I just like to share this is a letter I wrote immediately after the 2008 
General Election Tsunami.

Unfortunately, it seems not much has changed since then; gutter politics, 
character assasinations, highly biassed third world class main-stream media, 
journalists who has no qualms about lying, reporters who do not bother about 
ethics or sins, editors who stoop so low  wagging the dog,  ..the list is 
endless.


=====
OPEN LETTER TO ALL MEDIA ORGANISATIONS

11th March 2008
Dear Sir,


Let’s  Embrace this Wind of Change, Lets start with a Credible and Respectable 
Media 


Most people in the country were taken aback by the trouncing of Barisan
 Nasional (BN) by the loose coalition of non-BN parties two days ago.  
However, I am also  surprised by the way the media covered the elections 
results and their refusal to change their ways 
even after sensing the ground swell or  tsunami.

For one,  it should be noted that  one of a 
very significant paradigm change the media organizations need to be 
familiar with is the phrase "Pembangkang/Opposition".  Previously  when BN  
held control in all DUNs and the Parliament,  the phrase was clear-cut.  
 
But  now,  we cannot refer  BN as kerajaan and  the other parties as 
pembangkang  anymore since BN is now pembangkang in five  states with  a 
sizeable number of voters.

It seems until today, most media organizations have missed that point. To refer 
the parties as non-BN parties  will be more appropriate.  

Secondly, during coverage of  election results, most of the TV commentators 
were not neutral 
in their commentaries.  Although the TV stations invited 
non-politicians,   their commentaries  were just like any one of the BN  
leaders; talking about "they" when referring to  PKR, PAS or DAP and 
"we" when referring to BN . The TV presenters were also using similar 
vocabularies. 

Because of this inability to shift the paradigm,
 the analyses given by most commentators during the TV and radio 
coverage, and in newspapers the past two days were shallow, bias and 
some based on conjectures.  They have failed to gauge and identify the 
actual reasons for such shifts in allegiances.  At one point, I realized that 
the commentators, reporters and editors were  and are still in a state of 
denial.

The above inability of the media organizations to distance itself from BN, was 
actually one of the contributing factors to this debacle.  In the run-up to the 
election, the television channels not only failed to 
give a fair coverage to the other parties, but continued to carry lies 
and negative reports on them.  It is one thing if 
you do not want to report their side of the story, but you should not 
have allowed yourselves to be a BN mouthpiece spreading wrong 
information. 
 
The  print news media particularly the Malay dailies were also to blame.  If 
you  were to flip through Utusan Malaysia for example prior to the election,  
you will find not a single mention of the non-BN parties except in the negative 
light or  rebuttal of their views which 
were never published in the first place. It seemed that the newspapers 
reporters and editors have been turned into BN spokesmen. I  am still at a loss 
at trying to understand why they sacrifice the sacred 
principle of ‘being truthful’ and willing to breach basic ethic of 
journalism of  reporting the truth.
 
These blatant breaches of  religious commandment and ethics of journalism are 
pathetic.
 
By stooping so low in generating lies and propaganda on behalf of the BN, 
the electronic and print news media have lost their credibility as 
respectable media organizations.  When  honest reporting have been thrown out 
of the window, how can you compare yourselves to reputable organizations such 
as the Singapore Channel News Asia, let alone the BBC or CNN?  I think it is 
like the Malay saying “Seperti langit dengan Bumi”. Even the Indonesian news 
media organizations are ahead of us in this matter.  
 
It seems that the dinosaurs within BN have not realised that time has 
changed. Such tactics might be useful and successful in the sixties and 
seventies.  However, in this age of the Blogs, Yahoogroups, Youtube and Ipods , 
intelligent voters no longer rely on  the BN-controlled media which are proven 
to be unreliable sources of  information. Why should they rely on the media 
which  reports nothing but lies? 
 
What is more damaging, the voters  also see the unfair use of the media as 
further proof of gross misuse of power and injustice by the BN.  In other 
words, the blatant use of the media for party propaganda has indeed backfired! 
Again to quote a Malay saying “ Senjata makan tuan”.
 
This brings us to the main issues underlying the rejection of BN by voters 
across the board.  Contrary to the superficial observations from the 
commentators and reporters, the issues are neither racial nor religious per 
se.  
 
DAP,  PAS and PKR went to the voters with one clear  message, that although BN 
has brought good development for the country, it has 
abused its power, forming a feudalistic patronizing culture based on 
corruption and scandals of enormous proportions.  The non-BN parties contended 
that while failing to tackle the woes of the 
common folks who are being hard-pressed with unbridled rise in prices of  
goods, petrol, toll charges and education expenses, the BN leaders continue 
their lavish lifestyles  in contrast to the image of simple and austere 
lifestyle of leaders of the other parties, particularly the Kelantan Menteri 
Besar.
The abuse of power by BN leaders can be seen in terms of misusing government 
assets for party use, continuing to equate  the BN with the government. From 
electronic media to newspapers, schools to mosques, balai-raya to stadiums, 
official cars to official aircrafts, 
various government facilities were (mis)used prior to and during the 
election campaigns.  The sight of the Deputy Prime Minister having a cozy 
cuddle with his daughter aboard a government 
aircraft during a campaign trail  provided an  irrefutable proof of  this 
particular grievance.
 
