| Call on the PM, Cabinet 
	Ministers, Police and Attorney-General to stop treating Hindraf leaders and 
	ordinary Malaysians who attended the 30,000-strong Hindraf demonstration as 
	“terrorists” just because “somebody” had lodged a police report that Hindraf 
	has contacts with LTTE 
    ______________Media Conference
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 _________________
 
      
      (Ipoh,
      Saturday):
       I call on the 
		the Prime Minister, Cabinet Ministers, the Inspector-General of Police 
		and the Attorney-General to stop treating Hindraf leaders and ordinary 
		Malaysians who attended the Nov. 25 30,000-strong Hindraf demonstration 
		as “terrorists” just because “somebody” had lodged a police report that 
		Hindraf has contacts with LTTE. 
	Just because “somebody” has lodged a police report making an accusation 
		against an organization cannot be the basis for any public policy as the 
		government, Inspector-General of Police and the Attorney-General will 
		surely not treat UMNO and Barisan Nasional leaders and members as 
		“terroriss” just because “somebody” has lodged an unsubstantiated police 
		report that they have connections or links with terrorist organizations.
 
 The Attorney-General Tan Sri Gani Patail was the first to raise the 
		alleged Hindraf links with terrorists when he deployed it as the “star” 
		argument at the Shah Alam Sessions Court on Wednesday to oppose the 
		application for bail for the 31 persons charged for the “attempted 
		murder” of a policeman. What was the justification for the 
		Attorney-General leading the attack on Hindraf for its alleged terrorist 
		links?
 
 Yesterday, Gani said his linking Hindraf to the LTTE in his argument at 
		the Shah Alam Sessions Court on Wednesday was based on a police report.
 
 He said: "Somebody lodged a police report that there is ground that 
		these people have been going out to (establish) contact with this LTTE.’
 
 Surely, this is too flimsy a ground for the Attorney-General to found 
		his whole court strategy to virtually regard the 31 ordinary Malaysians 
		as if terrorists out to wreck the country and too dangerous to be 
		allowed bail pending their trial.
 
 But this is exactly the line which the Prime Minister, Cabinet 
		Ministers, the Police and the Attorney-General have adopted with regard 
		to the Hindraf leaders and the ordinary Malaysians who had gathered for 
		Nov. 25 rally to peacefully, democratically and constitutionally send a 
		clear and unmistakable “cry of desperation” of the long-standing 
		political, economic, educational, social, cultural and religious 
		marginalization of the Malaysian Indians into a new underclass to serve 
		as a wake-up call to the Barisan Nasional Government.
 
 The Prime Minister has led the attack on Hindraf for its allegations of 
		“ethnic cleansing” and genocide of Indians in Malaysia, but can the 
		government, police and Attorney-General, with the vast resources at 
		their command, be unaware that the 30,000 Malaysian Indians who had come 
		to Kuala Lumpur from all over the country were completely unconnected to 
		these allegations and their support of the Hindraf demonstration was for 
		one and only one purpose – to call the attention of the government to 
		the decades-long marginalization of the Malaysian Indians?
 
 Has the top Barisan Nasional leadership decided on a harsh and even 
		cruel response to the “cry of desperation” by 30,000 Malaysian Indians 
		on behalf of two million Malaysian Indians for an end to their 
		marginalization as Malaysian citizens, explaining:
 
 • the demonisation of Hindraf leaders and creating the conditions to 
		prepare for their detention under the Internal Security Act, with 
		growing chorus of demand for the invocation of the ISA by BN Ministers 
		and even with the Prime Minister publicly discussing the ISA option; and
 
 • treating those who attended the Hindraf demonstration as “terrorists” 
		and grave threats to national security who cannot be allowed bail when 
		they are ordinary Malaysians who have nothing to do with the allegations 
		of “ethnic cleansing” and genocide and only wanted their legitimate 
		grievances about the marginalization of Malaysian Indians to be heard 
		and addressed by the government.
 
 The Prime Minister and the Barisan Nasional government must be 
		forewarned – that a harsh, insensitive, cruel and high-handed response 
		to the 30,000-strong Hindraf demonstration on the marginalization of the 
		Malaysian Indians, demonizing the Hindraf leaders as terrorists and the 
		two million Malaysian Indians who want an end to their marginalization 
		as grave national security threats will only aggravate the sense of 
		alienation, deprivation and marginalization of the Malaysian Indian 
		community.
 
 It will have grave short-term, mid-term and long-term repercussions.
 
 Short-term, there will be further alienation of the Malaysian Indian 
		community aggravating racial polarization and national division, 
		undermining our international competitiveness.
 
 This will also have electoral consequences for the forthcoming general 
		election, as there are 58 parliamentary seats and 140 state assembly 
		seats in Peninsular Malaysia where the Indian voters account for more 
		than 10% of the electorate – not enough to singly decide the outcome of 
		any constituency but able to influence as to which party and candidate 
		will get elected.
 
 There are 13 such parliamentary and 29 state assembly seats in Perak – 
		with Indian voters comprising as high as 26% for a parliamentary 
		constituency and 45% for a state assembly seat.
 
 If the Malaysian Indians continued to be marginalized, and their “cry of 
		desperation” on Nov. 25 by 30,000 people on behalf of two million 
		Malaysian Indians result in further marginalization, then Barisan 
		Nasional candidates cannot depend on the Malaysian Indian votes as a 
		captive vote bank as in past general elections and by-elections.
 
 In the higher interest of national unity and greater international 
		competitiveness, sanity and good sense must prevail and I call on the 
		Prime Minister to provide the leadership to respond positively, 
		constructively and in a statesmanlike manner to the “cry of desperation” 
		for justice of the Malaysian Indian community to end their long-standing 
		marginalization with two measures:
 
		
		• Establish a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Hindraf demonstration 
		on Nov. 25, the police handling and conduct as well as allegations of 
		terrorist links of Hindraf; and
 • A National Conference of all political parties, NGOs and stakeholders 
		to deal with the root causes of the Hindraf demonstration – the 
		marginalization of the Malaysian Indians – but with a larger national 
		ambit and term of reference: a New Deal to end the marginalization of 
		the Malaysian Indians and all marginalized groups in the country.
 
      (08/12/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |