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Indeed, nobody needs to shut up PDF Print
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Saturday, 13 June 2009 11:00

Let us welcome internal disagreements on both sides. Show us your weaknesses and show us how you will patch it up. Antagonise, challenge and provoke your rivals, and see how they react and rejuvenate.

By Koh Lay Chin, The New Straits Times

“HUSH”. “Don’t let them see us fighting.” “Shut up.” “No, I won’t shut up. You shut up.” “I’ll say what I very well like!”

Thus goes the usual routine when members of the opposition alliance disagree with each other. Rightly so, they get flustered when internal contradictions happen, knowing that their rivals will pounce on their weaknesses and try to tear their fort down.

It all sounds very sinister but if this is a game, it is a dance-off one can’t take their eyes off. After all, if a couple should falter, or take a misstep, that just means less points for them, and more points for their competitors.

But lest opposition cheerleaders bitterly accuse Barisan Nasional for trying to drive the wedge or nudge dissenters further apart, two things should be remembered. That Pakatan Rakyat members pounce just as eagerly on BN’s flaws and disharmony, and sometimes one should not give too much credit to outsiders for internal squabbles.
A third party can only affect a marriage if there wasn’t too much holding it up in the first place.

In a long line of “shut up” appeals, Parti Keadilan Rakyat deputy president Dr Syed Husin Ali pleaded with PR leaders at the end of last year to stop taking their differences and conflicts to the media, “especially the BN-controlled ones”.

DAP stalwart Karpal Singh was told to put a lid on it after he told PR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to resign over the party-hopping and Perak debacle earlier this year.

And now Pas spiritual leader Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat snaps that he will not shut up even if other members want a lockdown on dissenting views within the party on unity talks with Umno.

Accompanying these pleas for silence comes public defensive snarls or threats to bar mainstream media, some so bitter that they are counterproductive in their quest to be as open as possible.

This worry and antsy attitude about one’s enemies attacking them during moments of weakness can seem a little misplaced.

After all, BN, 36 years old and all, still has plenty of moments of weaknesses and glaringly so.

It’s not even ideological in nature any more. Here we have PPP’s Datuk M. Kayveas and Senator Datuk T. Murugiah enacting Perak-inspired histrionics all on their own, while the inner disgruntlements of MCA, MIC and Gerakan are laid bare for all and sundry to mock. The sulks, the rumours of flight, threats, rumours of bargaining and deals, as well as actual party-hopping have been so frequent since last year it’s almost boringly normal.

The thing is, for all the criticisms against Barisan allies for their backroom dealings, and public stances which are regarded as not strong or pure enough for their individual membership, this is precisely the spirit in which the 1951-formed Alliance, or Parti Perikatan, took up struggle for our independence.

The united force that freed us from British rule was a political alliance that obviously had differing views within them but trudged on united, engraving what was to be our most treasured principle — ruling with consensus and compromise despite the divergent colour of skin, religion or background.

The idea of the Alliance and its practical realities have had more than five decades to grow and learn. People lambast it as a fragile marriage of convenience but PR has just begun its journey more than a year ago.

It goes without saying that at the heart of every single party is its own defined vision for the country, with most believing that they are the only ones with the best and most appropriate version.

Opposition parties at their core oppose the ruling alliance because they believe it prevents the necessary transformation for Malaysia by stubbornly adhering to the status quo, among many other reasons.

Jamaah Islah Malaysia president Zaid Kamaruddin once said in an interview that PR was a difficult coalition to hold because of its differing political ideologies.

The Islamic non-governmental organisation acknowledged that a viable and credible opposition was important for the country and that PR still had enough similarities that could be agreed upon for governing.

He said it was important for “real statesmanship“ to steer such an alliance, and that “the key would be in moderation, avoiding extremes and letting common sense prevail”.

Indeed, that is the point that ruling BN has had to take into account ad infinitum.

