There is no doubt that the Bersih 3.0 rally on April 28 has succeeded
beyond the wildest imagination of any one. Not only for the immensity
of the numbers of participants, but also for their spontaneous
expressions of love and devotion for this beloved country.
Where in the world can you see demonstrators that packed like sardines
from one end of the street to the other, and overflowing from one street
to the next?
Among the hundreds of video clips posted in the Internet is one showing a
densely packed procession of demonstrators clad in yellow, streaming
endlessly from the Masjid Negara (National Mosque). This spectacle was
so overwhelming that one reader was prompted to exclaim:
“Unbelievable!”, while I quipped: “This looks like the great Yellow
River of China, except that instead of flowing to the Pacific Ocean, it
is flowing towards our Putrajaya”.
The huge number of participants (in hundreds of thousands) is all the
more impressive, because the entire city of Kuala Lumpur was practically
locked down with all access to city centre (58 roads according to
police announcement) blocked by police since early morning.
Yet, despite the masses of people flooding the streets with many camping
there overnight, the conduct of the crowd was so exemplary that it won
the unreserved admiration of a visiting foreign observer group on
Malaysian electoral system who had observed the entire rally. A member
of the group, Pakistani senator Hasil Khan Bizenjo said:
“This is really an eye opener. We who are very familiar with rallies,
having them almost every day in my country, …… But I have never seen
such a big and peaceful rally.”
He expressed surprise at the great difficulties people here have to
overcome to get to the rally, while “in other countries buses and other
transport are provided to facilitate the movement of participants”.
Among the many people he talked to was “a group of youngsters who told
me that their group of 180 people have walked 20 km to come to the
city”.
Another member of the group, prominent Indian journalist, the India Today editorial
director Mobashar Jawed Akbar, who was also a one time member of
parliament, referring to the violence in the rally, said:
“The crowd had been building up overnight; they had ample time to be
violent if they wanted to. There was no sense of violence whatsoever.
In fact, It was a festive and celebratory experience of the people, very
peaceful, until the very end when …….”
Referring to the press coverage the next day (April 29) that highlighted
only the violent conduct of the protesters, Akbar believed that the
violence was a deliberate police provocation, based on his experience as
a journalist and politician. He said:
“One of the oldest trick is to provoke the victim, in order to blame the
victim. I do believe that, after observing the rally for five to six
hours, the provocation was perhaps done in order to create images that
will play well in the official media”.
While political propaganda has undoubtedly been a major motivation of
the instigated violence, another sinister agenda is the unleashing of
cruelty as a deterrent against future rallies. This is evident from the
unnecessary and indiscriminate firing of tear gas and acid-laced water
cannons on the dispersing crowd, and the wanton beating and arrest of
individuals – all occurring far from the prohibited zone of Dataran
Merdeka (Independence Square).
The Malaysian Bar, which has placed 80 lawyers in the rally as
observers, has charged that “police had acted not to disperse, but is
instead designed to attack the crowd, as they have witnessed numerous
acts of police brutality”.
However, despite suffering media vilifications and physical pains at the
hands of the callous and corrupt ruling power, the masses that gathered
on that historical day have emerged triumphant and jubilant in the
knowledge that people power has grown and matured.
This rally has broken many records:
> The biggest gathering of people with the courage to stand up for a just cause.
> The highest proportion of youth spearheading a patriotic movement.
> The best proportionate mix of races that reflect the demography of the nation.
> The greatest display of camaraderie and solidarity among the participating masses.
> The greatest expression of joy, optimism and love for the country.
The people have spoken loud and clear: we want nothing less than clean
and fair election and we want democracy to be restored. And in the days
ahead, this clarion call will reverberate to reach every remote corner
of the country.
Let there be no doubt: the people have finally woken.
And let Barisan Nasional be warned: you will be ignoring the people’s call at your peril.
Kim Quek is the author of banned book The March to Putrajaya
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