Abstract

This article investigates a long-neglected aspect of Indian Malaysian history, namely the Indian Agents of the Government of India to British Malaya. The Indian Agents were representatives of the Indian Government who were appointed under the Indian Immigration Act of 1922 to investigate and report on the state of affairs of Indian communities in the British colonies. The official duties of the Indian Agents in British Malaya were formalised under Section 73 (III) of the Labour Code 1923. Between 1923 and 1941, six Indian Agents were appointed in British Malaya. Throughout their tenure, they focused on and reported extensively on the socioeconomic conditions of the Indian working-class community, particularly south Indian labourers. One problem that came to their attention was the underdevelopment of the community’s permanent settlement in the country. The Federated Malay States (FMS) government did not appear to be concerned about the situation. Similarly, private estate managers reacted indifferently to the issue. Both saw permanent settlement as simply an economic measure to keep the community as a labour force, rather than a way to alleviate their socioeconomic hardships. This article shows how the Indian Agents were able to uncover a range of issues that were impeding the establishment of permanent settlements for south Indian labourers in the FMS. Some of them demonstrated exceptional levels of direct involvement. The article’s primary goal is to assess the degree to which the Indian Agents influenced the overall development of permanent Indian labour settlement.

Highlights

  • Despite the fact that the history of Indian Malaysians has been the topic of numerous scholarly publications over the years, there are still areas that researchers have yet to fully investigate

  • This article shows how the Indian Agents were able to uncover a range of issues that were impeding the establishment of permanent settlements for south Indian labourers in the Federated Malay States (FMS)

  • The amount of liberty they were able to exercise in Malaya can be vouched for by the fact that the Indian Agents used their influence to press the Malayan government into taking a more helpful approach for Indian labourers to settle permanently on lands and, on occasion, to criticise them for failing to do so

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Summary

Utaman Raman* and Sivachandralingam Sundara Raja

Department of History, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, MALAYSIA Published online: 29 October 2021 To cite this article: M. Utaman Raman and Sivachandralingam Sundara Raja. 2021. Indian agent involvement in the establishment of permanent settlement for the south Indian labouring community, 1923–1941. Kajian Malaysia 39(2): 95–115. https://doi.org/10.21315/km2021.39.2.5 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.21315/km2021.39.2.5

INTRODUCTION
September 1930 to 6 June 1933
ARULANANDAM PILLAI
KUNHIRAMAN NAIR
CONCLUSION
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