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Reuters: Hadi says Mahathir is scaremongering By Jalil Hamid 20/8/2001 5:08 am Mon |
[Kerajaan secara tidak langsung seperti sengaja menjalankan satu kempen
besar-besaran untuk memburukkan nama Islam, PAS dan Osama b Laden. Ini dapat
dilihat bila kerajaan cepat-cepat menuduh satu kumpulan (KMM) bertanggungjawab
bukannya satu dua individu. Ini diharap akan dapat menggoda Amerika dan pelabur
luar agar tidak menyisihkan Malaysia kerana menggunakan ISA. Selain itu ia akan
menimbulkan perasaan takut kaum Cina agar menjauhi PAS.
Perlu diingat di sini kenapa isu Dani dibesarkan tetapi isu pemnyembelihan
umat Islam Ambon sengaja digelapkan. Kenapa juga jenayah pelampau ugama
Kristian tidak pula diberi liputan? Mempersalahkan Islam atau kumpulan Islam
kerana tindakkan Dani adalah satu sikap yang amat tidak bertanggungjawab.
- Editor] 17 Aug 2001 Malaysian Muslim leader says Mahathir is scaremongering
By Jalil Hamid KUALA TERENGGANU, Malaysia (Reuters) - An influential Malaysian Islamic
opposition leader said on Friday a crackdown by Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad's government on alleged Muslim extremists was scaremongering to
shore up dwindling support. Abdul Hadi Awang, deputy president of Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS), also
took a swipe at Singapore's Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew for saying PAS,
which harbours ambitions to set up an Islamic state in multiracial Malaysia,
could be a destabilising force in the region.
But, in an interview with Reuters, Mahathir's government bore the brunt of
the turbanned 53-year-old's ire as he reacted to the arrest two weeks ago of
10 Muslims, including the son of PAS's spiritual leader, Nik Abdul Aziz Nik
Mat. The 10 men are accused of militant extremism and are being held under the
Internal Security Act (ISA), which allows detention without trial.
"The militant issue is created by it to scare the non-Muslims," said Abdul
Hadi, who is regarded as the party ideologue and is also chief minister of
Terengganu, the east coast state PAS won in the 1999 general election.
Abdul Hadi said there were Malaysian Muslims who joined Muslim freedom
fighters to drive Russian forces out of Afghanistan in the 1980s. But he
challenged authorities to produce evidence in court to back up their
allegations against the 10 who are accused of belonging to an Afghan-trained
militant Muslim group. The police have also held six supporters of the jailed former finance
minister Anwar Ibrahim held under the ISA since early April.
Abdul Hadi, whom Asiaweek magazine two months ago listed as the seventh most
powerful Asian, well above Mahathir's ranking, said it showed the prime
minister, who has ruled for 20 years, was getting desperate.
"These are signs that Mahathir's rule is coming to an end," said Abdul Hadi.
"We cannot have dictators. What is happening points towards dictatorship.
The (political) scenario is changing," he said. He also questioned whether there was a conspiracy within Mahathir's United
Malays National Organisation (UMNO) to raise fears that PAS harboured
extremist elements. "It is not impossible these things are hatched by UMNO," he said.
LESSON FOR LEE Abdul Hadi also said Singapore's Lee was wrong to raise worries about PAS's
potential ascendancy over UMNO. Lee said in an interview published on Singapore's ruling People's Action
Party website that regional instability was the biggest risk to the island
state's prosperity, and cited growing support for PAS in Malaysia as a
potential worry. "If it continues in that way they can win over some of the Malay and Indian
parties, that will present another difficult problem for the region," said
Lee, who visits Mahathir on September 2.
Abdul Hadi said Lee was being alarmist, and was too influenced by Western
thought. "If Lee Kuan Yew understands Islam, he should be jubilant over the
resurgence of PAS. He should understand the ideology and principles adopted
by Singapore came from the West, not from China or India.
"If he can study the Western economic and political theories, why can't he
study Islamic teachings on economy and politics as well?" Abdul Hadi said he was confident that PAS could win more seats in the next
general elections, due in 2004, but stopped short of saying whether the
opposition front could win power.
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