Showing posts with label citizen's rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label citizen's rights. Show all posts

Monday, July 4, 2011

BERSIH 2.0: Let Reason Prevail... by Pahlawan Volunteers

BERSIH 2.0: Let Reason Prevail

Malaysians will support BERSIH 2.0 whether one or 1 million people walk on the street on July 9 2011. And if things don’t improve, there will be BERSIH 3.0, 4.0, 5.0 until the cause is successful.  World history has shown governments the wisdom to uphold the will of the people, and the law of nature dictates that energy cannot remained pent up; they must be channeled productively to bring positive outcomes.
By Pahlawan Volunteers
Those present at the 1997 Hong Kong hand-back ceremony to China  would have developed great admiration for the Police force of the Special Economic Region.
At that time there was a lot of concern on a potential noisy demonstration staged by the pro-democracy groups  outside the convention hall where the historic hand-back ceremony attended by the world’s dignitary and 6000 journalists was held. Many thought that Beijing would do all it can to block the demonstration; but the territory’s police did Hong Kong proud by managing the demonstrations orderly; the democrats had their say; the hand-back ceremony went smoothly;  both events happening side by side, watched by the people of Hongkong and the world. A really big step for living democracy in HongKong’s nascent democratic system which only started elections in the recent past.
5 years later, on 24 September 2002 the Hong Kong government released its proposals for the anti-subversion law, known as Section 23.  The proposal became the cause of considerable controversy and division in Hong Kong.
On July 1 2003, some 500,000 people took to the streets in anger  — the largest mass demonstration on Chinese soil since the 1989 Tiananmen Square protest. Critics had argued that Article 23, the controversial anti-subversion legislation, violated the civil liberties guaranteed in Hong Kong’s Basic Law. But the demonstrators railed against more than Article 23: pent-up anger over the wobbly local economy and the government’s handling of the SARS crisis prompted a huge outpouring of anger, much of it directed at Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa. In the aftermath of the public protest, two cabinet members resigned, and the government ultimately retreated from the proposed law.
Pressure vaults
Peaceful demonstrations are necessary and are guaranteed by the constitution; even if only one single person who does not agree with the system, he or she must be allowed to express his feelings on the street. No matter how many people want to walk on the street, peaceful demonstrations are an expression of democracy, and all democratic governments must have the capabilities to manage them. To keep order in public demonstrations; the responsibility lies with the police force and it is a test of their management skills. The police cannot ban public demonstrations because of its imagined fear of chaos and inconvenience to the public.
Development is not about hardware or physical infrastructure alone. We can have state of the art technology and tall towers, we must also show that the system respects each and every single individual among us; and that we have the capability to sort out differences among ourselves. Those with contrarian views, or opposing positions  from the power of the day must be given fair and free expression. Democracy functions with a free market; the marketplace of ideas should be unrestrained and the people be allowed to choose.

