|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Malaysia
Malaysian human rights report details methods of police repression
By John Roberts
4 September 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Another crack has appeared in the political support in Malaysian
ruling circles for Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has held
power for two decades and routinely used the police and the courts
in the crudest fashion to deal with his opponents.
Last month the countrys Human Rights Commission (Suhakam)
released a 66-page report into a police attack on a major political
rally organised by opposition parties on November 5, 2000. It
is clear from the detailed evidence that the police manufactured
the pretext for moving in, then rounded up and detained 116 people.
Whatever violence took place was a product of deliberate police
provocation.
The findings are the result of a four-month investigation by
a panel of three senior Suhakam officialsTan Sri Anuar Abidin,
Professor Mehrun Siraj and Tan Sri Simon Sipaun. The panel took
evidence from 46 witnesses, including 16 police officers, and
viewed police videotapes. The report ends, as might be expected,
with a feeble call for a police investigation into the actions
of their own officers. But it does provide a rare glimpse into
the police methods and at least hints at the political motives
for the action.
The rally last November was organised by the National Justice
Party (Parti Keadilan), which was founded by Wan Azizah Wan Ismail,
the wife of former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim. Billed
as a peoples gathering to support Anwar, who
is in jail after being convicted of bogus charges of corruption
and sexual misconduct, opposition leaders expected to attract
100,000 people.
Mahathir was desperate to prevent such a public show of support
and pulled out all stops to prevent the rally and intimidate the
opposition. The gathering was originally planned for the Bukit
Jalil stadium and, as the commission stated, would have been peaceful
if the police had given permission and assisted with crowd control.
But the police refused permission and the rally was transferred
to private land owned by Keadilan near the Kesas Highway at Jalan
Kebun.
Because the meeting was to be held on private property, the
police had no reason to intervene. But two days before the rally,
a group of 50 local residents, out of the blue, held a counter-protest
calling for the opposition gathering to be stopped and threatening
to take the law into their own hands if it went ahead. The Suhakam
panel pointed out that the police could easily have taken action
against the residents but instead chose to use the threats of
violence to warn people away from the Keadilan rally and mount
a massive operation against it.
Despite the police intimidation prior to November 5, an estimated
5,000 people turned up for the rally. The commissions report
explains that the police had a policy of total denial and
domination. Roadblocks were set up to stop people getting
to the rally, causing chaos and a major traffic jam that was used
as the pretext for police action.
When police moved against the crowd they gave only two minutes
warning before using water cannon and tear gas. The immediate
reason for attacking the protesters was supposedly an assault
on a police officer. But the commission found that the police
themselves probably orchestrated the incident.
According to the commission, once the assault was under way
police used excessive and unlawful force on people
trying to leave the rally, on those caught in the traffic jam
caused by police roadblocks, and on protesters already in police
vehicles. The panel found evidence that teargas was sprayed into
a police truck full of detained persons.
The report stated that police abuses did not end after the
rally. Female detainees, including Norazimah Mohd Nor, who was
arrested after setting up a stall to sell caps, shirts and videos
of political discussions, were subjected to humiliating treatment
at the Kapar police station. She and eight other women were stripped,
searched and then forced to do knee squats while naked.
According to the commission, police used a five-day remand
period not for investigations but to gather intelligence and put
pressure on the detainees to make statements. There was
also evidence that the police carried out the cruel and inhuman
treatment of detainees, and took advantage of their situation
for the purpose of forcing them to confess or otherwise incriminate
themselves, it stated.
The commission also found that police abused bail procedures
by telling prisoners that they had to report to the police station
for an indefinite period after release. They also failed to provide
medical attention for injured detainees.
Underlying rifts
The report is the first by the Human Rights Commission, which
was only set up by Mahathir in April 2000 in an attempt to deflect
growing criticism, internationally and in Malaysia, of the governments
flagrant disregard for democratic rights. The government handpicked
the commission and gave it no enforcement powers.
As the commission itself pointed out, the police treated the
proceedings with thinly veiled contempt. Police witnesses would
only give prepared answers and refused to answer new questions
put by the commissioners in the course of the hearings. The government
has virtually ignored the report. Mahathir dismissively accused
the commission of preparing a report to please the West.
But the fact that a government-appointed body should explicitly
criticise the police, and implicitly the Mahathir government itself,
again points to deep underlying rifts in the ruling elites following
the removal and jailing of Anwar. At the heart of the split between
Mahathir and Anwar were sharp differences over the direction of
economic policy in the aftermath of the 1997-98 Asian financial
crisis.
Over the last three years, Mahathir has responded to growing
signs of anti-government sentiment in the same way that he did
to Anwarthe use of crude police methods. A number of opposition
leaders have been detained in the course of the year under the
countrys repressive Internal Security Act, which allows
for indefinite detention without trial. A number of court decisions,
however, have recently gone against the government, indicating
disquiet over Mahathir even in these usually politically submissive
circles.
On August 6, Malaysias highest court, the Federal Court,
ruled against the government and voted to allow 10 opposition
leaders to present affidavits detailing their treatment under
the ISA. They were arrested in a crackdown for obtaining weapons
and explosives to overthrow the governmentallegations for
which neither the government nor the police have provided any
evidence.
In a press conference on August 29, opposition leaders revealed
details from the affidavits. They explained that during the Special
Branch interrogation of the accused the charges against them were
not mentioned. Instead the detainees were questioned on the politics
and organisation of the opposition parties, on their connections
with non-government organisations, and on the conduct and funding
of a by-election in November 2000, which the government unexpectedly
lost.
One line of police questioning points to an area of great concern
for the Mahathir leadership. The interrogators asked the detainees
about UMNO leaders who the police believed were still supporting
Anwar. The affidavits explained that the police went to considerable
lengths using crude, abusive methods to denounce Anwars
alleged sex crimes and insist the detainees cease their support
for him.
The interrogation also revealed a shocking and perverse
preoccupation within the Special Branch with sexual matters. Detainees
were grilled and abused on their personal lives and pressured
to make false statements about sexual activities with various
persons, the opposition leaders told the press conference.
Such methods were precisely what the police used to obtain evidence
against Anwar.
These methods have been the stock-in-trade of the state apparatus
in Malaysia for decades. The fact that these are now being made
public by the actions of a government-appointed body and elements
in the judiciary further indicates that the far-reaching political
crisis precipitated by the expulsion and jailing of Anwar has
not be resolved.
See Also:
Mahathir detains Malaysian
student leaders
[25 July 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |