Abstract

The Orang Asli group forms a minority community in Peninsular Malaysia, whose livelihood mostly depends on their land and the surrounding area. Dispute over customary land rights of Orang Asli has been continual in Malaysia although Malaysian Courts, in several cases, have upheld the Common Law rights of Orang Asli to their customary lands. This poses a challenge to some Orang Asli communities and State Governments. Based on focus group discussion, profiling survey, and library research methods, this paper analyses the land rights of Orang Asli in Peninsular Malaysia, by placing focus on Orang Asli in Kampung Parit Gong, Jelebu, Negeri Sembilan. The findings indicate that the Kampung Parit Gong Orang Asli community has been strictly adhering to the customs of ‘adat perpatih’ since yesteryears, and that they highly value the land, both through usage of land and by inheritance. Several important concerns were raised by the Orang Asli in Kampung Parit Gong, particularly on the security over their rights on the said customary land and the guarantee of their future generations’ socio-economic wellbeing. Having said that, this paper proposes several legal and administrative measures to not only address the uprising issues, but also to ascertain that the rights of Orang Asli residing in Peninsular Malaysia are secured.

Highlights

  • The Orang Asli has a significant place in Malaysian history

  • In the case of Yebet bt Saman & Ors v Foong Kwai Long & Ors [2015] 2 MLJ 498, the Court of Appeal stressed that the customary land rights of Orang Asli under the common law may co-exist with Aboriginal Peoples Act [Act 134] (APA)

  • The outcomes obtained from the focus group discussion revealed that their customary and ancestral lands have been gazetted as an aboriginal reserve, as initiated by the Orang Asli at Kampung Parit Gong in 1960

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Summary

Introduction

The Orang Asli has a significant place in Malaysian history. Their inhabitation in Peninsular Malaysia dates back to more than 50,000 years (Ricaux et al, 2006; Macaulay et al, 2005). This paper probed into the customary land rights of Orang Asli residing in Kampung Parit Gong, Negeri Sembilan. The UNDRIP holds a persuasive authority on Malaysia as a United Nations Member to provide statutory protection to the tradition and culture of the Orang Asli, and their customary land rights.

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