steadyaku47 : Saw this in Din Merican's blog - too good not to share it with others. Enjoy. With thanks to the author S. Thayaparan and Malaysiakini
February 7, 2016
http://www.malaysiakini.com
Schizophrenic nature of this regime
S. THAYAPARAN is Commander (Rtd) of the Royal Malaysian Navy.
February 7, 2016
Sparing the Wrongdoer like Najib Razak
by S. Thayaparanhttp://www.malaysiakini.com
‘Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets…’ – Napoléon Bonaparte
COMMENT: Nobody would agree more with the
above quote than the Najib Abdul Razak regime. Ever since the Sarawak
Report expose and then the alternative press began reporting on the
‘donation’-now-investment scandal that has engulfed the Prime Minister,
the keris(es) have been out for the online media.
With UMNO devouring itself with its
internal schisms, the search for acceptable scapegoats has been frantic.
The Chinese community, always the first choice, has proven problematic
since with each passing the day the Malay community has been inundated
with news that the so-called defenders of race and religion have been
selling them out for decades and getting rich in the process.
Sacred cows of Malay hegemony have been
railing against the Najib regime and in the process, the Najib UMNO
faction has been carry out a systemic Night of the Long Knives on
dissenters and rebels.
The Christian community is always a juicy
target but the threat of IS and Islamic extremism right on our
doorsteps have the security apparatus in a constant state of high alert
for provocations that could lead to sectarian Islamic conflict that we
have demonstrated that we are woefully unprepared to face.
Secrets are leaking from the corridors of
UMNO power. Sleepers, sympathisers, malcontents, dissidents, people of
conscience or just plain troublemakers, are spilling their guts because
Cash is King but, as always there is not enough of it to go around.
I never really liked the idea of calling
Najib the Teflon Prime Minister. The only other person of such title is
Russian President Vladimir Putin and we all know how he deals with
dissent.
No, the real Teflon President was someone
like former United States President William Jefferson Clinton, who had
to contend with a free press, an independent legislature and his own
personal demons. Yet nothing stuck to Slick Willy and most Americans
loved him. Now that is Teflon.
However, our Prime Minister does not fit
into my definition. With the UMNO state controlling everything, there is
no need for spin or brilliant counter moves, shrewd political
manoeuvrings, or deft handling of public perception, there is only the
blunt force of the apparatus of the state doing its master’s bidding.
I have no idea when we descended the
rabbit hole but when Attorney-General Mohamed Apandi Ali warns everyone
that his office is seriously mulling “to amend laws to increase the
punishment for those who leak state secrets and journalists who report
them” I think we can safely say we are not in Kansas any more.
What exactly are these “state secrets” he
is alluding to? Plainly, his warning is to potential whistleblowers but
more importantly, to the recalcitrant online press who continue
offering alternatives views to the UMNO narrative.
The Attorney-General references China of
all countries and says, “In some countries, the leaking of official
secrets is a serious offence, like in China where it carries the death
sentence,” which just goes to show, you the schizophrenic nature of this
regime when the Chinese are sometimes to be scorned but other times
worthy of emulation.
Well, let me remind the Attorney-General
that China also has the death penalty for corruption. In fact according
to the state-owned China Daily, “There is an overwhelming
support for death penalty in corruption cases, according to an online
survey conducted by Social Survey Centre of China Youth Daily
on November 4, 2014. It claims that 73.2 percent of 2,105 respondents
think that the death sentence should continue to be applied in graft
cases.”
In the same article Che Hao, Associate
Professor at Peking University Law School, said, “Considering the
ongoing anti-graft campaign and people’s high expectations, it would be
prudent to keep the death sentence for corruption cases”
Now, we already have the death penalty
for a variety of offences but does the A-G’s office think that the death
penalty be used for corruption cases? Would the public support
something like this?
In the past year not only have our
democratic institutions been compromised , we have a former de facto Law
Minister charged in court for asking the Prime Minister to step down.
We have had a law professor charged in court for giving a legal opinion.
We have had a cartoonist charged in court for drawing cartoons. We have
had activist charged in court for organising protests, as is our
constitutional right.
We have had radio presenters investigated
because of suspicion of turning Malaysia into a “liberal country”. We
have had publications suspended because they were investigating and
enticing employees to reveal damaging information of possible
corruption. We have had material confiscated because certain words are
verboten to a certain segment of the Malaysian polity.
In all those cases where charges brought,
I am sure the A-G’s office had 90 percent (sic) of the evidence. What a
ludicrous proposition. What exactly does 90 percent of evidence mean?
Either you have evidence of probative value or you do not.
Why bother shooting the messenger? The
alternative press is but a small fraction of the dissent that is heard
in the online world. When the prime minister initiates legal proceedings
against Malaysiakini because its Yoursay column offends him,
does he really think the average netizens would be cowed into
self-censorship like the propaganda organs of the state?
When the editors of Utusan Malaysia have
no problem saying that it lies and spins for the government, all bets
are off. That is one kind of message that is being spread. I suppose
lying and spinning are on the bottom of the list for the A-G’s office
unless it comes from the alternative media.
Whenever Apandi Ali or indeed anyone from
Barisan Nasional speaks, what they say does not resemble anything like a
functional democracy. What they describe, with their threats,
intimidation, provocations and enticements is not a system of government
or governance.
What they say makes the Malaysian
government sounds more like Cosa Nostra rather than a democratically
elected government for the people by the people. What does Cosa Nostra
mean? It loosely translates to ‘Our Thing’.Indeed.
S. THAYAPARAN is Commander (Rtd) of the Royal Malaysian Navy.
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