By Opalyn Mok
May 17, 2013
GEORGE TOWN, May 17
— Pakatan Rakyat (PR) will continue to pressure the government for the Election
Commission (EC) to be completely reformed if Malaysia wants to see a clean
election the next time around, said PKR director of strategy Rafizi Ramli.
Speaking at a forum
on the facts behind PR’s win in popular votes for Election 2013 here last
night, Rafizi (picture) said the only way was to continuously
fight and apply pressure so that the EC will be completely overhauled and
replaced with people who are fair and who believe in clean elections.
“We need the whole
EC to be completely reformed, where the chairman down to all its officers are
replaced by new officers that are approved by PR and the public to ensure their
impartiality,” he said.
He said it was only
after the EC was fully reformed that re-elections be held for seats that are
proven to have irregularities and fraud, especially the 30 marginal seats.
He told the audience
of several hundreds at Komtar that PKR has already assembled a team to probe
electoral fraud into several parliamentary and state seats and once enough
evidence was gathered, election petitions would be filed.
“We have been told
that to file a petition, it would cost up to RM50,000 for each petition per
seat and that means the 27 seats we are currently investigating could cost us
close to RM1.5 million if we were to file petitions,” he said.
He said this was why
the party has to conduct thorough investigations and scrutinise all
irregularities on top of gathering enough resources to file the petitions.
“We must continue to
fight, whether it is in court, in the streets or in Parliament to push for a
complete reform of the EC or else Barisan Nasional (BN) will continue to cheat
to win,” the Pandan MP said.
During a
question-and-answer session, some in the audience asked what the PR could do
about the alleged gerrymandering that would result in BN continuing to win in
all future elections.
DAP election
strategist Dr Ong Kian Ming, who was also one of the forum panellists, said the
only way was to continue to fight for EC reform to ensure that the
redelineation exercise, expected to start by this year, would be done fairly
and would not be another gerrymandering attempt.
He said other
methods to fight this would be to continue to register more voters and also in
other areas, including a Bersih 4.0 rally, for total reform of the EC.
Earlier, Penang
Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng, who opened the forum, criticised newly appointed
Home Minister Datuk Zahid Hamidi for going overboard by asking unhappy
Malaysians to leave the country.
“If this is the
standard that he is going by, does it mean that all the BN supporters in Penang
must move to other states?” he asked.
Besides, Rafizi and
Ong, PAS’s Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad was the other panellist at the forum which was
moderated by Lim’s political secretary Zairil Khir Johari.
All three panellists
gave figures and spoke on how PR had essentially won the May 5 polls by
garnering 51 per cent of the popular votes.
EC chairman Tan Sri
Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof was invited to the forum but he did not turn up for the
2½-hour event that ended around 11pm.
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