POOR.....
To be born poor is not a sin but to remain poor is.
By : CLARA CHOOI (TMI)
KUALA LUMPUR : Schoolchildren,
'blind' anti-Barisan Nasional (BN) supporters and paid participants had marched
for Bersih 3.0, Datuk M. Kayveas has said, adding that 99 per cent of the
thousands who gathered did not know what they were rallying for on April 28.
Kayveas, who leads the
People’s Progressive Party (PPP), raged that many of the participants were
those who have “shut their eyes to BN’s goodness” and were intent on blaming
the ruling pact for their own failures in life.
He pointed out that he had
come from a very poor family and had lived among squatters for some 25 years
but still supports BN for what it has done for the country.
“It was because of what BN
has done for the past 50 years that I can be what I am today. But there are
those who grew up with me, who are still there... they never moved out of it.
“These people who are now
supporting the opposition you see, they are forever making complaints or giving
excuses for whatever failure of theirs to change themselves. They want to blame
others, or find someone to blame,” he told The Malaysian Insider during a
recent interview at his office here.
“But I always say — to be
born poor is not a sin but to remain poor is.”
These “blind” supporters,
added Kayveas, were the ones willing to spread discord on the streets and break
the law as they knew their political leaders would later argue in their defence
in Parliament.
The former deputy minister
and Taiping MP said these supporters were even willing to “beat up policemen”
and “damage police cars”, referring to the violent incidents that occurred
during the thick of Bersih 3.0 when police rained down tear gas canisters and
chemical-laced water to disperse protesters from the city.
But Kayveas accused the
opposition for promoting such blind condemnation of BN and for allegedly
instigating their supporters to break the law and to spread falsehoods through
the use of social media tools.
“They have created groups to
blindly support them with herd mentality, without realising what is the truth
and what is not,” he said.
“The opposition teaches you
that. Wake up in the morning and run people down on the Internet. If you cannot
succeed in running people down, then you run to the streets.
“Ninety-nine per cent of
those who marched with Bersih did not know why they were there. Give a yellow
T-shirt, a few hundred ringgit and they are there.
“Some schoolchildren were
there... when I asked them, they said their parents asked them to go,” he said.
Kayveas also lashed out at
the electoral reform movement Bersih 2.0 for deviating from its original and 'noble'
cause to fight for clean and fair elections, which he said he supports.
“The issue is fair and clean
elections. The issue was not about Dataran Merdeka. But you insisted on Dataran
Merdeka so it clearly shows that you had diverted from the original, noble,
idea into a now opposition-backed, daft, arrogant, stubborn, thinking of
defying everything that is right by saying it is wrong,” he said.
Tens of thousands had
thronged the city’s streets on April 28 for the Bersih 3.0 rally for free and
fair elections, the election watchdog’s third such event since 2007.
The opposition-backed
protest had kicked off peacefully but turned chaotic shortly after 3pm when
protesters breached the three-tiered barricades surrounding Dataran Merdeka,
which had been blocked off to them via a court order obtained by the police.
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