KUALA LUMPUR, July 3 — The
ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) risks losing Indian support, seen crucial
to winning the next general elections, after the recent spate of attacks
against Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan reached boiling point last week when
Umno MP Datuk Mohamad Aziz suggested she be hanged for treason, MIC
leaders told The Malaysian Insider.
The country’s Tamil newspapers splashed the news as well as analysis
of the Sri Gading MP’s outburst in parliament, reflecting the popularity
of the electoral movement Bersih’s leader, much to the dismay of BN
leaders who have been trying to regain the support of the country’s 1.8
million-strong Indian community, who form seven per cent of the
population and electorate.
MIC pointed out that party president Datuk G. Palanivel had to move
immediately into damage control mode the moment the issue hit media
headlines by assuring the community that BN’s leading Indian party does
not endorse the Sri Gading MP’s stand.
“Such
remarks will affect Indian voters, who are turning towards the BN now,”
Palanivel had warned last Wednesday, even as the community’s newspapers
went to town with the news.
In a heated moment during debates in the Dewan Rakyat last Tuesday,
Mohamad had suggested that Ambiga be hanged for treason over her role in
the Bersih 3.0 rally, which saw chaos reign the city’s streets on April
28.
The Umno leader’s remarks earned him front-page recognition in many
local Tamil dailies and article upon article was filled with
hard-hitting responses from community leaders, similar to the months
before Election 2008 when opinion leaders from the Indian community
amassed a crowd of over 30,000 to march against the allegedly unfair
policies of the BN government.
The Indian community has long been seen as a “fixed deposit” vote
bank for BN but the march, organised by the now outlawed Hindraf
movement, was believed to be what blew the lid on the group’s simmering
frustration over being left out of development for decades.
The tumultuous event, together with Bersih’s first march for free and
fair elections in late 2007, have been credited for the staggering
losses suffered by the ruling coalition during the March 8, 2008,
general election.
Following the Bersih rally, anti-Bersih proponents held numerous
protests in front of Ambiga’s home. During one protest, traders set up
burger stalls just beyond the vegetarian Hindu’s main gate while in
another incident, veteran soldiers performed “butt exercises”.
“We
are concerned... because the PM has been doing a lot and we have been
working very hard too. And sometimes, when statements like these are
uttered, of course it would touch the sensitivities of the Indian
voters,” MIC secretary-general Datuk S. Murugesan told The Malaysian Insider.
“I do not think that the Indian community was in support of the
Bersih rally... but because (Mohamad’s) the attack was personal, the
community’s sympathy for Ambiga only grew,” he said.
But MIC, BN’s Indian-based component party, believes that the Najib
administration has also done well to woo the community back into the
ruling coalition’s fold.
“The Prime Minister (Datuk Seri Najib Razak), through all his
policies, has come forward and dealt directly with the Indian community,
whether through NGOs, groups or the temples.
“So the Indians are coming back. But these kind of statements...
issued by no less than a BN man at that, can do much damage to Najib’s
good work,” MIC leader Senator Datuk Daljit Singh told The Malaysian Insider.
“The sentences he (Mohamad) used were not logical at all. At least he
could have used words like ‘fine her (Ambiga)’ or ‘punish her’... after
all, DBKL (KL City Hall) is already claiming damages from Bersih,” he
said.
He pointed out that despite the widespread anger against Bersih and
Ambiga, many in the Indian community view the former Bar Council
chairman as a “brave person”.
“She
is not fighting for anything out of the way; she is not asking for
compensation from the government or anything — she is asking for free
and fair elections, something which even BN and the Election Commission
(EC) are fighting for,” Daljit said.
He echoed the sentiments of fellow party members that Ambiga, despite
being the co-chairman of Bersih 2.0, the coalition that organised the
Bersih rally, was not the only person to blame for the chaos on April
28.
“Why did he (Mohamad) not target (Opposition Leader Datuk Seri) Anwar (Ibrahim) instead? He was there too.
“Ambiga has gone through enough,” he said.
Palanivel, in his statement last week, had also urged Najib and BN
leaders to call for an end to the widespread attacks against Ambiga and
like Daljit, had also pointed out that the leader was not the sole
organiser of the Bersih rally.
“Why is Ambiga made a scapegoat?” he had asked. “Why didn’t these
people demonstrate or put up burger stalls in front of other Bersih
leaders’ (homes)?”
MIC central working committee (CWC) member S. Vell Paari had even
said it was Mohamad who should be hanged for his lack of general
knowledge.
The son of MIC’s longest serving president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu
was quoted as saying in Tamil Nesan last Thursday that, “I guess that
when he (Mohamad) was young, someone must have dropped him in such a way
that he hit his head.”
The following day, the same daily quoted Malaysian Hindu
Sangam president R.S. Mohan Shan as demanding that Mohamad issue a
public apology for his remarks, saying it could cause racial tension.
“Did Datuk Ambiga commit the crime of murder that she should be
hanged? This is a matter that deserves serious censure,”
Pahang MIC
communication head R. Gunasekaran was quoted as saying.
Other media reports quoted National Indian Rights Action Team (Niat)
chairman Datuk Thasleem Mohamed Ibrahim as challenging Mohamad to repeat
his remarks outside the Dewan Rakyat, where the latter would no longer
enjoy parliamentary immunity.
“If he doesn’t repeat his remarks outside, it will show that he was
only abusing his privileges to abuse respected NGO leaders who champion
civil rights issues,” he was quoted as saying on news portal Free
Malaysia Today.
The embattled Mohamad has since retracted his statement after he was
censured by Dewan Rakyat deputy speaker Datuk Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar,
but it is believed that the incident may have reopened old wounds
within the Indian community that the Najib administration has been
struggling to heal.
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