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Media Conference Statement by Lim Kit Siang
at the DAP Ipoh Timur Election Ops Centre, Ipoh on Tuesday, 4th
March 2008 at 2 pm:
24-hr four-state
11-stop whistlestop election tour most encouraging as wind of change
blowing strong and hard in Malaysia – question is whether it could reach
the velocity to change the political landscape by denying BN two-thirds
majority I have just
returned from a 24-hour four-state 11-stop whistlestop tour which I find
most encouraging as the wind of change is blowing strong and hard in
Malaysia – and the question is whether it could reach the velocity to
change the political landscape by denying the Barisan Nasional
two-thirds majority. I left Ipoh for
Johore by car at 3.30 am on Monday morning, starting with a 10-hour
swing of Johore to campaign for DAP candidates in eight state assembly
and three parliamentary constituencies in Johore, namely Senai, Skudai,
Stulang, Yong Peng, Bekok, Jementah, Tangkak, Bentayan (state) and Kulai,
Segamat and Bakri (parliament) from 8.30 am to 6.30 pm, followed by huge
ceramahs in Malacca, Rasah (Negri Sembilan) and Subang Jaya. I returned
to Ipoh at about 3.30 am – a real 24-hour affair! Johore Mentri
Besar Datuk Seri Ghani Othman and the erstwhile MCA national and Johore
leader, Datuk Seri Dr. Chua Soi Lek had declared that the Barisan
Nasional (BN) objective is to ensure that Johore is a zero-Opposition
state – which not only exposes their undemocratic mindset but their
abysmal failure to understand the meaning of democracy. There can be no
meaningful democracy without a viable and credible opposition in
Parliament and State Assembly to ensure that the diverse opinions, views
and criticisms particularly in plural Malaysia are heard loud and clear
in the various legislatures. Ghani made the
startling statement that he would not listen the DAP State Assemblymen
elected to the Johore State Assembly on March 8. I call on the voters of
Johore to use their vote to teach both Ghani and Chua a lesson in
democracy, that they must respect the wishes and decisions of the voters
if they want to elect DAP representatives into the Johore State
Assembly. Otherwise, the
Barisan Nasional might as well admit that the 12th general election is
just a charade and not a meaningful democratic exercise for Malaysians
to vote for the Parliament and State Assembly representatives of their
choice once in five years as provided for in the Constitution. I hope the Johore
voters would teach Ghani a lesson in democracy and that the DAP can look
forward to winning at least one parliamentary and three state assembly
seats in Johore in the 12th general election. I fought an
hour-by-hour battle to keep my voice from failing and from succumbing to
flu and fever, but great and heartening response from the people from
every stop I made in the whistestop tour had been the most efficacious
medicine of all! My only regret in
the 10-hour swing for eight state and three parliamentary constituencies
in Johore is the untoward incident in Labis resulting in a scuffle
between the Labis OCPD Supt. Abdul Majid Mohd Ali and the seven-month
pregnant woman DAP parliamentary candidate for Labis, Teo Eng Ching for
a mike during a simple welcoming reception for me when I arrived in
Labis. I had to intervene
to ask Abdul Majid to refrain from such an action, publicly being seen
in a scuffle in trying to snatch the mike from the seven-month pregnant
woman, which is not only ungentlemanly and completely lacking in
chivalry but might harm the unborn babe Teo is carrying. After the
incident, Teo vomited and had to be hospitalized for observation whether
harm had been caused to the unborn babe. Most police
personnel had been considerate and impartial in their police role in the
general election campaign and the Labis incident is a police blackmark
in the way the Labis OCPD disregarded Teo’s seven-month pregnant
condition in his scuffle with her in trying to snatch her mike. DAP has fielded 19
women candidates – eight parliamentary and eleven state assembly
candidates – to be the voice of all Malaysians, regardless of race,
religion or gender in Parliament and the State Assemblies. The polling
day of March 8 falling on International Women’s Day must make the 12th
general election particularly significant for upholding the dignity and
honour of women – and what happened to Teo in her pregnant condition in
Labis must be deplored not only by all women candidates but men
candidates and the general public as well. But will the BN
women candidate, let alone the BN men candidates, speak up for Teo to
deplore the action of the Labis OCPD, endangering the life of the unborn
in Teo’s womb? Nobody has any
high hopes in this, particularly after the highly offensive and sexist
billboards launched in the election campaign by a woman MCA
parliamentary candidate against her opponent, Teresa Kok. (Seputeh
Parliament), attacking her as a “loose woman” who would “two-time” her
constituents. In the last
Parliament, the three women DAP MPs – Teresa Kok, Chong Eng and Fong Po
Kuan, were often the butt of sexist and offensive remarks by Barisan
Nasional “MCP” MPs. No MCA, Gerakan or BN women MPs stood up for the
three DAP MPs against the offensive and sexist “MCP” attacks. It would
appear that the same applies to the current batch of MCA and other BN
women parliamentary and state assembly candidates. Finally, I call on
the Inspector-General of Police, Tan Sri Musa Hassan, to send out a
clear directive to all OCPDs to respect the rights, dignity and honour
of all women candidates in the general election and not to subject them
to the indignity and humiliation visited on Teo in Labis yesterday. *
Lim
Kit Siang, DAP Parliamentary
Candidate & DAP Central Policy and Strategic Planning Commission
Chairman |
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