Bersihkan Malaysia

Many of us were not aware of Bersih 1.0.  The Pahlawan brothers and sisters who come together to rally around a national cause are non-partisan. We only come to notice Bersih in the recent months and are attracted by their 8-point rational appeal.
Bersih has won our hearts because the movement is agitating to build a better electoral system that will enable Malaysia to elect better leaders; and better leaders are exactly what the doctor would prescribed for Malaysia’s current woes.
As Bersih moves into 2.0, Malaysia too must move from its old operating system mindset into a Malaysia 2.0 mindset and framework. For example we have a state of the art Mykad being used for national registration; but we still need each eligible voter to go register before they can vote. This is totally unnecessary and ought to be reformed yesterday; anyone holding the Mykad attaining the legal voting age must be permitted to vote with the Mykad, no separate voter registration required — saving national resources, man power and no paper forms needed; therefore less waste and save more trees!
So if the Election Commission has not got around to doing this, now they can pay attention to a much neglected reform. This is what BERISH 2.0 is all about.
Bersih 2.0’ s very reasonable demands are:
1. A clean electoral roll
2. Reform the postal ballot,
3. Use of indelible ink to reduce voter fraud
4. A minimum 21-Day campaign period
5. Free and fair access to media,
6. The strengthening of public institutions to act independently and impartially in upholding the rule of law and democracy
7. The end of corruption by acting against all allegations of corruption including vote buying
8. And end to dirty politics.
All these 8 demands are good for the entire country and good for all political parties because a clean and fair system will enable the best people be elected to run the country.
In today’s competitive world, the success of each and every citizen depends on the efficiency of the political and economic system one operates in; and our well being and success is directly related to how smart and efficient our public administration and its leadership. Why are so many Malaysians voting with their feet; the answer is obvious. They have no confidence in the current system in delivering success to their career, business and family.
If our government does not wake up to the demands of the times, the country will become sidelined and our people will no longer be able to compete. We cannot talk about any national vision if we don’t fix our governance system first.
8 REASONS why peaceful demonstrations must be allowed:
1. Public demonstration is guaranteed by our constitution. It is a legal right of every Malaysian citizen. Every   individual or group must be allowed to take his or her cause onto the street.
2. Malaysia has a tradition or history of public demonstrations; UMNO and the Malay pressure groups successfully won their case by taking their cause to the street.
3. Peaceful and orderly demonstrations reflect on the maturity of the populace, and the competence of the police force. They add on to the attractiveness of the country to all, including its citizens, visitors, foreign investors and tourists included. Everyone will feel secure that Malaysians can sort out their differences in public and in an orderly manner, and that the police force is impartial and fair.
4. Bersih 2.0 is about improving the Malaysian electoral system, it is non-partisan. It is working for the interest of One Malaysia. Bersih 2.0 has a just cause.
5. It is a test of the police’s public order management abilities; the police and government must not made groundless accusations and propagate imaginary threat and fear. Our police must demonstrate that they can handle public expressions of the people and that they can manage peaceful and orderly public demonstrations with rational argument for our cause. Misplaced emotions do not help our national cause.
6. The government should not worried about the public being misled by public demonstrations staged by whichever groups; in open societies, the public  will and can make out whether they can identify with the cause, and competition is the best guarantee for fair play. Today Bersih 2.0 is gaining support not because of the personality of its leadership; but because of its cause.
7. The government of the day would win votes by acting responsibly and in a liberal manner. In this age of transparency enabled by the Internet and social networking media; “spins” would only bring negative backlash; the only way to win hearts is to be open and transparent and compete on merits.
8. Malaysia need Bersih. This is an important message to be sent to all Malaysians, political parties and leaders; the wellbeing and development prospects of Malaysian society rests on the foundation of a Clean society and fair political system.
On July 2nd 2011, the BN government has declared Bersih as an illegal organization. Yes,  Bersih does not fit the conventional legal framework of  social institutions; it is a convergence of NGO groups; it is the coming together of many registered groups who share the same agenda and love for the country. Bersih 2.0 is an expression of the internet age’s  free association of NGO groups working on different causes being united by one common agenda. Their cause is just and legitimate.  They therefore should be allowed to take the people’s cause in  public. When the BN government allow the will of these groups to prevail, it will only help them win or win back more hearts!
Anyway, Malaysians will support BERSIH 2.0 whether one or 1 million people walk on the street on July 9 2011. And if things don’t improve, there will be BERSIH 3.0, 4.0, 5.0 until the cause is successful.  World history has shown governments the wisdom to uphold the will of the people, and the law of nature dictates that energy cannot remained pent up; they must be channeled productively to bring positive outcomes.
From now on, July 9 will be Hari BERSIH because Malaysia needs to be cleaned up badly. Our success and our family’s well-being can only be guaranteed in a Clean Malaysia.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

We have to speak up.... by P. Ramakrishnan, President of Aliran

We have to speak up

by P. Ramakrishnan
President of Aliran
12th January 2011

JAN 12 — We have every reason to be concerned. We wonder where this nation is heading for and what is in store for us.

From the civil servant to the Umno politician, it is the same story: The non-Malays are “pendatang” (immigrants) and don’t have any citizenship rights. The rights conferred by Article 8 of the Federal Constitution are not respected or protected.

When an extreme group like Perkasa questions the citizenship rights of the non-Malays, the national leadership does not take them to task.

When extreme elements in Umno berate and denigrate the non-Malays, the top Umno leadership does not chastise them.

When one Umno delegate at the recently concluded general assembly had the temerity to suggest that the non-Malays be given the right to do business but should be denied the right to vote, nobody pointed out that it was against the constitution and that he should not be talking through his nose!

It is this disturbing silence when atrocious things are said which affect our unity that is worrying. It is this unbecoming conduct that encourages the extreme elements amongst us to be outrageous in their conduct and prompt them to continue with their seditious remarks.

It is this vocal minority that is predominant in our society and influences the trend of policy. Our political leaders dare not condemn them outright.

Utusan Malaysia fans the race-baiting and gives the widest publicity without bothering to be responsible or sensible. When the powers-that-be that own and control this press do not force it to fall in line, what do we make of this?

A nation can make or break depending on the unity of its citizens. Today our unity is threatened. And if concerned voices and responsible leaders and caring Malaysians do not rise up and speak up, we will be a fragmented nation.

By our silence, we will contribute to the chaos that may ensue.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Malaysiakini: Outrage: Beaten and robbed by cops over expired road tax... by S Pathmawathy

Beaten and robbed by cops over expired road tax
S Pathmawathy
Dec 24, 2010
7:08pm

For being frank with the police, 34-year-old Chia Buang Hing was detained for five days and beaten up until he vomited blood.

The businessman, who is frame-maker, narrated the "horrific" incident today, saying that the police bashed him up, threatened and robbed him of RM13,000 in cash he was carrying - all for the expired road tax of his wife's car that he was driving.

