Please SHARE. An in-depth and insightful article by Dr Bakri Musa
In
any mass rally you expect a minority to get carried away or be
willfully indulging in criminal acts. It is the duty of the authorities
to prevent and apprehend them, but not to use that as justification to
treat as criminals the vast majority who are otherwise peaceful, or for
the police to behave like criminals in responding.
First of Two Parts: Seeing The Bright Side
In
the aftermath of the largest public demonstrations against the Barisan
government, the officials’ obsession now turns to the exercise of
apportioning blame and the associated inflicting of vengeance. Both are
raw human reactions, but hardly enlightening, sophisticated, or even
fruitful. Besides, there is plenty of blame to go around. I prefer to
look at the bright side and on the lessons that can be learned.
BERSIH
3.0 clearly demonstrates that Malaysians no longer fear the state. In
that regard we are a quantum leap ahead of the Egyptians under Mubarak,
the Iraqis under Saddam, or the Chinese under Mao (or even today).
When citizens are no longer afraid of the state, many wonderful things
would follow.
BERSIH is also the first successful multiracial mass
movement in Malaysia. In a nation obsessed with and where every facet
is defined by race, that is an achievement worthy of note. Another
significant milestone, again not widely acknowledged, is that the
movement is led by a woman who is neither Malay nor a Muslim. Ambiga
Sreenevasan broke not one but three Malaysian glass ceilings!
On
a sour note, BERSIH 3.0 revealed that Barisan leaders (and a few from
the opposition) have yet to learn and accept the fundamental premise
that dissent is an integral part of the democratic process, and
expressing it through peaceful assembly a basic human right. At a more
mundane level though no less important, the authorities’ performance in
BERSIH 3.0 also exposed their woeful incompetence and negligence in
basic crowd control.
In any mass rally you expect a
minority to get carried away or be willfully indulging in criminal
acts. It is the duty of the authorities to prevent and apprehend them,
but not to use that as justification to treat as criminals the vast
majority who are otherwise peaceful, or for the police to behave like
criminals in responding.
To keep things in perspective,
and with no intent to insult those injured, whose properties were
damaged, and those otherwise inconvenienced, the mayhem last Saturday
was no worse than that following an American college championship game.
More to the point, considering the vastly much larger crowd and the
much more pivotal issues at stake, no lives were lost.
Discerning The Winners and Losers
As
with a college championship game, there were definite winners – and
champions – from last Saturday’s contest. As for the losers, there were
plenty of them too. If you were to appear late on the scene or just a
distant observer like me, it would not be terribly difficult to figure
out who were the new champions and who were the sore losers just by
watching their reactions.
It was a tribute to BERSIH’s
leaders that they did not gloat – the hallmark of genuine champions.
They remained cool and confidently went on to target their next trophy,
the removal of the Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the Elections
Commission for the pair’s blatant political partisanship by being,
among others, UMNO members.
Although BERSIH was a
coalition of NGOs, it nonetheless welcomed participation from all,
including members of political parties. Thus there were generous
representations from the opposition as they too shared BERSIH’s
objective of clean and fair elections. Again it was a tribute to
BERSIH’s enlightened and sophisticated leadership that it welcomed
their participation and did not try to control or otherwise censor
their speeches and actions. BERSIH leaders respected individual
freedom, again reflecting their maturity and sophistication.
As
for the political players on either side of the issue, we too could
also easily discern the winners and losers among them. KEADILAN’s
leader Anwar Ibrahim described the event as a “celebration of unity, an
awakening for liberation. [It] … shall go down in the nation’s history
as Merdeka Rakyat when 300,000 spoke in one voice to demand a free and
fair election. …. [Those who] came down in full force were encouraged
by a sense of justice to demand liberation from usurpers. Their message
cannot be mistaken – a free country cannot be enslaved anymore.”
He
continued, “BERSIH 3.0 represents the hopes and dreams of all
Malaysians that the political legitimacy of any government in the
future can only be attained through a genuine democratic process.” That
is the confident voice of a winner.
Contrast that to the
reactions of the Prime Minister, his Deputy Muhyiddin, and Home
Minister Hishammuddin. Muhyiddin was first to the draw, threatening to
make BERSIH pay for the damages, presumably including those caused by
those ubiquitous razor fences, tear gas explosions, and blasting water
cannons. For his part, Hishammuddin contemptuously dismissed the
smashing of journalists’ cameras as “standard operating procedure,” only
to be contradicted later by his Chief of Police. As many later found
out, the police smashed more than just cameras.
