One of the
most positive developments in the wake of the 13th General Election
is the willingness of a number of Ministers in the Federal Cabinet to invite
Opposition politicians to join them in policy formulation and planning at the
ministerial level.
Hopefully,
cooperation of this sort --- if it works out --- will reduce the antagonism and
animosity between the Barisan Nasional and the Pakatan Rakyat which has
poisoned the political atmosphere in the last five years or so. Adversarial
politics upon which our political system is built often undermines the etiquette
and respect that should govern relations between actors with different
perspectives on society.
If the
Federal Government and the Federal Opposition demonstrate that they can work
together on certain matters, the Centre and the Opposition states should also
aim to achieve a higher level of understanding especially on issues that have
divided them in the recent past. Since there is always the possibility of a
State and the Centre being ruled by different political parties, it is
imperative that the rulers at both levels transcend partisan loyalties and
focus upon the well-being of the people. Opposition leaders at the State level
should perhaps initiate moves in that direction, since some Federal Ministers
have already reached out to the Opposition.
In the spirit
of reaching out to each other, the BN and the PR should also give serious
attention to a proposal that has re-emerged in the post-election scenario.
I had first
mooted the idea of a Consultative Council on National Unity in 1987 when I was
heading a local NGO. Later, when I joined
the Opposition, then known as Barisan Alternatif (BA), I revived the proposal
and developed it further. The BA accepted it and the concept of a Majlis
Perundingan Perpaduan Nasional (MPPN) was presented to the public at a media
conference on the 2nd of April 2001.
I had
suggested then --- and I remain convinced --- that the MPPN should be
established through an Act of Parliament. It would be independent of the
Executive and would be answerable to Parliament to which it would submit half-yearly
reports to be debated by both the Dewan Rakyat and the Dewan Negara. These
reports would also contain recommendations which if adopted by Parliament would
be implemented by the Executive.
Since the
proposed MPPN would be answerable to Parliament, its members would also be
appointed by the same body. What is envisaged is a membership of about 40 to 50
persons comprising representatives of citizens’ groups and individuals who have
researched and written on ethnic relations in Malaysia. The membership should
reflect the wide spectrum of ethnic concerns that characterise our society and
should be as inclusive as possible. Political parties and serving politicians will
not be part of the MPPN. This is to ensure that the consultative council will
not be subjected to the pulls and pressures of partisan politics. It will also
help to elevate issues pertaining to national unity above politics which in
some ways has been a bane to the quest for national unity.
The
MPPN would meet behind closed doors. There would be no media coverage of its
deliberations. The media and the public would have access to its work through
its half-yearly reports presented to Parliament. It is through Parliament that
the MPPN would be accountable to the people.
It is
crucial that a platform like MPPN be established expeditiously, given the
situation we are in. When political polarisation conceals deeper
ethnic-cum-religious polarisation, it is important to create opportunities for
citizens with divergent ethnic perspectives to meet and share their innermost
feelings in an atmosphere that allows for honest, sober reflection. If
anything, the 13th General Election and its outcome has revealed
that a substantial segment of the Malay and Chinese populace subscribes to notions
of the character and identity of the Malaysian nation which are diametrically
different. It is partly because many Malays felt in the week leading to the
polls that the idea of the nation that they were comfortable with was being
challenged by a view of Malaysia that ignored its historical foundation that
they rallied around UMNO. The election also showed how ‘equality’ and ‘justice’
are increasingly seen through a communal prism that has little or no empathy
for the other and how it understands its own situation. The impact of young voters who mirror some of
these communal tendencies and yet are different in their political orientation
from the older generation is yet another development that merits serious
thought. Add to this the role of the new media in fostering and reinforcing
both communal and non-communal attitudes. Among these attitudes are those
related to religion and its role in the public sphere which in the election
generated responses from a segment of both the Muslim majority and the Christian
minority.
What this
shows is that there are issues of great magnitude that should be addressed
outside the arena of electoral politics through sincere and continuous
engagement and interaction with the diverse citizens’ groups that constitute
our multi-ethnic nation. Hence the case for MPPN.
Let us be clear.
ReplyDeleteThe initiative should come from the Chinese. Kita akan nilai jujur ke tidak :)
First gesture, tukar STAR editorial board.
If no gesture then they can go fuck themselves