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WSWS : News
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: Malaysia
Long-running trial of Malaysian human rights activist
By Carol Divjak
15 July 1999
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The ongoing trial of Malaysian human rights activist Irene
Fernandez is another crude attempt by the government of Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad to silence its critics. The crime
of Fernandez and her organisation Tenaganita was to publish a
report into conditions of migrant detainees in government camps.
Rather than investigate the allegations of abuse and torture,
the government responded by interrogating Fernandez and charging
her with maliciously publishing false news.
The Tenaganita report, based on interviews with over 300 migrant
workers who had been detained as illegal immigrants, was released
at a press conference on July 27, 1995. The year-long investigation
revealed consistent accounts of brutality, disease, little or
no medical attention, bribery, sexual exploitation and abuse of
female detainees. Many detainees claimed to have been beaten and
forced to stand in the sun for hours if they asked for water.
In some cases, medical treatment was denied to the sick.
In the largest of the camps at Semenyih, up to 500 people were
housed in blocks with only one bathroom and three toilets. Detainees
were forced to sleep on wooden floors in unventilated dormitories
infested with bugs. All their belongings were confiscated, they
were not allowed outside contact and many of the men were shaved
bald.
The Fernandez exposé shocked many Malaysians. The government
responded initially with denials, then by banning the employment
of foreign workers through private agencies. They set up a visitor's
panel to study conditions in the camps but it failed to publish
its findings. The police also announced that investigations would
be conducted.
But what followed was the launching of a defamation case against
Fernandez by police commander Abdul Malek Jano, based on an interview
by her with The New Straits Times on the report. She was
required to present herself for questioning, which went on for
10 days. When the police demanded the names and particulars of
informants and documents, Fernandez refused.
In October 1995, police ordered Fernandez to surrender all
records on former detainees, interviewers and volunteers, and
all documents pertaining to research. Fernandez refused to obey
the orders. Three other Tenaganita members and two volunteers
were also questioned and a researcher was detained for two months.
In March 1996, Fernandez was charged under the Printing Presses
and Publications Act with maliciously publishing false news.
The Act along with the country's Sedition Act and Internal Security
Act, which allows for indefinite detention without trial, were
used by the British to enforce their colonial rule. The laws have
been retained and enhanced by the Malaysian government.
When Fernandez trial began on June 10, 1996, the prosecution
claimed it would call 200 witnesses. But only 35 were finally
called. Far from demolishing the evidence contained in the Fernandez
report, the witnesses in some cases reinforced it.
The government claimed that the detainees who had died were
suffering diseases contracted prior to their arrival in Malaysia.
But police commander Abdul Malek Jano, who had issued the defamation
writ against Fernandez, revealed under cross examination that
there had been deaths in the camp from Beri Beri and exhaustion.
Both conditions are readily treatable. Beri Beri is a dietary
deficiency disease caused by lack of vitamin B1, which is abundant
in unpolished rice.
Superintendent Abu Bakar Lim Mustaffa, the investigating officer,
admitted that he had never even asked for post-mortem reports
of migrant workers who died in the camps.
The immigration officer for Semenyih Camp, Abdul Rahim bin
Endut, denied that he had received complaints of abuse, torture,
illness and sexual harassment but admitted that any complaints
would go through the police. The police, and not immigration officers,
were responsible for the day to day running of the camp and there
was no system for recording complaints.
In August 1998, the prosecution wound up its case and in February
1999, Magistrate Juliana bte Mohamad issued a three-line judgment,
stating that the prosecution had made a case for the defence to
answer.
When the trial resumed on April 6, 1999, the defence lawyer
presented a motion to stop the trial on the grounds that the prosecution
had not been able to produce the ex-detainees whom were interviewed
by the police. Under Malaysian legal practice, a list of prosecution
witnesses interviewed but not called in the trial has to be presented
to the defence who may call them if it wishes. In this case the
defence was given a list last September but many of the witnesses
had been deported. On April 7, 1999, Magistrate Juliana bte Mohamed
dismissed the defence motion without citing any reasons.
On the same day, Fernandez took the stand and gave evidence
over the next two weeks. She testified that she had released the
report to use the press as a channel for information about the
conditions in the camp. By exposing the attack on human rights,
Tenaganita had hoped to put pressure on the government to develop
good governance and to be accountable. She insisted that people
had a right to know what was happening in state-run institutions
like detention camps.
When asked why Tenaganita did not lodge a police report, Fernandez
stated that there had been an erosion of confidence in the police,
who were implicated in the abuses. The police would be investigating
an institution they managed and controlled. What was revealed
was not an isolated incident of abuse but institutionalised violence
that effected hundreds of detainees.
Fernandez ended her testimony on May 26, 1999 in what has been
the country's longest-running criminal trial. In an interview
given this year, Fernandez warned that the political nature of
her trial and the loss of independence of the judiciary virtually
guaranteed her conviction.
The so-called illegal detainees in the government camps investigated
by Fernandez and her group were the unfortunate victims of the
guest worker system instituted by the Malaysian government in
the 1980s and 1990s to supply workers to the booming Malaysian
economy.
Prior to the Asian economic crisis, Malaysia had between one
and three million guest workers. The majority were Indonesians,
with Bangladeshis, Filipinos and Thais comprising most of the
remainder. Many migrants had sold all their possessions or borrowed
heavily in order to make the journey and pay the contract fees
for supposedly well-paying jobs.
In many cases, the agencies were accused of charging up to
$3,000 for contracts to work in construction, plantations or factories.
Wages were just half what was promised or contracts were with
companies that did not exist. If workers were forced to move from
one employer to another or one sector to another they lost their
accreditation and so became illegal. Among the companies exploiting
these so-called subcontracted workers were transnational corporations
such as Nestlés and Bata.
Thousands of workers were arrested for not carrying their passports
and work permits. In many cases employers and agents insisted
on keeping the papers of guest workers. Thousands of others in
desperate need of work came across the border without documentation.
Many were caught, held in the horrific conditions in camps and
then deported. Instead of defending these workers, the Malaysian
unions like their counterparts in every country blamed migrant
workers for threatening the jobs of Malaysian nationals.
From 1997, after the Asian economic breakdown, the Malaysian
government turned on all migrant workers and intensified the round
up and deportation of so-called illegals. A law was passed requiring
employers to inform the police of all illegal immigrants. The
government has pushed ahead with the trial of Fernandez in a bid
to silence her and her organisation and to bury their evidence
of the atrocious conditions facing detainees in Malaysian camps.
See Also:
Anwar put on trial again as
Malaysian government prepares for elections
[16 June 1999]
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