Lessons from the ICERD hullabaloo


Mustafa K. Anuar

THOSE who opposed the controversial International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) may claim victory after Putrajaya announced yesterday that it will not ratify the international instrument.

The mood among them might be celebratory, especially if they chose to perceive this decision as the Dr Mahathir Mohamad administration buckling under ferocious pressure and objection from the Malay-Muslim community.

Hence, the insistence among some of them that they should still stage a public rally on December 8 to celebrate.

But it may not be the right time for them – if we are at liberty to use the expression – to crack open a bottle of champagne. For, there is a need for introspection and conversation by all concerned Malaysians arising from this episode.

Decades-old politics of race and religion that informed the ICERD protest had entrenched, and in some cases amplified, ethno-centrism, hatred and suspicion among segments in our society. Old habits die hard.

Hence, many segments among the Malays were swayed argument by so-called defenders of Islam and the community that ICERD would undermine Article 153 in the federal constitution and other provisions that are considered “sacred”.

While fear of the implications of ICERD ratification may be genuine to certain pockets of Malays, the deliberate manufacturing of a siege mentality by certain quarters with vested interests for the consumption of Malays, might have increased the political temperature to a dangerous level.

To give it a larger context, ICERD emerged at a time when those politicians who lost badly in the last general election were struggling to make themselves relevant again in the eyes of the Malay-Muslim community.

To these politicians the ICERD issue must have been, as the Malay proverb says, “Bagaikan bulan jatuh ke riba”. A golden opportunity that knocked on the door of those who all along have been peddling and profiting from the politics of race and religion.

As part of the playbook of those who exploit race, Malays are told that ratifying ICERD would mean they are being slowly undermined by minorities in this multiethnic, multireligious and multicultural country.

And, it doesn’t help either when such anti-ICERD rhetoric is couched in religious terms. Not that such religious intervention is out of the ordinary in Malaysian politics.

If anything, it only heightened the fervour of those waging war against ICERD, and possibly blowing things out of proportion.

Protester at an anti-ICERD rally in Pasar Salak on November 17. – The Malaysian Insight, 23 November, 2018.

For instance, in urging all “God-fearing” Malaysians to oppose this convention, PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang sought the moral and religious high ground in defending “agama, bangsa dan negara” (religion, race and country).

In other words, to defy his calling is to be fearless of God, and, therefore, those who do so deserve to be demonised. In a culture steeped in religious practices, it is sacrilegious for a Malay not to fear God. You are, therefore, either with “us” or “them”.

Such rhetoric laced with godliness is calculated to legitimise threats of running amok if the government ignored their objections and pursued the path of ICERD. No matter if such threats violate norms of democracy.

Even the spectre of May 13 was invoked by certain quarters to show their grim resolve to oppose what they see as a transgression on Malay interests. It appears that they don’t mind going down the slippery slope of violence to attain their objective.

Is it any wonder, then, that the vigilante Badar Squad, for instance, is defiant and adamant about spreading its wings nationwide in its supposed war against vice and sin, especially among young people? A perceived divine blessing drives its mission to fight the evil that is courting those who defy God’s laws.

Democratic norms call for dialogue, discussion and debate, not rabble-rousing and, God forbid, social unrest.

Furthermore, Islam, like other religions, also calls for peaceful interaction and conversation about things that matter to all Malaysians from all walks of life.

With the benefit of hindsight, the government, needs to address the genuine fears of certain segments of Malays and other indigenous communities, particularly the poor and disenfranchised.

All is not lost if the government conscientiously pursues a policy of assisting the poor and needy in the country, i.e. the bottom 40%, the majority of whom are Malay, to show that poverty is indiscriminate. This is apart from providing assistance for educational and career advancement.

In the long run, it is hoped that it would be instructive to the poor and those in other social categories that Malaysians, irrespective of their ethnic, religious and cultural backgrounds, must be accorded dignity as a human being and God’s creation.

There’s a lot of work to be done, especially when race and religion are often exploited. But it’s worth doing it in the spirit of ICERD. – November 24, 2018.


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Comments


  • The world will look at us a great shame as one who cannot walk the talk. How are we qualified to condemn others for treating their minority citizens badly?

    It is time to keep silent on the Rohingya
    and Palestinian issues lest we are called a hypocrite.

    Posted 7 years ago by Tanahair Ku · Reply

    • Bringing back education in English in a big way (like it was in schools and university in 1957 during Merdeka) will really help "save" our Malay friends from what appears to be their permanent predicament? My 2 Malay best friends in a KL upper secondary school in the mid-196O's spoke good English and gained coveted seats to study advanced Science..

      Posted 7 years ago by MELVILLE JAYATHISSA · Reply

  • Lack of the ability to think in English like it was in 1957 at the time of Merdeka may have led to this?..

    Posted 7 years ago by MELVILLE JAYATHISSA · Reply

    • What has English got to do with this issue? The English-speaking world does not have a monopoly on critical thinking.

      Posted 7 years ago by Anak Kampung · Reply

    • That's true that the English-speaking world doesn't have a monopoly on critical thinking. However it's also true that the Malay-speaking world continues to be drown in their ignorance, poverty, extremism and talibanism.

      Posted 7 years ago by Jackal Way · Reply

  • Actually, the Orang Asal and Malaysians of Indian origin are worse of than the 'Malays'. Also, 'Malay' has now become a useless category for socio-economic analysis, given the constitutional definition. Disaggregation by state, among other factors, is crucial. Otherwise, any affirmative action programme will just end up enriching the UMNO-putras or their PH equivalents.

    Posted 7 years ago by Anak Kampung · Reply