I am pleased that in ‘Dr. Chandra – just an
open note for you’ Choo Sing Chye (FMT 19 March 2013) does not resort to the
vile and vulgar vitriolic of so many commentators in cyber media. His quotes
from one of my earlier books are also accurate--- unlike some who invent or
distort the writings of the targeted person in order to tarnish him.
However, when one quotes from someone
else’s writings it is also important to provide the context. Many of my
commentaries in Challenges and Choices in
Malaysian Politics and Society were responses to specific episodes. Choo
has also been somewhat selective in his quotes. While it is true that as the
President of a reform group, I was mostly concerned with the actions of the
wielders of State power, I was also critical in the book of PAS and the DAP.
In fact, Choo recognises this. He says
that, “You didn’t speak for the Opposition, nor the BN government but you spoke
eloquently for the poor and (sic) injustices.”
This is the crux and core of the matter.
Our fidelity should be to the principle of justice, not to a personality or a
party.
When I joined the Anwar movement in 1998,
it was not because of Anwar the man but because of the injustice done to him.
For taking a principled stand, I paid the price. I lost my university job.
Three years later when I left Parti
Keadilan Nasional, it was because my conscience could not accept the
wrongdoings in the party. I was not prepared to acquiesce with money politics
in the party; the manipulation of communal sentiments in pursuit of political
objectives; the utter lack of transparency in the financial management of the
party; and the cosy relationship that Keadilan’s de facto leader had cultivated with certain
elements in Washington.
It was while I was in Keadilan and as
coordinator of the Barisan Alternatif (BA) comprising Keadilan, PAS, DAP and
Parti Rakyat, that I realised that the ideological chasm that separates PAS and
DAP on fundamental issues such as the role of Islam in society and the identity
of the nation is unbridgeable. I organised a few sessions among the leaders of
the BA to try to address these issues but there was little progress.
It is because their differences are
insurmountable, that PAS and DAP need Keadilan, specifically Anwar, as a link.
Anwar in turn needs both parties to shore up his position. Through DAP, PAS
gains some Chinese support while through PAS, DAP secures some Malay support.
PAS discovered the value of a link to DAP via Anwar in the 1999 General
Election when it captured 27 parliamentary seats, its best performance ever.
DAP, on the other hand, realised the efficacy of a link to PAS mediated by
Anwar in the 2008 General Election when it won 28 parliamentary seats, a figure
that it had not reached before. So it is
a case of PAS and DAP using one another. Indeed, everyone is using everyone
else in the Pakatan.
Pakatan is a totally opportunistic
inter-party grouping that has one overwhelming aim: to take over Putrajaya. Of
course, like other parties elsewhere seeking power, Pakatan’s rhetoric is all about
fighting corruption and ensuring good governance. Unlike other coalitions in
Malaysian politics, it has no common belief-system that holds it together. Even
the Socialist Front of the sixties, comprising the Parti Rakyat and the Labour
Party, had some ideological bond. When the Alliance was formed in 1954,
achieving Merdeka was its all-consuming goal. In 1974, the Barisan Nasional
committed itself to development and national unity. Indeed, the Pakatan is not even a coalition in
the sense in which the term is understood. It has no common symbol; no common
flag; no common structure of authority.
When a citizen alerts his fellow citizens
to the inherent pitfalls of an inter-party grouping like Pakatan, isn’t he
doing his duty to his nation? Why should
he be accused of betraying his “egalitarian idealism” when he speaks the truth
about those who are lusting for power? After all, didn’t I in Challenges and Choices ask the honest
question, “Will it (PAS) ever be able to realize its potential of becoming the
leader of an alternative coalition of parties to the Barisan as long as it
persists with its goal of establishing an Islamic State defined on the basis of
traditional theology?” (p.123)
Chandra
Muzaffar.
Your Avid and Naive Admiration of Chandra Muzaffar is amusing.
ReplyDeleteIt's true when they say Bullshit BafflesBrains.
Hint, when a person who claims to be an impartial intellectual starts taking sides, beware of his integrity.
The Open Letter to Chandra posted earlier reflects the nature of this person for whom expediency rules.
Very objective.
ReplyDeleteThe common bond between PAS, DAP, and PKR may I surmise is their authoritarian mold.
Chiefdom versus egalitarian society.