NONEChia's (left) nightmare began about 11pm on Dec 18, as he was driving from his house in Tropicana to Kota Damansara, where traffic police had set up roadblocks.

Having spotted the expired road tax, one of the police officers asked for his driver's licence and identification card.

It was then, he said, that the officer spotted stacks of RM50 notes, totalling RM7,000, sticking out of his pocket and demanded that he hand them over.

Chia said he refused and insisted he be issued with a summons but as the officer kept asking for the money, Chia warned that he would lodge a report. Then the assaults began.

"I tried to take his picture with my mobile phone, but I was repeatedly punched by him and two other officers.

"One of them then handcuffed me and I screamed for help (but) I was shoved inside a police car and beaten again," he said, adding that there were several witnesses to this, including a security guard and a friend of his who was in another car.

Chia said he was carrying a total of RM18,000 that he had collected from his three frame-making shops that night, with RM10,000 in his pockets and RM8,000 in the car.

'My money was thrown into the toilet'

The father of two said he was then taken to the police station in Kota Damansara and again assaulted.

NONE"I was outside a toilet at the station and seven officers kicked and stepped on me until I vomited blood and sustained injuries on my face.

"Then, one police officer took the RM7,000 from my front pocket and RM3,000 from my back pocket and they threw it on the floor."

"He (the officer) became angry when I demanded the money be returned and he threw the remainder he was holding into the toilet and hit me again."

Chia said the police then ordered him to write a report that his sustained the injuries in a traffic accident and when he refused, they threatened to plant a blood-stained machete and drugs in his car and get him locked up for a long time.

At about 3am the following morning, he said, he was threatened by an officer that drugs would be injected into his bloodstream. He was later assaulted again, by as many as five officers, at the police station and at another place he could not identify.

One thing he managed to do, Chia said, was to leave his bloodied fingerprints in many parts of the police station that he had been dragged to.

"Only when they saw that I was barely surviving - as I had vomited blood and white foams were trickling out of my mouth - they took me to the hospital. By the time we got there, it was already 7 in the morning.

Magistrate ignored his complaints


Chia was taken to the Sungai Buloh Hospital and after that to the Petaling Jaya magistrate's court, about 10am, for a remand order against him.

He said he informed the magistrate of his ordeal but he was ignored. The magistrate ordered Chia to be remanded by police until Dec 22 on suspicion of possession of drugs and weapons.

During that period, he said, he was taken to a officer at narcotics department in the Petaling Jaya district police headquarters.

NONE"He told me there was no case against me and called up the men who had abused me. He advised me to lodge a report and allowed me to contact my family," Chia added.

He said that he was then released on police bail and RM5,000 was returned to him.

Segambut DAP MP Lim Lip Eng (left) assisted Chia in lodging his report at the Mutiara Damansara police station yesterday.

Lim said the investigating officer accompanied them to the Kota Damansara police station where most of the Chia's bloodstains been removed, but there were some under a table, behind a mirror and under a cupboard, which were photographed by police.

'Nobody is above the law'


Malaysiakini was later informed that the Selangor police contingent headquarters has officially taken over the matter.

A task force has been set up to investigate the complaint in detail. There will be no cover-up in the investigation, police said in a text message.

"Nobody is above the law. If there is evidence, the persons responsible will be charged in court," added the contingent's officer in-charge of criminal investigations, Mohd Adnan Abdullah.

------------ooooo00000ooooo---------------

Who is to 'police' the police?
Dec 26, 10 8:04am

your say'Jensen (Chia, as I know him by), is the most likeable and generous person that you can meet anywhere. He definitely does not deserve this.'

Beaten and robbed by cops over expired road tax

Habib RAK: The myth that only a few black sheep are in PDRM (royal police force) is now busted. This blatant and wanton abuse of authority by not one or two police personnel but by more than 10 officers at different time and location indicates that brutality is widespread within the force.

Such abuse can only happen when we have highly incompetent police personnel whose only capability is to act and do work in thuggish and mafia fashion. If the police were professionals, they would have easily established the victim's background and credibility in no time.

Instead, they assaulted him and stole his money. This incident adds to the long list of blatant abuses by the police which once again demands for the implementation of IPCMC (Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission).

Anonymous: Jensen (Chia, as I know him by), is the most likeable and generous person that you can meet anywhere. I have my pictures framed by him in TTDI (Taman Tun Dr Ismail). He contributes every month to the poor. He definitely does not deserve this.

To know that this atrocious crime has been committed against him by none other than the very people who should be protecting society is sad and frightening. What should we do? Use your vote wisely to change this government that has no moral authority to make the necessary changes to the police force.

CarL: What's the big fuss? How do we know that this man is telling the truth. For what we know he might be a criminal. It is very common for any crime suspect to hallucinate following long hours of verbal grilling by the police.

No criminals would admit their wrongdoings and it is very common for them to blame others instead. The police were just doing their job. Imagine if there is no police force in the country, the criminals would have a field day.

