The head of Bersih, the organisation
campaigning for clean elections in Malaysia, has criticised reform of the
country's Election Commission, a move aimed at healing deep divisions following
last month's disputed elections
Ambiga Sreenevasan said the reforms announced by prime
minister Najib Razak at the weekend were like "fixing a gaping wound by
using band aid remedies" and would not work.
Ms Ambiga said the commission has lost the confidence of the
public and its top officials should resign or be removed and replaced with
"commissioners of the highest integrity and courage."
She also criticised Mr Najib's announcement the commission
would report to a special committee that would include opposition
representatives.
"To make them report to another committee is
unconstitutional because if you look at the federal constitution they are
supposed to be an independent body," she said.
Under the reforms the Election Commission, under fire over
its conduct of the knife-edge May 5 poll, will report to a parliamentary select
committee rather than to the prime minister's office as was set in the
country's 1957 constitution.
"I understand that sections of the public want to see
our election processes strengthened," Mr Najib said without providing any
further details of the changes.
Hundreds of thousands of people have attended rallies across
the country to protest the election outcome where a three-party opposition
alliance won 54 percent of the popular vote but failed to oust the Barsian
Nasional coalition that has ruled since independence from Britain in 1957.
Malaysia has a gerrymandered electoral system that favours
Malay Muslims in rural electorates.
The opposition led by former deputy prime minister Anwar
Ibrahim is preparing to mount a legal challenge to the results in 30 close-run
seats, claiming there was vote rigging through fake ballots and black-outs at
key polling centres.
Lim kit Siang, a veteran opposition politician, said reform
Election Commission reform appeared to be a step in the right direction but said
its leaders should be replaced and the opposition should be consulted on the
reforms.
"The Election Commission needs a clean start," Mr
Lim said.
"There is no doubt that the EC has in many instances
acted as a Barisan Nasional protagonist in attacking opposition leaders, rather
than acting under an impartial rule," he said.
The government has denied any fraud took place and said the
elections were fair.
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