Student activists want to reclaim the ‘third force’
Sheridan Mahavera, TMI
They are from different families, faiths and ethnic groups but share a common belief – that Malaysian students need to reclaim their role as a third force in civil society.
This is what binds the current crop of Universiti Malaya student leaders together and what made them stand their ground when it came to the controversial talk with opposition leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim earlier this week.
Unlike their predecessors in the past two decades, they are not driven to become proxies or recruitment agents for political parties.
Neither are they interested in just campaigning for “youth” issues.
They are also sick of being treated like schoolchildren by university administrators when the university is a place where they are supposed to mature as adults.
The students behind the October 27 talk told The Malaysian Insider that the talk was not about supporting Anwar or Pakatan Rakyat (PR).
They wanted to revive a culture of student activism based on the belief that they, too, can influence the debate on issues like inflation, government wastage and the urban poor.
And as seen in the events that night, they are prepared to face the consequences to reclaim that right.
National issues are student issues
Universiti Malaya’s student union in the 1960s and 1970s was what historians called the golden age of the movement.
Datuk Abdul Rahman Embong of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia said UM was where scholars, politicians and thinkers of all stripes came to exchange ideas on what was called the “great economic debate”.
The student union itself was aggressive in protesting against injustice such as when it held a rally against the visit of foreign dignitaries from Thailand in 1971 and the United States in 1973.
In 1974, thousands of students were rounded up after a protest in Kuala Lumpur against hunger and poverty in Baling.
That all stopped when the Universities and University Colleges Act was amended in 1979 to make it an offence for students to get involved in political activities.
When the ban was lifted in March 2012, said UM Student Representatives’ Council (MPPUM) vice-president Syahruldeen Ahmad Rosli, it reopened the door for students to get involved in issues beyond their campus.
In reality, said Syahruldeen, these issues were not external or foreign to the experience of being a student either.
For instance, the march against PTPTN or National Higher Education Fund loans in Dataran Merdeka in April 2013 was a campaign for affordable higher education.
The 2014 New Year’s protest in Dataran Merdeka against inflation and the goods and services tax (GST) was also in the same spirit since students are among those who would be hard hit by price hikes.
Many UM students joined in and helped organised those events although the leaders and participants were from all over the country.
“We want to transform the student movement so that once again we focus on the basic needs of the rakyat. On food and living expenses, on poverty,” said Syahruldeen, 27, who is currently completing a master’s in Islamic finance.