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Malaysia: Citizens Denied a Fair
Vote
Bias in Electoral Process Favors Ruling Coalition in March 8 Poll
March 5, 2008 – (Human Rights Watch) Government
restraints on expression, assembly and access to state media will
deny Malaysians a fair vote in the March 8 general elections, Human
Rights Watch said today.
The authorities’ manipulation of the electoral process appears
aimed to ensure that the ruling coalition maintains its two-thirds
parliamentary majority.
“Once again, elections in Malaysia are grossly unfair to the
opposition,” said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at
Human Rights Watch. “Malaysia’s ruling coalition is
too comfortable with the status quo to allow reforms that would
level the playing field.”
On March 8, Malaysians will vote for the national parliament. Since
1969, the ruling Barisan Nasional, a coalition consisting of 14
parties, has held a two-thirds majority in parliament, which enables
it to amend the constitution at will. Opposition parties currently
hold 9.6 percent of the seats in parliament.
Freedom of expression, association and assembly
Malaysian law and practice allow free campaigning for the ruling
coalition while placing severe restraints on the opposition. For
instance, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahman Badawi on March 1 was able
to hold a rally of 20,000 supporters. But police have repeatedly
blocked attempts by opposition parties to hold election rallies
by refusing to issue the permits required for any gathering of four
or more people.
In November 2007, the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections (Bersih),
a loose alliance of almost 70 civil society organizations and several
political parties, organized an orderly march and rally by some
40,000 Malaysians. In response, police used excessive force, including
tear gas and chemical-laced water on peaceful protesters.
The government has routinely used the specter of ethnic violence
to deter public demonstrations and silence government critics. On
February 16, three days after Abdullah dissolved parliament, police
officers used tear gas and water cannons to disperse a peaceful
crowd of some 200 Malaysian Indians from the Hindu Rights Action
Force (Hindraf). Hindraf has not been permitted to register as a
political party, and has repeatedly been denied permits when they
sought, such as on this occasion, to hold a peaceful demonstration.
“When opposition leaders and civil society groups critical
of the government try to organize rallies, they are blocked at every
turn,” said Pearson. “Yet the usual excuses about unruly
protesters and blocked traffic are never mentioned when the ruling
coalition wants to get its supporters out on the streets. ”
The government has long threatened opposition politicians with provisions
of the broadly worded Sedition Act. In addition, since the draconian
Printing Presses and Publications Act places the burden of proof
on defendants in defamation cases, opposition parties are self-censoring
for fear of being hit hard by libel suits if they critique the establishment.
Curbs on the media
Government interference in media reporting is not new to Malaysia,
but has become even more contentious during election campaigning.
An election observer in Malaysia told Human Rights Watch that monitoring
of state television and radio had turned up no opposition candidate
presence. The state media are the two most important avenues for
candidates to communicate their messages to voters, particularly
those in rural areas.
In late January, Bernama, the Malaysian National News Agency reported
that Deputy Information Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamid conceded the
lack of fairness in the state media. He said that the ministry would
need to study “whether allowing opposition leaders to campaign
through Radio Television Malaysia in the next general election will
benefit the people.”
Freedom of the media is further hampered since all private free-to-air
television channels are owned by the United Malays National Organization
(UMNO), a founding member of the ruling coalition and Malaysia’s
largest political party.
Because Malaysian law requires all publications to obtain permits
to operate on a yearly basis, the state can easily shut down those
that are critical of the government. The minister of internal security,
who is currently also the prime minister, has discretion to grant,
revoke or suspend any publication prejudicial to public order, morality
or security, or that is likely to alarm public opinion. Newspapers
such as the Tamil language daily, Makkai Osai, are self-censoring
to avoid being shut down.
On February 15, the online Malaysiakini site reported that the Chinese-language
Oriental Daily editor issued an election-related “guideline”
to staff. The guideline suggested the newspaper should avoid placing
opposition news prominently, mentioning the opposition’s campaign
to block the Barisan Nasional’s goal of a two-thirds majority,
or discussing any disputed issues in Chinese communities. The Oriental
Daily has had difficulty renewing its license in recent years.
“The Malaysian government has ensured that state radio and
TV only cover the ruling coalition and that newspapers report on
the opposition at their own risk,” said Pearson.
Irregularities in electoral roll registration and certification
of election results
Irregularities in the voter rolls and other elements of the electoral
process raise concerns that the government will seek to manipulate
votes in closely fought districts. While some individual problems
may be simple error, they highlight the need for effective and impartial
monitoring by the Election Commission and national election monitors.
Bersih, the coalition for clean and fair elections, has documented
severe irregularities in the voter rolls. It found that in several
areas a large number of voters were suddenly transferred en masse
from one district to another. According to Bersih, some voters discovered
that their electoral registration was changed without their knowledge
to locales outside their home districts.
In one case, a voter found that her registration had been changed
back to a residence she had not occupied for 14 years. Others have
found that despite registering a change of address some time ago,
they have not been reassigned to polling stations reflective of
their new addresses. Still others, who had never registered, found
that their names mysteriously appeared on the electoral roll. One
voter in Penang went to register, only to find that she allegedly
had done so when she was 17 months old. Some voters who used the
mail to register to vote discovered registration procedures had
not been completed in time for them to be eligible to vote in the
upcoming election.
Other anomalies reported by Bersih involve multiple registrations,
in one case 40 individuals are registered at a single address. In
other cases, family members living together are listed at different
addresses. Other registrations use nonexistent addresses. Almost
9,000 voters who were born more than 100 years ago (two were reported
to be 128 years old) are still enrolled to vote, raising suspicions
about phantom voting. No matter what the offense, the voter roll,
once gazetted, cannot be challenged in court.
Bersih is also concerned with postal voting, limited to police and
army personnel, and overseas students. More than 221,000 voters
use postal votes, but the tallied votes are not necessarily counted
among those from voters’ home districts. Although the Army
Div 2 Base in Georgetown, Penang, houses only a security guard,
some 500 voters are registered to that address. A lack of transparency
raises questions about how votes are assigned, including concerns
that they may be arbitrarily allocated to benefit districts where
the vote is close.
“Voters in Malaysia deserve a chance for every vote to count
and count equally,” said Pearson. “Given the vast array
of anomalies in the electoral rolls, this looks increasingly unlikely.”
Human Rights Watch urged the Malaysian government to protect the
constitutionally guaranteed rights to freedom of expression and
assembly for all parties. The government should not use laws to
unfairly penalize opposition politicians, and it should ensure that
all political parties have equal access to state media. Human Rights
Watch called on national election monitors to thoroughly investigate
any claims of electoral fraud and irregularities, and to provide
for greater transparency by posting vote tallies outside polling
stations before votes are transferred to the Election Commission.
From:http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/04/malays18204.htm
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