.

MT COLUMNS GUEST COLUMNISTS Malaysia’s Culture of Political and Social Oppression

Malaysia’s Culture of Political and Social Oppression


Thursday, 28 October 2010 Aurora
E-mail Print PDF
Digg!Del.icio.us!Google!Live!Facebook!Technorati!StumbleUpon!MySpace!Yahoo! Twitter!LinkedIn! 

By Nurul Izzah Anwar

In recent years, Malaysia has seen a huge wave of migrations, with an estimated one million Malaysians now living abroad. The UK is now home to over 50,000 Malaysian citizens. Many travel to the UK to study or work, and choose not to return to Malaysia, often stifled by the lack of civil liberties and basic human rights in their own back yard. This is compounded by the race-based economic and social policies selectively championed by the ruling United Malay National Organisation(UMNO) that enriches a few at the expense of majority Malays who remain poor and where  many non-Malays feel that they are often treated as second class citizens.

On Saturday the 30th of October 2010, Malaysians from all over the UK will be peacefully protesting outside the Malaysian Tourism Office in Trafalgar Square against the continued use of Malaysia’s draconian Internal Security Act, a throwback from the days of British colonial rule that allows for indefinite arbitrary detention without trial. The right to peaceful assembly and protest is not something that Malaysians take lightly.

In Malaysia, a police permit is required for gatherings of five people or more and peaceful civil society protests are often met with water cannons, tear gas and arrests. Similar protests in Malaysia in August saw the arrest of 36 people. Such crackdowns on basic civil liberties have ignited a debate amongst Malaysians abroad, galvanising them to stand in solidarity with their countrymen back home and help draw the attention of the international community to Malaysia’s dismal human rights record. 

 

The Internal Security Act(1960) was drafted by colonial British lawyer R.H Hickling, to use against Communist insurgents bent on armed struggle. Over the last 50 years, more than 10,000 people have been detained under the ISA. Despite the Malaysian government often claiming that the ISA is an anti-terror law, no detainees have ever been charged in a court of law for acts of terrorism. The protest on the 30th of October marks the twenty-third anniversary of Operasi Lalang when then Prime Minister Dr.Mahathir Mohammad used the ISA to detain more than a hundred civil society activists, political opposition leaders, educationalists and religious converts.

Many in my generation will be too young to remember or understand the exact reasons for the government clampdown in 1987. However what is clear is that the arrests were made following the escalation of political tensions with worrying racial undertones, not dissimilar to the sort of climate the current government appears intent on fostering today. As a result, respected academics like Dr Kua Kia Soong, veteran opposition politicians Lim Kit Siang and his son Lim Guan Eng, veteran lawyer and politician Karpal Singh, Women’s Aid Organisation leader Irene Xavier and PAS leaders Khalid Samad, Mohd Sabu and Mahfuz Omar amongst others, lost almost two years of their lives in arbitrary detention. What they endured was harrowing, demeaning and completely unjust. But what remains unspoken by and large was the suffering and pain also endured by their spouses and families. I highly recommend Kua Kia Soong’s book ‘445 days under the ISA’ for an insight into what goes on behind the barb wire of Kamunting and the devastating impact the ISA has on the family and friends of those detained.

In the last year the Malaysian government has launched a number of initiatives to revamp its image abroad. These include recent bilateral talks with UK Foreign Secretary William Hague and a series of high profile tourism and hospitality campaigns including a Malaysian food festival at Trafalgar Square, a booth at the Chelsea Flower Show and an address by Sarawak Chief Minister and Taib Mahmud at a Global Islamic Branding and Marketing Forum in Oxford. In June this year, Malaysia contentiously sought re-election to the UN Human Rights Council, and paid lip-service to a series of promises on human right’s reforms, including reviewing the ISA. To date, no such review has been forthcoming. 

However, Malaysia’s repressive laws continue to cast a gloomy shadow over the nation. Corruption remains endemic and Malaysia’s corruption perception ranking dropped to 57th place globally in Transparency International’s 2009 report.  Foreign direct investment into Malaysia continues to dwindle, with Malaysia now lagging behind other regional neighbours such as the Philippines, Vietnam and Indonesia.

For a country who was a leader in the region in the 1960s-1980s and was sending engineers to South Korea to assist with their technology development, this is a sad state of affairs that can only be attributed to the financial mismanagement and lack of accountability and transparency that have become so endemic in the current form of governance. 

