MGG Pillai
Umno leaders come out of the
woodwork to express their sadness at PAS roadblocks Umno must
clear before Malay unity talks could proceed. The national leaders
have had their say, and now lesser leaders raise the decibel of
Umno indignation.
But those outside the immediate
circle of leaders relishing the sound of their own voices care
not a whit. After all, it was Umno which wanted Malay unity talks
for a narrow selfish interest of restoring its own credibility
with the Malay ground.
But for talks to be held, there
must be, as Umno president and Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir
Mohamad insists often globally, a level-playing ground. In Umno's
and PAS' view, there is not. This is not as paradoxical as it
appears. Both Umno and PAS insists the ground tilts against them.
Umno would not have wanted the talks, nor PAS impose conditions
that cannot be met, otherwise.
Neither Umno nor PAS is clear
what it seek. One does not want to meet the other's demands, and
both would regard the other's concession a victory for the other.
So, the high volume of political noise about PAS' intransigence
would continue in the mainstream media as strenuously as PAS demanding
that its conditions be met.
PAS has now thrown the ball
into the Umno court. Umno cannot kick it back without compromising
the government it leads. The issues raised are resolvable. The
attorney-general as public prosecutor can initiate and discontinue
prosecutions at his (or, as now, her) absolute discretion.
Article 145 of the Federal Constitution
provides for that. The Anwar Ibrahim affair upsets not only the
government's, but the Malay's, equilibrium. It can be resolved,
if Dr Mahathir would give the nod, by withdrawing from Anwar's
appeals. But his administration is so deeply involved in his excoriation
that it is as painful to retract as to move forward.
Neither committed
PAS makes it a condition of
the Malay unity talks that the government eschew plans to remove
the word ‘Islam’ from the name of political parties. Is it that
important for a party that has used the name for 50 years? The
law surely cannot be retroactive without raising other political
difficulties for the government.
The law would then apply from
the day it is gazetted and surely would apply only to those political
parties that apply for registration after that day. This would
make PAS the only political party legally to have the word ‘Islam’
in its name. As a theocratically inclined party, it strengthens
its position as the only Islamic party around. PAS did not think
through this as Umno customarily does.
PAS also should not have insisted
upon the federal government's withdrawal of oil royalties to Terengganu.
Especially when this is bringing the state government to its knees
and funds allotted for its administration based on the oil royalties
now does not come. But it did because of concerns within the PAS
leadership about the wisdom of the Malay unity talks as constituted.
Neither Umno nor PAS, in other
words, is committed to the talks. But neither could say it is
not. But having thought it had PAS over a barrel, Umno finds itself
mired in confusion and occasional bad faith. Umno viewed this
politically when the Malay shifts from him for cultural reasons.
With an important segment of
Malay opinion with neither but with the National Justice Party
or Keadilan, the joker in the Malay unity pack, either of both
could lose ground.
Agenda widened
The hidden Umno agenda was,
and is, to seduce PAS into the government. Important segments
in PAS, including many once Umno members, want closer ties with
Umno. Both are nervous of Keadilan's potential strength, though
if you look at how it now is, you would not think so. But its
icon, Anwar Ibrahim, has a stranglehold on the Malay cultural
ground than any outside, in the Barisan Nasional or in the opposition,
can challenge the Umno-PAS worldview.
The Umno and PAS dilemma is
to ensure Malay unity by ignoring Anwar Ibrahim and Keadilan.
If Umno is so concerned about Malay unity, it could have seized
the advantage by pre-empting PAS demands and conceding it in the
larger Malay interest. PAS could not but go along, for if it had
not, it would have lost ground, if not to Umno then to Keadilan.
So it widened the agenda - there
is as much apprehension in Umno ranks about the proposed talks
as in PAS. It is, after all, a meeting of two diametrically opposed
worldviews about Malay unity. Umno believed Malay unity could
only be with a strong cultural base, and PAS with a strong religious
base. Umno is nervous now because that cultural ground shifts
away from it. PAS was once the religious wing of Umno, from which
it broke away in 1951.
The differences do not end there.
Umno when formed in 1946 believed in a regional confederation
of the Malay peoples. This collapsed five years later when its
founding president, Onn Jaffar, was forced out and the new president,
Tunku Abdul Rahman, focused its reach within the Malay peninsula.
The religious wing disagreed,
and provided one more reason why it left Umno. This Umno belief
in a self-contained national Malay state cut off from the other
Malay states conflicts with the Melayu Raya worldview, which PAS
espouses, of a Malay state within a larger Malay entity. This
remains as true 50 years later.
This is not emphasised, but
must be accepted before talks move forward. Keadilan's appearance
challenges both worldviews, and makes it more appealing to the
Malay cultural ground by synthesising the two views into a composite
third view which has much sympathy with the Malay.
Especially when it is sidelined,
as now, in this search for Malay unity.
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