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MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

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10 APRIL 2024

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

'Opposition also involved in polls hanky-panky'

Even the opposition, said former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad, engaged in hanky-panky during polls.

"In my time even the opposition engaged in such tactics. At one time there were 50 people registered in one house.

"We don't know how, but they managed to register the voters into the constituency," he told reporters after launching a disaster fund for Somalia famine relief in Putrajaya today.

mahathir ikmal presidential lecture 290410Mahathir said that this matter needs to be addressed by the Election Commission and expressed his support of the recently announced select committee on electoral reforms.

Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak disclosed plans to form the parliamentary select committee on Tuesday, immediate garnering both brickbats and accolades from various quarters.

While many applauded Najib for it, some say that he had no choice as popular sentiment was for it. Yet others criticised the move as not enough and a diversionary tactic to temporarily stifle dissent.

Mahathir also admitted that elections in Malaysia were not free from irregularities and interference from the ruling government, but stressed the defects were not as serious as elsewhere in the world.

"There may be some hanky-panky, but elections in Malaysia are clean, not absolutely clean, but clean.

"I must stress that it is also not as rampant as in other countries where the government gets 90 percent of the vote... here the opposition has even won some states," he explained.

International pressure

Asked if Najib's announcement of the select committee can be seen as caving in to the largely negative international reaction on the government's outlawing and subsequent crackdown of the Bersih 2.0 electoral reform rally, he said that the pressure also emanated domestically.

"Not international backlash, it is the local backlash on him," Mahathir posited.

The former premier himself had spoken out against the outlawed electoral reform rally, calling it an attempt by the opposition to attack the administration, rather than a real effort to cleanse the process of elections.

His daughter Marina Mahathir however has disagreed with him on this and had marched in the recent rally - the second after the first 2007 gathering in Kuala Lumpur.

While the opposition and civil society have long been campaigning for electoral reforms in Malaysia, the government however maintains that there are no serious problems with the way elections are conducted.

However it shys away from allowing the presence of local and international observers during the polls. - Malaysiakini

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