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Friday, 27 October 2000 - Today
is the thirteenth anniversary of Operasi Lalang, the ill-fated
day for more than a hundred innocent and upright Malaysians who
were arrested and detained under the infamous Internal Security
Act 1960 (ISA). The detainees included academics, politicians,
religious leaders, social activists and others who simply believed
in fighting for truth and justice.
Although Operasi Lalang was a
particularly abhorrent application of the ISA in Malaysia's recent
history, it should be borne in mind that it is not the only instance
that the draconian law was used to oppress the people of
Malaysia and violate their basic human right to a fair and public
hearing before an independent tribunal.
Both before and after Operasi
Lalang, the ISA have been used - and abused - by the Barisan
Nasional (BN) government to defend its position and protect its
own interests. Not long after the ISA was introduced by government
and following Indonesian Confrontation, hundreds of leaders and
members of PRM, Labour Party, PAS and the National Convention
Party (NCP) were detained, many for long years. In the
early seventies, conscientious citizens who dared to question
the government's lack of action in the face of abject poverty
were arrested and detained. In recent years, the ISA has been
used to detain people ranging from Shiite Muslims to supporters
of Dato' Seri Anwar Ibrahim, our former Deputy Prime Minister.
In addition to violating the
rights of detainees, the ISA is also a cruel law that deprives
families of their loved ones, which very often result in broken
families. Moreover, it instills fear in the hearts of many
Malaysians, thus indirectly curbing their rights to freedom of
expression and their right to participation in the democratic
governance of their own country.
The right to a fair and public
hearing is not merely a trite legal principle, but a fundamental
principle of justice. Hence, this cruel and draconian law which
allows for arbitrary detention should not have been
inherited from the British and implemented in Malaysia at all.
For the BN government to maintain that the ISA is required for
the sake of national security, it is not only an insult to the
people's sense of justice, but it is also an insult to every
citizen's intelligence.
Recently, on 19 October 2000,
when some law-abiding and peace-loving citizens attempted to
submit memoranda to Members of Parliament, the BN government
further insulted the people of Malaysia by denying them their
democratic right to visit the Federal Parliament.
After 40 cruel and oppressive
years under the ISA, the time for the repeal of this draconian
law is long past due. On this thirteenth anniversary of Operasi
Lalang, Parti Rakyat Malaysia, once again, urges the government
to do the right thing by abolishing the ISA.
Jonson Chong
Organising Secretary
Parti Rakyat Malaysia
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