The
Internet Blackout day on Aug 14, 2012. Malaysians made history! It was only
possible because of the thousands who used the tools provided by the open web
to spread the information about Section 114A far and wide. The diversity and
creativity of actions, from tweeting, posting on Facebook, designing banners
and pictures, e-mailing, to even going offline the whole day, was outstanding!
It shows that many actions of protest are possible and indeed, necessary.
The
broad spectrum of people who came together also shows that this is an issue
that cuts across political divides. Some tried hard to paint this
citizen-initiated campaign as politically-motivated or influenced by partisan
politics. In an extremely polarised political landscape like ours, initiatives such
as the Internet Blackout Day are bound to get caught in the crossfire.To raise
awareness about the detrimental impact of Section 114A of the Evidence
Act.Another positive outcome is that a lot more Malaysians now realise how
faulty our process of law-making is.If only consultation had taken place before
the bill becomes law.
If only
MPs — whether from BN or Pakatan, or the Independents — were given enough
resources to look carefully at this law and their implications on the rakyat.
If only
MPs were given enough time to debate this before they vote.
Fact is,
there was zero consultation. Fact is, MPs are often badly stretched and under
resourced. Fact is, we’ve seen more quality debate on Section 114A over the
past few days than in Parliament when the bill was passed!
If we
take our democracy and its processes seriously, it’s our individual
responsibility to keep our lawmakers on their toes. It’s our responsibility to
educate and inform ourselves of various laws and policies that affect us,
something that Malaysians proved they were able to do. It’s also our
responsibility to demand that out lawmaking process be consultative and
transparent. We can’t mature as a democracy if laws are bulldozed through
Parliament, only to have them withdrawn or discussed after much public protest.
For
those who were skeptical about the efficacy of a 24-hour Internet-based
protest, we support the idea that online action needs to be taken offline to
effect lasting change.
The
online community should also respond to the Cabinet decision to not review
Section 114A, following the Prime Minister’s tweet in response to the popular
online support for Internet Blackout Day.
By
Muhammad Suhaimi
1112702066
By
Muhammad Suhaimi
1112702066
Okay....like seriously , why they want to include it into our laws when no one was agree with it ? I don't understand.....
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