PICIS Newsletter Issue No.85 (28th May, 2001)
International Solidarity
Abolish the Internal Security Act of Malaysia and
Release All Detainees!!
http://picis.jinbo.net/english/mainpage.htm
http://picis.jinbo.net/english/malaysia.htm
http://picis.jinbo.net/english/malaysia_0528.htm
On 28th May, 2001, PICIS, Korean House for
International Solidarity(KHIS) and Solidarity for the
Abolishment of the National Security Law (an umbrella
organization of 232 social organizations) held a
demonstration at the Malaysian Embassy in Seoul,
Korea, to demand the abolishment of the Internal
Security Act and the release of the 10 detainees who
were recently arrested. Although small in number, the
demonstrators gathered together in Dankuk University
(which shares a wall with the Malaysian Embassy) with
pickets and demanded the Malaysian government to
abolish the ISA, release all detainees and abide by
international human rights principles. The
demonstrators also recognized the importance of
international solidarity for the abolishment of
security laws that are used as tools of political
oppression in all Asian countries, including Korea.
Recently, several activists were arrested in Korea on
charges of violating the NSL. After the demonstration,
the activists then handed a letter to be forwarded to
the Ambassador. PICIS also carried out a campaign
during the Seoul Human Rights Film Festival, about the
present situation in Malaysia. PICIS handed out
leaflets to be signed and collected more than 500
signatures to be sent to Malaysia, in solidarity to
their struggle against the Internal Security Act and
the deprivation of basic human rights. For more
information on the Internal Security Act of Malaysia,
visit Suaram, a human rights organization in Malaysia
http://www.suaram.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statement:
The Malaysian Government Must Abolish the Internal
Security Act and Release All Detainees! We have come
together here today to demand the immediate release of
Malaysian activists arrested by the Internal Security
Act (ISA), and the abolishment of the anti-human
rights Security Act. Through series of arrests that
started on 10th April, 10 'Reformasi' activists have
been detained and have been denied visits by their
lawyers and families. The Malaysian government gave an
illogical reason to the arrests saying that the
activists 'had planned a violent demonstration,
imported molotov cocktails and thus threatened the
wellbeing of the state'. But the democratic citizens
of Malaysia and the conscientious international
community who are watching the situation closely
definitely know that the arrested activists are not
those trying to overthrow the state, but rather,
progressive forces that are trying to abolish and
reform the age-long anti-democratic, anti-people laws
and policies. The ISA of Malaysia, when it judges a
person to be 'threatening the national security', can
arrest and investigate the person for 6 months without
trial, and is an anti-human rights law that can extend
the length to 2 years merely through the government's
arbitrary interpretation. Ever since its enactment in
1960, more than 10,000 Malaysians have been 'bestowed'
with this law, and there is even a prisoner of
conscience who has been imprisoned for 32 years. Also,
the ISA is interrelated with other 'evil' laws such as
the Police Act, Societies Act and the University and
College Act and are used as tools in thoroughly
blocking and suppressing the voices and actions of
those yearning for reform and democracy. However, what
is more deploring is the fact that such anti-human
rights security laws, like the National Security Law
of South Korea or the Anti-Subversion Act of
Indonesia, are still prevalent in most Asian
countries. There is no doubt to the fact that the
security laws, that were introduced by the
imperialists of France, Japan, Portugal, US and Great
Britain to maintain their economic hegemony in the
colonized nations, are now acting to maintain the
power of the military dictatorships that have settled
in Asian nations after liberation from the imperial
forces. The national security laws, that in the past
were consistently used to sustain the national system
(anti-communism, or in the case of China, communism)
and justify development, are today, in the post Cold
War period, used as an ideology to suppress the
demands of the citizens and workers who are against
'globalization' and the 'neo-liberal economic order'.
These national security laws severely contradict the
human rights principles that were already conferred
internationally decades ago (the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, agreements on civil and political
rights etc.) such as the Freedom of Speech and Freedom
of Assembly and Association, and are accompanied by
appalling anti-human rights activities such as
torture. After 1998 which marked the 50th anniversary
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and also
the 50th anniversary of the Korean National Security
Law, the movement by activists in each Asian country
is speeding up and is expanding to international
solidarity and actions. The 10 arrested activists have
been working for progress and democracy not only in
Malaysia but also in Asia and all around the world.
Their activities are beneficial to all except for
those who arrested them. The demonstration that the
activists were organizing to commemorate the second
anniversary of the former deputy prime minister
Anwar's trial (on allegations of homosexuality and
abuse of power) was indeed a peaceful one. But if
Mahatir's government does not immediately release the
detainees, it will not be able to avoid criticisms
that the government is oppressing the forces that are
resisting against economic crisis and corrupt
dictatorship just as it did to Anwar through political
purge. The Malaysian government must realize that the
conscientious civil societies of Asia and the entire
world are watching this situation, and if it does not
accept our demands it will face a wave of resistance
that crosses national borders.
Thus we, Korean activists, demand the following from
the Malaysian government :
1. Free All Detainees!
2. Abolish the Internal Security Act!
3. Abide by the International Human Rights Standard!
28th May, 2001
Solidarity for the Abolishment of the National
Security Law Policy and Information
Center for International Solidarity
Korean House for International Solidarity