The Sun (Malaysia)

Ambiga, Maria made change possible

- Ű BY CINDI LOO newsdesk@thesundail­y.com

WHEN Pakatan Harapan took over Putrajaya from Barisan Nasional in the 14th general election in 2018, one organisati­on that helped make this possible was electoral watchdog Bersih 2.0. It helped to level the playing field to an extent.

From 2010 to 2019 the organisati­on with the most imprint in the heads and hearts of Malaysians was arguably Bersih 2.0. Five mega rallies were organised in Kuala Lumpur from 2007 to 2016, each one bigger than the other.

Demanding clean and fair elections as well as serving as a pressure group to call for accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in the government, Bersih 2.0 had risen to represent the people’s demand for better governance. When everything in the political system seemed to be in favour of one political coalition, the only way to take back power for Malaysia was through the ballot box. But the odds were unfairly stacked against the opposition.

Having realised that from the beginning, Bersih 2.0, a coalition of

Ambiga and Maria are without a doubt two key figures in Bersih 2.0, who’ve gone above and beyond for Malaysia. several civil society organisati­ons, was formed with the intention of pushing through a thorough reform of the electoral process in Malaysia.

Two women helmed the role of leaders in Bersih, one being Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasa­n and the other Maria Chin Abdullah.

Ambiga helmed the Malaysian Bar from 2007 to 2009, serving as president and as part of the Bar Council, organised the Walk for Justice in 2007, as a protest against allegation­s of corruption in the judiciary in the wake of the V. K. Lingam scandal.

From then on, she has assumed multiple roles to advance human rights and democratic reforms in many other organisati­ons, including as chairman of Bersih 2.0 from 2011 to 2013.

Meanwhile, being an activist since 1985, Maria has worked on gender, developmen­t and democracy issues in women’s rights groups such as the AllWomen Action Society, the Women’s Centre for Change, the Women’s Developmen­t Collective, now known as Empower, and headed the secretaria­t for Bersih 2.0.

With her leadership from 2013 to 2018, Bersih 2.0 grew into a civil society organisati­on that was a force to be reckoned with.

Its demands for clean and fair elections saw the formation of the Parliament­ary Select Committee for electoral reforms in 2011, and the recommenda­tions of the select committee were eventually adopted by the Election Commission in the general elections.

In some ways, it contribute­d to the opening of democratic practices that led to a change of federal government for the first time in the 14th general election. Without a doubt, Maria Chin Abdullah and Ambiga Sreenevasa­n are Outstandin­g Malaysians of the Decade.

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