Monday, June 22, 2009

UNITY GOVT A BETRAYAL ALL AROUND


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By Oon Yeoh (The Edge)
Tuesday, 23 June 2009 10:49


The much-hyped, but now abandoned, unity-government concept,

first touted by PAS President Datuk Seri Hadi Awang in March, and

welcomed by all and sundry within Umno is a betrayal.


From Pakatan Rakyat's perspective, it is a betrayal of voters’ trust.

Malays who voted for PAS did so because they preferred it over Umno.

Non-Malays who voted for PAS didn’t do so because they wanted PAS

but because they rejected Umno. In either case, PAS teaming up with

Umno is the last thing these Malay and non-Malay voters want.

By pushing for unity-government talks, the faction headed by PAS

Deputy President Nasharuddin Mat Isa, is betraying PAS’ coalition

partners DAP and PKR, which consider Umno the enemy (as do

most of PAS' grassroots).


Lastly, this faction is betraying PAS itself, which campaigned on a

platform of a “welfare state”, with justness for everybody, not just

Malays or Muslims.


What else could you call a PAS-Umno unity government but a race-

exclusive government?


Those who are under the illusion that the unity talks could be aimed at

setting up a national unity government involving all parties (including

DAP and PKR together with MCA, MIC, Gerakan and a host of East

Malaysian parties), should look back at what happened right after the

March 8, 2008 general election.


Just days after the election, then-prime minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad

Badawi held secret (now, not so secret anymore) unity talks – three

such meetings were held according to Abdullah – with a PAS

delegation that included Nasharuddin and the current Secretary-General

Mustafa Ali.


The idea was for Selangor to be ruled by a new coalition between Umno

and PAS. According to PAS MP Khalid Samad, who was present at the

first meeting, former Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Khir Toyo was

willing to become deputy MB and accept Selangor PAS Commissioner

Hassan Ali as MB.


Khalid told Singapore's Straits Times last July that during the meeting,

the Umno side played up the racial issue, voicing concerns over DAP

coming to power and the possible erosion of Malay rights and power.


Straits Times reported that other PAS insiders said Umno wanted PAS

to cooperate with it in the states ruled by the Islamic party, like Kelantan,

Kedah and Perak, and sideline its partners in Pakatan Rakyat. In return,

PAS was promised that it would be able to dictate certain terms, such as

its choice of MB.


This is the kind of "unity talks" we are talking about. So, if certain factions

within PAS were to push on with such unity talks, their actions would be

nothing less than a betrayal of voters (both Malay and non-Malay), of its

coalition partners, and of the Islamic party itself.


And what of the Umno side, with so many of its leaders jumping on the

unity-talks bandwagon?


Umno President and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak got the

ball rolling by welcoming such talks. Despite initially being wary and

lukewarm about such talks, Umno Deputy President and Deputy Prime

Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin very quickly changed tack and

infamously stated, “We will not impose any conditions and we accept

whatever terms set by PAS. As far as I'm concerned, we have to be open.”


Such openness, apparently does not extend to PR component parties

DAP and PKR. Deputy International Trade and Industry Minister Datuk

Mukhriz Mahathir made it clear that both those parties were not welcome

to the talks.


He even rationalised the need for Malay-unity talks on the grounds that

Najib’s 1Malaysia concept hinged on it. “If they are not united, how are

we going to realise the 1Malaysia concept?” he said. “This will be

detrimental not only to the Malays but also to other races.”


Going by his warped logic, Mukhriz should support a gathering that

involves DAP, PKR, MCA, Gerakan, MIC and East Malaysian parties but

excluding PAS and Umno. The purpose of such talks? Non-Malay unity,

for the sake of achieving 1Malaysia. You can imagine the ridicule that

proposal would draw.


Umno leaders who harp on Malay-unity talks are not only betraying the

1Malaysia concept but their partners in Barisan Nasional, whom they

know only too well, are now so weak that they can’t say a word against

the notion of being sidelined by Umno in favour of PAS.


Their unwillingness to object to Malay-unity talks is a betrayal to the very

constituency they are supposed to represent. Not a word on this matter

has been heard from Gerakan President Tan Sri Koh Tsu Koon who is

the Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department for National Unity. Note t

hat it's "National Unity" not "Malay Unity".


Datuk Seri Samy Vellu offered the lame proposal of Indian unity talks

between MIC and various Indian parties and non-governmental

organisations. Of course talking to DAP and PKR – both of which have

elected Indian representatives at the state and federal level – is not on

the cards.


But, MCA President Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat takes the cake by offering a

red herring that would be laughable if it was not so weak: “We also want

to know, through a dialogue, how far the DAP is committed to informing

the people of its relationship with PAS. Whether the relationship is cordial

or not.”


I’m sure there are many Chinese people who would like to know, through

a dialogue, how far MCA is committed to informing the people of its

relationship with Umno. Whether it’s one of subservience or not.


Malaysians may not have yet reached a stage where we can say we are

colour blind, but the politicians who are pushing for, or tolerating, the

so-called unity talks, must be blind, deaf and dumb if they think the voting

public can so easily have wool pulled over their eyes. Unity talks – which

is just euphemism for race-based collusion – is a betrayal all around.


http://mt.m2day.org/2008/content/view/23500/84/

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