COMMENT As the buzz surrounding Bersih
grows louder, the stakes are rising. As the week began, many wrote off
Bersih 3.0, suggesting that the outrage and momentum did not echo the
sentiments of last July. They suggested that the playing the rally card
again would backfire.
Yet, as the week unfolded, and with the DBKL's (City Hall's) response to
the occupation of Dataran Merdeka and students calling for free
tertiary education, the tide slowly began to turn. It was BN which
appeared to be playing a bad hand.
While
there was a decentralisation of who was on the frontline for the BN
this time, local authorities rather than national leaders, the end
result was the same - a failure to address deep-seated concerns about
electoral integrity and unwillingness to accept the protest that has
arisen by the failure to address these concerns.
While many remain undecided, the ground is moving. Like the earlier two
rallies, Bersih 3.0 has evolved into an event that captures a broad
range of concerns, from the environment, religious rights, 1Care health
insurance scheme and corruption to electoral reform and free education.
The core of these issues involves a call for better governance and
greater consultation with Malaysians. This has been the central nerve of
Malaysian politics since 1998-1999, as leaders who are seen to be
engaging in reform win power and those who don't lose support.
This was the case in 2004 and 2008. The Bersih 3.0 rally will shape whether this will be the case in 2012 (or 2013)...
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