On the one hand, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak parrots his reform
agenda. But in sharp contrast the movements of Malaysians are regulated –
they are told where they can and cannot be.
The court order, obtained by the police, banning the organisers of
Bersih 3.0 and the public, is shocking. After 55 years of independence,
the government manipulates the arms of the judiciary to block the
people’s access to a public space. This is shameless and shocking.
Over the last weeks, we have heard ruling politicians nonchalantly
dismiss the planned rally, calling for free and fair elections. Home
Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said it was not a security threat. Others
retorted the rally has no traction with the people.
But it seems that now everyone has cold feet – from Umno politicians to
the KL mayor Ahmad Fuad Ismail who has started seeing red over the
protest.
Najib, meanwhile, is silent while his goons scramble around trying to
frantically cordon off Dataran Merdeka. This is a clear indication that
Najib simply cannot put forward a coherent political message. One moment
he is a reformist, self-styled if I may add. Then he shows his true
colors.
I do understand the prime minister’s position – if Najib is serious
about implementing reforms, his government will collapse in the next
general election. Unwilling to do too much and lose his grip on power,
the Parliament was used to bulldoze the amendments to the Election
Offences Act, giving the government a free ride to continue rigging the
polls.
The government has done everything in its power to clip the wings of
legitimate dissent in the country- including resorting to thuggery to
create an element of fear. We saw gangsters trying to break up talks by
Anything but Umno (ABU), beating up students who were occupying Dataran
Merdeka, death threats against S Ambiga and some opposition politicians,
not to mention smear campaigns and dirty politicking.
Despite these harassment, the Bersih 3.0 rally will proceed. We did not
buy into the gimmicks fashioned out to look like electoral reforms. The
Election Commission is even dismissive about cleaning up the electoral
roll and had the audacity to say it has one of the cleanest electoral
list in the world.
The manner in which the government will handle the protest tomorrow will
indicate whether Najib is serious about reforms and opening up the
democratic space in the country.
Or it will show how Najib lied about his reform agenda.
Charles Santiago is DAP’s member of parliament for Klang.
Charles Santiago is DAP’s member of parliament for Klang.
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