Rolls-Royce: Someday I wish CarL or his love ones would suffer the same fate as this victim (and I am doing this on Christmas day. May God forgive me for my indiscretion).

It is simple; an abusive police force, a police force that is ill-disciplined, greedy, corrupt, and has no respect for human rights and human dignity will eventually have no respect for your political affiliation, race and religion.

Those who complained here I believed have not done so out of political reasons alone. We must always ask who is in charge of police force today. Who has the authority to discipline the police force today? The complaint is directed toward the authority in charge.
If Pakatan Rakyat is in control of the federal government and in charge of the police force today, I believe the people will go the street to demand that the minister concerned and the IGP resign immediately. They will demand that the police officers involved be investigated immediately.

Cala: Who is to 'police' the police? What is the lesson learned from Chia Buang Hing's ordeal in the hands of thug-like police (from Kota Damansara police station)?

Let me cover two issues. First, while no complete solution is in sight, we should act to prevent the police from getting oversized. To do that, do consider splitting them up according to states. Second, following from (i), make state police chief answerable to the chief minister of the state. Ultimately, this new system ensures that the police are accountable to the people.

In conclusion, Chia's ordeal is yet another reminder of the brutality of the enforcement agencies. In this case, Chia is lucky to have survived the beatings. Say 'no' to police gangsterism. Please, no more another TBH (Teoh Beng Hock), sir. One is too many.

Neders: I try not to consider this case to be a racial or political one. However, at the back of my mind, I am inclined to believe it is somehow connected with this 'ketuanan' crap. This warped social engineering perpetrated by TDM (Dr Mahathir Mohamad) has implanted into the Malay pysche that they are indeed a supremacist race in this country and that non-Malays must be shown their place.

Ibrahim Ali of Perkasa will go along with this I am sure. Chia was beaten to a pulp at four locations, one of which was at a public car park. Didn't the police officer involved fear that they may be severely punished for this crime of assault and robbery? No, simply because they believe they have the tacit protection of the Umno regime.

I ask myself: am I paranoid? I don't think so. I look around me and racism is as thick as pea soup and the way the PDRM behave these days leads me to believe that the present regime is their political master. How sad and frightening at the same time.

Pain Killer: If indeed a thorough investigating has been set up, then all those police officers involved should be suspended. The police force must be seen that they do not condone the act, and that they will come down hard on the transgressors. The forensic team should be able to identify whose bloodstains were found at the alleged crime scene.

But why is it that my intuition is telling me that the spin doctors will make this case slip away into oblivion and forgotten?

Not Confused: This is the most disgusting incident that I have read since arriving here eight years ago. Words fail me as to how this country could have sunk so low.

Pakatan must take control of Putrajaya and put a stop to this unbridled abuse of power by the PDRM (and others). The entire force should be fired and rehired only after thorough vetting to ensure their integrity. The IGP (police chief) should resign immediately. Such incidents call for dramatic and uncompromising action.

Zimbobwe: IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC.... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC... IPCMC...

Pietiring: Where do we go from here? I've been suppressing myself in saying that very few cops are bad, while the majority are good cops. But how do I reason out after going through Chia's horrific experience with the law enforcers. Do I have to wait until I get the other side of the story from the official source?

Hardly a few days ago, news were screaming with the horrific accident in which 27 people, mostly Thai tourists, were killed when the local bus in which they were traveling overturned. I simply cannot fathom why tourists are coming here to die along with thousands of Malaysians who have been killed yearly on our highways-turned-graveyards.

Victor Johan: There should be an official statement from the home minister. Should his statement be a non-commital one, and/or an inappropriate recourse be taken by him, the victim should press charges and the court hearing must be conducted on an urgent basis.

Citizen: This is terrible. Things are getting out of hand as far as the police is concerned. It is time that the 27 million Malaysians go on a protest march against the police and the government for crimes against the citizens of Malaysia. I call upon every political party to rise and act. Let all NGOs rise against the barbaric actions of the police.

Simon Lee: We are living in a false sense of security. This is a lawless county. When the very institution (the judiciary, the MACC, the AG or the police) that has sworn in the name of Allah to protect the rakyat and ensure peace in our nation, are the main perpetrators of crime against the innocent rakyat, and when the innocent rakyat are treated with such injustice: brutality, torture and abuse, we cannot imagine how real criminals: juvenile and petty criminals are being treated by such institutions. This may explain the countless death in the police lockup.

MySecret: I'm surprise they didn't find any 'parang' in his car and that he did not attempt to commit suicide out of shame for not having a valid road tax.

Ravindran Supiiah: All I can say is to wish the PDRM Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. What a shame to our nation.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Civil Society Joint Statement on Malaysia Day 2010



Malaysia – A Promise of Fraternity through Freedom
When the peoples of Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore came together in 1963, Malaysia was a promise of freedom and fraternity, that all the children of this land would love and support each other to develop and progress.

