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BURNT Accused Person! UMNO Sacrified 7 matas for KT By-Election!

matamafia

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On the eve of Kuala Terengganu By-Election, 7 matas were charged in court for beating and burning (like Ah Seng?) accused person to get confession from 2 car park attendants.

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/ap/20090116/tap-as-malaysia-officers-charged-b3c65ae.html

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7 Malaysia policemen face rare charge of abuse
AP
By JULIA ZAPPEI,Associated Press Writer AP - Friday, January 16

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - Seven Malaysian policemen have been charged with allegedly beating and scalding two detainees with hot water to induce confessions, a lawyer said Friday in a rare court case involving suspected police abuse.

The officers from Kuala Lumpur's criminal investigations department pleaded innocent Thursday to a charge of causing hurt to two parking lot attendants last month, said government prosecutor Yaacub Chik.

The officers, who were released on bail, face up to seven years in prison if convicted.


District police chief Wan Abdul Bari Wan Abdul Khalid declined to say whether the officers have been suspended. Their trial is scheduled for Feb. 17.

The case came to the attention of authorities after one of the victims filed a police complaint alleging that he and the other victim were assaulted and scalded during five days of custody to make them confess to extortion allegations.

Photographs of one of the victim's alleged injuries have also been circulated on the Internet.

Both men were eventually freed without being charged with any crime, said S. Jayathas, an activist representing the independent group Police Watch.

Human rights activist have often accused Malaysia's police of violent tactics against suspects, including incidents that allegedly resulted in the deaths of many detainees in recent years.

However, few police officers have been prosecuted for any such offenses.


http://malaysiakini.com/news/96631

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KT by-election: Tomorrow will tell
Bridget Welsh | Jan 16, 09 7:15pm

Tomorrow’s by-election represents a critical indicator for both the Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Rakyat.

More than the August 2008 contest in Permatang Pauh and perhaps on par with the decisive turning point of Lunas in 2000, the contest of Umno’s Wan Ahmad Farid Wan Salleh and PAS’ Mohd Abdul Wahid Endut will be a key turning point in political fortunes of the incumbent government and opposition.

BN: Campaigning from weakness

For BN, severely weakened by the March 2008 polls, party infighting and lackluster leadership of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the by-election will show whether the coalition can cooperate on the ground.

kuala terengganu parliament seat and state seat breakdown 2008 results 060109The Chinese 11.6% of the electorate will ultimately decide the election results. As such, the coalition needs to work as a unit to win. Unfortunately, this unity is missing.

Umno leaders are focused on internal party dynamics and the racial rhetoric post-March 8 polls has left a negative imprint on Chinese voters. The Umno heir apparent Najib Razak has yet to instill confidence among non-Malay voters.

The major Chinese component party in BN has also yet to win back its traditional electorate. The MCA is now riddled with infighting in the wake of its party polls and its new leader, Ong Tee Keat, has yet to move beyond his focus on his deputy to invigorate the party.

More importantly, MCA has not yet shown that it can deliver for the Chinese in the current political environment of weakened BN. Many Chinese in Terengganu are leaning toward the opposition despite some of them being MCA members.

The shadow of the losses of the BN in the March polls darkens its chances with non-Malay voters in this contest since none of the major issues associated with non-Malay representation been effectively addressed. Ironically, since March 2008, the BN as a genuinely collaborative partnership of multi-ethnic parties has further eroded.

This erosion in cooperation has corroded the BN electoral machinery. It was slow to get going in KT. It has gained momentum, but this may be too late to get enough of the BN supporters to the polls.

The machinery is important, since the campaign to date has been essentially issue-less. The issues of the March polls continue to regurgitated. To win over the Chinese voters, BN has turned to the old and tried (read: tired) method of raising the hudud issue.

kuala terengganu by election 130109 cabang tiga rally 01This is old news, for an electorate fed up with the politics of fear. The BN negative messaging will only consolidate the die-hards and not extend multi-ethnic support.

The BN has also turned to the traditional honed method of financial incentives. And the money has poured in as is the norm in by-elections, but the pace of distribution has not matched earlier efforts to date.

Most flows, however, occur in the last day of polling, however, so this dimension is too early to call. Irrespective, the problems of cooperation, machinery sluggishness and stale messaging hamper the BN’s chances.

