The opposition response to
scandals and growing repression has been weak.
“The best lack all conviction,
while the worst are full of passionate intensity.” So goes the poem by William
Butler Yeats, a line that could easily be used to sum up the state of affairs
in Malaysia.
The Malaysian liberal can
be a curious character. Holding views considered liberal when compared against
many of his countrymen, but which may well run into the conservative in Western
societies, he (or she) is a tragic figure, his way of life often under attack
by his country’s ruling party and the groups aligned with it.
For news,
he eschews the government-controlled press – the vapid broadcasts of RTM, the
propaganda sheets of Utusan or The New Straits Times – looking
instead to more independent media outlets. He listens to BFM 89.9 and reads The
Edge and The Malaysian Insider, or foreign publications like the BBC,
The New York Times, or The Wall Street Journal. He learns about
the latest crackdown or the latest Malaysian fiasco to grab international
headlines and he fumes or laughs in disgusted disbelief. He decries it later
with his friends and acquaintances over supper at a mamak stall, or
dinner at a restaurant, or drinks at a country club.
If he’s
young, he often expresses this discontent online. Apart from the usual photos
and status updates, his Facebook wall features incredulous posts charting
Malaysia’s slide deeper into tyranny. He posts and shares and likes, he pulls
up dumb statements by the country’s ministers and tweets sarcastic rejoinders.
Speak to
him, though, and he seems eminently reasonable, strangely mild in the face of
all that’s happening. What does he want for the country? A variety of things,
of course, but ultimately for people to be left free and in peace. How to get
it? By eschewing confrontation, spreading awareness, building bridges,
dialogue, and so on. He loves his country – still does – with the weary
resignation of someone who’s been disappointed by the thing he loves and expects
to be disappointed again. He is affable and temperate, cautious and
considerate. He is also indisputably, utterly, helpless.
Any
foreigner observing the rampant spread of corruption and Islamic extremism in
Malaysia could be forgiven for asking how it’s come to this, how it’s been
allowed to come to this. It’s a question many Malaysians ask themselves.
Over the
1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB – a state investment fund) corruption
scandal alone, for example, Prime Minister Najib Razak has sacked the attorney general
who was meant to be investigating him, had the offices of the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission raided to hide evidence of his crimes, suspended The Edge
(a local paper) and blocked The
Sarawak Report (a whistleblowing website) for reporting on it, and claimed that the $700
million transferred to his personal bank account was a donation. How, many ask,
could someone who has so blatantly betrayed the public’s trust remain in power?
For that
matter, how could Malaysia’s government get away with jailing opposition
leader Anwar Ibrahim (whose coalition won the popular vote
in the last election) over trumped-up sodomy charges? How could its courts get
away with a ruling as ludicrous as banning non-Muslims
from using the word “Allah”?
Much of
the reason for this lies with Malaysia’s liberals – those you’d expect to check
such abuse.
Liberal Response
I can
tell you about them. There was the public intellectual and think tank director
who tried to convince me that the best way to stop the government from
censoring unflattering news online was to write a research paper on the
benefits of a free internet. There were the civil society leaders who responded
to the government’s use of the draconian Sedition Act to round up their critics
by submitting a petition
against it. There was opposition leader Anwar himself, who, when charged with
sodomy, meekly submitted to the legal charade, and even expressed confidence
that the Federal Court judges would be fair enough to acquit him, despite
knowing full well they were the ruling party’s puppets – two weeks before those
judges declared him guilty and sentenced him to jail.
The
liberal response to the 1MDB fiasco has been similarly weak.
The
leaders of the opposition parties issue statements and questions on the matter,
which the government simply ignores.
The most
tangible response is Bersih 4.0, a rally planned for the end of the month.
Although it aims to gather hundreds of thousands of Malaysians together to
protest in three of the country’s cities, its organizers intend to disperse it
after two days, even if its demands for Najib to step down and for the
implementation of institutional safeguards against corruption are ignored,
which they probably will be. It is not expected to change anything.
Though suggestions have been
made to expand the two-day rally into a mass civil disobedience movement – one
that provokes confrontation with the authorities and occupies key areas in the
major cities until its demands are met (probably the only strategy under the
circumstances with a chance of success) – Bersih’s organizers seem to have
rejected them, asserting instead
that the purpose of the rally is to “send the government a message.” That the
ruling party has ignored the message of previous Bersih rallies with impunity
has not prompted a strategy rethink.
Those
people I mentioned are good, courageous, earnest men and women who represent
much of what is best in the country, which makes their helplessness all the
more unfortunate.
Why do
Malaysian liberals persist with methods they know to be so ineffective? Why do
they continue to play by the rules of a game that’s hopelessly rigged against
them?
A Malaysian
psychologist I once spoke to described this phenomenon as “learned
helplessness.” Malaysians, so habituated to oppressive rule, ignore obvious
methods of resistance, thinking within the framework the government has set,
beseeching the very authorities that are abusing them to save them from abuse.
Anyone
can fall victim to this affliction of course, but it’s a particularly liberal
failing to forget that ultimately it’s a question of power, and that power is
seldom given up – it has to be taken. This is something the hateful fascist
groups in the country, like Perkasa, never forget.
Last
year, I attended a talk at a country club on the damage Islamic extremism was
doing to freedom in Malaysia. I asked the panel how the spread of extremism
could be stopped. Among the panelists who replied was Ambiga Sreenevasan,
former Chair of Bersih and one of Malaysia’s greatest civil society leaders.
She
responded that the solution was to send people to educate and spread awareness
amongst the country’s rural Muslims. Even as the rest of the audience
applauded, I was skeptical – even if we could educate Malaysia’s Muslims faster
than the rabid imams could indoctrinate them (unlikely), something like that
would take generations to yield results, generations the country cannot afford.
The
strategy sounded hollow then. It sounds even hollower now.
Perhaps
Malaysia’s liberals are too genteel to provoke confrontation, too diffident to
risk chaos – the creative disruption necessary for real change.
Perhaps
they console themselves with the notion that the ruling party’s moves against
its critics are signs of weakness and desperation, that its bullying will only
harm its position.
If so,
they have some unlearning to do, and they’d best do it fast. They’re running
out of time.
Shaun Tan
is a freelance writer
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