THE police should not side with those who trample on people’s constitutional rights, said a former senior judge, who chastised authorities on how they handled recent racial and religious issues.
Hishamudin Yunos said the uproar over the teaching of jawi in vernacular schools and Chinese New Year decorations at a school as two examples of the “authorities siding with the transgressors”.
Instead of protecting the rights to freedom of expression and assembly of a group opposing jawi and the school’s administrators, the police had acted to silence them, Hishamudin, a former appeals court judge said.
This behaviour, he said, is dangerous as it sends the wrong message and make groups who incite racial and religious sentiments bolder.
A Malay student group, Gamis, had threatened Chinese education group Dong Jiao Zhong, which wanted to hold a congress on teaching jawi to primary four vernacular classes on December 27 last year.
Malay rights groups had threatened that racial riots will break out if Dong Jiao Zong persisted in holding the congress.
Due to the threat, police obtained a court order to stop the Dong Jiao Zong congress.
Days later, however, a Muslim student group went ahead to hold its anti-Dong Jiao Zong rally in Kuala Lumpur despite orders from police not to do so.
The same thing occurred in SMK Pusat Bandar Puchong (1) where police asked the school to take down CNY decorations because a Malay nationalist party, Putra, protested against them.
Following Putra’s uproar, Pakatan Harapan ministers and state government officials visited the school to show their support for its parents and administrators.
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