Long fight back for Malaysia's invisible man
Simon Tisdall
Tuesday May 31, 2005, The Guardian
Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia's leading opposition figure, launched a  
series of rallies and speeches across the country at the weekend -  
but you would not know it from reading the newspapers.
An establishment politician turned pro-democracy "icon" who was  
beaten and jailed by the government of the former prime minister  
Mahathir Mohamad, Anwar drew an estimated crowd of 10,000 people in  
Penang. Up to 40,000 were expected in northern Kedah yesterday.
But most Malaysians are unaware of Anwar's travelling reform  
campaign. The media blackout is total. Officially, he is Malaysia's  
invisible man.
Interviewed at his home in Kuala Lumpur, Anwar said Abdullah Ahmad  
Badawi, Dr Mahathir's successor, had ordered the gag.
"Editors tell me it is the personal instruction of the prime minister  
that you should not report or mention Anwar at all," he said.
Various reasons had been given, all of them preposterous, he said.  
"I'm a threat to the nation, a threat to security, I will split the  
Malays ... Actually, they don't try to justify it. It's brute force."
Editors would be quietly removed, advertising withdrawn, or  
publishing licences withheld if newspapers disobeyed. That was  
typical of the roundabout way repression worked in Malaysia, he  
suggested.
Leaders of Umno, the main ruling party, say that Anwar, who was  
deputy prime minister and heir apparent before an explosive falling- 
out in 1998, no longer matters.
But such indifference hardly squares with tight restrictions on his  
political activities, media gags, continuous surveillance - and the  
big turnouts for the "illegal" rallies organised, by word of mouth,  
by his People's Justice party (PKR), led by his wife, Wan Azizah Wan  
Ismail.
The PKR is pushing for tougher anti-corruption measures, economic and  
electoral reforms, an end to detention without charge, judicial and  
media independence, and a reversal of institutionalised workplace and  
educational discrimination against Chinese and Indian minorities.
Western governments that criticised Anwar's trial view current  
tensions as an internal matter. A diplomat said it was misleading to  
see him as "some sort of white knight" and pointed to inconsistencies  
between his present stance and his time in office.
But such attitudes were another example of denial, Anwar said.  
"People in the west say Malaysia is a moderate Islamic country, there  
are no bombings, it's a democracy. And they are fearful of the  
Islamic parties. So they think it is safer to deal with Umno.
"But how do you have moderation and democracy when there are no basic  
rights? This is a very repressive system but repressive mostly  
without violence. It is civilised repression. It was learned from the  
British."
Corruption was endemic, unemployment was rising, police abuses went  
unchecked, foreign investment was declining and the country's  
democratic institutions, dominated by Umno since independence, were  
dangerously weak, he said. Without reforms, Malaysia could become all  
the things the west most feared.
Some Malaysians believe Anwar blew his chances in 1998. Others are  
waiting for him to emerge from the shadows. He is exploring a common  
platform with opposition and Islamic groups. He still has allies  
inside Umno and among Malaysia's numerous royal families.
But the road back after six years in jail and a current period of  
recuperation and study in the US and Britain will be tough.
"He's in a weak position right now," a western diplomatic source  
said. "He is well aware that if he wants to come back to power, he  
can only do so through Umno."
Beyond the haze of official harassment and obfuscation, two things  
seem clear. One is that given a level playing field, Anwar can still  
hope to lead his country one day. The second is that Malaysia will  
eventually be forced to embrace the reformasi agenda he espouses.
The question is whether he is up for a fight that could lead him back  
to jail, to a deal with ruling party modernisers or to a Ukraine- 
style popular insurgency before the 2008 election.
"He's our hero," said Amien Rais, a leader of Indonesia's 1998  
democratic constitutional revolution. "I hope in three or four years  
we will see him in a different position."
Anwar vows to return. "I am a Malaysian. This is my home," he told  
supporters in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday. "I shall be back."
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005
Tuesday, May 31, 2005
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