Najib’s
hospital visit to the injured journalist Radzi Razak was a gracious
personal touch. However, the heavily-covered media event backfired as
it revealed too much. Radzi’s facial expression during Najib’s nearly
quarter-of-an-hour monologue where he (Najib) apparently apologized to
the injured reporter showed that he (Radzi) was anything but comforted
by the Prime Minister’s presence or words. Later Najib blasted the
demonstrators for not respecting a court order banning entry into
Dataran Merdeka, conveniently forgetting his administration’s contempt
for citizens’ right to peaceful assembly. The irony of the venue;
Dataran Merdeka – Freedom Square!
In
short, the political trio of Najib, Muhyiddin and Hishammuddin behaved
like typical losers, consumed with blaming others and seeking
vengeance. They were not unlike the three blind mice running around as
if BERSIH had cut off their tails. The trio may not be blind but they
certainly behaved like three myopic mice, unable to see beyond their
whiskers.
Futility of the “Blame Game”
Trying
to apportion blame at this stage of the game, even when attempted by
well-meaning and neutral observers, is a futile exercise. When done by
political hacks, as most surely it would, the exercise would serve only
to aggravate old wounds.
When you have dry rubbish strewn
all over, cans of gasoline purposely left open, and match boxes
recklessly tossed around, the question of who lit the first matchstick
becomes irrelevant. There will always be someone who saw somebody else
who struck a match earlier. Then the analyses and debates would quickly
degenerate into the minutiae of determining the exact seconds or
minutes, or interpreting what certain gestures and phrases may or may
not mean in the heat of the occasion. Indeed such a puerile exercise is
already well underway, and worse, it is being taken seriously by the
authorities!
A more useful endeavor would be to learn ways
of, metaphorically speaking, getting rid of the dry tinder, the thick
brush of mutual suspicions, the open cans of inflammatory slimes, and
the readily available matches. Such an exercise would require of Najib,
Muhyiddin and Hishammuddin to be other than the three blind mice.
Mice, blind and otherwise, thrive in rubbish.
Najib et
al. need to look far beyond their whiskers and ponder whether the
laying of razor fences at Dataran Merdeka and turning the center of
modern peaceful Kuala Lumpur into an Israeli-occupied West Bank,
Korea’s Demilitarized Zone, or Stalin’s Gulag is the equivalent of
removing open cans of gasoline or merely spewing more fuel. This point
was forcefully made by a poster on one razor fence, “Welcome to Tel
Aviv!”
There are hundreds if not thousands of such
pictures as well as personal accounts of BERSEH 3.0. One touched me
immensely. “Up ‘til Friday afternoon I was still unsure about going,”
she wrote. “… Then I saw the photos of the police rolling out the
barbed wire and I saw red. Since when did our police, or whoever is
their boss, roll out barbed wire – barbed wire!! – against their own
people?? Are we thugs? Terrorists? Thieves?”
The observer
who wrote that is no raging anti-establishment anarchist. On the
contrary, Marina Mahathir is a thoughtful commentator, very much
mainstream. She saw only the pictures of police laying down those razor
fences, and she was incensed. Imagine if she had been strolling down
the street and been rudely confronted by that hideous sight? What if
she was a foreign tourist?
Ponder the mindset of those
who proposed the idea in the first place, or the personnel who laid
down those razor fences. Did they think that Malaysians are such unruly
hooligans that could only be kept away by those menacing barriers? Or
were the authorities gleefully imagining and salivating in anticipation
of some innocent citizens being ripped apart by those sharp blades? We
judge others through our own image. To our leaders we must be a nation
of thieves, thugs, and terrorists because they themselves are.
Najib
and others readily referred to the damages done by the demonstrators
while conveniently overlooking those incurred by the police, as with the
unnecessary road closures long before the event. I wonder how many
ambulances and doctors were delayed on their way to the hospital to
attend to emergencies before the rally because of the massive road
closures. Violence was perpetrated upon the city long before the first
demonstrators arrived.
Do not expect much introspection
from our leaders; sore losers are incapable of that. They could not for
example, fathom that the laying of razor fences, widespread closing of
streets, and heavy police presence contributed to the violence. Such
an insight escapes them.
Next: Second of Two Parts: Lessons To be Learned
Source: http://bit.ly/JW0GPA
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