http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/international/sister-listen-video-sparks-anger-in-malaysia/566992



'Sister Listen' Video Sparks Anger in Malaysia
Teo Cheng Wee - Straits Times | January 22, 2013

 Sharifah Zohra Jabeen (holding the microphone) was moderating a political 
forum in Kedah last month, and was caught on video berating and interrupting 
law student K. S. Bawani. (YouTube screenshot)

Kuala Lumpur. A forum moderator who gained infamy for relentlessly berating a 
student has defended her actions, after a video of the event went viral and 
sparked outrage in Malaysia.

The episode also led to renewed criticism of the public education system, and 
raised questions over the independence of Malaysia's public university 
education system, which has been slipping for years in global rankings.

Sharifah Zohra Jabeen has been nicknamed "Kak Listen" (Sister Listen) after she 
used the word "listen" 11 times to interrupt law student K.S. Bawani, who was 
in the middle of asking questions during a political forum at Universiti Utara 
Malaysia (UUM) in Kedah last month.

Saying this was "our program," Sharifah also asked Bawani — who called on the 
government to provide free higher education — to leave Malaysia if she did not 
like it here and "go to Cuba, Argentina, Libya."

Sharifah remained combative in her first public response, which was posted on 
YouTube on Sunday night.

In the seven-minute video, she accused "irresponsible" parties of blowing up an 
incident that was only "a communication issue between two people."

"I apologize to the people of Malaysia on the phenomenon which was 
intentionally caused by irresponsible entities and which was totally out of my 
control," said Sharifah, who heads an NGO called Suara Wanita 1Malaysia. She 
was also a former member of the Malaysian Indian Muslim Congress, an associate 
party of Umno.

"I'm just a normal person without any positions or stakes in any political 
parties," she said.

"I appeal to the Malaysian public not to let yourselves be trapped in the game 
of hatred."

During the forum, Sharifah had hit out at electoral reform group Bersih and its 
leader Ambiga Sreenevasan. Students were made to pledge to "oppose culture 
detrimental to the society," including street demonstrations, in an apparent 
reference to public protests held by Bersih.

"An extremely sad state of affairs of education in Malaysia," one person wrote 
on an online forum on the Malaysiakini news website. 

"We lost generations of balanced critical thinking education."

The strong public reaction to Sharifah's actions spooked the authorities, who 
were quick to dissociate themselves.

UUM said it only provided the venue for the forum, while Higher Education 
Minister Khaled Nordin said the government did not organize the program or 
direct Sharifah to "control the minds of the students."

The Malaysian Chinese Association said Sharifah's statement shows that she 
still "misses the point."

"Sharifah had denied and continues to be ignorant of the right of 
undergraduates to hold an opinion on education and other issues," said MCA's 
National Youth Education Bureau chief Chong Sin Woon.

Separately, Sharifah denied news reports that she would be sharing the stage 
with Bawani at another forum on Tuesday.

Reprinted courtesy of The Straits Times


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