A Promise of Fraternity through Freedom
Malaysia was a promise of fraternity. For none of Malaysia’s children were meant to be asked to leave their country for some foreign land. And no one was meant to be insulted and marginalised because of his or her ethnicity, faith, birthplace, lifestyle or any other group attributes.

Malaysia was a promise of freedom. Like every other nation on Earth, we would inevitably have differences on how the country was to be run and how resources and opportunities shared. We were meant to listen and understand each other, and seek solutions acceptable to all. We were not meant to silence each other by resorting to threats of riot or imprisonment.

Malaysia cannot be an independent nation if Malaysians are not free.

Malaysia was indeed such a promise, not only of fraternity and freedom, but specifically of fraternity through freedom. We were not meant to be a fraternity of slaves, living in peace merely out of fear of draconian laws or ethnic riots. Neither were we meant to exercise our freedom irresponsibly and heartlessly to cause or ignore misery of our brothers and sisters.

We were meant to use our freedom – uncompromised by our diversity – to chart a common future and a better tomorrow for all. It’s the desire for freedom and the confidence that we can collectively use freedom wisely that confirm our independence from colonisation. And that’s why Malaysia as a whole is – or should be – greater than the sum of Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak.

What has gone wrong?
What has happened to this great promise of fraternity and freedom? Where are our civil and political liberties after 47 years of independence? How is our social harmony after 47 years of co-existence?

We have educationists openly calling for ethnic minorities to leave the country. We have politicians demonising gestures of good wills between different religious communities. We have self-appointed communal heroes mongering fear and hatred, lodging police reports against opinions disapproved by them. Subsequently, we have vulgar expressions of counter-attacks.

Every society has fringe individuals and groups going all out to offend others. The only way to stop them is to expose their slurs shunned by the mainstream opinion, the very people they claim to champion, not by imprisoning them and making them martyrs. However, for common sense to prevail, we need freedom of expression and freedom of information.

By no accident at all, the perceived escalation of communal tensions happens concurrently with selective crackdown on mainstream and alternative media. Critical journalists – from television, radio and print media – are either removed or marginalised. Books and cartoons are banned while bloggers are harassed and intimidated.

Rational discussion and legitimate dissent are simply muted while certain media organisations are allowed the maximum freedom to spread bigotry and ill-will. These media operators want to terrify us Malaysians into denouncing freedom – what the Independence is really about – by manipulating our love for peace. They want us to cling on to authoritarianism. They even openly call for ISA arrests to silence dissent.

Why are the bigoted politicians and their media collaborators so bold in challenging the common sense of Malaysians? They call us the silent majority. Do they know silence can be powerful, too? When the silent majority act together, then silence can be more deafening than any noise.

Let us reclaim our Independence
This Malaysia Day, let us all work to reclaim our country, not only for ourselves, but also for the future generations to come.  It has to begin with ourselves, not anybody else.

As the Native American wisdom aptly puts it, “We do not inherit this land from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children.”

Let us guard this land from the fire of hatred, ignorance and fear, and return it intact to our descendants.

Let us take some time to reflect in silence on the part we have played in letting this country stoop so low, either by commission or omission.

Let us reach out to other Malaysians, out of love, not out of fear or tolerance.

Let us listen to each other and seek understanding even if we disagree.

Let us reaffirm our Independence and defeat any attempt of mental colonisation.

Let us live the promise of fraternity through freedom that Malaysia was born for 47 years ago.