Despite gaining independence from British colonial rule more than 53 years ago, Malaysians have only ever known one –party rule. The UMNO-led Barisan National (National Front) has won 12 successive general elections since independence, a feat that would be considered preposterous in most other countries claiming to be a democracy. The ISA remains a crucial component of the Barisan National’s toolkit for immobilising and paralysing the political opposition and civil society, and hence ensuring their continued political dominance and survival.

In a speech at the recent UMNO party conference, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak warned of  “crushed bodies”, “lost lives” and “ethnic cleansing” if UMNO failed to hold onto power. Such phrases are completely irresponsible and a reflection of the sort of scare-mongering and state sponsored psychological terrorism that we have become all too familiar with. 

We must not forget that Barisan National also boasts an impressive array of other equally repressive laws aimed at curtailing freedom of expression, association and thought. These include the Press and Printing Act 1984 that require newspapers to apply for annual renewal of their printing permits, the University College and Colleges Act that prevents students from participating in political societies, and the Sedition Act that is frequently used to curtail freedom of expression and public debate.

The utter control of the government over mainstream media, the arrests and charging of the 4 UKM students earlier this year for observing the Hulu Selangor by-elections and the calls by UMNO led quarters to charge Chinese rapper and singer Namewee under the Sedition Act is testimony to the fact that the Malaysian government’s brand of Orwellian politics is alive and thriving. 

Indeed it is a chilling state of affairs when even cartoonists are not spared. Last month, Malaysian cartoonist, Zunar, famous for his comic take on Malaysian politics and current affairs was arrested, following the banning of his book ‘1FunnyMalaysia’, on the eve of the launch of his latest compilation ‘Cartoon-Oh-Phobia‘. Home Ministry secretary-general Mahmood Adam claimed that ‘the cartoons were a threat to national security’, Readers and vendors were threatened with up to 3 years' jail or a fine of up to RM20,000 for being in possession of the publication.  

Unless the Malaysian government starts to take socio-political reform seriously, our country may remind others of George Orwell’s book ‘Ninety Eighty-Four’. Its efforts to be taken as a serious player on the international stage will be in vain. The anniversary of Operasi Lalang provides a timely opportunity for the Malaysian government to repeal the Internal Security Act and revert to the rule of law. No act would go further to restoring the confidence and respect of the Malaysian people and providing the Malaysian government with the credibility and image overhaul it so desires. Till then, Malaysians will have to look elsewhere for the civil liberties and basic freedoms that people in many other parts of the world take for granted. 

_____________________________________________________________________ 

If you happen to be in London, please join the ISA Protest Walk on Saturday the 30th of October 2010.  The walk starts with a protest at the Malaysian High Commission in Belgrave Square from 4pm- 4.45pm (Nearest Tube: Hyde Park Corner). The walk will then proceed to Trafalgar Sq where there will be a further protest outside the Malaysian Tourism Office the before a Wayang Kulit show at dusk, ending at 7pm.


 


Comments (7)Add Comment
...
written by Pegasus, October 29, 2010 10:06:45
My name is UMNO has done a lot of evil things for pasts 53 years! It rule tru coalition in guise in order to impose it its wills and fancy. And as result of its 53 years of demonic rule many things bad things occur! Manipulation, brutal killings of indians, one chinese and scores of plundering stories regarding money how being use and spend like no body business, manipulation of courts and almost every one of government institution being use for it own ends! All this must be stopped soon or else more evil intentions will continued.
...
written by Taikohtai, October 29, 2010 09:15:43
I will there too, in nama, as rupa still in Australia.
...
written by Better My, October 29, 2010 06:40:39

SABAH

Re: With uncertain steps in politics . Thu, 28 Oct 2010 15:07 .By FMT Staff”

Re: Chong was seen as a "weekend politician". "Her husband's record (as an MP) is poor," said Lim, a shopkeeper. “
(Tsen’s husband poor records of helping BSapi. Enven if he wanted to, he can’t due to the failure of the PBS/bn)

