KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian attorney N Surendran appeared in court last week to defend a fellow opposition lawmaker accused of insulting the powerful ruling party -- then returned hours later to face a sedition charge of his own.
Surendran’s revolving door at court is the result of a flurry of sedition and other charges widely seen as a campaign to harass the opposition, sparking fears Malaysia’s long-ruling regime is lurching back to its authoritarian ways.
Prime Minister Najib Razak pledged two years ago that his ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) would abolish the Sedition Act, part of broad liberalisation promises to shore up sagging voter support.
But the reforms have foundered amid conservative resistance within UMNO, and the opposition says a crackdown is under way to thwart its growing electoral success.
“It’s a sedition blitz. This is clearly an attempt to stifle dissent,” said Surendran, who is handling opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s appeal against a controversial March sodomy conviction.
Surendran was hauled up for sedition after saying the harassment charge was fabricated by the government to derail the opposition.
The wave of sedition charges has been roundly criticised by groups including the independent Malaysian Bar Council, which has called it “an intense period of oppression against the citizenry and regression in the rule of law.”
UMNO has ruled multi-ethnic Malaysia since independence in 1957, bringing rapid growth while frequently using the organs of power to cow opponents.
But liberal-minded voters have increasingly flocked to the multiracial opposition.
Seeking to reverse that trend, Najib replaced some repressive laws in recent years, and in 2012 said the Sedition Act was next, calling it a remnant of a “bygone era.” The British colonial government introduced it in the 1940s to curb criticism of authorities amid a communist uprising. Convictions bring up to three years in prison.
But the act remains in force and its use has accelerated, especially since elections in May 2013 in which the opposition won the majority of the popular vote yet failed to take parliament.
Opposition-linked rights group Suaram said at least 14 people have been charged since then -- including three opposition legislators in the past two weeks and a respected university lecturer on Tuesday. Critics have long accused UMNO of unaccountability and misrule, issues spotlighted by the disappearance in March of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
AFP