Both PM, Najib face key test

Perhaps even more significant than the dynamics within BN, is the impact of this contest for Umno. KT represents a test of whether Umno can win a majority of Malay voters, whether the party is the legitimate voice of the Malay electorate.

Traditionally polling shows that Umno has the support of anywhere from 35-65% of the Malays, but this dropped in March (and August) last year to under 50%. The drop was not that pronounced in Terengganu, however, and recent polling by the Merdeka Center shows that the Malay electorate is evenly divided.

kuala terengganu by election 080109 bn logoUmno is quietly pushing the issue of Malay rights among its base and appealing to party loyalty. The party, however, is in a period of uncertainty. The cloud of the leadership transition and upcoming party elections have created a combination of lack of direction and factionalism.
 

matamafia

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This factors have failed to engender enthusiasm and energy found in the campaigns of earlier by-elections such as Pendang (Kedah) and Anak Bukit (Kedah). Umno members are concerned with their own fortunes and not sure how much they should invest in this contest.

kuala terengganu by election 080109 abdullah discuss with othersWan Farid’s link to Abdullah, the outgoing leader, has not brought in the support for those jockeying for future positions. The end result is that many Umno leaders are going through the motions. Leaders are making appearances, but not breaking a sweat for the cause.

Without issues, the focus on the candidate has taken on greater significance. Despite Wan Farid’s valiant efforts to engage with voters in the campaign, these actions may be too little too late.

Perceptions – which are unfair in that they do not appreciate his reserve – are that he is distant and arrogant.

kuala terengganu by election 080109 poster bn wan farid mesra rakyatBut perceptions can matter more than reality. Wan Farid has a reasonable record of public service and is not significantly tainted with scandal. This record ultimately may not matter, as the focus on shallow personality perceptions dominates talk in the coffee shops.

If Wan Farid loses the contest, and Umno loses another seat, this will have a major impact. Foremost, it sends a signal to Abdullah that his own ally cannot win office. His power could be seen as completely evaporated, as his lame duck status has made him ineffective politically.

kuala terengganu by election 090109 najibEqually significant is that a loss will taint Najib, who has very much been the target of the opposition this round and the leader of the BN campaign effort. The hard work that Najib has put into this campaign will be moot, and he will now have two losses in his column as the leader apparent.

There is the real potential that some in Umno would question Najib’s leadership before the March 2009 party elections. Hard work only goes so far. It is the delivery that counts.

The hand the BN had before the polls was weak, but it was very much of their own making, and has the potential to weaken further if the BN suffers a loss.

Pakatan: Desperate to keep momentum

For the opposition, this contest is equally important.

Like the 1989 Telok Pasu by-election during the period of Semangat 46, KT has the potential to bring the opposition together or divide it. If PAS loses this contest, this will potentially put pressure on Pakatan, as those unhappy with PAS working with Pakatan may become even more disgruntled.

Those concerned that the coalition is hurting PAS’ viability as an Islamic party will gain ground, as many in PAS feel that the coalition is limiting their space to address issues of Islamic governance effectively.

PAS took its time – as it does in its consensus decision-making – to settle on a candidate. The choice of Wahid Endut, a former civil servant and businessman, was carefully calculated. The party worked to smooth over differences within the party that emerged after March 2008 on how to work within the opposition.

The two camps led by Syed Azman Nawawi and Mustafa Ali locally in Terengganu agreed on the choice of Wahid Endut, who is close to Mustafa but has the openness and credentials to appeal to the professionals in PAS and meet the standards requested of the other opposition component parties in Pakatan.

kuala terengganu by election 080109 pas candidate abdul wahidIt has been quickly decided that the candidate had to be local, and Wahid Endut fits that bill. His pluses were that he could also appeal to the civil servant community that comprise a large share of the KT electorate.

PAS’ calculations rested on the assumption that they can hold their base and pick up some Chinese and Malay voters. This may not be as easy as it seems. PAS is divided about how it should govern – its position in Pakatan and its position on Islamic governance.

While the decision to field Wahid Endut may have mended fences within the party, it is not completely clear whether this has extended to the KT electorate as a whole.

The party has turned to its cache of bread-and-butter issues and threaded the campaign in its closed campaign meetings with promises of better governance, albeit undefined in form. Yet, with fuel prices much lower and economic conditions not perceived to be as difficult as last year, concerns with the economy have less appeal. The Islamic governance components remain abstract promises that have mixed appeal.

kuala terengganu by election dap dinner 140109 nik azizLed by Hadi Awang, PAS in Terengannu has not fully appreciated that its message of Islamisation does not win over new voters, particularly in a middle-class constituency such as KT. PAS’ messaging this round is not new. The only new dimension is a targeted attack on Najib, which like the hudud issue, only serves to bring out the party faithful and not win over new voters.

At the same time PAS’ machinery in Terengganu lacks the cohesiveness of that in Kelantan and arguably even Kedah. Modern posters and mobilisation has not yet replaced the traditional methods of in-house meetings and closed-door grassroots campaigning. The focus is on the fence sitters in quiet onslaught of material distribution.

The resources that have characterised the campaign paraphernalia of PAS elections have not been matched in this contest, as the party appears taxed financially in presenting itself to KT voters. Without the same dynamism, it is not clear whether PAS is actually reaching new voters, which it needs to assure a win in this contest. Younger Malay voters will be decisive and in KT, they have leaned toward BN in both the 2004 and 2008 polls.

kuala terengganu by election 160109 anwar ibrahim 2Opposition cooperation as a whole will be essential. To date, the Pakatan has worked as a unit. Both PKR and DAP have brought in their leaders to assist, with PAS leading the campaign. The campaigning has been ethnically segmented – with DAP and non-Malay leaders in PKR addressing the Chinese while Anwar Ibrahim is focusing on the Malay community.

Yet, the campaign cooperation reflects tightening bonds among opposition parties. The cooperation is pragmatic and does not address the ideological differences that divide the opposition, but the spirit of cooperation in the campaign is real.

kuala terengganu by election 150109 lim kit siang ceramah at malay area 02Unlike the BN, it is hampered by the fact that neither PKR nor DAP have their own independent base of support in Terengganu. DAP, for example, no where matches the local ties of MCA. The reality is that Pakatan has much less experience working together collaboratively than the BN and, at times, this inexperience shows.

If PAS wins KT, the opposition as a whole will benefit. The victory will be seen as much a Pakatan victory as a PAS one since the spillovers will extend into the opposition congealing as a unit.

The impact of a loss will have the opposite effect, and will send PAS inward-looking, with the potential of the message of deepening Islamic governance and widening this ideological opposition divide further. KT will determine whether the opposition gains momentum or backslides.

The contest is PAS’ to lose

Most pundits have argued that the poll is too close to call. With the national momentum working in the opposition favour, and the adjustments PAS made in their candidate selection, the contest is PAS’ to lose.

PAS has the advantage, but the BN has been cutting into the contest over the last days of the campaign. Many of the electorate have already made up their minds and are staying home from the ceramah.

kt by election 070109 wan farid greet votersThe lack of enthusiasm in the capital of Malaysia’s richest east-coast state has not sparked the energy of other by-elections. KT voters know that their votes count, but neither side has given them strong reasons to come out and vote, especially swing voters. Overall, the choice for KT voters is a negative one, the side they like least, rather than a positive vote for a particular party or candidate.

Three factors will shape the final results – 1) turnout 2) mobilisation, and 3) the fairness of the contest.

It is not the level of overall turnout that matters, but which groups – Chinese, Malay, older voters or middle-class voters - that will shape the outcome. Older voters will help the BN, for example, while the Chinese are likely to swing to PAS.

Mobilisation is closely connected to turnout. Both sides will need to gear up their machinery with some stronger petrol than has been used to date in the campaign so far. The messaging of both sides is not inspiring.

If the BN wins this contest, money will be a major reason. The key element will be whether both sides keep to the rules, from the potential use of phantom voters and intimidation to respecting the outcome. Tensions are high. The police presence is massive. Tomorrow will tell.

DR BRIDGET WELSH is associate professor in Southeast Asian studies at John Hopkins University-SAIS, Washington DC. She is in Kuala Terengganu to observe the by-election.
 
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