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Much ado about nothing much... in Kuala Terengganu PDF Print
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Friday, 09 January 2009 17:42

The locals seem almost nonchalant about the whole affair. Except for the heavy presence of the police stationed at every intersection throughout the parliamentary constituency, things don't look particularly different.

By Debra Chong, The Malaysian Insider

A half-full hall greeted the Prime Minister on his lightning visit here yesterday to brief electoral workers on the government's campaign in the Kuala Terengganu by-election.

It got worse.

When the press got up to leave Datuk Seri Abdullah Badawi to his hush-hush meeting, the room was practically empty.

The Barisan Nasional (BN) campaign is not the only one affected.

A couple of nights before that, Abdul Wahid Endut, the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) candidate, was left addressing an empty car park while on his ceramah rounds.

There has been a distinct lack of energy among campaigners in what has been publicly spun as the make-or-break by-election for Malaysia.

The listlessness among the campaigners seems to stem from the selected candidates themselves.

Datuk Wan Farid Wan Salleh from the BN has been pegged as Idris Jusoh's man.

Idris is the man in the middle of the Terengganu Umno leadership crisis with the state ruler last year, which eventually saw a relative unknown, Datuk Ahmad Said, promoted to be the new Menteri Besar.

The crisis may have been resolved, but there is still high tension between the two factions.

The Prime Minister addressing a half-empty hall when he went to brief campaign workers in KT. – Picture by Choo Choy May

 

Ahmad and his men have not forgiven Idris nor the latter's side for the mess. While they have not actively sabotaged Wan Farid's campaign, they have not given the candidate due co-operation either.

Quite clearly, they are more focused on shoring up support for their own positions within the party at its next elections in March.

Even Abdullah, the head of Umno and the BN, has openly admitted to the in-fighting at state level, which may have damaged Wan Farid's and the BN's chances of winning this seat irrevocably.

For PR's Pas, it is a similar story.

The Islamist party is equally split down the middle between its top two leaders, which forced them both to compromise on the candidate for this by-election, with neither gaining any satisfaction from it.

Spiritual Advisor Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat backs the Erdogan faction which is pro-Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim; and party president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang backs the conservatives.

There are still rumblings from the grassroots who believe the party would have been better if its leaders had chosen either the Erdogan faction's preferred nominee Mohammad "Mat" Sabu; or Mustafa Ali, the state party chief who is popular with the conservatives.

But it is not only the dispiritedness among the campaigners that is behind the lack of excitement on the ground.

It has been three days since the nomination of the candidates and the pace in Kuala Terengganu has yet to pick up speed.

The locals seem almost nonchalant about the whole affair. Except for the heavy presence of the police stationed at every intersection throughout the parliamentary constituency, things don't look particularly different.

Few eateries open till late at night. Most Malay restaurateurs close shop at 6pm while their Chinese counterparts draw their shutters around 10pm.

Attendance at the PR ceramah by Abdul Wahid Endut was also dismal. – Picture by Choo Choy May

 

Fewer still are frequented by locals who want to gossip about how close the fight will be into the wee hours of the morning.

Most prefer to catch a good night's sleep before they continue the daily grind of earning a living. Some told The Malaysian Insider that they are asleep by 9pm.

Most of the late-night clientele are made up of the press working late, or the campaign workers and police personnel getting off their shift duties.

It is business as usual in Kuala Terengganu.

Some of the locals say they are too busy working to attend any of the daily functions organised by the BN and the PR.

Others give the excuse that they are intimidated by the police who seem to be everywhere they turn their heads.

"Why are there so many police here? What have we done? Takutlah. Better I stay at home," said one elderly Malay woman.

But several voters from the local Chinese community who form some 11 per cent of the population told The Malaysian Insider they have already made up their minds who they will vote for next week.

"I already know who to pangkah. Why so susah go out?" said one retiree who declined to give his name.

Comments (9)Add Comment
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written by ahmadneil, January 09, 2009 17:54:26
All the locals have already make up their mind to vote PAS so they sleep early to prevent umno from disturbing them.Who care if PM is there! After all March is coming soon.Wo care is Najib is there! After all he will follow AAB footsteps when the result is announce in KT.
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written by savemalaysia, January 09, 2009 17:59:19
BN can bring Obama to KT to campaign for Wan Farid but he still won't be able to help BN. When the KT's folks have already made up their mind, nothing can change their decision. When they are not interested in showing up for the BN's ceremahs, that's a good enough indication of who they shall vote for on Jan 17.
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written by Democrats, January 09, 2009 18:06:58
All you need is one ceramah by PR and one ceramah by BN for fence sitters to decide who to vote for.

During 0803, all i did was attended a ceramah of Lee Hwa Beng in Kelana Jaya (good food there) and one in TTDI with RPK in it. From there i know where my support lies. I do not need people escorting me around and pretending that they are my friend. Some of these BN reps, you seem to see them only during election time, and their actions are so fake to show they suddenly give a damn about us.
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written by SocratesI, January 09, 2009 18:27:48
Looks like the people in KT already know who and what Party they want to vote for! Pakatan Rakyat is certainly way ahead, but we must not let up, and we must not falter. We need to build up the momentum until it reaches a crescendo pre-election day and election day, and then we have to keep our eyes peeled for Barisan Najis dirty tricks involving phantom voters, polis anjing voters, many-times voters, polis anjing brutality and the list goes on.Not until we win KT by a 10,000 vote margin with confirmed results will we rest ! Then, it is time to put the cross-hairs on Sarawak and Taib and capture Sarawak!
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written by renoir, January 09, 2009 18:35:13
In any election in any country, activists are always few when compared with the vast majority which have to earn their living. The important thing is to get those most likely to vote on your side. And contrary to what "Debra" Something says, reports on Pakatan Rakyat's sessions with the people have been largely well-attended.

All of us must realize this: the strategy of BN is to play down the elections so as to discourage voting and/or canvassing for votes - foul play is more likely to succeed when less people vote. So keep up the pressure and make this election another grand victory for the People's Front! Vote PAS!
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written by OilMan, January 09, 2009 19:01:10
"A half-full hall greeted the Prime Minister on his lightning visit here..."

It should be said a HALF_EMPTY hall....
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written by asguard, January 09, 2009 21:16:27
At least PR.. ceramah is attended by locals compare to the Barang Naik!
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written by Rainbowseahorse, January 10, 2009 11:07:06
Not much show of support in their campaign?
No wonder they are turning their attention to juicer crowd getter like street protest against Israel.
After having lost in KT..hehehe..UMNO will most probably blame that on the Israelis and go for more protest and boycott. Typical mentality!
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written by temenggong, January 11, 2009 00:22:02
I think it is a mistake to say that the KT chinese are the kingmakers in KT. Or anywhere in Trengganu. They are a subdued lot depending on the govt in power. Equally parochial as the malays. On the contrary I think it is the malays who are the kingmakers. I feel it is the malay shift that will decide the outcome. This is my observation after a four day recon mission of Trengganu. The people think they live in Trengganu and not in Malaysia.
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