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WSWS : News
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: Malaysia
Signs of a growing antiwar movement in Malaysia
By John Roberts
3 April 2003
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After two weeks of hostilities in Iraq, antiwar protests in
Malaysia are growing in size, creating concerns in ruling circles
about the potential for political instability.
Two of the largest demonstrations took place last Saturday
in the capital Kuala Lumpur. The first was a rally held by the
ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition as a means of maintaining
its control over the antiwar movement. The second, which was organised
by opposition parties, was attacked by police.
More than 10,000 people gathered at the legal BN
demonstration near the centre of the city to express opposition
to the war. The gathering was dominated by the parties and organisations
associated with the ruling coalition, including ethnic Chinese
and Indian groups. Two government ministers were present. Speakers
included teachers and students from the citys Iraqi school,
who described the horrors of war being endured inside Iraq.
At the same time, police waded into 2,000 opposition party
demonstrators as they placed coffins marked Freedom,
Democracy and Liberty in front of the
Australian High Commission. The rally was organised by the Islamic
fundamentalist Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS), Parti Keadilan Nasional,
Parti Rakyat Malaysia (PRM) and the ethnic Chinese-based Democratic
Action Party.
The protestors originally attempted to march on the US Embassy
but heavily-armed police blocked their way. When they arrived
at the Australian High Commission, police ordered them to disperse.
After demonstrators sat down, police fired tear gas into the crowd.
Twelve were arrested, including PRM president Dr Syed Husin Ali
and two members of the partys youth wing.
The rallies followed earlier small demonstrations in the capital.
On March 21, an antiwar protest of 7,000 took place in the northeastern
state of Kelatan, where PAS controls the state government. Demonstrators
burnt effigies of Bush and Blair and chanted Destroy Bush
and Long Live Islam. Party leader and Kelantan chief
minister Nik Aziz Nik Mat urged the crowd to boycott American
goods.
The opposition party demonstrations are the largest since protests
erupted over the jailing of Anwar Ibrahim in 1999. Anwar, who
served as Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamads deputy, was sacked
and expelled from the ruling United Malay National Organisation
(UMNO) after sharp differences emerged over economic policy. He
was arrested and tried on trumped-up charges when he began organising
anti-government rallies.
After opposition parties made significant gains in the 1999
national elections, Mahathir used the full battery of the Malaysias
anti-democratic laws to crack down on the pro-Anwar protests.
A number of senior opposition figures were arrested in 2000 and
2001, some under the draconian Internal Security Act which provides
for indefinite detention without trial.
The police response to the antiwar rally last weekend indicates
government fears that the opposition will gain support as the
US-led war on Iraq drags on. Despite his, at times, strident statements
against the Iraq war, Mahathir is careful not to damage his relations
with Washington. Malaysia is highly dependent on exports into
the North American market and on US investment. Behind the scenes,
the government has been cooperating closely with the Bush administrations
global war on terror.
Mahathir candidly admitted in a recent interview in the regional
newspaper, the Daily Express, that the government is nervous
about alienating the Bush administration. The US is a powerful
nation, which a small nation is afraid of... Theyre capable
of arm twisting in many ways, not only through invasion... They
can apply sanctions... Were a weak nation, we cant
fight a war, we cant even defend ourselves in case of economic
attacks against us, so naturally were afraid.
The longer the war on Iraq proceeds, the deeper the opposition
will become. The government is clearly concerned that its carefully
stage-managed antiwar rallies will be sidelined. There are already
indications that Mahathir, a past master at cynical political
manipulation, is prepared to use the carrot as well as the stick
with opposition parties.
On March 25, Hishammuddin Hussein, a youth leader from Mahathirs
UMNO, joined his PAS counterpart, Mhafuz Omar, in leading a joint
government-opposition delegation to hand a written protest note
to US Ambassador Marie Huhtala. The youth wings of UMNO and PAS
are normally at one anothers throats.
The opposition parties have indicated their willingness to
work with the government. PAS acting president Abdul Hadi Awang
declared recently: PAS will work with the government, political
parties and organisations in the country to resolve the negative
effects of the war. In similar vein, DAP chairman Lim Kit
Siang urged parliament to put aside all other business to pass
a unanimous all-party condemnation of the war.
All the established political parties are anxious to keep the
growing popular sentiment against the war from spilling outside
the framework of official politics.
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