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IPS: Amid arrests, security concerns take a high profile By Anil Netto 13/1/2002 3:09 pm Sun |
http://www.malaysiakini.com/News/2002/01/2002011203.php3
Amid arrests, security concerns take a high profile
Anil Netto 11:42am, Sat: (IPS) feature Walking along the narrow streets of the
northern Malaysian city of Penang, lined with road-side stalls
catering to teeming crowds tucking into their favourite spicy dishes, it
is difficult to guess that suspected terrorists could be lying in the
background, poised to endanger national security.
So the Jan 4 announcement that 13 alleged Muslim militants
belonging to the so-called Malaysian Mujahidin (or Militant) Group
(KMM) had been arrested between Dec 9 and Jan 3 has raised
more than a few eyebrows. They were detained under the Internal Security Act, which allows
indefinite detention without trial. The following day, the Home Ministry in neighbouring Singapore
announced that police in the island republic had detained 14
Singaporeans and a Malaysian under the republic's internal security
law for alleged involvement in terrorist activities, including procuring
materials for making bombs and surveillance of potential targets.
Malaysia's deputy home minister, Zainal Abidin Zin, said that the
government hoped to interrogate the Malaysian held in Singapore,
39-year-old businessman Faiz Abu Bakar Bafana, as part of its
efforts to uncover an alleged link among suspected terrorists groups
in the region. Zainal said that the government had discovered a link between
terrorist groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan with similar groups in the
region, but needed more information to find out the extent of their
cooperation. In disclosing Friday's arrests, Malaysian police chief Norian Mai
was reported as saying that police were confirming reports that
several KMM members had ties with Zacarias Moussaoui, a
Frenchman facing charges in the United States in connection with
the Sept 11 attacks on New York and Washington.
Local news bulletins have reported the revelations in a
matter-of-fact style, but there has been little in-depth discussion.
Subdued reaction It is difficult to gauge how ordinary Malaysians view the alleged
terrorist threat due to a reluctance to share personal views and curbs
on the media, but there appears to be few signs of undue concern
among many Malaysians that peace and stability is at risk.
''I have heard some people mentioning the arrests, but I don't know
much about it,'' said a mechanic in his forties.
A woman in her thirties had her doubts about a terrorist network in
Malaysia, saying she was not entirely convinced about the
seriousness of the threat - but ''that's just my view, I am just a
nobody,'' she remarked. Public interest groups have been fairly muted, probably due to an
unwillingness to question the official theory of a regional terrorist
network in the absence of hard evidence to the contrary, and the
sensitivity of the issue for the government.
The subdued reaction could also be due to the use of the Internal
Security Act, a colonial-era law that can be used by the state to
address what it sees as security concerns.
But some critics say Malaysians are entitled to see what kind of
evidence the police had against the suspects and whether it could
hold in open court. ''Without an independent trial in court, these
allegations will only raise alarm and fear,'' said the non-government
group Aliran. ''They may even scare away much-needed investors
and tourists.'' Asked if the arrests confirmed foreign media claims that Malaysia
was a terrorist haven, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said it
showed that the authorities are firm in dealing with terrorists. ''If we
promised to take action against terrorists, regardless of whether they
are locals or foreigners, we will take action,'' he said.
Anti-opposition clips Indeed, security issues have had a high profile in Malaysia lately.
The arrests of the alleged militants comes on the heels of a
controversial Christmas Day front-page story headlined, 'Plot to Kill
PM' in a national English daily, The Sun. The Sun published front-page apologies after its own probe
discovered that the report was apparently unfounded. But some key
editorial staff left in protest, prompting concerns about media freedom.
Some are looking at the implications of the KMM arrests on the
Jan19 by-election in Indera Kayangan in the northern Perlis state.
There, the ruling coalition is being challenged by a candidate from
the opposition National Justice Party (Keadilan) of jailed ex-deputy
premier Anwar Ibrahim. Non-Muslims make up about half the voters in Indera Kayangan.
The ruling coalition is expected to capitalise on its record of ensuring
national stability. In this context, the latest KMM arrests may prompt
some non-Muslim voters into thinking twice about the opposition
front, which is led by the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, PAS.
The opposition has already strongly protested the screening over
national television of 90-second clips on primetime news warning
that it stands for possible repressive Taliban- style rule in Malaysia.
The ruling coalition leaders and ministers ''regard public property as
their private property and public funds as meant for their private
dispensation,'' complained Lim Kit Siang, chairman of the opposition
Democratic Action Party (DAP) in a statement.
Sexual lives questioned For Mahathir, the Sept 11 attacks have apparently vindicated his
ISA crackdown against the alleged militants that reportedly began as
early as August, followed by arrests in September and October.
But the repeated use of the ISA to rein in an assortment of suspects
continues to alarm rights activists. Before the latest round of arrests,
there were some 80 ISA detainees in the Kamunting Detention
Centre, north of the capital Kuala Lumpur.
When 10 reformasi activists were detained under the ISA in April last
year, the authorities said that they were planning to topple the
government. Yet some detainees have alleged that they were not
interrogated about these allegations and that questions centred on
their political activities and their sexual lives.
''If indeed there is a threat to national security, if the police have got
proof of that, those arrested should be brought to a court of justice.
The due process must take place, otherwise we won't have the
confidence that (the detainees) have been given their basic rights (to
due process),'' argued Zaid Kamaruddin of the Abolish ISA
Movement. Wrote Aliza Jaffar, whose husband Saari Sungib is among the five
activists still in detention: ''The laws of Malaysia are actually
sufficient to charge a person for any offence. So why do they still
resort to the ISA?''
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