Azlan, N.A., 2021.
Spatial Inequality and Colonial Palimpsest in Kuala Lumpur
Output Type: | Chapter in a book |
Publication: | Volume 1: Community and Society |
Pagination: | pp. 155-164 |
Three weeks after armed military personnel started patrolling the area and barbed wire was installed around the perimeter, an immigration raid was conducted on Menara City One and Malayan and Selangor Mansions in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on May 1, 2020. The irony that the raid was conducted on Labor Day was not lost, given that the three buildings were mostly populated by migrant workers living in cramped conditions. Following a spike of COVID- 19 cases in early April 2020, the three buildings were put under Enforced Movement Control Order (EMCO) - a stricter version of the lockdown imposed on the rest of the country. People were prohibited from entering or leaving the buildings. Hundreds of migrants and refugees, including children, were detained in the raid, despite the Defense Minister's promise in March that punitive actions would not be taken against undocumented migrants should they come forward to get tested (Sukumaran and Jaipragas, 2020). Malaysia performed relatively well in managing the infection rate of COVID- 19 during the first wave of the pandemic. By September 2020, Malaysia had a total of 9, 915 cases resulting in 128 deaths (Ministry of Health, 2020). To mitigate the impact of the pandemic, several types of lockdown were imposed depending on the number of cases and the likelihood of infection. The Movement Control Order (MCO), imposed on the whole country from March 18 to May 4, 2020 was strict: nobody was allowed to leave their homes apart from essential reasons such as getting groceries or going to the doctor.