Thursday, May 16, 2013

The 13th General Election And Its Aftermath by Dr. Chandra Muzaffar

It is a shame that eight days after the 13th General Election, there are some Opposition leaders who continue to denounce the result as a “massive fraud.”

Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s scurrilous allegation about 40,000 Bangladeshis and other foreigners being air-lifted to vote in the election has been exposed as a monstrous lie. Opposition parties such as the Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) and the Democratic Action Party (DAP) have not been able to produce a single foreigner who had voted in the election!

In fact, it is Opposition vigilantes who have harassed and humiliated legitimate Malaysian voters who they claim looked like Bangladeshis. If this isn’t vicious racial profiling, what is? 

Opposition leaders and their supporters know that if they have any evidence of electoral fraud, they can always petition the Courts for remedy. A cursory look at the record of our Election Courts will show that they have been fair in their decisions.

It is wrong of leaders like Anwar and Lim Kit Siang to whip up mass passions on the outcome of a general election which both local and ASEAN observers have assessed as free of fraud. There is a lurking danger in this sort of mobilisation. Since the vast majority of attendees at the rallies organised by them come from a certain community, they could easily give rise to ethnic tensions.

These rallies also have implications for our national sovereignty. There is no doubt at all that Anwar has the backing of some powerful interests in the West. The overtly biased reporting in many Western media channels on the election and the post-election scenario testify to this.  By keeping alive in the media, challenges to an election result which did not go in their favour, these interests are seeking to undermine the legitimately elected government of the day and install their proxy in power. The larger aim is to pursue the US’s geopolitical agenda in Asia, specifically in relation to China, with the help of this proxy, as has been analysed by various commentators such as Tony Cartalucci. (see Global Research 9 May, 2013). Malaysians should be fully aware of the game that is unfolding before us.           
           
 There are other important facets of the 13th General Election which we should reflect upon.

  • UMNO remains the most formidable political actor in the country. It increased its parliamentary representation to 88 from 79 in 2008 and its representation in the state assemblies to 242 from 239 five years ago.
  • The MCA, Gerakan, PPP, and SUPP continue to decline. Would this lead to their demise? Should the Barisan Nasional  itself be re-structured? What sort of role can UMNO play in this?
  • Opposition parties command substantial support among the populace. Their growing strength means that a two-third majority in Parliament for the BN is a thing of the past. The emerging situation calls for greater mutual respect between the BN and the Opposition.
  •  Since Merdeka there has been both Malay and non-Malay opposition to the ruling coalition. There is rural as well as urban opposition. That pattern repeated itself in the 2013 Election.
  • Three out of thirteen state governments are in the hands of the opposition parties. Given this scenario which may well continue into the future, it is imperative that the centre and the states cooperate closely for the well-being of the people.  The BN and the Pakatan Rakyat should be committed to ensuring the success of federalism as a mode of governance. 
  • What is unique  about the 13th General Election is the almost unanimous rejection of the BN by Chinese Malaysian voters and their complete endorsement  of Pakatan, especially the DAP. It is estimated that 90% of the Chinese who voted chose the Opposition.  The driving force behind their choice was the desire to “Ubah”( change)  --- to get rid of the UMNO led BN.
  • What explains this rejection? Is it because many Chinese --- like the non-Chinese voters --- perceived the BN as corrupt and guilty of wrongdoings? Is it because they, like other Malaysians, were yearning for good governance?
  • While integrity and governance were important considerations, they do not tell the whole story. If good governance was uppermost in the minds of the Chinese voters, why did they reject Dato Seri Muhammad Ali Rastam in Melaka and Dato Seri Abdul Ghani Othman in Johor? There is a deeper reason for their en masse vote against the BN.
  • From the very beginning of the Malaysian journey, a lot of Chinese have felt that they are discriminated against, that they are marginalised, that they are “second-class” citizens. It explains why achieving equality with the Malays has been their overriding political goal --- a goal which they sought in the 13th General Election through “ubah.”
  •  This goal galvanised into a powerful emotion in 2013 for a number of reasons. 1) The DAP’s stunning victories in Perak and Selangor in 2008 which indicated that they could control power in Malay majority states. 2) The leadership provided by a Malay politician --- Anwar Ibrahim --- who was prepared to criticise “Malay supremacy”, pledge to end the NEP and eliminate “racial discrimination.”  3)  The enlargement of democratic space through the abolition of the ISA and other restrictive ordinances and the enactment of new laws such as the Peaceful Assembly Act which has emboldened the Chinese community to act as seen in their participation in Bersih 3 and Perhimpunan Kebangkitan Rakyat. 4) The emergence of a host of new Chinese civil society groups focussed upon democracy and change and 5) The skilful exploitation of the new media by the proponents of  Ubah to create a mass emotional wave within the community.
  • The critical question is:  are the Chinese justified in seeing themselves as a marginalised community? Is it true that the Chinese are the victims of inequality and injustice?  If we examined the real situation of the Chinese in almost every sphere of society what is the picture that emerges? Who dominates the upper stratum of the economy? Which community is the most significant component in the middle stratum of the economy? Given the cultural background of the land, isn’t the Chinese language and culture overwhelmingly pervasive in Malaysia --- a situation which has few parallels anywhere else in the world?  Even in politics, isn’t Chinese participation remarkable, considering that Malaysia evolved from Malay Sultanates?  Is it fair to describe a community with such a powerful role in society as“marginalised” and “unequal”?     
  •  How can we correct this widespread misconception that an entire community labours under? Are Chinese politicians, community leaders, business elites, social activists, academics and others with influence prepared to tell the truth to the community? Are they prepared to explain the background and the context of this nation to them for principles such as equality can only be understood if they are grounded in reality?  Are they prepared to make the Chinese aware that in reality the people who were actually unequal in the economic sense at the time of Merdeka were the Malays, 64% of whom lived below the poverty-line? Since their leaders were prepared to confer citizenship on a million Chinese and Indians on incredibly liberal terms, the Special Position of the Malays and later the indigenous peoples of Sabah and Sarawak was incorporated into the Constitution in order to safeguard their economic interests.  
  • Are Chinese and Indian opinion makers willing to admit that all said and done Special position and the New Economic Policy (NEP) that grew out of it have contributed immensely to the nation’s well-being? Without the accelerated development of the Malays which the NEP was largely responsible for, a strong Malay middle-class with significant representation in almost all professions, and in the upper echelons of commerce and industry would not have emerged in less than a generation. It is this Malay middle-class which has stabilised ethnic relations.  It is because a once impoverished people enjoys an appreciable  degree of equity and justice today that the Malays continue to place their faith in a market economy and parliamentary democracy which in turn have benefitted everyone, including the Chinese.
  • By acknowledging the positive aspects of the NEP, one is not denying that in its implementation there have been accesses and abuses. In a number of instances, opportunities for non-Malays in education and the economy have been unjustly restricted. Well-heeled Malays and other Bumiputras have also sometimes taken advantage of what is essentially an affirmative action policy meant for the poor and deprived, to advance their own interests.
  • In the last four years Prime Minister Mohd Najib has sought to address some of these issues. Non-Malay recipients of Federal Government scholarships have reached an all-time high. There is a concerted effort to increase the number of non-Malay public servants and non-Malay personnel in the police and the armed forces. All 1Malaysia ventures are blind to ethnicity and religion. Even in strengthening Malay entrepreneurship, new approaches that discourage rent-seeking are being tried out.
These and other worthwhile efforts should continue, the negative Chinese electoral response notwithstanding. They should continue because it is a question of justice and fairness. Who knows they may persuade a small segment of the community to do some soul-searching.

