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: Malaysia
Mahathir reacts to growing criticism
Nine opposition leaders in Malaysia arrested in government
crackdown
By John Roberts
30 April 2001
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Malaysian police last week detained another opposition leader
under the country's draconian Internal Security Act (ISA), bringing
to nine the number of oppositionists now being held. Lokman Noor
Adam, a Keadilan (National Justice Party) youth leader, was arrested
just after midnight on April 24 after attending a rally in Shan
Alam city, just outside the capital Kuala Lumpur.
His arrest follows the detention of seven opposition leaders
on April 10, just prior to an opposition rally on April 14 to
mark the second anniversary of former deputy prime minister Anwar
Ibrahim's conviction on trumped-up corruption charges. Six of
the seven arrested were members of Keadilan, which was formed
by Anwar's wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, and were involved in organising
the rally.
Those detained included Keadilan's vice-president Tian Chua,
its youth leader Ezam Mohamad Noor, one of its council members
Saari Sungib, its youth secretary N. Gobalakrishnan and the head
of the Free Anwar movement, Raja Petra Kamarudin. On April 20,
police seized Badrul Amin Baharom, a member of Keadilan's supreme
council.
At a press conference on April 11, the Malaysian police chief
claimed that the seven arrested were among 20 people who were
planning militant actions to topple the government and alleged
that they were trying to obtain firearms and explosives. But he
presented no evidence and none is required under the ISA, which
provides for detention without trial, initially for two years,
for anyone deemed to be acting in any manner prejudicial
to the security of Malaysia. For the first 60 days, detainees
can be denied access to lawyers.
Displaying his usual contempt for democratic rights, Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad justified the use of the ISA, saying:
They could have been arrested under normal laws but normal
laws require certain evidence and procedures and processes which
is, I suppose, from the police point of view not effective in
preventing something from happening. He said political opposition
would be tolerated but only if it followed normal democratic
procedures which did not include protests and rallies.
Keadilan and its coalition partnersthe Islamic fundamentalist
Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS), the Democratic Action Party (DAP)
and the Malaysian Peoples Partycondemned the arrest as outright
political repression. Local and international human rights groups
along with the Malaysian Trade Union Congress, which usually does
not protest the government's actions, called for the oppositionists'
release.
Keadilan deputy president Chandra Muzaffar described the charges
as farcical. He said the arrests were designed to
stamp out the growing anti-Mahathir sentiment... It is a
preemptive move in view of the imminent economic downturn because
the Mahathir government is afraid that if the economy declines,
the people's anger will mount and any attempts to mobilise people
in such circumstances will be successful.
Despite the arrests and further threats by police, more than
2,000 people gathered outside the National Human Rights Commission
on April 14 to protest Anwar's continued detention. The rally
broke up peacefully after a delegation led by Anwar's wife presented
a memorandum on human rights abuses in Malaysia. Anwar is serving
a 15-year jail term after being found guilty of abuse of power
and sodomy.
The following day, the government continued its political attack
on the opposition. Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar claimed that
the rally's organisers had sought assistance from activists in
Indonesia. Mahathir repeated the allegation, without any evidence,
that certain parties had sought Indonesian help. The
accusation is designed not only to provide a thin pretext for
further political repression on national security grounds but
to appeal to Malay nationalists.
On April 18, High Court judge Augustine Paul rejected an application
for the release of the detained opposition leaders. The defence
lawyers had demanded that the government provide evidence for
its claims that those arrested had sought firearms and explosives
to help topple the government. But the judge simply accepted a
police assertion that the oppositions were being held under the
ISA for other reasons... which would not be disclosed.
Paul was the judge who found Anwar guilty in his first trial.
Mahathir under siege
The scant regard for democratic rights displayed by the government
in arresting opposition leaders is not unusual in Malaysian politics.
But the latest crackdown comes amid growing signs of divisions
within Mahathir's United Malay National Organisation (UMNO), the
leading party of the ruling coalition.
On the same day as the first arrests, UMNO Supreme Council
member Shahrir Samad publicly challenged Mahathir in an interview
with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). He becomes
a liability and will remain a liability if he does not attempt
to change and make the changes which are necessary within the
Malaysian context, he said.
On the same program the head of the UMNO youth wing, L. Alwi,
expressed doubts about Mahathir's leadership, saying: We
could be in jeopardy if we fail to adapt and adjust to the changes
that have occurred. The ABC report also featured a Malaysian
political analyst, E. Pillai, who predicted Mahathir would be
gone in a year, very likely much earlier than that.
Such open criticism of Mahathir within UNMO indicates deep
division within its ranks. The original rift between Anwar and
Mahathir opened up in 1998 over economic policy differences following
the eruption of the Asian financial crisis.
As finance minister, Anwar supported the IMF's demands for
economic restructuring and deregulation, which threatened the
privileged position of commercial empires with UMNO connections.
Mahathir removed the head of the central bank and imposed capital
and currency controls to shore up faltering businesses, then sacked
Anwar and expelled him and his supporters. When Anwar began publicly
campaigning against Mahathir, he was detainedinitially under
the ISAthen put on trial on bogus charges of corruption
and sexual misconduct.
The measures against Anwar and his supporters have, however,
failed to halt criticism within UMNO, indicating that the differences
over economic issues, inside the party and more generally within
ruling circles, have sharpened. In February, a rally organised
with Mahathir's blessing by an UMNO grouping known as the Malay
Action Front became an arena for criticisms of the government's
bail-out of corporations and UMNO's dwindling support among ethnic
Malays.
Another sign of political tensions in the government has been
the announced departuresaid to be temporaryof finance
minister Daim Zainuddinone of Mahathir's closest political
associates and the figure most closely identified with UMNO's
business connections. A wealthy businessman himself, Zainuddin
was brought back into the government in 1998 to replace Anwar.
Behind the nervousness in UMNO are concerns about the Malaysia's
economic prospects in the event of a protracted downturn in the
US and elsewhere. The country was able to survive the impact of
the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis not as a result of the government's
capital and currency controls, but largely because of strong exports,
particularly of electronic products to the US.
On March 27, Mahathir announced a series of fiscal and monetary
measures totalling $US790 million to try to stimulate domestic
consumption. The following day the country's central bank, Bank
Negara, revised this year's estimated economic growth from 7 percent
to between 5 and 6 percent.
Despite the government's capital controls, an estimated $US18
billion in investment capital has left Malaysia in the past two
years. According to a Washington Post report in March,
a survey of 60 countries showed that only two were predicted to
be less attractive to investors during the next five years as
compared to the past fiveMalaysia and Chinese-controlled
Hong Kong.
Taken together with the dissension in UMNO's ranks, the latest
police crackdown on oppositionists bears all the hallmarks of
a desperate action taken by a political leader who is increasingly
under siege from within and without.
See Also:
An uncertain future for Malaysia's
prime minister
[26 March 2001]
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