Is the Government about to crackdown down on PAS?
2002-02-16
There is no smoke without fire. And if you read the Malaysian
newspapers, especially the New Straits Times, you get the feeling
that a crackdown is imminent. The target appears to be PAS.
The New Straits Times yesterday (15 February 2002) devotes most
of page 2 to carry sundry reports of PAS perfidy: "PAS leaders
responsible for the disunity"; The Persatuan Ulama Malaysia
(PUM) is a PAS front and the government should, by implication,
have nothing to do with it; Muslim student body denies it is
'used' by PUM; Chief Minister likens PAS actions to communist
tactics; PAS cancels ceremah after meeting; the Government will
do anything that would put pressure on PAS. The ceremah in
Baling which turned violent and a police truck was torched is yet
another sign of PAS getting out of hand. Radio Television
Malaysia continues to dog PAS with its "trailer" advertisements
about the Memali affair and other examples of what they see as
opposition violence.
Does all this suggest the government is set to crackdown on
PAS or its leaders? In the past, whenever the police mounts a
political crackdown, the Prime Minister, Dato' Seri Mahathir
Mohamed, is conveniently out of the country, and it is the deputy
prime minister who is blamed for what happened. So it was in
Memali in 1985 when the then deputy prime minister, Tan Sri Musa
Hitam, bloodied his hands. The Baling incident had all the
hallmarks of an agent provacateur. When the police take an
administrative decision to deny a political party the right to a
ceremah, dragging its matter and deciding hours before it is due,
it throws all preparations out of gear. This is deliberate. It
is to raise the ante, and get those who come from long distances
angry and dissatisfied enough to take matters in their own hands.
Malaysian opposition political parties are horribly
restricted on how they can attract support. Their party organs
cannot be sold to the public, they are not allowed the right to
conduct ceremahs, they do not have the right of reply to
accusations against them in media, all government-controlled and
owned by one or the other of the National Front parties. (The
only one that is is Harakah, the PAS organ, and amongst the
rumours I hear is its banning. Its English section is still a
must-read for those who want to know a view other than the
official.) Worse, the buildup against the opposition is reduced
to a naive recitation of what allegedly happened. Those who
lived through the Memali affair in 1985 have a different view of
what happened: At that time, Ibrahim Libya and his band of 14
supporters in a commune in Memali, in Kedah, was killed in a
shootout. It was an excessive use of firepower, one in which the
then home minister got a black eye.
There is always two sides to a question. The government
view of Ibrahim Libya conflicts with what the people in the area
thought of him. As it is in every issue. But only view, the
government's, gets a public airing. The opposition is prevented
from petty restrictions from holding meetings to explain their
position. When you talk to the opposition party leaders, you
notice a well of discontent at this. In other words, the
government's petty restrictions raise the temperature, and it is
a matter of time when it breaks loose.
This move to restrict PAS is part of UMNO's move to be the
sole Islamic authority in Malaysia. PAS challenges its Islamic
worldview so consistently and UMNO responds to it half-heartedly
or not at all that the UMNO ulama is all but thrown. The
problem, which UMNO would not address, is that once the ulema is
given a power in the land, as UMNO tries to, they acquire a
persona of their own, and react in its own interest and not of
those who appoint them. It came as a shock to UMNO and the
government that the PUM targetted five writers for denigrating
Islam and them. If you read the statement carefully, you would
notice it was angrier that they were attacked. Now, the
government ulamas, usually turncoats from PAS, insist the PUM is
a PAS-controlled group.
PAS, unlike the other parties, is organised to build up its
support whatever the legal impediments, daring the authorities to
act. They get their way. The police stay out of their way.
And crowds gather by word-of-mouth. In contrast, if UMNO wants
to hold a large meeting, it must bus the audience in, often
bribing them with money. Now, UMNO decides to rein PAS in, with
arrests if necessary. This sudden attacks on PAS is a prelude to
a crackdown. The main issue to hang PAS with is its involvement
with terrorist groups. What annoys the government and UMNO is
the general belief that what it does is not to bring political
peace to a country but to ensure UMNO's hold on power, come hell
or highwater.
But can it pull this off? Methinks this government attempt
to blacken the opposition could backfire. The first-time voter,
about a million for the next general election, is alienated from
it. Especially the Malay. And he sees these gratuitous
television trailers of violence not in how the government views
it, but as an option he should consider. The youth look upon the
violence in the trailers as an option to get what they want;
since they have nothing to lose, they are prepared to challenge
every notion the government and UMNO holds dear. If that
includes taking on to the streets, they reckon then so be it.
The government may show the TV trailer on Memali, but the
young Malay see in how the crowds forced the Shah or Iran out of
office. No one talks to the young, they are dictated to, or seen
in controlled circumstances in which they are there to fete
whoever is speaking to them. If the government now wants to
crack down on PAS, it would create fear and mayhem in opposition
circles, especially if a few non-PAS leaders and a few pesky
critics join them. But since this is done not because the
perceived threat is not to the nation but to those in power, and
undertaken in near panic, it cannot sustain. Even if the
Malaysian police -- thank God it does not -- had a fiercer
reputation for violence than Zimbabwe's.
M.G.G. Pillai
pillai@mgg.pc.my
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This archive was created as a tribute to the late veteran
journalist MGG Pillai. We believed his writings are useful to develop a critical
thinking analysis.
By the way, the original mggpillai.com web site (2001-2006) was actually created
by one of us.
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