It is this soul-searching within the influential stratum of the Chinese community that is the greatest need of the hour ---- a serious, sincere reflection on prevailing realities and the Chinese position; on its understanding of equality in the context of the larger nation; and on its future in a society whose very survival rests upon multi-ethnic cooperation. 


3 comments:

  1. apa lagi cina nak.
    1.mereka nak kuasa.
    2.mereka nak kuasa.
    3.mereka nak kuasa.

    usabukata

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  2. Though the 'urbanised' Malays from far flung ulus and kampongs living in cities and it's fringes couldn't care less about how certain Malaysian society treat the Malay leader of the the nation of Malaysia with outright contempt and double speak to extract a lot of goodies, the really ulu and backward Bumiputras were watching and they talk about it. They were angry at the uncouth or 'kurang ajar' attitude of the section of society and Malaysian society as a whole will revert to the pre independent day where the the attitude is, to each his own.

    Ruralrevert

    ReplyDelete
  3. My family and I are all born in Malaysia; we do not read/speak Mandarin and I have chosen to come home to Malaysia despite green card/PR offers twice. So I'm Malaysian 1st and last - and have Chinese ancestors 4 generations ago.
    None of my family/friends are politicians - so we are not interested in Kuasa. We are interested in how our tax Ringgits are (mis)used.
    I have no problem with the intent of NEP - to uplift the poorer Malays - but have issue with subsidizing millionaire's bungalows. I have no problem with Malaysia being Tanah Melayu - then pls, Melayu gotta hold the govt of the day accountable for clean governance. That's not the case today where in just one deal - Submarines - the commission is RM500mil! The dirt of PKFZ and NFC stinks to stratosphere. And I hold the BN govt responsible.
    As to Mohd Ali Rustum - his son's wedding...mmmm. Ghani - I feel sorry for - but obviously Gelang Patah wanted to support LKS. Yes, many of us voted en masse for PR (not anti-MCA/Gerakan but anti-BN) not so much because we love PR, but believe that BN needed a TIME-OUT to correct it's Entitled Behaviour, to be useful again.
    For those who think DAP is all about Power, LKS, Karpal, LGE all could have made themselves Rich and powerful a LONG time ago if they had joined Gerakan/MCA - so I respect their struggles. s I do PAS anf Tok Guru's principles.
    BN has Najib, Rosmah, Shahrizat, Hishamuddin, etc to be blamed for losing my support - and for the recored I did vote BN until 2004! I believed Abdullah Badawi when he promised to clean up this country.
    I believe in Malaysia, I love Malaysia - and I want it to be better than Singapore/Taiwan/Korea - not sliding down to compare it with being better than Cambodia! And I voted UBAH hoping that the coalition of PR would be the govt for 5 years - but am frustrated that my vote is worth only one-fifth that of a voter in Putrajaya.
    I want a Needs-based policy - and that should lift up all poor Malays/Indians/whatever - so that the poor and desperate will not resort to crime. NEP has had its time - time to help all needy Malaysians - I'm confident it will help the poor Malays.
    So pls note - I've NOT asked for equal status, Chinese language, scholarships, contracts,etc- I only want a better Malaysia, and believe (as is my democratic right) that BN is not offering it. As a govt in power for 56 years, for its Hime Minister/UMNO mouthpieces to tell me to get out -hey, and anybody wonders why I voted PR? I'm a PJ Voter

    ReplyDelete