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©Malaysiakini
(Used by permission)
by Terence Netto
For a start, political allegiances have long been
unconventional in the family of Badrul Hisham Shaharin, PKR’s parliamentary
candidate for Umno stronghold of Rembau in Negri Sembilan.
His mother, a hospital amah, used to vote in the 1980s for DAP’s Hu Sepang in
the Rasah constituency while his father, an employee of Tenaga Nasional, was a
dyed-in-the-wool Umno man in Rembau.
“There was no trouble in my family because of differences on who to support,”
said the 30-year-old former schoolteacher. “We were left to our preferences.”
The odd political preferences have carried over into Badrul’s life of activism.
He is popularly known by the moniker ‘Chegubard’, in no small part because of
his admiration for Che Guevara, the Argentine doctor who fought with Fidel
Catsro in the Cuban uprising of the 1950s before choosing to foment revolution
in Bolivia where he met with a violent end in 1967.
“The first person I revere for his defence of the poor and underprivileged is
Prophet Muhamad, peace be upon him,” emphasised Badrul.
“I also admire Che Guevara for his sacrifices on behalf of the poor in South
America,” added Badrul who wears his hair, facial and cranial, in the style of
the Argentine who enjoys mythical status in the annals of modern political
revolutions.
Badrul has been arrested 14 times since he became active in the reformasi
movement nine years ago. He has had to run a gauntlet of obstacles because of
his scrapes with the law on illegal public gatherings.
Badrul’s time at a teachers’ training college in Seremban from 1997 to 2000 was
a period of ferment on account of his involvement in reformasi agitation.
Despite the frequent interruptions to his studies and the
array of obstacles he had to face with the authorities at the college where he
trained, he passed out to teach science and mathematics.
Predictably, his years in a secondary school in Mambau, which is in the Rembau
constituency, were tumultuous simply because he did not desist in his
engagements with reformasi.
Anytime there was demonstration for a human rights cause, Badrul would find time
to be involved. He was also active in Gerak, the NGO concerned with fighting to
abolish the ISA and combat corruption.
He had to leave the teaching service in early 2004 to contest in the 11th
general election where he came up against Umno’s Mohamed Hassan, in the Rantau
state seat. He was beaten by Hassan who went on to become the new Negri Sembilan
Menteri Besar.
Homeboy vs Umno rising star
Odd political couplings in Badrul’s personal history apparently go with
electoral contests against stellar opponents as for the March 8 poll, this
ex-teacher is up against Umno’s rising eminence, Khairy Jamaluddin, 32.
Of Khairy (right), Badrul said: “I like him to see the poor here in
Rembau who have long been staunch supporters of Umno and the BN. They struggle
with their little incomes and small expectations while an elite take hold of
their party and appropriate for themselves the wealth of the nation.
“My involvement in reformasi was an effort to open the eyes of the ordinary
people to the actual state of the nation where the rakyat are allocated the
crumbs while a steadily contracting circle of cronies and kinsmen help
themselves to the caviar.
“This is an astonishing deception foisted on the people by an elite aided and
abetted by a controlled media. It has to stop but first we have to open the eyes
of the ordinary citizen.”
Has his father been awakened to the son’s theology of liberation?
“It was hard for him because leaving Umno is as repugnant as religious apostasy.
But he has come round,” said Badrul, who was the top student at the Asian Human
Rights School in Kwangju, South Korea, to which he won a scholarship last year.
He was adjudged best student from among 20 human rights activists from the rest
of Asia selected for the course. If he bests Khairy Jamaluddin in tomorrow’s
poll, he will have added another stripe to his list of achievements in a life of
pressure-filled political engagement.
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