“I hate victims who respect their executioners” – Jean-Paul Sartre
“Policemen so cherish their status as keepers of the peace and
protectors of the public that they have occasionally been known to beat
to death those citizens or groups who question that status.” – David Mamet
The ghosts of A Kugan, Aminulrasyid Amzah, Teoh Beng Hock and a host of others (whose names go unmentioned) watch silently as Prime Minister Najib Razak proclaims the police the victims of the state sanctioned violence that they (the police) perpetrated on the Bersih 3.0 marchers on April 28.
But in a sense he is right. The police are victims. They are as much
victims of the Umno regime as any other citizen of Malaysia.
I realise at this emotional post-Bersih 3.0 moment, nobody is
interested in any kind of discussion about the police other than how
they are the armed division of Umno, but I would like to address certain
issues regarding the violence that occurred during the April 28
protest.
This
should not be read as some sort of apologia for the actions of the PDRM
(Royal Malaysian Police) but rather my (hopefully) informed opinion on
what has been troubling many men and women who have served, and who
currently serve, in the various security apparatus of this country.
As a matter of public record, I would like to state that in my
opinion any police officer who can be identified as abusing any marchers
should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. They are a disgrace
to the uniform, the public and finally the Agong.
On Sunday night (the day after Bersih 3.0), I received a call from an old senior police officer I knew from my Sarawak days.
“What the hell, Thaya, did you see the baby faces on parade there? What the hell were they (the government) thinking?”
We got into a long conversation and indeed I had the same
conversation with many other retired and serving members of the various
security forces in the country.
What amazed me the most of the police presence last Saturday was how
young most of them looked. Many of my friends speculated that they
looked fresh out of whatever passes for training these days.
Seeing the violence they committed in the various videos circulating
on the Internet, it reminded me of schoolboys engaging in fist fights.
There was no sense of any higher authority in command merely random
violence targeted at anyone unlucky enough to get in their way.
Indeed, the protestors themselves seemed more organised, especially
when they were shielding those unlucky police personnel who for whatever
reason “accidently” rammed into them from the anger of the crowds.
Siege mentality
Having been on the other side of protest marches gives one a particular perspective when it comes to situations like this.
All military personnel receive some kind of public order training, or
at least they did in my time, so I have some vague familiarity with
what these men were going through. A long time ago, I too at various
times in my career either stood guard or was giving the orders. The fear
in their eyes was evident and so was the anger.
Wherever I went I made it a point to keep an eye on our boys in blue
and sometimes even interacted with them. On numerous occasions, I
realised that they had been standing still or milling about in the hot
sun staring at the procession around them without having anything to
drink.
One
of my biggest expenses last Saturday was buying drinks for them, which
they at first refused but gratefully accepted after I spoke to their
commanding officer. I was extremely happy seeing that other Bersih
protestors doing the same thing at various points across the city.
Understandably those I engaged with in conversation were rather
tight-lipped about what they thought of this whole affair, but something
deep inside me knew there was trouble brewing.
“You know how it is now. The rot started post-69 or thereabouts,” an
old army comrade reminded me. “It infected all the services.”
I want readers to think about how police officers or any other
security personnel are infected with the Umno garbage of race and
religion.
Remember how non-Malays are accused of being unpatriotic because they
choose not to serve in the security apparatus of this country even
though institutional racism is an open secret, much like it is in the
civil service.
I
have no idea if there is a police equivalent of a Ridhuan Tee Abdullah
teaching at whatever police training schools in operation now, but it
doesn’t take a genius to understand that these impressionable young
minds who are supposed to be taught to serve and protect all citizens of
the country are infected with that peculiar brand of Umno bigotry that
excludes everyone even other Malays and Muslims if they don’t subscribe
to the party’s ideology.
Add to this, the ranting of the two Alis (Ibrahim and Hasan)
published in the racist propaganda organs of the state (which is
probably the only news outlets they are exposed to) and what you get is a
siege mentality acerbated by the fact that there is already an
invisible line that separates security and civilian citizens.
When you are constantly indoctrinated with hate, sooner or later
seeing the ‘other’ as not human and not fellow citizens but rather just
another threat to ‘national security’ or to racial hegemony becomes part
of who you are.
Imagine standing in the hot sun looking at people having fun,
marching and enjoying themselves – crowds which consist of rebellious
Malays and non-Malays who would wish to usurp your rightful place in the
destiny of Malaysia.
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