Thursday, November 22, 2007

Comments: Truth and justice are no longer Malaysian way

Posted by Michael Backman on November 22, 2007 at 06:04:13:

Truth and justice are no longer Malaysian way

The Age

THE Government of Australia will probably change hands this weekend. There will be no arrests, no tear gas and no water cannons. The Government of John Howard will leave office, the Opposition will form a government and everyone will accept the verdict.

For this, every Australian can feel justifiably proud. This playing by the rules is what has made Australia rich and a good place in which to invest. It is a country to which people want to migrate; not leave.

Now consider Malaysia. The weekend before last, up to 40,000 Malaysians took to the streets in Kuala Lumpur to protest peacefully against the judiciary's lack of independence, electoral fraud, corruption and a controlled media.

In response, they were threatened by the Prime Minister, called monkeys by his powerful son-in-law, and blasted with water cannons and tear gas. And yet the vast majority of Malaysians do not want a change of government. All they want is for their government to govern better.

Both Malaysia and Australia have a rule of law that's based on the English system. Both started out as colonies of Britain. So why is Malaysia getting it so wrong now?

Malaysia's Government hates feedback. Dissent is regarded as dangerous, rather than a product of diversity. And like the wicked witch so ugly that she can't stand mirrors, the Government of Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi controls the media so that it doesn't have to see its own reflection.

Demonstrations are typically banned. But what every Malaysian should know is that in Britain, Australia and other modern countries, when people wish to demonstrate, the police typically clear the way and make sure no one gets hurt. The streets belong to the people. And the police, like the politicians, are their servants. It is not the other way around.

But increasingly in Malaysia, Malaysians are being denied a voice — especially young people.

Section 15 of Malaysia's Universities and University Colleges Act states that no student shall be a member of or in any manner associate with any society, political party, trade union or any other organisation, body or group of people whatsoever, be it in or outside Malaysia, unless it is approved in advance and in writing by the vice-chancellor.
 
Nor can any student express or do anything that may be construed as expressing support, sympathy or opposition to any political party or union. Breaking this law can lead to a fine, a jail term or both.
 
The judiciary as a source of independent viewpoints has been squashed. The previous prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, did many good things for Malaysia, but his firing of the Lord President (chief justice) and two other Supreme Court judges in 1988 was an unmitigated disaster. Since then, what passes for a judiciary in Malaysia has been an utter disgrace and the Government knows it.
 
Several years ago, Daim Zainuddin, the country's then powerful finance minister, told me that judges in Malaysia were idiots. Of course we want them to be biased, he told me, but not that biased.
 
Rarely do government ministers need to telephone a judge and demand this or that verdict because the judges are so in tune with the Government's desires that they automatically do the Government's beckoning.
 
Just how appalling Malaysia's judiciary has become was made clear in recent weeks with the circulation of a video clip showing a senior lawyer assuring someone by telephone that he will lobby the Government to have him made Lord President of the Supreme Court because he had been loyal to the Government. That someone is believed to have been Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim, who did in fact become Lord President.
 
A protest march organised by the Malaysian Bar Council was staged in response to this, and corruption among the judiciary in general. But the mainstream Malaysian media barely covered the march even though up to 2000 Bar Council members were taking part. Reportedly, the Prime Minister's office instructed editors to play down the event.
 
Instead of a free media, independent judges and open public debate, Malaysians are given stunts — the world's tallest building and most recently, a Malaysian cosmonaut. Essentially, they are given the play things of modernity but not modernity itself.
 
Many senior Malays are absolutely despairing at the direction of their country today. But with the media tightly controlled they have no way of getting their views out to their fellow countrymen. This means that most Malaysians falsely assume that the Malay elite is unified when it comes to the country's direction.
 
Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, a former finance minister and today still a member of the Government, told me several weeks ago in Kuala Lumpur that he could see no reason why today Malaysia could not have a completely free media, a completely independent judiciary and that corrupt ministers and other officials should be publicly exposed and humiliated.
 
According to Tengku Razaleigh, all of the institutions designed to make Malaysia's Government accountable and honest have been dismantled or neutered.
 
It didn't need to be like this. Malaysia is not North Korea or Indonesia. It is something quite different. Its legal system is based on British codes. Coupled with traditional Malay culture, which is one of the world's most hospitable, decent and gentle cultures, Malaysia has the cultural and historical underpinnings to become one of Asia's most civilised, rules-based, successful societies.
 
Instead, Malaysia's Government is incrementally wasting Malaysia's inheritance.
 
 
COMMENTS:
 
The author has given a latest fair view about Malaysian government's stye of rule which lacks transparency and did not practise what it preaches. "Anti-corruption" as voiced by PM but did not go to the root of the problem, i.e, to restore the judiciary system as an independent body without government's interference. Eversince 1988, Malaysian judiciary system is in tune with government's indirect order or approval. Only when the legal system is credible and just, the people will follow the corrupted ways of living. It has a chain effect like corrupted judges, senior civil servants, police inspectors, immigration officers, road transport officers and so on.
 
 
The sayings is" Flow with the tide so that you will not get drowned." The tide is strong and how could a minority be able to beat aginst the strong current without getting drowned? As a matter of fact, the royal commission inquiry into the authenticity of video clip is just an excuse to delay the restoration of the judiciary system. Why govt is so slow to understand when the laymen have perceived it much earlier that an independant judiciary system is essential for just and fair governance? Look what former PM had done to his then DPM? The former PM did something to prosper the country but had deprived the strong root for the "tree" to grow strong and healthy for a long term. Now one see the effect of nutrients deprivation of the "tree". Oh poor corrupted tree.
 
 

 

1 comment:

MakLijah said...

Dear Michael,

Thank you for the post. You have put into words what many Malaysians feel.

It is a sad day when Ministers of the (claimed) democratic country seem NOT to know the meaning of democracy.

I am worried for Malaysia. I live in this country, it is my home. I'm malay.

The people of Malaysia are suppressed. We are not given the platform or freedom to criticise our government. We are asking for reform, transparency, justice and fairness. Things that many of us take for granted.

I am at a loss of how to handle this. I don't want to be arrested, beaten, tear gassed, water cannoned or ISA-ed.

I don't know who to ask for help.
It is very depressing when I get comments on my blog stating support for a 'state controlled' media, support for the wrong doings of the government. They have spun it so well that there are some who believe it (because they do not know better).

God help us.