Destroying Unity

Eat yellow.

According to an article in TheStar, our dearest PM said that:

We worked so hard to build and transform the nation and we cannot allow any trouble to take place as it would destroy unity.

Wow! I’m surprised that this could come from the person who allowed a clamp-down on the largest unity party of the year, which cut across all race and religion, with water-cannons, tear-gas and baton-charges. This is the person who sees 1-Malaysia as a threat to national security.

Also, from the same article:

I don’t want to be the Prime Minister for one moment if I do not have the support of the people.

Rich, coming from the only PM that we have who has not gotten a mandate from the people. Our PM from the last general election was Pak Lah and not Najib who inherited the position when Pak Lah opted to leave office. He has yet to prove that the people actually want him.

He barely made it past the post in his constituency with a narrow 241 vote majority in the 1999 general elections. Maybe our PM might consider calling for a snap election to see just how much support he has from the people?

Clean Observations

Frak you, BN.After so many days, and reading so many stories on the march, I thought that I should pen a few of my own thoughts and observations on some interesting things that happened on that day.

Drop-in Sales
Instead of the expected rioting and looting that was expected, the rally goers did the exact opposite. I witnessed people queuing up and paying for bottles of water amid all that violence. Those establishments that were open that day, made a lot of money off the rally goers. And everyone actually queued – a rarity in Malaysia!

Ground Support
The shop owners, many of whom were very supportive. When the police started lobbing tear-gas into the crowd, some of the shop owners were herding people through their shops for safety and also a quick escape into the back alleys. While they were not in the crowd, they were definitely with it.

Irrelevant Anwar
There were all kinds of chants that the crowd shouted including “Hidup Rakyat”, “Bersih Bersih” and others. However, when someone shouted “Hidup Anwar”, the volume of the chant was obviously muted. Most people were very clear on why they were there and it was not for Anwar who is becoming largely irrelevant.

Truly Malaysia
People helped people. The sensation of being part of something bigger than ourselves, united people across religions and race. It is just ironic that the most 1Malaysia event of the year drew out the worst suppression that our government could throw at its own people. Instead of celebration, it was suppressed.

KL is Small
I actually wondered why, instead of driving, I have not walked more within the city. KL is actually very walk-able. One can cross the heart of the city from one end to another in just about half an hour. There are actually so many back-alleys and side-streets that can be used to short-cut the distance.

Supportive Families
While many parents can remember the atrocities of 1969 and were very worried about how this rally may turn out, many were still quite supportive of their children’s need to march – Marina Mahathir joined the rally to keep an eye on her daughter. Some bid their kids to have a good time and stay safe!

Strong Defiance
Everyone had their own personal reasons for joining the rally. However, there were some who joined simply because the government told them not to – natural trouble-makers – and some even spent the prior night in their offices. Honestly, I think that the turn-out might have been less if the government had actually played everything down.

I hope that I did not miss anything. If I did, I will update this entry later.

Clean Stories

I will probably compile some of my favourite Bersih 2.0 stories here.

  • My favourite on so far, by a friend of mine – The Battle for Jalan Pudu:
    “It felt like an intense amount of chili powder gently and delicately rubbed onto every part of your exposed skin by Najib Razak”

  • The only one from the corporate media worth reading – A display of the people’s spirit:
    “Within the Tung Shin compound, I was hit the hardest by the tear gas. It burned my esophagus and eyes. I felt I was on the verge of passing out. Somehow, I managed to eat some salt.”

  • Sharing ice-cream with the police – Someone Did Win on July 9th:
    “What I experienced on the 9th of July is Malaysia. We are decent people, we are a people of quality. Those in power who are selfish or bigots or who try to divide the people – that is not Malaysia, and they are not deserving of Malaysia.”

  • A nice eye-witness account – I am Proud to be Malaysian:
    “I am not just proud to be Malaysian. More than that, I’m truly proud of my fellow Malaysians. May God bless you all.”

  • Nobody cares about Anwar anymore – The Difference:
    “Anwar could have been the Man in 2007, but Now it is Ambiga.”

Police Honesty

I won’t say much since I think that the police are doing a brilliant job of digging a grave for themselves. Their stories no longer fit together properly.

A news report, that quotes the actual numbers:

Commenting on the rally, IGP Tan Sri Ismail Omar said as a result of steps police had in place only about 6,000 managed to gather unlike the crowds seen in the 2007 Bersih rally.

And the general kudos for a job well done today:

Ismail also attributed the smooth crowd control to systematic and professional policing, adding that the number this time was not as large as the gathering for the 2007 Bersih rally due to the steps taken.

And the gem from TheStar archives, Nov 2007:

The police have said it involved 4,000 people while the organisers have put it at 40,000,

Yes, our police force must be the most brilliant in the world, which can say that 6,000 is less than 4,000. Goodness knows what else goes on inside such brilliant minds.

I guess that explains a lot about how they chose to handle things. I must learn mathemagic from them. Repeat to self – 6k is less than 4k… 6k is less than… 6k is… frak it.

And of course, the numbers who were arrested:

A total of 1,667 people were arrested for taking part in various rallies in the city, said Inspector General of Police Tan Sri Ismail Omar.

I must congratulate our police force for a job well done and being so efficient – arresting almost 30% of the participants. Let me put it in another way, that is almost 1-in-3 of the participants.

Take a good look at the photo gracing the front-page of the Thestar today – every third person got arrested! Wish they solved crimes as efficiently.

source: thestar.com.my

If they are so honest about this, I wonder what else are they honest about – like the police did not gas Tung Shin Hospital (the multi-storey gray building at the top of the hill).

He also denied allegations that the police team had fired tear gas into the Tung Shin Hospital grounds to disperse crowds gathered there.