
A Submission to my Colonel-in-Chief (Princess Anne)
Got a little fed-up witnessing you guys having all the fun composing letters to all and sundry...ergo; as follows...
Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal
Buckingham Palace
London SW1A 1AA
England. UK
April 24, 2006
Subject: Pingat Jasa Malaysia (PJM)
Your Royal Highness,
I am writing to you in your capacity as Colonel-in-Chief of The Royal Corps of Signals and as Commandant-in-Chief of St John Ambulance, in both of which I was privileged to serve.
I am confident that you will be aware of the recent recommendation, of the Honours and Decorations Committee, which denies British Malaya and Borneo veterans the right to wear the PJM that has been graciously offered to them by the King and Government of Malaysia for their part in successfully protecting newly independent Malaysia from aggression. There is extreme and widespread disappointment at that recent decision reached by Her Majesty's advisors, who comprise said Committee, regarding the restricted acceptance of the PJM announced in the FCO Ministerial Statement on the 31st January 2006.
My purpose in writing is to respectfully ask if you will lend your support to us (British Malaya and Borneo veterans) in our struggle to have this shameful recommendation amended, so that I, and many others like me, may have formal permission to wear our PJM with pride. That is all we are seeking. The Queen has accepted the medal - we just wish to be able to wear it.
To tell 35,000 loyal military ex-servicemen and women that they may accept a medal, which they will not be permitted to wear, defies all logic. On one hand, we are told that two rules (double-medalling and events over 5 years ago) are waived to permit acceptance and then, paradoxically, are immediately resurrected as reasons for the medal not to be ‘formally’ worn. To make matters worse, the double-medalling objection is erroneous, not only because thousands of veterans eligible for the PJM have no British medal, but also because the 5 year rule is spurious when applied to the scope of the Malaysian medal which was offered to the British in 2005.
This decision denigrates the loyalty and service of we, the affected veterans. In addition, it demeans the sacrifice made by our comrades who fell during the course of those conflicts. It concurrently offers gratuitous insult to the Agong, Government and Peoples of Malaysia.
The restricted recommendation appears to place Her Majesty the Queen in the invidious position of having told her British citizens that they must be content with rights inferior to those which she has previously conferred upon Australian and New Zealand citizens, our Commonwealth comrades, despite the fact that the ‘Brits’ were the only group to serve in all parts of Malaysia throughout the ‘Emergency’ and ‘Konfrontasi’ periods.
As an individual I categorically refuse to believe that my Sovereign is responsible for this implied insult. Further, I reject any implication or innuendo that to wear this medal will somehow offer an insult to that Sovereign.
It is instead, my belief, that her HD Committee initially provided Her Majesty with flawed advice, and that the Committee, the FCO and Cabinet Office have subsequently conspired to obfuscate the issue by refusing, despite repeated appeals, to provide a precise, clarifying definition of the term, ‘formal permission’, as applied to a group of ageing civilians, who are desirous of nothing more than wearing their medal, in memory of their comrades, on an annual ‘Remembrance Day’ parade.
Thank you for being so generous with your time as to read this submission.
Sincerely,
John ‘Jock’ Fenton.
(Ex Royal Corps of Signals & 17th Gurkha Division, Malaya)
Additional information and comment available
at
http://www.fight4thepjm.org/index.htm
_________________
...................'Jock'
Paroi...Rasah...Batu Signals Troop.