Josh Hong
So, High Court judge Rohana Yusof quashed Home Minister Hishammuddin
Hussein's order last year declaring Bersih unlawful. In other words, the
umbrella group that is made up of more than 60 NGOs can now function as
a legal entity with head held high.
It is vindication for the
Bersih 2.0 steering committee, especially for Ambiga Sreenevasan, Pak
Samad Said and Maria Chin Abdullah.
And also a small victory in Malaysians' long and tumultuous walk for political freedom.
Of far greater significance are Justice Rohana's remarks that "in my
view, the decision is tainted with irrationality... The decision to
declare Bersih unlawful was made without taking into account some
relevant facts or by taking into account irrelevant facts".
This is a damning verdict on the home minister who claims to hold a master's degree in law from the now not-so-prestigious London School of Economics.
In plain language, Hishammuddin is simply kepala angin
and his paranoid behaviour before the two Bersih rallies - July 2011
and in April this year - was nothing but befitting a mad dog.
Then again, the quality
- or the lack of it - of this particular Umno princeling has always
been highly controversial, and his keris-waving antics were a major
contributing factor to Umno's losing Malay votes that remain vivid in
the minds of many.
No amount of whitewashing will be able to erase that racist and jingoistic image of his from public memory.
When
a group of cow-head protesters hurled insults at the Hindus in August
2009, Hishammuddin - whose father is fondly remembered as a gentle
statesman - rushed to their defence by arguing pig heads had been used to stir up Muslim sentiments.
Still, any seasoned lawyer will know two wrongs never make a right, and
the correct approach was to condemn both, instead of practically
endorsing the act of either of them by appealing for ‘understanding' in
front of the media.
Persistently high crime rates continue to
plague Hishammuddin's records. He and the inspector-general of police
may blame them on ‘perception', but facts speak for themselves. Car
parks in shopping malls are no longer safe, while break-ins are as banal
as one's frequenting a mamak stall across Malaysia.
Tell missions to remove travel advice
Who
are now the best people for the home minister to consult as to whether
the rising crime rates are merely a public perception? Malacca state
exco member Latiff Tamby Chik and Faizah Shuib, widow of the late former deputy home minister during Mahathir's era?
If the government is so certain that KL is as safe as Singapore or Oslo, perhaps it can tell the foreign missions, such as Austria and Ireland, to remove their travel advice over street crimes in our capital.
One
may ask how on earth the worst-performing and internationally notorious
home minister has been able to keep his job until now? It has to do
with the fact that removal of Hishammuddin from cabinet will entail
severe consequences for Najib Abdul Razak, the apprentice prime minister
who is best known for being adverse to taking risks.
Najib may
look popular according to surveys, but he has no faithful allies in
government, thanks partly to his vainglorious wife. Given Hishammuddin's
fleeting loyalty and opportunistic character - who once praised
Mahathir profusely as his ‘idol' and conveniently forgot his own
father's and grandfather's contributions to forging ethnic unity - even
kinship ties can become fragile before the temptation of power.
As Malcolm X put it succinctly: power never takes a back step - only in the face of more power.
Hishammuddin now sees himself just two steps away from Seri Perdana,
and any attempt to block him will likely result in a concerted effort to
engineer an early downfall of Najib involving Muhyddin Yassin, Ahmad
Zahid Hamidi (another infamous fence-sitter) and, no doubt, Mahathir
Mohamad, who has been scheming for his son Mukhriz to be fast-tracked
into cabinet.
So, expect him to stay put.
But the
docile, almost slavish mainstream media are equally responsible for
sustaining Hishammuddin in his position. Other than Utusan Malaysia, the New Straits Times, Berita Harian and The Star that are now completely written off for their propagandistic deception, the Sin Chew Daily, too, is in the habit of back-scratching.
Don't forget: on the eve of the Bersih 2.0 protest last year, several Sin Chew
senior journalists spin-doctored the rally - which was in full
compliance with our constitution - as being unlawful and an attempt to
subvert the ‘rule of law'.
Now that the High Court has chastised Hishammuddin for his reckless behaviour, the self-congratulatory Sin Chew
must issue an apology for distorting the good intentions of the Bersih
2.0 steering committee or make itself a laughing stock with its own
assertion to ‘uphold integrity'.
So must Hishammuddin.
Or maybe it does not really matter any more, since a large segment of
the Malaysian electorate is ready to punish him and his cohorts through
the ballot box.
JOSH HONG studied
politics at London Metropolitan University and the School of Oriental
and African Studies, University of London. A keen watcher of domestic
and international politics, he longs for a day when Malaysians will
learn and master the art of self-mockery, and enjoy life to the full in
spite of politicians.
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