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Freelance journalist Rex Tan faced criticism for a question he posed during a lecture on Gaza, which included references to the Chinese and Malay races, leading many to perceive it as racially charged.
He later publicly apologised, stating his comments were unnecessary and clarifying he did not intend to compare Malaysian Chinese to Palestinians.
Tan subsequently resigned from his position at Free Malaysia Today.
However, as the controversy grew, social media users found an article he wrote on UEC, and the backlash quickly escalated from one individual to attacks on the UEC system itself and its graduates.
DAP you got a fan in Rex Tan who agreed UEC must gain full recognition by Anwar's Madani whereby DAP is part of Madani govt.
— Jess (@jezlai) January 15, 2026
UEC grads can work in govt & it's related agencies & UEC exams recognized in IPTAs.
DAP are u going to defend Rex ? https://t.co/fvKgJT256n pic.twitter.com/7atn54qoSb
Accusations Fly, Logic Gets Questioned
On social media, users began labeling UEC as a “factory scheme of producing Chinese supremacists-chauvinists.”
One Threads post declaring “UEC is one of the reason why racism become more worse” received 1,700 likes.
Another user wrote that Tan’s case proved “UEC is problematic” and questioned why it should be recognized in Malaysia.
View on Threads
But others pushed back hard against what they called unfair stereotyping and flawed logic.
Tan is a graduate of both the UEC and Universiti Malaya (UM), where he pursued a Master’s degree in English Literature.
Defenders pointed out that by the same logic used to blame UEC, should all Universiti Malaya graduates also be labelled racist?
Some suggested the criticism stems from jealousy, noting that Chinese independent schools are often well-funded and academically successful.
Here’s What Tan Actually Said About UEC Schools
A month before the Gaza talk controversy, Tan wrote an opinion piece advocating for UEC recognition—but with significant caveats, describing his alma mater Foon Yew High School as “monolingual, monoracial and monocultural” with an “overly ethnocentric” curriculum.
He argued that public universities could serve as “places for culturally outcast students to reintegrate into Malaysia’s diverse social fabric,” warning that denying UEC graduates entry would push them further away from Malaysia—noting half his peers now work in Singapore and many others overseas.
Further denying UEC students will only brew further bitterness among those like me, who enrolled into monocultural institutions under our parents’ instructions.
This context makes the backlash more complex: Tan wasn’t a blind defender of Chinese education—he was critiquing its insularity while advocating for pathways to integration.
Yet when controversy struck, critics ignored this nuance entirely.
View on Threads
UEC: Racism Factory or Convenient Target?
The UEC is offered by Chinese independent high schools that are privately funded and teach Bahasa Melayu along with other subjects.
It has produced many professionals, and is recognised by universities in Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and some Western countries, but Malaysian public universities don’t fully recognise it.
The certificate has always been controversial, sitting right at the center of debates about national identity and education reform, and it’s become a political hot potato that reflects how divided Malaysians are on these issues, though supporters say recognizing it is a constitutional right that won’t threaten our national language.
Here’s the big question Tan’s incident raises: should one person’s controversial comments define an entire school system?
View on Threads
Critics are using his case to claim UEC schools produce racists, but defenders fire back saying it’s unfair and prejudiced to judge thousands of graduates by one person’s behavior—especially when that person also studied at UM.
There’s no actual research linking what school you went to with racist attitudes, but social media is still buzzing with Malaysians arguing over whether this criticism is fair or just stereotyping.
What we do know is this: one controversial case has brought back all those old tensions about race, education, and identity in Malaysia—so are we really judging people for what they do, or just for the labels we stick on them?
READ MORE: Former FMT Journalist Rex Tan Questioned Overnight, Released On Bail Over Gaza Talk Question
READ MORE: [Watch] Rafizi: Only 20% Of Chinese Students In Independent Schools, UEC Threat Overblown
READ MORE: [Watch] DAP Chief Says He’ll Quit If UEC Recognition Comes With His Resignation
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One Man’s Comments, Thousands Labeled Racist: Is UEC Really The Problem?
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