Malaysians Flock Online To Voice
Opinion on Anwar
By Chen May Yee, The Asian Wall Street Journal, Tuesday March 30, 1999
Staff Reporter
KUALA LUMPUR - Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's ambition to build awired society is
receiving a big boost from an unexpected quarter: the supporters of his political nemesis.
Since September 2 when the prime minister sacked his deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, more than 50
Internet sites have sprouted to offer alternative views to Malaysia's pro-government mass
media. The country's biggest Internet service provider, TMNet, says about 14,000 new
subscribers have signed on each month since September, compared with about 9,000 before.
It is a telling reflection of Malaysia's biggest political crisis in more than a decade.
The local media generally have tended to reflect the government's view point in reporting
Datuk Seri Anwar's sacking, arrest and trial. Now they are coming up against critics armed
with computers in the tussle to shape public opinion.
Critics such as Sabri Zain. In September, when the local media went to town with reports
that Datuk Seri Anwar was bisexual and an adulterer, as well as corrupt and a leaker of
state secrets, Mr. Sabri decided he had had enough. "I was outraged. I thought, 'This
is not journalism,'" says the 39-year-old Malaysian, an ex-journalist who now works
for an environmental organisation. He wasn't a fan of Datuk Seri Anwar before, he says,
but the media onslaught "turned me over."
From the Internet, Mr Sabri began collecting reports by foreign news agencies and
electronic-mailing them to friends. Unlike much of the Malaysian media, these reports
included the fallen politician's claim that he was framed by political enemies. Some
stories also described the thousands of supporters thronging his house each night.
Inundated with requests to join his mailing list, Mr Sabri set up a website, Berita
Reformasi, or Reform News. It offers Internet links to news sources such as The Straits
Times of Singapore, Indonesia's Kompas, Agence France-Presse and CNN International. Today,
Berita Reformasi, which says it has received 178,934 visits as of Monday night, along with
other reform sites have kept the Anwar issue simmering long after the government expected
it to die. There are about 480,000 Internet subscribers among Malaysia's population of 22
million.
Datuk Seri Anwar, the charismatic Islamic youth leader whom Dr Mahathir recruited into his
ruling party in 1982, is in jail awaiting a court verdict on charges that he ordered
police to cover up his sexual misconduct. Capitalising on public dissatisfaction over the
government's treatment of Datuk Seri Anwar, a hodgepodge of opposite parties and non
governmental groups are now trying to hammer together a coalition for the next elections,
which Dr Mahathir must call before April 2000.
Malaysia isn't the first place the Internet has challenged the rules - from Beijing to
Belgrade, dissidents and others have gone online to circumvent government censorship or
simply get their message out. In Indonesia in May, university students used e-mail to help
organise the mass protests that eventually deposed President Suharto.
Malaysia is slightly different, Internet observes note. Its steadier economy and stronger
middle class means people are less likely to riot. They are more likely to have computers,
and more likely to use English - the primary language of the Internet - due to Malaysia's
British colonial history, says Bala Pillai, a 41-year-old Malaysian Internet business
consultant based in Sydney. Hence the Internet is more effective in shaping opinion in
Malaysia, says Mr Pillai. He adds that visits to his Malaysia.net.site, which discusses
current affairs, have jumped tenfold to about two million a month since September.
Other countries such as China and Singapore, monitor Internet content and block material
they regard as dangerous. But Malaysia, which is striving to attract foreign investors to
its new billion-ringgit high-tech development zone, the Multimedia Super Corridor, has
guaranteed there won't be any Internet censorship. Dr Mahathir recently reversed a
directive for all customers of cybercafes to register their names and identification-card
numbers after an international news magazine said that the directive, which was created to
discourage visits to pornographic sites, had spooked foreign investors.
In Malaysia, major newspapers and television stations are either directly owned by the
government or by business groups linked to the ruling coalition. As newspapers ran
statements by cabinet ministers condemning Datuk Seri Anwar, the politician fought back by
declaring his innocence on Anwar Online, a site that came into existence two days after
his arrest.
When the New Straits Times reported on the business assets held by Datuk Seri Anwar's
allies, a site called Cronynet appeared, listing shares owned by individuals close to Dr
Mahathir. (The webmaster culled his information from the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange's
website). And in a country where political cartoonists tread carefully, a modified Star
Wars poster - renamed AnWars - began circulating by e-mail. Dr Mahathir is portrayed as
the black-hooded Emperor, Datuk Seri Anwar as a swashbuckling Han Solo, and his wife Wan
Azizah Wan Ismail as the white-robed Princess Leia.
Venues for Meetings
There is also a site for Dr Wan Azizah's new Social Justice Movement, which has been set
up to lobby for her husband's release. The group is awaiting official approval, so she
can't legally publish a newsletter. Meantime her website lists the movement's aims, as
well as dates and venues for meetings.
It is Dr Mahathir who is most responsible for making the Internet accessible to ordinary
Malaysians. In 1996, the technology-loving premier launched the Multimedia Super Corridor,
an ambitious plan to wire a strip of real estate with telecommunications powerful enough
to support "smart" schools, a paperless government, telemedicine and a center
for software development, among other things.
Though the recession has delayed some parts of the Multimedia Super Corridor project,
industry titans such as Microsoft Corp. and Sun Microsystems Inc. have so far pledged a
total of 1.2 billion ringgit ($315.8 million) in investment. In 1997, the government
launched a nationwide information technology awareness campaign, complete with a jingle
urging people to "Accept IT, Learn IT. Love LT, Use IT."
Malaysians are certainly using it, though perhaps not the way the prime minister envisage.
"I thought the Internet will be good for people to give opinions," Dr Mahathir
said recently, "but now it is being used to spread lies."
Room for Conflicting Views
There are three pro-Mahathir websites, and more than 50 pro-Anwar websites, according to
an official from Malaysia's Information Ministry. A website launched by the ministry in
December called Cetusan Rasa, or Burst of Feeling, to "show support to leaders and
the government" has attracted about 54,000 messages; many critical of the government.
"Just by looking at a reformasi site, you are making a statement that you reject the
mainstream media," says Sumitra Visvanathan, 30, webmaster of Saksi.com, or
"Witness." Photographs and eyewitness accounts on Saksi of the 40,000 to
60,000 strong crowd that gathered in the capital to hear Datuk Seri Anwar the day he was
arrested attracted 20,000 hits the day they were posted, says ms Visvanathan. She says
Saksi isn't strictly a reform site : "We don't glorify Anwar and we don't just knock
Mahathir."
Others are unabashedly partisan : I am pro-Anwar," says the webmaster of the Gerakan
Reformasi, or Reform Movement, site. He says he would never post anything that might
damage his hero's case.
Webmasters acknowledge that you can't believe everything you read on these sites. One
posting erroneously reported that Datuk Seri Anwar's teenage daughter, Nurul Izzah Anwar,
had been arrested. "There is a lot of rubbish flowing out on both sides of the
political fence," says Mr Sabri, who uses his real name because he thinks it
makes his reporting more credible.
Most other webmasters prefer to remain anonymous, they say, for security reasons. In
August, just before the Anwar crisis, three people were arrested for Internet
"rumor-mongering." They were accused of spreading rumors of riots in Kuala
Lumpur via e-mail and are currently on trial.
The webmaster for Laman Reformasi through e-mail says that even his family and friends
don't know what he does. Adds another, also via e-mail : "People from (police
headquarters) are looking for people like us."