The endorsing civil society groups:
  1. Aliran Kesedaran Negara (ALIRAN)
  2. Borneo Research Institute Sarawak (BRIMAS)
  3. Child Development Initiative
  4. Civil Rights Committee, Kuala Lumpur and Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall (CRC-KLSCAH)
  5. Community Development Centre (CDC)
  6. Council of Temples Malaysia
  7. Educational, Welfare and Research Foundation Malaysia
  8. Federation of Indian Non-Governmental Organisations
  9. Friends in Conversation (FIC)
  10. Frinjan Collective
  11. Group of Concerned Citizens (GCC)
  12. Hartal MSM
  13. Indian Malaysian Active Generation (IMAGE)
  14. Institute for Development of Alternative Living (IDEAL)
  15. Islamic Renaissance  Front (IRF)
  16. Jaringan Orang Asal Semalaysia -JOAS (indigenous peoples network of Malaysia)
  17. Jaringan Rakyat Tertindas (JERIT)
  18. Klang Consumer Association
  19. Kuala Lumpur And Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall Youth Section
  20. LLG Cultural Development Centre
  21. Majlis Kelab Bell Belia Tamil Malaysia
  22. Malacca Chinese Assembly Hall Youth Section
  23. Malaysian Association of Indian University Graduates
  24. Malaysian Dravidian Association
  25. Malaysian Hindu Youth Council
  26. Malaysian Indian Development & Unity Association
  27. Malaysian Indian Historical Association
  28. Malaysian Tamil Forum
  29. Malaysians for Beng Hock
  30. Muslim Professionals Forum (MPF)
  31. Negeri Sembilan Chinese Assembly Hall Youth Section
  32. Oriental Hearts & Mind Study Institute (OHMSI)
  33. Pahlawan Volunteers
  34. PeBT MPSJ Zon 23
  35. PERMAS (Persatuan Masyarakat Selangor Dan Wilayah Persekutuan)
  36. Persahabatan Semparuthi
  37. Persatuan Alumni PBTUSM Selangor & Kuala Lumpur
  38. Persatuan Kebangsaan Hak Asasi Manusia (HAKAM)
  39. Persatuan Komuniti Prihatin Kuala Lumpur,Selangor & Perak (PRIHATIN)
  40. Persatuan Penduduk Taman Muhibbah
  41. PT Foundation
  42. PUSAT KOMAS
  43. Research for Social Advancement (REFSA)
  44. Sarawak Dayak Iban Association (SADIA)
  45. Sarawak Native Land Rights Owners (TAHABAS)
  46. Sarawakians Access (SACCESS)
  47. Saya Anak Bangsa Malaysia (SABM)
  48. Tamil Foundation
  49. The Micah Mandate (TMM)
  50. The Penang Independent Schools Education Society
  51. Women Institute for Research Development and Advancement (WIRDA)
  52. Writer Alliance for Media Independence (WAMI)
  53. Youth for Change (Y4C)
The endorsing party organisation:
  1. Wanita Parti Keadilan Rakyat

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Malaysia must Change for the Better, no Ifs, no Buts...

Malaysiakini published a version of this as an opinion piece on 25.09.08

Raja Petra sent to Kamunting
The government's continued disregard and disdain for the Malaysian public boggles the mind.

It also shows its precipitous descent into a beleaguered mindset of a morally-emaciated misdirected authority, seemingly grasping at whichever convenient straws to prop up its crumbling foundations...

Instead of listening to and reflecting on the wishes and aspirations of an increasingly vocal rakyat, it continues to wallow in a fossilised mentality that 'might is right', as long as it continues to believe and hold on to the majoritarian trump card.

Sadly, but perhaps hopefully this might just change in the next few days or weeks—many Malaysians are praying and hoping for change for the better.

The current leadership appears to subscribe to the view that it alone holds all the puissance and licence for arbitrary diktats of obsolete inequitable laws, hollow-sounding rhetoric and cheap propaganda.

Somehow it seems to have become shell-shocked into an impervious barricade of seeing no evil, hearing no evil but speaking and acting with callous and vilest evil—hitting back with whatever they've got the power to lash out! It appears to be clinging on to whatever little power it has left—which is dwindling day by day; worse it appears to be losing relevance, in the eyes of an earnest rakyat. (See BN dynasty crumbling, says Bukit Bendera MP)

Shockingly, even our past PM Tun Dr Mahathir has decried the current administration as inept. He said that the government now commands much less support than it did after the recent general election, but rather than share the public's urgency for change, the present office-holders had "redoubled efforts to frustrate renewal, cut off reform, and silence criticism".

It has inflexibly steeled itself from having to shift gears in a much changed Malaysian political reality since March 8, 2008, that ensconced racial and ethnic divisions which had previously been battened down, are passé.

By steadfastly holding on to the concept of and playing up the divisive if dumbed-down special unequal sectarian rights, the current leadership appears to be foundering on a dessicated landscape of enlightened global visions and aspirations for greater inclusivity and equality—that the quest for basic human rights cannot stop at narrowly-defined sectarian exclusivity or political expediencies.

The now much maligned Ketuanan Melayu catchphrase, with its expectant master-follower relationship appears to have lost its jingoistic power to inflame fear and privation for an increasingly sophisticated rakyat, at least for a sizeable number.

It is true that many Malays and bumiputras continue to fear that once this interpretation of exceptional right is taken away from them, they might not be favoured anymore and would be sidelined, even marginalised in their so-called 'own homeland'. This is a very real and rightful concern, and all Malaysians must be mindful that this does not and should never happen.

But I think every thinking Malaysian understands this perspective which has been ingrained into the psyche for so long, that this has become an immovable crutch reinforcing a diffident yet hand-out frame of mind.

We must all work together to ensure that fairness—even if with initial overweening affirmation to reassure our Malay and bumiputra brethren be justly extended—based on social need rather than simply birthright, be the paradigm of the new Malaysian model, with eradication of all leakages and wastages from corrupt and other venal interests.

I strongly believe our economic pie is big enough for all. I believe our collective potential is even greater when we can all work together without unspoken but seething suspicion, envy or disgruntlement.


There's really no necessity for fear of being excluded of fair opportunities for any Malaysian, as I fervently believe that every Malaysian will always have a soft spot for the poor, the marginalised and the truly deprived. 50 years of living together in relative peace and harmony would and should ensure that common sense and goodwill will prevail.

