DAP national chairman Karpal Singh, the ‘Tiger of Jelutong’, is now
roaring his way into the people’s hearts this general election.
For the first time, he has incorporated his famous tiger trademark
into his election campaign by having his campaign vehicles emblazoned
with his image beside the image of a tiger.
The 72-year-old lawyer, who earned the nickname following a dispute
with former MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu in Parlia-ment in
1982, said he was sure the tiger would bring good luck to him and
Pakatan Rakyat.
He also did not mind retelling
the story behind the nickname to reporters during a meeting-the-
people session at the market in Jalan
Gangsa yesterday.
“During an argument with Samy Vellu, he called himself a lion while he called me a tiger.
“But I’m a lion as Singh means lion in Punjabi. And lion is ‘singa’ in Bahasa Malaysia,” he added.
“But then I said to him: ‘Never mind, you be the lion and I’ll be the tiger. There are no lions in the country.
“So the name started from there,” he said with a chuckle.
Karpal Singh, who is defending
his Bukit Gelugor parliamentary seat, said a supporter, S. Mahendran, had taken the campaign vehicles —
a multi-purpose vehicle and a jeep — to the shop to have the images pasted on them.
He added that he would ensure that tigers, an endangered species,
would be protected as any attack on a tiger was an attack on him.
“The vehicles bearing the tiger images received a positive response
from the public who would take photographs of them,” he said.
He has also called himself the ‘Tiger General’ in Bukit Gelugor which
he said was the only constituency in the country to have four lawyers
in the parliamentary and state seats.
“Four lawyers — we are like ge-nerals. And I am the ‘Tiger General’,” he said.
DAP candidates for the three state seats are incumbents R.S.N. Rayer
(Seri Delima), Wong Hon Wai (Air Itam) and Yeoh Soon Hin (Paya
Terubong).
Karpal Singh won the Jelutong parliamentary seat in 1978 and held the seat for more than 20 years until losing it in 1999.
The Bukit Gelugor constituency was once part of the Jelutong parliamentary constituency until the mid-1990s.
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