By Shanon Shah
JOURNALISTS have been warning each other that Zulkefly Mohamad Omar, PAS's Bagan Pinang by-election candidate, is not the world's best orator. Unfortunately, this is true.
At a PAS-organised ceramah in Taman Eastern on 5 Oct 2009, The Nut Graph observes that Zulkefly is ponderous in his speech. The chants of "Allahu akbar" that greet him are tentative and scattered. The entirely Malay Malaysian audience politely listens, but doesn't even seem to know when he is done speaking.
But Zulkefly is soft-spoken and gentle with journalists. And he lights up when anyone asks him about his involvement in the "no incinerator" campaign in Broga, Selangor. The incinerator fiasco began when the Selangor government, under then Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo, initially wanted to build a thermal incinerator in Puchong.
It is this sort of community-organising track record that could make Zulkefly the David to the Barisan Nasional (BN)'s Goliath, candidate Tan Sri Isa Samad. For example, Zulkefly has been, since 2000, one of the leaders demanding action on the mysterious deaths among pig farmers in Bukit Pelanduk, Negeri Sembilan that followed the 1998 Nipah virus outbreak. The cause of the deaths remain a mystery but Zulkefly says he knows that the Negeri Sembilan government, under none other than Isa as menteri besar, did not do enough to help the pig farmers in Bukit Pelanduk.
Indeed, these community-type issues seem to be Zulkefly's forte. According to his campaign manifesto, revealed on 6 Oct 2009, he will focus on improving the constituency's drainage system and quality of roads, and conserving the natural environment. But is this enough ammunition for Zulkefly to win the battle for Bagan Pinang?
Zulkefly's skeletons
As eager as he is to highlight his activist history, it is also easy to rattle Zulkefly. Reporters quiz him about DAP secretary-general and Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng's assessment that the BN has a 70% chance at victory with Isa as their candidate. "I don't want to answer this question," Zulkefly says. What about Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad's recent jibe that PAS will render halal all that it deemed haram in the past just to please its Pakatan Rakyat (PR) partners? "I'd like to focus on questions regarding my campaign, please," Zulkefly says.
These might be fair objections coming from Zulkefly. After all, he is here to tell the people what he stands for as a candidate and what he can offer, not speculate on the outcome of the by-election or analyse PR dynamics.
Yet, he even avoids questions on other public interest issues that would alert the electorate about what principles he is made of.
The Nut Graph asks Zulkefly what his stand is on concert banning, as called for by central PAS Youth against both Danish soft-rock band Michael Learns to Rock and US R&B diva Beyonce Knowles. He declines comment. What is his stand on the open sale of alcohol? No comment. What is his position on the whipping sentence dropped on Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarnor? No comment. He says, "Ask me questions about the campaign, please."
But these are not curly questions. These are questions on issues of public policy. Yet, Zulkefly declines, albeit politely and sweetly. And when he addresses the multiracial crowd at the DAP operations center in Batu 9 on 5 Oct, it is clear to see why Zulkefly is so cautious. "A vote for PAS is a vote for the PR and its vision," he says in earnest.
And so this must be Zulkefly's dilemma in Bagan Pinang. How will he sell himself to multiracial and multireligious voters while making sure PAS's Islamist skeletons do not come jumping out of his campaign closet?
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