It happened in Indonesia, it happened in Thailand. It is now happening in Malaysia. And Singapore, try as it may to resist, will sooner or later have to deal with the same issue of youth-led change. For too long have the authoritarian governments - some say semi-dictatorships - of Southeast Asia had it easy.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak should have smelled the wind of change blowing near but ensconced in the plush, expensively-carpeted corridors of power, he dismissed it. He continued to rule in the tradition of his elitist Umno-BN coalition, setting off a few 'racial' firecrackers now and then to keep the 'masses' in check.
But Gen Y in Malaysia is a different force altogether. An online generation fed on literature where Good always triumphs over Evil and against all odds, they are smarter, much more articulate and conscientious than let's say the 'Flower children' of the 1960s.
And in eyes of Malaysia's Gen Y now, Good is Anwar Ibrahim and Pakatan Rakyat. They are the Gandalfs and Bilbos to Malaysia's youth. Clearly on the opposite side are Najib and Umno-BN. They are the Saurons and the evil Orcs as depicted in Tolkien's light versus darkness epic - Lord of the Rings.
Rise of the Black 505 movement
This then is the situation in Malaysia where the ruling coalition and the Opposition have moved from a controversial ballot to a new and uncharted battleground. The head-to-head fight is gaining intensity and this cannot be manifested more clearly than in Saturday's Blackout 505 rally to protest electoral fraud and to demand new elections.
More than 60,000 Malaysians of various races and backgrounds had flooded the field in Padang Timur, Petaling Jaya. Mostly youths in their 20s and 30s, they dressed in black T-shirts to symbolize the death of democracy due to the controversial May 5 election that many have accused the Najib administration of rigging to cling to power.
The youths showed no shyness or fear in calling for Najib and top officials of the Election Commission to quit and for Umno-BN to be toppled. Waving flags, banners and blowing vuvuzuelas, they shouted their frustration against the ruling regime's notorious corruption and ham-fisted rule.
Not the grand finale at all but the first
The youth-led uprising has left Najib and his administration in a bind. Wavering between using 'scare tactics' and the fear that he might unwittingly set off a wave of unprecedented public resistance, Najib has been conspicuously silent, leaving his lieutenants such as newly-appointed Home Minister Zahid Hamidi to play 'bad cop'.
But instead of working, this has made the 59-year-old Najib appear even weaker, exposing him as a leader with few ideas as to where and how to take Malaysia forward.
"This is not the last or grand finale but the first rally to consolidate all the ones that we have been carrying out. Before this we held many smaller rallies in various places and tonight's rally is to sum up those demonstrations. After this we will travel to other states such as Sabah, Sarawak and other places that we have not gone to yet," PKR women's youth chief Siti Aishah Shaik Ismail told Malaysia Chronicle.
"So far despite all the threats from the police and the authorities, the people are still coming to our rallies and this shows they know this is their country and the government should listen to them. This is why I say this is the beginning because we will not stop until they withdraw the outcome of the (May 5) election."
"I am surprised by the reaction. It is not only from the Malays but from the Chinese and Indians. And 60 to 70% of those who come are youths. This shows that Malaysian politics have reached a high level of maturity where all the different races can accept Malaysian politics."
Never seen before in his 30 years of experience
PAS deputy president Mat Sabu told Malaysia Chronicle that in his 30 years of experience in politics and activism, he has never seen such a public reaction before. Calling it a people's movement, Mat Sabu believes it is public outrage over what he claims is clear-cut evidence of polls cheating that has brought so many to the PR's ceramahs.
"The people are not happy with the indelible ink, the way the media was used, the postal and early voters as well as how some civil servants were forbidden to vote for the opposition. "They feel there has been injustice perpetrated in the elections and they want to remedy this," said Mat Sabu.
"The rallies will continue because the people want action to be taken. They are not coming because we asked them to. This is not an organized effort. It sprung up from the people's anger over the injustice in the election."
According to PKR leader Badrul Hisham Shaharin, also known as Chegubard, the Pakatan is now trying to organize the next major rally at the Dataran Merdeka, the venue for the BERSIH 3 rally for free and fair polls.
Apart from Anwar, who was the last to speak, other PR leaders who attended the rally included PKR president Wan Azizah, DAP's Ronnie Liu, Nurul Izzah, Rafizi Ramli, Tian Chua, Fuziah Salleh, PAS' Dr Siti Maria.
Almost stealing the show were Malaysia's blues legend Ito, who belted out 2 songs and got the crowd rocking with him, while former singer Dayangku Intan and Datuk Thasleen from the NGO Jihad for Justice also sang to the audience.
Malaysia Chronicle
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