The year 2011 will be remembered for the decision to do away
with the ISA – a move which vindicates the half-century long struggle
against this oppressive law.
But we need to be especially vigilant about what kind of laws will eventually replace the ISA. No to detention without trial.
Prime Minister Najib Razak’s announcement on 15 September 2011, on
the eve of Malaysia Day, that the government would repeal the Internal
Security Act (ISA) and lift the proclamations of Emergency removed a
heavy mill-stone that has weighed down on the nation’s psyche.
Despite the long delay before the actual repeal (supposedly in March
2011), the announcement vindicates the long struggle by ordinary
Malaysians to rid the nation of this obnoxious detention without trial
law.
The dumping of the ISA would be testimony to the strength of People
Power for over half a century. A droplet of discontent grew into a
stream and then a raging river which flowed into a sea of protest, the
biggest of which was the Abolish ISA rally in 2009.
Even when the peninsula achieved Independence in 1957, we were not
fully liberated. The Emergency Regulations Ordinance, introduced in 1948
remained in force. Introduced by the British High Commissioner Edward
Gent, the Ordinance was anything but gentlemanly. It allowed for
detentions not exceeding one year. Not only suspected communists, but
thousands of nationalists including Malay political activists outside
the Umno fold such as Ahmad Boestamam and Pak Sako were detained without
trial.
Full article in Aliran Monthly.
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