According to the non-BN parties, the culmination of this power abuse is in the 
meddling with the Election Commission (EC). This started with the 
insistence of reappointing the retiring BN-friendly EC Chairman even to the 
extent of amending the laws to accommodate his age.  
 
The EC then made rules which could only be interpreted as favouring the BN, 
changing them at last minutes, again in what is perceived as trying to 
salvage a sinking BN ship.  The change in rules 
with regard to the stamping of the statutory declaration and the 
cancellation of indelible ink usage could easily be interpreted as proof of EC 
collusion to retain BN in power.
 
The second big issue in the minds of voters is the rising cost of living.  The 
BN through the various media has tried in vain to tackle this issue in 
two ways, first by warning of the potential bankruptcy faced by the 
government if it increases the subsidies of goods, petrol and 
toll-charges and secondly by comparing local prices of basic goods with 
those of our neighbours.  But the BN-linked media have all lost any credibility.
 
It seems the voters rejected the bankrupt  argument outright, citing increase 
exports in petroleum and palm oil exports, 
whose prices have risen sharply bringing in more income to the 
government which in turn should have been used to further reduce the 
prices of basic necessities.
 
On the other hand, the other parties successfully convinced the voters 
that the so-called bankruptcy will be more likely if BN is allowed to continue 
in power, quoting previous 
examples of scandals allegedly involving many BN leaders such as PKFZ, 
PV project, IKBN, Scorpene and  Sukhoi purchases. 
It was contended that besides palm oil and Petronas income, the total 
amount of ‘illegal money’ involved in such scandals could easily be used to 
offset any rise in basic goods and petrol.
 
The voters also did not buy the hollow argument of price comparison with 
neighbouring countries.  PKR leaders brought out data  which conclusively prove 
that the so-called price comparison was flawed since it did not actually take 
into consideration the buying power of 
neighbouring countries.  
 
The petrol price comparison fail to impress voters because it is natural that 
prices in a petroleum  producing country should  be lower than in  
non-producing neighbours. 
 
These intelligent voters were also particularly angry by suggestions by BN 
leadership for people to adapt and change their lifestyles to more 
austere ones while the BN leaders continue with their extravagant 
lifestyles buying new official aircraft, buildings and cars as well as 
building personal palatial homes and purchasing unique car registration 
numbers.
 
The above weakness of  BN’s  defence of price rises, coupled with PAS’s offer 
of a welfare state  resonates well with the voters.
 
Of course, there was also a tinge of racial gripe. The Indians were 
particularly fed-up with BN because they claimed the MIC leadership are 
not doing enough to fight for the welfare of their people. The economic 
cake did not reach the grass roots in rubber estates and construction 
sites.  Instead, the leadership is seen to be obsessed with  power struggle and 
collection of personal wealth. On the other hand, the MCA 
and Gerakan is seen to be too timid in standing for Chinese right,  for example 
in the issue of teaching of mathematics and science in English.
 
To cap it all,  there is the image problems of the BN President himself.  One 
concerns his tendency to doze off during events and meetings, the other his 
image of being ‘absent when disaster struck’.  One particular complaint was his 
petty trip to Perth when heavy floods hit the country in early 2007. But none 
is more 
damaging, particularly among devoutly Muslim voters, than the image of 
his family’s unIslamic attire and his ‘a bit over-friendly’ gestures to 
his female guests and well-wishers. For someone being portrayed as 
Islamically-inclined with his version of Islam Hadhari, the President 
needs to be more sensitive to such issues. Some voters were also wary of his 
family’s and friends close relationship to Singaporeans at various levels.
 
Until and unless the BN start to make a soul-search and recognise the above 
issues and make a concerted effort tackle them head-on, the party risks 
of becoming obsolete and extinct, just like the dinosaurs of old. 
 
To reinvent itself, BN has to leave the ways of old of third-class 
politics. We vividly remember that after the hotly contested 1999 
elections, the BN did not take that route of self-criticism and 
soul-searching. 
 
 
Instead they went on the rampage, cutting off  aid to Terengganu, serving a 
gag-order on  government servants and university students, strengthening the 
grip on the media 
and government institutions, stopping support for religious schools,  and 
taking punitive actions on  non-BN supporters.  We hope this time  BN will not 
resort to such  kind of third-class  politics.

The message sent  by the voters on Saturday was clear.  It is a vote for change 
of culture and paradigm. It is a signal for the government not to take the 
rakyat for granted.   After 50 years of independence, it is time  for the 
country to embrace the new kind of politics; a politic free from intimidation 
and patronage. 
 
Let’s Start to Embrace this Wind of Change, Lets start with a Credible and 
Respectable Media 
 
Yours sincerely,
 
Ismail Nor,
Johor Bahru.

Kirim email ke