Malaysia

Rescind 'xenophobic' ban of foreign cooks, Penang govt told

Urimai chairman says cooking local dishes is not rocket science.

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 20 Jul 2024 12:33PM

Rescind 'xenophobic' ban of foreign cooks, Penang govt told
Urimai chairman P Ramasamy says with training, foreign cooks can be as good as locals. – The Malaysian Insight file pic, July 20, 2024. – The Vibes file pic, July 20, 2024.

BANNING foreigners from cooking 13 local dishes in Penang is nothing short of xenophobia, said P Ramasamy, who urged the state government to rescind the ban.

Ramasamy, who is Urimai chairman, said it is not necessary for locals to cook better compared to foreign workers.

“Foreign workers are cooking the local dishes simply because they are workers and employed to do so.

“The situation in some food stalls has come to the extent without foreign workers, these eateries will have to be closed down.

“There is nothing magical about locals being better cooks than foreigners. Essentially, it is a question of experience and exposure to local food tastes,” the former Penang deputy chief minister said in a statement.

He said tasty food preparation depended on work exposure, length of service and the ability to learn the art of preparing local dishes.

“Cooking local dishes is not rocket science. There is nothing to say that locals are better cooks coming out with tasty dishes. This is complete nonsense,” he added.

The ban to bar foreigners from cooking 13 local items was introduced in 2014, imposed on food stalls owned by the Majlis Bandaraya Pulau Pinang (MBPP).

The MBPP now plans to enforce the ban at all hawker centres, coffee shops, and food courts in the state from early next year.

The 13 types of food are nasi lemak, asam laksa, pasembor, mee sotong, char koay teow, koay teow soup, Hokkien mee, curry mee, wan tan mee, loh bak, chee cheong fun, char koay kak and oh chien.

Ramasamy said it is a falsehood to argue that the taste of these 13 local dishes have deteriorated because they are being prepared by foreign workers.

He added that if foreign cooks are trained, they can be as good as locals. 

He said that it should be left to customers to decide if they don’t want to eat the food prepared by the foreigners.

“Nobody is forcing them. There is always the element of choice,” he said. – July 20, 2024.

Spotlight

Malaysia

All eyes on Conference of Rulers and Negeri Sembilan

World

Boeing staff among eight dead in US B-52 bomber crash in California

Malaysia

‘Our struggle has never been just about winning elections’ – PM Anwar

People

'Grandpa thought grandma was just sleeping' (video)

Malaysia

Minister: Sarawak made right decision to reject entry of Rohingya refugees in 2017

Malaysia

Island, helicopter, luxury yachts among assets to be auctioned at insolvency carnival

Malaysia

Killing, burning pregnant girlfriend; Prosecution requests death penalty to be upheld

Education

No vernacular schools will be closed, assures government

You may be interested

Malaysia

Good governance critical for national cooperative growth, affirms PM

Malaysia

Prawn dispute a rising threat to Thai-Malaysia relations

Malaysia

Banks to scrap RM1 ATM withdrawal fee nationwide from July 1

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

PAS president accused of bypassing PN leadership as internal power dynamics come under scrutiny

Malaysia

Govt moves to shield economy from energy crisis targeting below global average inflation rate

Malaysia

Zaid fires back over PAS move. Says political journey ‘not a tragedy’ and hopes for seat in next GE

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Kulai platform diplomacy thaws tensions as Loke and Onn Hafiz share tracks in high stakes election campaign

Malaysia

PM Anwar – ‘Rather a torn shirt, than …’ (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir