Genuine civil rights reform cannot rely on the abolition of the Internal
Security Act and similar repressive laws alone as the country's
constitution contains provisions that are against civil liberties, says
law professor Abdul Aziz Bari.
To
this end, Aziz argued that the country's constitution must be amended
so that there will be no provision overwriting the fundamental liberties
enshrined in the constitution.
"The
suggestion to review the Malaysian constitution is good," he said in
response to a question from the floor during a post-ISA forum in Kuala
Lumpur on Tuesday.
However, Aziz
warned that this would not be possible because neither the government
nor the opposition had the necessary two-thirds majority in Parliament
to push through the amendments, unless they worked together.
"But
I don't think that it is possible (to amend) because the constitution
is so rigid. If, by reviewing, we mean amendments, it's not possible
because this requires a two-thirds majority in Parliament," he said.
Aziz
was referring to two provisions in the constitution, Article 149, which
provides for Parliament to create laws that are against fundamental
liberties, and Article 150, which allows for the declaration of
emergency.
"Both these provisions are
worse than they were during the British era. After independence,
Article 150 was amended in 1981, allowing an emergency to be declared
even before an emergency situation happens.
"So
if the government feels threatened, it can declare an emergency on the
excuse that it is anticipating or wants to intercept chaos," he said.
'PM pressured by Bersih rally'
Aziz said the people had to change their mentality that the country needs preventive laws.
"The
problem is that we have become so accustomed to the fact that there
must be such laws...," he said referring to the replacement laws should
the ISA be repealed.
Echoing
the need for focus to be on the people rather than on laws, political
analyst Wong Chin Huat drew parallels to the well-behaved protesters
during the July 9 Bersih 2.0 rally crackdown.
"There
is no law that requires the people to run away from the police in an
orderly fashion, but they ran in an orderly manner on that day," Wong
said.
He acknowledged Prime Minister
Najib Razak's announcement to abolish the ISA as a "smart move", but
attributed it to the sentiments of the people, particularly the Bersih
rally.
"Why did he (Najib) announce
it now? Because 50,000 people took to the streets. The prime minister
came under pressure and was reminded of his promise (to review the ISA)
three years ago.
"Before July 9, he
was led by right-wing group Perkasa and (its chief) Ibrahim Ali but
after July 9, he was forced to follow the people's lead," Wong added.
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