Yet another Malaysian Boleh! … but not in Malaysia
Yet another Malaysian Boleh! … but not in Malaysia
Yet another Malaysian-born is making waves in the international scene - a woman who is set to take over US-based technological firm, SoPark Corporation, later this year.
Kampar-born electrical engineer Rupa Shanmugam has been SoPark’s vice-president since September 2012.
“Congratulations to Rupa is in order and thanks for making Malaysians and Malaysia proud,” Gerakan Deputy Speaker Syed Abdul Razak Alsagoff said.
“Rupa, like many other diaspora Malaysians achieving excellence and success overseas, shows that Malaysians Boleh!
“The question is this - why are so many talented Malaysians not achieving such successes in Malaysia?” he asked.
“Malaysia is striving to achieve developed nation status and we are already an industrialised country. Why is it that we have an electrical engineer like Rupa not making it in Malaysia?
“To achieve developed nation status, having an abundance of quality and competent human capital is essential for success.
“The brain drain is now a national problem that is affecting Malaysia’s progress to become a developed nation. If we cannot retain our own talent, how do we expect progress?” he asked.
Indrani Kopal says there are better career prospects outside Malaysia. Photo courtesy of Indrani Kopal Brain Drain in Malaysia Keeps Getting Worse The longer filmmaker Indrani Kopal stays in New York, the stronger is her desire to remain overseas and not return to Malaysia. Home may be where her heart is, but it is a different story when opportunities start popping. She was already winning awards for her documentaries in Malaysia but the chance to go beyond all that is too good to resist. Her documentary called The Game Changer has been selected for the 2014 Portland Film Festival in August and the 9th Harlem International Film Festival in September. “Even though I am a foreigner here (in US), I get to pursue my dream just like anyone else. I am presented with the same opportunities as others in my field. The only question they ask is how good I am in what I do, not what my race or ethnicity is,” said Ms Kopal in an email response to The Establishment Post. Ms Kopal will be completing her masters in Fine Arts, specialising in documentary studies and production at the Hofstra University. She is the first filmmaker to be on a Fulbright Scholarship. “I do want to come back home and share everything I have learned here and hope to inspire others. But I’m not sure about staying long,“ says the 35-year-old who needs to return home to serve a two-year residency as per the scholarship requirement … for more, go to http://penanginstitute.org/v3/media-centre/penang-institute-in-the-news/584-brain-drain-in-malaysia-keeps-getting-worse |
Syed Razak, who is Gerakan’s nominee to contest N.37 Bukit Lanjan in the coming 14th General Election (GE14), said: “We believe there is no shortage of talent and ‘rocket scientists’ in Malaysia.
“It is a matter of identifying them from young and providing them all the support in education that they need to keep them in Malaysia. This must be carried out according to meritocracy, nothing else matters,” he added.
Here’s online news portal Free Malaysia Today (FMT)’s that was posted on March 14:
FMT Reporters
March 14, 2018
Rupa Shanmugam says her father, a physics teacher, had pushed her interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. (The Buffalo News pic) |
Today, she is the president of leading US-based technological firm, SoPark Corporation, a company with about 80 employees which she would take ownership of later this year.
For her achievements, Rupa was last month awarded with the Women in Leadership Honoree by a New York-based women’s empowerment organisation, the Buffalo Niagara Chapter of NYS Women, Inc.
Among others, the company manufactures circuit boards, electromechanicals as well as provides custom cable assemblies and design services to the medical device industry.
STEM, or the field of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, has traditionally been male-dominated.
But Rupa’s father, a physics teacher, had pushed her interest in STEM.
“He encouraged me to pursue a career in electrical engineering as I displayed interest in the field when I was young,” she told a local New York paper in an interview recently.
“I had helped him around the house with the wiring, plumbing and carpenting. He even called me his right-hand man,” Rupa said.
Rupa was the only female student when she pursued a diploma in Electrical Engineering from the Federal Institute of Technology in Kuala Lumpur.
After graduating, she worked at many large corporations in both Singapore and Malaysia as a technician, a rarity for a woman at that time.
Rupa later studied at Trine University in Indiana where she earned her degree in electrical engineering.
FMT intern Tan Chia Hee contributed to this article."
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