At the end of the day, real statesmanship is the real battle which must be fought in both political blocs. BN detractors say it is a dinosaur so corrupt and entrenched that the only way for it to go is out, while PR detractors say the fledgling marriage is still on shaky legs, devoid of the necessary strength a ruling Malaysian alliance needs.

Eitherway, let us welcome internal disagreements on both sides. Show us your weaknesses and show us how you will patch it up. Antagonise, challenge and provoke your rivals, and see how they react and rejuvenate.

Why not, as long as people keep it above the belt and free of adhominem attacks.

Impress us with your arguments, we’ll take notes. Post-2008, both sides of the divide and the public pride themselves on a maturing democracy.

If it is indeed maturing, then coalitions will find that they need to go through the pains and pangs of engagement, marriage and/or divorce.

The ruling coalition, present and future, will have to be top notch. This is the survival of the very best, the fittest, the ones that convince Malaysian voters that the highest principle of our land is not just some oft-repeated slogan on tourist buses.

That we can, with our differences, run this kaleidoscope of a country with the workable formula and consensus carried out by the best statesmen to do it. Malaysians decide on the better, nay, the best coalition. Let the games begin. Oh wait, they already have.

May the best men and women win.

Comments (7)Add Comment
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written by garuda, June 13, 2009 11:10:10
Either way UMNO is behind all this, the minute PKR won many state seats and also parliament seats UMNO had gone into secret discussions on how to topple state govts and also parliament members, PRK has been fooled into a trap cleverly designed to create chaos and disorder which would benefit UMNO in the end!!

UMNO is now creating many problems on state levels as the govt staff is mainly UMNO backed so whatever the plans and decisions would be known to UMNO and they will make it harder to get off the ground, PKR should have purged the state and put their people instead and now will learn a bitter lesson as UMNO despite losing still controls state proceedings, we have to learn from our mistakes and be sharper next time, Perak is an eye-opener whereby UMNO backed officials completely overturned everything. Wake up PKR or you will see all yr hard work lost as UMNO will go to any level for their own sake
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written by Urangsabah, June 13, 2009 11:29:48
Wah, 1st time I read NST comment got sense one..............give more la not just comment like this.

Front paged lah issue like $12.5 billion PKFA ......wht UMNO BN doing to recover the hard earned Malaysian RM12.5 billion.... smilies/grin.gif smilies/grin.gif smilies/grin.gif

Mr Koh if U notice yr write up got Dr Syed Husin Ali, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat,Karpal Singh and BN only got Datuk M. Kayveas and Senator Datuk T. Murugiah ...... No Najip, Mohiddin, Same Value, Otk.........why only small fry from BN...
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written by HamChak, June 13, 2009 11:50:54
No wonder, ARMS dealers are doing so well.
Keep on FIGHTING, I love it.
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written by Ken Liew, June 13, 2009 12:00:16
May the best men and women win.


I bet u mean May the best CORRUPTED men and women win, isn't it.

Cos Ur boss are so corrupted that NST was paid handsomely to spread "NOT SO TRUTH" and preventing Bankrupt.

All Malaysians should BAN NST! cos it is another POLLUTED TOOL by BNs gomen.
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written by san amin, June 13, 2009 12:04:06
I actually didnt bother to read this article when I saw NST on it, only interested in reading the comments. Similar to when I watch TV3 bulletin utama, only interested in watching some of the attractive newsreaders.
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written by joeawk, June 13, 2009 12:24:04
Nevermind if UMNOI is behind all these. It is important that malaysians stick to the agenda for change in then federal government. malaysians want transparency, accountability and integrity.

Malaysians want a civil sevice for the people and not subservient to the politicians. We want an independent judiciary and not judges who sell their souls.]

We want, we want.
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written by educationist, June 13, 2009 12:43:34
But,sadly, the writer's political masters do not practise what is preached
They have tried to shut up any dissenting voices and are still trying to do.
Within the UMNOputras fold, none of those wagging dog parties have ever dored to make a principled stand
It is, yes tuan all the way!
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