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WSWS : News
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: Malaysia
Mahathir detains Malaysian student leaders
By John Roberts
25 July 2001
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Malaysian police have increased to 12 the number of people
arrested under the countrys draconian Internal Security
Act (ISA) since a crackdown on political oppositionists and government
critics began on April 10. The ISA enables the government to detain
anyone deemed to be a threat to national security indefinitely
without trial, subject only to a review every two years.
For the first time since the 1970s, two university students
were arrested under the ISA on July 5 and 7. University of Malaya
Students Representative Council president Mohamad Fuad Mohamed
Ikhwan, a 22-year-old business studies student, was released on
July 18. But the other student leader, 24-year-old Khairul Annuar
Ahmad Zainuddin from the Mara Vocational Institute, remains in
custody.
The two detentions are part of a broader campaign by Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad to intimidate government opponents on
campuses and elsewhere. Since Mahathir ousted his deputy Anwar
Ibrahim in 1998 and then jailed him on trumped up charges, students
have been prominent in the protests against the governments
heavy-handed methods. Just prior to the latest arrests, Mahathir
pointedly denounced students for taking part in demonstrations
and insisted they stick to their studies.
On July 17, the prime minister foreshadowed a regulation that
will force students to sign contracts allowing for their expulsion
if their performance is not satisfactory. Mahathir told an audience
at the Malacca Manipal Medical College that if students do
not fully utilise the opportunities and money spent on them, it
is necessary for the government to kick them out of university.
Mahathirs threats are not idle. At least one student
who was arrested at a June 8 student rally against the ISA, Rapzan
Ramli, was expelled after being released from custody. Mahathir
has also warned tertiary teaching staff, saying: If they
are more interested in activities other than teaching, they are
welcome to leave.
The way in which the courts have handled the latest round of
ISA detentions is a further indication of divisions in ruling
circles over Mahathirs leadership.
Five of the oppositionists arrested in April have launched
an appeal in the countrys highest court, the Federal Court,
against their continued detention. Chua Tian Chang (Tian Chua),
Mohamad Ezam Mohd Nor, Saari Sungipall leaders of the opposition
party Parti Keadilan Nasional (National Justice Party), formed
by Anwar Ibrahims wife Wan Azizahand activist Hishamuddin
Rais, are being held without charge under two-year detention order.
The fifth appellant Raja Petra has been released.
Normally such appeals would be a forgone conclusion in the
governments favour. But on June 6, Chief Justice Mohamed
Dzaiddin Abdullah rejected an application by the senior deputy
public prosecutor to have the appeal of the five detainees discontinued.
Instead he appointed an additional two judges to hear the case
on August 6.
The decision followed a previous High Court ruling in May ordering
the release of two ISA detainees. Judge Hishamudin Mohd Yunus
not only dismissed police claims that the two represented a threat
to national security but also sent a message to the government
about its use of the ISA against political opponents. Those
police officers responsible for the detention of the applicants
must wake up to the fact the supreme law of this country is the
constitution and not the ISA, he said.
On June 27, the Federal Court threw out a contempt of court
conviction and prison sentence against one of Anwar Ibrahims
defence lawyers, Zainur Zakaria. Acting on Anwars behalf,
Zainur had introduced an affidavit in the 1998 trial accusing
the prosecution of attempting to pressure a witness into making
false statements against Anwar. The presiding judge cited Zainur
for contempta decision that was upheld by the Court of Appeal.
In throwing out the charge, the Federal Court judges simply made
the point that the defence lawyer had been acting in his clients
interest.
In many countries these court decisions would not be considered
earth shattering. But in Malaysia, where the courts have been
carefully appointed, groomed, and when necessary disciplined by
successive United Malays National Organisation (UMNO)-led governments,
the challenge to Mahathirs authority is unmistakable. Taken
together with rather muted criticisms of Mahathir inside UMNO
and the continuing protests by opposition parties and groups,
it indicates that the deep-seated rifts in the ruling elites opened
up by the sacking of Anwar have not been resolved.
At the heart of the conflict between Anwar and Mahathir were
deep disagreements over economic policy. As finance minister in
the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, Anwar was implementing
the economic restructuring remedies demanded by the IMF. He ran
up against opposition from Mahathir precisely because the IMF
measures were threatening a layer of businesses with close connections
to UMNO. Mahathir overturned Anwars policies, imposed capital
and currency controls and then sacked Anwar when he refused to
resign.
The underlying cause for the hardening opposition to Mahathir
in ruling circles lies in the slide in the countrys economic
prospects. For the last three years, Mahathir has paraded as the
economic saviour of Malaysia, insisting that his decisions in
1998 enabled the economy to recover. In fact, like other East
Asian economies, the Malaysian recovery was largely the result
of increased exports, particularly to the US.
Now, however, with the major economies including the US slowing,
Malaysia is feeling the pinch, along with the rest of Asia. Malaysian
exports fell by 7 percent in May compared with the same month
last year. In the first five months of this year 12,952 jobs were
lost, 2,000 a month coming from the electronics industry. The
Malaysian Trade Union Congress predicts that half the electronic
industry workforce100,000will be laid off by the end
of the year.
Under these conditions, Mahathirs claim to be an economic
miracle worker does not appear particularly convincing. He recently
celebrated his 20th anniversary in office on July 16. How much
longer he will last is by no means certain. But all the signs
point to the fact that the opposition to Mahathir is continuing
and if anything sharpening, and that his days are numbered.
See Also:
Malaysian judge orders the
release of two opposition detainees
[11 June 2001]
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