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WSWS : News
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: Malaysia
Malaysian government detains opponents without trial for another
two years
By John Roberts
3 October 2003
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In a politically-motivated manoeuvre, Malaysias Deputy
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi last week extended the detention
of nine political activists for another two years. They have been
held without trial or charge since August 2001 under the countrys
notorious Internal Security Act (ISA) on suspicion of terrorism.
The nine, all members of the Islamic fundamentalist Parti Islam
se-Malaysia (PAS), are among more than 90 prisoners detained since
2001 on suspicion of belonging to terrorist groups. Badawi, who
is also Home Minister, claimed their continued detention was necessary
because they posed a threat to national security. They were, he
said, members of the Islamic militia group Kumpulan Mujahidin
Malaysia (KMM), which was linked to Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the
group blamed for the Bali bombings last October.
One of the detainees is Nik Adli Nik Abdul Aziz, the son of
Nik Aziz Nik Mat, a PAS leader and chief minister of the state
of Kelantan. PAS is the ruling party in two of Malaysias
northern statesKelantan and Terengganu. Among the others
detained are PAS youth wing leader Noorashid Sakip and PAS youth
committee member Mohd Lothfi Ariffin.
Malaysian police accuse the men of being involved in a series
of robberies and the killing of a politician. While it is possible
that some or all of the nine may be guilty, none of the evidence
against them has been made public or tested in court. Under the
ISA, detainees can be held indefinitely on vague grounds of national
security, subject only to the home ministers renewal of
the detention order every two years. Detainees have limited access
to lawyers and virtually no ability to legally challenge their
imprisonment via the courts.
As a result, it is just as likely that the men are political
prisoners whose continued detention is aimed at casting the slur
of terrorism against PAS. There is also evidence that
they are being brutally treated. A report by the US-based Human
Rights Watch published on September 20 noted: There are
allegations of abuses against some of the detainees, including
ill treatment while in custody and coercion during questioning.
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamads government is notorious
for using the ISA and other laws to deal with political opponentsthe
most high profile case being the jailing of former Deputy Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim on trumped-up charges of sexual misconduct
and corruption.
PAS is not the only opposition party to be targetted. Ten leading
figures and members of the National Justice Party (Keadilan),
formed by Anwars wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, were rounded
up prior to and during an opposition rally in April 2001, called
to oppose the continued jailing of Anwar. Among those detained
under the ISA were Keadilan Vice President Tian Chua, the partys
youth leader Mohamad Ezam Mohd Nor and Keadilan council member
Saari Sungip.
Prior to the September 11 attacks and the Bush administrations
war on terrorism, Mahathir had to weather international
objections of his anti-democratic methods. Since then, not only
has any criticism ended but Washington has praised the authoritarian
regime for its fight against terror. In fact, the
ISA, comparatively speaking, is a model of due legal process compared
to the US detention of hundreds of terrorist suspects
at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cubawho are being illegally
held without any access to lawyers or court procedure.
Badawis decision to renew the detention of the nine PAS
members is more likely to be connected to the political situation
confronting the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO)
than to any threat they allegedly pose to national security. Next
month, after 22 years in office, Mahathir is due to hand over
the reins of power to his deputy Badawi. Moreover, UMNO and its
allies in the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition government face
a general election, which is due by November next year but is
expected sooner.
The change of leadership comes at a sensitive time for the
Malay ruling elite in UMNO. The government has been involved in
a delicate political balancing act: between popular disgust at
Washingtons militarist policies, including the invasion
of Afghanistan and Iraq, and low-key cooperation with the US war
on terrorism as a means for gaining the Bush administrations
economic and political support.
At this stage, UMNOs greatest electoral threat comes
from PAS. At the last general elections in November 1999, UMNO
lost support in its Malay Muslim constituency, largely to PAS.
As a result it was forced to rely on its coalition partners, including
the Malaysian Chinese Association, to retain the two-thirds parliamentary
majority that the BN needs to change the countrys constitution.
In order to regain lost political ground, Mahathir attempted
to link PAS and Keadilan to terrorism. The arrests in April and
August 2001 were part of this tactic, which was then stepped up
after September 11. The political manoeuvre proved effective for
a while, with UMNO making gains in regional elections and by-elections.
But UMNOs ability to be able to play the terrorist card
has been undermined by growing popular opposition to the Bush
administration and its brutal subjugation of Iraq.
PAS has capitalised on this anti-US sentiment in an effort
to bolster support for its own reactionary communal agendathe
establishment of an Islamic state in Malaysia. The party is targetting
two more states in the economically-backward northKedah
and Pahangin the next elections. Where it holds power in
Kelantan and Terengganu, the party has begun implementing its
moral code: the segregation of men and women in supermarkets and
a ban on alcohol and dancing.
At UMNOs 50th anniversary rally on September 20-21, Mahathir
attempted to rally the party for the coming election, attacking
the opposition and directing most of his remarks against PAS and
its demand for an Islamic state. At the UN General Assembly last
week, this privileged representative of the Malay ruling elites
used his last speech to posture, once again, as the defender of
the masses. The West and the UN had failed to protect the
weak and poor, he said. The world faces the resurgence
of European imperialism... puppet states are installed, dancing
as puppets do, he added.
While true, his comments are part of a tired and completely
cynical routine. It is the complement to political repression
and economic policies that have benefitted a narrow layer of the
Malay ruling elite and middle classes. Whether it is enough to
enable his successor Badawi, a colourless yes-man, to win the
next elections in a politically volatile climate remains to be
seen.
See Also:
Scant media coverage as Malaysia
keeps Anwar in jail
[4 September 2003]
Malaysia rounds up Acehnese
refugees for deportation
[26 August 2003]
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