I believe we are more magnanimous and generous than we have been given credit for. A socially-engineered liberalism with an ethnically-blind and equitable social contract, will ensure that untrammelled market forces not be allowed to override the sensitivities and needs of those truly in need.

That every Malaysian will be accorded every fundamental right to a decent home, wages, access to basic amenities and health care, basic rights and freedom to associate, to think, to speak, to write and to believe.

That quality and merit must supersede all pretensions of enforced arbitrary allocations, to education, business, housing, employment, even social welfare, which can only make our nation and economy, our productivity and yes, especially our Malaysian nationalistic fervour stronger and more meaningful. That we can all shout out loudly and passionately with one unison voice that we are Bangsa Malaysia!

In a globalised world, this can only add on to our previously unimagined strength, rather than serve as a deadweight anchor dragging us slowly but inexorably into inefficiency, corruption, nepotism, dependency and poorer than can be achieved productivity...

In the past few years, this has become more evident with our sharply declining economic growth as the chasing developing world continues to progress in spite of us and our fantastic head-start.

We're now beginning to showcase our wasted, weighted-down, demoralised human capital achievement, which has now become even more tangible with the rise and rise of resurgent dynamic economies of China, India, Vietnam, Thailand and even Indonesia! With the current financial meltdown and banking debacle, we have to be even more resilient, otherwise we can expect worse to come... (See Bursa plunges nearly 4%, recovery in afternoon)

Ketuanan Rakyat must now be the new shibboleth for Malaysians now more confident of and attuned to fairplay and global competition.

We must continue to reinforce and burnish this quest for greater personal and national achievement, empowerment and excellence. We must learn to aspire to be world-beaters and not simply be content as jaguh kampung (village champions).

Malaysia Boleh
and must change for the better!

(photos from The Malaysian Insider, ISA graphic from malaysiakini)

Monday, July 7, 2008

Awakening the Political Genie in Us...

"Mankind's moral sense is not a strong beacon light, radiating outward to illuminate in sharp outline all that it touches. It is, rather, a small candle flame, casting vague and multiple shadows, flickering and sputtering in the strong winds of power and passion, greed and ideology. But brought close to the heart and cupped in one's hands, it dispels the darkness and warms the soul."~ James Q Wilson, in The Moral Sense, 1997, p251. Free Press Paperbacks, NY.
Ten years ago, I ventured into the unfamiliar arena of vocalising my usually submerged self-censored political thoughts and started to open up discussions and discourse on our then unsettling sociopolitical situation in Malaysia, among doctors.

While many physicians felt that this was a refreshing and sensible engagement, others felt otherwise. It was not met with universal acceptance and I was accused to politicising the medical profession's news magazine.

But I argued then and as I do now, that we simply cannot absolve ourselves from things political just because we wish to remain apolitical and neutral. Many felt then as I am sure some continue to feel now, that we should not ruffle whatever goodwill and rapport we might have had with the incumbent authorities that be... Perhaps we should let these "alien" and sensitive subjects alone, for another more appropriate forum than our finely cloistered 'health' niche.

But I just couldn't remain silent, nor could I remove myself from that heartfelt disquietude that gross injustice and blatant abuses are threatening to tyrannise a pliant citizenry. See Malaysiakini's. Not because I am a foolhardy adventurist or opportunist, but because I just couldn't stomach much more of what has become of our nation and its leadership. Over the past ten years, we have deteriorated further, and today we are at its nadir of directionless shame. See Malaysiakini's Malaysia's Culture of Shamelessness.

More specifically, I have become more thoroughly disenchanted with the scale of our sociopolitical disintegration. Blatant power play seems to have superseded all our more human and humane spheres of life. As a thinking person and a patriot who loves Malaysia for its huge potential and its multi-ethnic uniqueness, I just cannot look away.

I have always believed in more open dialogue and debate, transparency and accountability. I believe in the ultimate power of the people. I believe that constructive criticisms by an increasingly vocal and more engaged rakyat are legitimate exercises of need and concern.

We should also listen to and respect opposing or minority viewpoints because these are counterpoints to help temper the exuberance of majoritarian excesses and abuse. True democracies look after every citizen including the rights and interests of minorities, and are not instruments of rough-shot power-plays of the triumphant victors...

However, the past 2 weeks have seen an unprecedented barrage of senseless politicking, accusations and counter-accusations which can only be described as tawdry and tasteless. Such an excessive bombardment of the blogosphere with endless streams of vehemently partisan invectives cannot but put a damper on our Malaysian sociopolitical scene.

Even the MSM has been drawn into this cynical game of one-upmanship, each trying to paint a different slant on what can only be extremely damaging to our nation's reputation. That is not to say anything about our current crop of leaders--is there any left, who is untainted and capable of getting us out of this quagmire?

How ironic that we've been talking about national branding! Clearly, we are now not the best example of of how to showcase, much less to brand our nation!

