Change of government needed to undo all the adverse effects of 25-year Operation Lalang on democracy, human rights and national institutions
Tomorrow marks the 25th anniversary of Operation Lalang which
brought about the darkest days for democracy and human rights in the
nation’s history.
There was not only the arrest of 106 Malaysians, including opposition
leaders – 16 of whom were from the DAP, including MPs and State
Assemblymen – trade unionists, social activists, environmentalists,
Chinese educationists and religious workers, there was also the
wholesale attacks on press freedom with the closure of three newspapers,
the merciless attacks on the independence of the judiciary and the rule
of law resulting in the sacking of the Lord President and two Supreme
Court judges and the series of undemocratic legislation which caused a
tectonic shift in the Malaysian political landscape, subordinating the
legislative and judicial branches to the Executive or to be more exact
to the fiat of one person, the Prime Minister of the day.
The Government Transformation Programme of Prime Minister, Datuk Seri
Najib Razak has promised to make Malaysia “the best democracy of the
world”, but after more than 42 months of his premiership, Malaysia falls
far short of the conditions to be a “normal democracy” let alone the
“world’s best democracy”, as illustrated by the refusal by the Prime
Minister and the ruling UMNO/BN coalition to make a public commitment
that they would fully accept the verdict of the voters in the 13th
General Election and would peacefully and smoothly transfer Federal
power to Pakatan Rakyat if this is the verdict of the Malaysian
electorate in the ballot box.
It is clear that a change of government at the national level, for
the first time in 55 years, is needed to undo all the ravages and
adverse effects of the 25-year Operation Lalang on democracy, human
rights and the national institutions – whether it be the restoration of a
truly independent judiciary and a just rule of law; the unshackling of
Executive usurpation of powers of Parliament and the Judiciary; the
flourishing of a free and responsible media and the fundamental rights
of freedom of speech, expression and information; proper
check-and-balance mechanisms to end corruption and abuses of power; and
the restoration to all national institutions their impartiality,
independence and professionalism.
On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of Operation Lalang, let all
Malaysians reaffirm their resolve to undo all the ravages of the
Operation Lalang catastrophe in 1987 by a united effort to strengthen
democracy, human rights and national institutions so that there could be
no recurrence of a Operation Lalang in future by voting solidly for a
national change of government in the coming general election.
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