Mahathir
eyes White House invitation as repression continues in Malaysia
By Abdar-Rahman Koya in Kuala Lumpur
The beleaguered Mahathir regime in Malaysia
appears to have a knack for finding strategies that have unintended
effects. In its latest campaign to silence the opposition, ten
more people, including Nik Adli Nik Abdul Aziz, the son of PAS
chief Nik Abdul Aziz, were abducted in the first week of August
under the notorious Internal Security Act (ISA), which allows
indefinite detention without the need to produce detainees in
court or furnish evidence. This man’s only crime is to have served
in the Afghan jihad against the Soviets. The police have also
admitted that a witch-hunt is underway for more ‘militants’ who
went for jihad. Mahathir defended the witch-hunt as ‘preventive
measures’, saying that the Israelis too were taking preventive
measures against Palestinians.
The arrests are the third in what seem to
be a three-phased police crackdown against reformasi leaders,
students and Islamic activists: members of PAS, in other words.
In April, ten activists, mostly of the National Justice Party
(Keadilan), led by Wan Azizah Ismail, Anwar Ibrahim’s wife, were
arrested, with six of them now in prolonged detention at Kamunting,
a camp for political detainees. This was followed by two arrests
last month in a nationwide swoop on university campuses.
The victims of the latest crackdown are Islamic
activists and PAS leaders. The government says that the arrests
were aimed at ‘militants’ trained in Afghanistan, who are accused
of everything from bank-robberies and murders to attacks on non-Muslim
places of worship to create a ‘purist’ Islamic state. None of
these allegations has so far been supported by evidence, hence
the use of the ISA.
Many see in this a desperate attempt by Mahathir
to mend fences with his Western mentors. A report in the Far Eastern
Economic Review of July 26 revealed that Mahathir is making frantic
efforts to wrangle an invitation to the White House. The normally
west-bashing premier has sent three letters to President George
W. Bush, one congratulating him for his handling of the spy aircraft
episode in China in April. This was followed by permission for
hundreds of American troops to land in Malaysia to conduct ‘military
exercises’.
The latest arrest also came as PAS defied
a ban on political talks and vowed to continue its political gatherings.
Mahathir had earlier lamented that the Malays hated his regime
because of what he called a ‘hate campaign’ organised by PAS.
Subsequent gatherings were met by brutal police action to disperse
crowds.
But far from silencing critics, the provocations
appear to have encouraged PAS, whose support among Malay Muslims
has been increasing at the cost of UMNO since the dismissal of
Anwar Ibrahim. Many had previously voiced concern that PAS, comfortable
with control of two important states, were becoming more complacent
with their current strength and therefore not prepared to take
risks. Worries have also been expressed about PAS’s declining
role as an Islamic movement. But the latest crackdown on PAS has
woken it up and alerted some of its leaders to the dangers of
working within the system.
Since putting Anwar Ibrahim behind bars in
September 1998, Mahathir has been displaying some of his most
adventurous strategies, with contradictory aims: to woo back Malays,
and to reinforce the support of the Chinese, whose votes in 1999
ensured his ruling coalition formed the government. For the former,
he whipped up nationalistic sentiments along racist lines; for
the latter, he tells the non-Muslims of the danger of Islam and
the threat to their culture should PAS come to power. That has,
however, left the Malays all the more reason to rally behind PAS,
while Chinese leaders are given a free hand to scorn Islam.
The speed in which Mahathir changes his ill-founded
tactics is also interesting. Not long ago he picked a fight with
Chinese activists, scorning them for questioning what is called
the ‘Malay special rights’, a system whereby native Malays are
accorded quotas in public institutions. UMNO had then launched
a racist anti-Chinese campaign, with demonstrations and a media
blitz, effectively telling Malays that without UMNO they would
no longer have these rights.
Even then, Malay support for his government
continued to decline. Added to this is strong opposition among
students, young people and the judiciary, which appears to be
changing. Mahathir finally announced that the education system
will no longer give preference to Malays but will be based on
merit. Although the move is welcome, his argument is based not
on fairness but on political vengeance against Malay students,
whom he continuously calls "lazy" and "ungrateful".
UMNO is not the only party worried by PAS
inroads. The strongly anti-Islamic Malaysian Chinese Association,
UMNO’s main Chinese coalition partner, has even formed a special
unit to explain to the non-Muslim Chinese community "the threat
of the Islamic state". The party did not hide its aim to "educate
and explain to the people the damage that an Islamic state can
have on a multi-religious society". Not long ago, non-Muslim politicians
would not dare declare such animosity openly. But with Mahathir
himself churning out his anti-Islamic diatribe almost daily, they
have been tacitly given a free hand.
On a lighter note, however, Mahathir may find
himself in the company of some eccentrics. He was recently declared
a true Islamic leader by a Scottish ‘Sufi master’ by the name
of Abdulqadir Jilani, who flew in to the prime minister’s office
to declare Malaysia the "capital of Islam". He also criticised
local Islamists, branding all of them Shi’ahs who lack "financial
vision". Jilani was apparently overjoyed that Mahathir had reacted
positively to his proposal to use the so-called gold dinar minted
by his company in place of the US dollar.
The regime’s imaginary Islamic credibility
seems to be gone. With even Islamic scholars such as Yusuf Qaradawi
and Taha Jaber Alwani, who had earlier praised the government
for its ‘progressive Islam’, now calling for Mahathir’s trial
under Shari’ah, Mahathir is finding it easier to discard the Islamic
card altogether; hence his eagerness to be invited to the White
House. Much to his disappointment, he was turned down; Uncle Sam’s
envoy to Malaysia told him bluntly to restore ‘democratic’ rights
in his country before ties could be ‘normalised’. Such suicidal
acts he cannot afford. The most he can do is impress Uncle Sam
that he too is playing a small role in the fight against Islamic
‘terrorism’.
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