"When
will the 'Malaysia Spring' be? The next elections," said Malaysian
opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, answering his own question during a recent
media interview.
The reference was to the 'Arab Spring', a
pro-democracy movement that has brought down several authoritarian governments
in the Arab world this year.
Malaysia has witnessed important political
changes since 2008, when voters denied the ruling national front coalition
government its traditional two-thirds majority in Parliament. Just last month,
Prime Minister Najib Razak announced his intention to lift curbs on the media
and repeal two controversial security laws. National elections are not due
until April 2013. But Datuk Seri Najib is widely expected to call them early
next year.
The idea that Malaysia - and South- east Asia
in general - is experiencing profound political change is certainly beguiling.
Elections in Singapore in May saw opposition
parties make landmark gains. And in July, a political party supporting former
prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was elected to power in Thailand despite
strong opposition from the conservative forces that backed his ouster in a
military coup in 2006. Meanwhile, a military-backed government in Myanmar has
recently freed hundreds of political prisoners, postponed construction of a
controversial dam and showed signs of renewing dialogue with pro-democracy icon
Aung San Suu Kyi.
Datuk Seri Anwar's attempt to link recent
developments in the Arab world with events in Malaysia may be self-serving. But
he isn't the only one to have made the connection.
Several other government critics have seen the
recent reforms announced by Mr Najib in a similar light. Datuk Ambiga
Sreenevasan, a member of the executive committee of Hakam, a human rights
organisation founded by two former prime ministers, commented: "I think
they (the government) freaked out because of the Arab Spring happening at the
same time."
Foreign commentators have made a similar
point. Writing in the Business Standard (an Indian daily newspaper) on Nov 7,
former Pakistani finance minister Shahid Javed Burki said he believed that
Malaysia, together with Indonesia and Pakistan, formed part of a group of
non-Arab Muslim-majority countries outside the Middle East likely to be
influenced by developments in the Arab world.
A closer look at the situation in South- east
Asia, however, suggests that such statements need to be treated with caution.
The fact that many important political changes in the region pre-date the Arab
Spring certainly makes it difficult to argue that opposition groups have taken
their cue from it.
Unlike their Arab counterparts, South-east
Asians do not share a single language or religion that could facilitate
communication and cooperation among opposition groups. And while countries such
as Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines may have their
shortcomings, they are far more democratic that those in the Middle East. They
are certainly less inclined to use the sort of deadly force that triggered many
of the uprisings in the Arab world.
Moreover, it is these South-east Asian nations
- rather than more authoritarian South-east Asian states such as Vietnam and
Brunei - where political change has been most noticeable. Myanmar may appear to
be an exception, but it is interesting to note that its reform agenda is being
dictated by the government rather than by popular pressure.
Ms Ambiga, who is also chairman of Bersih, a
Malaysian organisation advocating political reform, put it well: "We
(members of the reform movement) are nothing like the Arab Spring," she
told Radio Australia in a recent interview. "The problems (in the Middle
East) are vastly different from what we're facing". Bersih, she continued,
was not seeking to overthrow the government. It simply wanted free and fair elections.
This, of course, is not to say that Malaysian
opposition groups cannot expect to experience at least some of the benefits of
the Arab Spring. The fact that opposition groups in the Arab world have
successfully overthrown several hated governments could invigorate at least
some opposition supporters.
Several of Malaysia's business leaders also
appear to be paying attention. Speaking at a seminar in Seri Kembangan,
Selangor on Nov 5, former Malaysian Airlines chairman Munir Abdul Majid told
his audience that the greatest challenge facing the world today was
"political change management". Referring specifically to the Arab
Spring, he noted that "politicians don't know how to manage change
properly", adding that Malaysia still had a long way to go in realising
its goals.
In an apparent reference to Mr Najib's
1Malaysia slogan, a much-criticised national motto that professes equality for
all, he also noted: "Sometimes Malaysia is good at sloganeering, but not
execution."
How the government in Kuala Lumpur deals with
these issues, rather than any flow-on effect from political developments in the
Arab states, will determine the outcome of Malaysia's next general election.
Bruce Gale
The Straits Times
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