There appears to be an extremely high-stakes game being played out in full public view. This is not simply one of political survival, but perhaps even of surviving legal recriminations.

Perhaps, as I have earlier stated (Should We Tame the Political Genie in Us?), the ugly truth of the matter may sound jarringly disquieting and unpalatable, especially when it seems to undermine the cozy status quo that we have become so inured with.

Disturbingly, we are becoming more and more myopic and fraternal, preferring immediate and short-term gains, but appearing not to be interested in the larger picture or the longer-term consequences. In the aftermath of these ugly public spats, the nation's interests have been dragged through the mud and beyond...

Wasn’t it Confucius who exhorted millennia ago, that “to see what is right, and not to do it, is want of courage, or of principle”? Is it not time to act?

We all have a right to our own political belief and/or attachment to certain personalities/leaders. But I dare say we all have to learn to be able to see beyond the horizon of simplistic yet parochial niceties and our all-consuming self- or partisan- interests. We must be able to initiate or push for change for the better, whenever there is some other greater and more paramount “truth” out there.

Why should any man be satisfied with the oppressive weight of “more of the same”, no matter how fantastically well our society has been perceived as stably humming along? Is the fear of the unknown so terrifying that we dare not venture out of our shell?

I believe we are emerging in fits and starts, from our too-long pupated phase. But our newfound freedom to express ourselves without any constraints, are floundering on lies, innuendos and make-belief, which have yet to attain a maturity of enlightened nationhood...

Perhaps, all these are the teething problems of a fledgling democracy trying to temper the zeal of having one's say without a thought as to the possible consequences...

Perhaps, our growing distrust and disrespect for our embattled institutions such as the police, the judiciary, and especially our politicians are so warped and so overwhelming that we no longer have any moral anchor to to brace ourselves with... See Bring law and order back to the judiciary.

Nevertheless, many Malaysians are now asking more pertinent and bolder questions as to our nationhood, half a century on, and wish to articulate their input as to the rakyat's role. See Malik Imtiaz's Rule by Law.

We no longer are prepared to accept the known status quo as cast in concrete where no change or improvement can be allowed to take place. We are no longer content to allow ourselves to be set in the fossilized past for ever more.

At long last Malaysians have learnt to look more closely at our society and are now daring to say that while material wealth and well-being are fine, other less tangible, less obvious executive transgressions are not, and that these have severely gotten out of hand. Karim Raslan's Power, Power, Power in Malaysia Today gives a balanced appraisal of the sad state of our political affairs of late...

The genie is out of the lamp, and it is wreaking unthinkable turmoil in our society’s sanity and sociopolitical well-being. We are no longer in closeted denial that everything thus far has been hunky-dory. We must rise up and take charge and work hard towards a better Malaysia.

We can no longer accept our chanting shibboleth of Malaysia Boleh which has threatened to blindside us, so that we have become impervious to any contrarian criticism, except for sycophantic praises.

We must climb up the rungs of our hierarchy of needs, which Abram Maslow have eschewed, and work for a greater good for all.

We must incorporate our much-vaunted Asian values, so that we can accept greater tolerance for individual freedom and fervently fight for human rights aspirations of each and every citizen.

We must not abdicate or vacate our conscience simply for political or personal expediency.

I do believe that ultimately some semblance of sanity and poetic justice will prevail, and that the growing destructive forces of Machiavellian sectarianism, unbridled power-plays and petty interests will be contained and returned into the genie’s bottle, for keeps.

That said, whatever happens, whichever victory would have been a Pyrrhic and hollow one. Our Greek-like tragedian dramas have yet to fully reach their final denouement.

Somehow, as helpless as we are, we still owe this to ourselves to want and to help make some good happen, and shape the outcome of our collective choice––one way or the other...

As concerned citizens, we must continue to speak out, so that the deafening silence can be broken, for the betterment of the society at large, sans political repercussions, sans public censure. We must escape our penchant for self-interest, and overcome that overpowering fearful, intimidated, cowering and insular mindset.

We can no longer simply stifle the political genie within us from escaping...

To quote Tagore, "Let My Country Awake"!

"Lead me from the unreal to the real!
Lead me from darkness to light!
Lead me from death to immortality!"
~ Brihadharanyaka, Upanishad 1.3.28

LET MY COUNTRY AWAKE


Where the mind is without fear
and the head is held high;

Where knowledge is free;

Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
by narrow domestic walls;
Where the words come out from the depth of truth;
Where tireless striving stretches its arms
towards perfection;

Where the clear stream of reason has not lost
its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit;
Where the mind is led forward by thee
into ever-widening thought and action --

Into that heaven of freedom, my Father,
let my country awake.

~ Rabindranath Tagore

A shortened version appears in malaysiakini as Revisiting the political genie in us...

(Part of this article is paraphrased from my previous MMA News editorial of 25 Nov 1999]