Tsen herself is seen as a "reluctant candidate", One senses her uncertainty amidst the structured campaign ceramahs and pre-arranged “meet the people” sessions Mother to their four children – Jamie Chong Sing Yi, 23, Charlene Chong Tze Yi, 20, and Steffi Chong Han Yi, 18 and son Douglas Chong Zheng Yi, 13. Many seem to think so given how she's being carefully guarded by her BN and PBS colleagues. Tsen in a recent interview said: “I just want to... carry on with what my husband has started."Because of his sudden death, a lot of things he wanted to do, he could not finish. So as a wife, I feel that I have this desire to finish what he started.”
(When you are thrusted into politics, you are FAIR game to all. No amount of hiding in bn/pBS skirts are going to protect you. How can you possibly juggle your many growing chidren’s needs and activities and your hypocritical christian time spent in churches and cell group meetings, with representation for BSapi people? It is impossible unless you rate your D grade performance as acceptable.

Your husband was a failure by all measurements of BSapi/Sabah/Malaysia real overall developments. Your husband couldn’t do it and if you think you can “finish his job, you are dreaming big time, lady. It is better to dream of pleasant Christian things that you can be really true to yourself and enjoy your children.

In pbs/bn, you CAN’t be true to your Christian ethics ever in their current form. A loss to you will be a greatest blessing in disguise to you and put you out to pasture. Thats how all Batus Sapi people should see you now. Then you hand in pbs your membership card and regain the real freedom that you really want be true to yourself, your circle of family and friends.

Tsen is totally the WRONG CHOICE for BSapi)
...
written by Better My, October 29, 2010 05:58:00
If this urged on by Nurul with her timely ISA piece above, with the attendance & the walk in the park (& mind & body refreshing exercise so needed) by the maestro, plus all the great anti-ISA movement people, the best show in town, better than Andrew Lloyd Webber musicals stage show, how can you possibly resist and think of doing anything else on the day?
...
written by expat/lon, October 29, 2010 01:12:40
I will be there in mind body and spirit to do my little bit for my fellow Malaysians come rain hail or snow Syd
...
written by fireduck, October 29, 2010 00:06:34
Good piece by YB Nurul. Repeal the ISA, yes but don't stop there. The rot will continue in other ways and forms, UNLESS the Judiciary is revamped and reformed. That would be the one to re-instill confidence in our nation and hope for our people.
...
written by syd, October 28, 2010 21:08:33
those in london can't be bothered about malaysia anymore. they would rather spend their saturday shopping or participate in sports.

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comments.

busy
 

Language Translation

TwitterFacebook Twitter

GUEST COLUMNISTS

What’s there not to like about PAS?

News image

PAS is not corrupted nor power-crazy. It upholds justice, fairness and good governance.  This issue – unity talks – coming so close to the GE13 is to trap ...

Tunku Aziz not the reason Malays join DAP

News image

Umno's excitement at Tunku Aziz's exit from DAP is grossly miscalculated and has not triggered the 'expected' exodus of Malays from the opposition party. Mohd Ariff Sabri A...

Anwar must decide on Azmin

News image

He only just has time to get rid of an upstart once and for all, and hope that it will be enough to save PKR from certain demise. Not ...

GE 13 to be survival of the fittest

News image

It’s all a matter of endurance. Given the stakes, tensions have also heightened. Both sides have a great deal to lose. Will the upcoming polls see this be...

Resurrecting Kirby Is Fiscally Irresponsible

News image

M. Bakri Musa It is incomprehensible that with the Ministry of Education still in the midst of its review of our schools, the Minister and his Deputy saw fit ...

Condemn unruly behaviour

News image

A wrong is a wrong and we shouldn’t compromise our principles for political expediency.It is time for rational political leaders, regardless of their allegiance, to condemn such u...

Unswayed by fear or favour

News image

Roger Tan (The Star) As much as we do not like the judiciary to be perceived as pro-government, we also do not want the Bar to be perceived a...

Najib & Co ‘scamming’ us

News image

All those swanky acronyms linked to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak's economic transformation agenda has done little except push up the prices of the poor man's meal. Since ...

Dong Zong pull out: Politics in Chinese education?

News image

Other Chinese-based education movements feel that Dong Zong should have participated in the Education Ministry's roundtable meeting to address shortage of Chinese school teachers. Other stakeholders are of ...



This Site is AnswerTips enabled. Just double click on any word on this site to get a quick reference.
You are here: Home MT COLUMNS GUEST COLUMNISTS Malaysia’s Culture of Political and Social Oppression

Latest Posts - Guest Columnist

Popular Posts - Guest Columnist