Setelah berbincang-bincang cukup lama dengan seorang wanita muda
berdarah Cina WN Malaysia beberapa bulan yang lalu, saya bisa langsung
menyimpulkan bahwa di Malaysia berlaku 'constitutional
discrimination'. Cukup menyolok perbedaan dalam membeli mobil, kredit
rumah dan aturan khusus bagi perusahaan asing akhir-akhir ini yang
harus mempekerjakan kaum bumi-putra karena semakin sulitnya keadaan
ekonomi di Malaysia.

Cerita berikut ini menambah kesimpulan tersebut. 'Video clip' berikut
menayangkan gambar wanita bugil, jangan meng-klik jika hal ini
bertentangan dengan keyakinan anda.
http://media.smh.com.au/?rid=17528&sy=smh&source=smh.com.au\
%2Farticles%2F2005%2F11%2F27%2F1133026346461.html%3Ffrom%\
3Dtop5&t=1TM2OO&player=wm6&rate=396&flash=0&ie=0


By Connie Levett in Bangkok and agencies
November 28, 2005

A POLICE abuse scandal sparked by a short phone video clip of a
Chinese woman, stripped naked and forced to do "ear squats", is being
called Malaysia's Abu Ghraib.

Malaysia is now in full damage control as it tries to contain
diplomatic fallout with China, the most important emerging power in
the region, shortly before the East Asia Summit.

The scandal comes after a series of recent allegations of harassment,
including strip searches, of young Chinese women in Malaysia by police
and immigration officials.

It also adds weight to claims that Chinese are being targeted and
profiled.

The one-minute, 11-second clip starts with a female police officer
ordering a naked Chinese woman, possibly in her 20s, to do the squats
while holding her ears. The footage, taken on a mobile phone, appears
to have been shot through a window without either woman's knowledge.

Lim Kit Siang, leader of the opposition Democratic Action Party,
called it Malaysia's Abu Ghraib, a reference to the humiliating abuse
of Iraqi prisoners in a US military prison near Baghdad.

A DAP politician, Teresa Kok, played the video clip in parliament on
Friday to politicians and the media. "Is it standard practice for
police to ask detainees to strip naked and to do ear squats?" Ms Kok
asked afterwards.

So far no one has been charged over the videoed detention or earlier
incidents.

Mr Lim said that the Malaysian public were entitled to know why the
police as a whole "seem so indifferent and detached in a police
scandal which had rocked the country and has such far-reaching
consequences to the country's tourism, trade, economy as well as the
country's international standing, particular the Malaysia-China
relationship".

The Malaysian Prime Minister, Abdullah Badawi, called a press
conference on the sidelines of the Commonwealth Heads of Government
Meeting in Malta on Saturday to demand an immediate investigation, and
"no cover-up", Bernama, Malaysia's national news agency, reported.

The scandal comes two weeks before the East Asia Summit, a Malaysian
diplomatic initiative that will bring the 10 members of the
Association of South-East Asian Nations together with China, Japan,
India, Australia, South Korea and New Zealand.

China, as the emerging economic superpower, is the most important
member of the trade-focused forum.

Photos from the clip appeared first in Malaysia's Chinese-language
China Press; then the independent web portal Malaysiakini put an
edited clip online. Even the Government-controlled New Straits Times
has made it page one news.

The Deputy Premier, Najib Abdul Razak, has also promised those
responsible will not be protected. "It should not have happened. It
has dealt a severe blow to our country's image," he told reporters,
but denied it would have an impact on the summit.

The Home Minister, Azmi Khalid, had announced he would fly to Beijing
this week to make an apology to Chinese officials.

"We will apologise where we are wrong, definitely. There's nothing
wrong to admit if there are mistakes," he said in Kuala Lumpur.
"Profiling Chinese women especially those below 35 as being involving
in vice should not have happened."

The trip, however, has been postponed until December 20, Malaysia's
Star newspaper reported, after Mr Azmi's Chinese counterpart requested
the delay as he had some other issues to settle first.

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/11/27/1133026346461.html?from=top5





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