
I found out from my friend-in-exile a short while ago that Anwar Ibrahim has been listed by Foreign Policy magazine as one of the "Top 100 Global Thinkers of 2009."

Nevertheless, Anwar is the only Malaysian on the list - along with other prominent Asian freedom-fighters like Amartya Sen and Aung San Suu Kyi - and that in itself deserves a hearty congratulation or two.
After all, I doubt Anwar had to pay RM20 million to some Jewish PR agency to upgrade his public image and make him look good in the eyes of the world.
Here's what Foreign Policy has to say about Anwar:
Anwar Ibrahim
for challenging the Muslim world to embrace democracy.
Opposition leader | People's Justice Party | Malaysia

He sat down with Foreign Policy to talk about his big ideas:
On Muslim countries and the West: You can't just erase a period of imperialism and colonialism. You can't erase the fault lines, the bad policies, the failed policies, the war in Iraq, and support for dictators. That to me is the reality. But what is the problem? When you … apportion the blame only to the West or the United States. They want to deflect from the issue of repression, endemic corruption, and destruction of the institutions of governance.
On his time in prison: I spent a lot of time reading. I decided to focus on the great works and the classics. Friends from around the world were sending books, but it takes months for [the prison] to vet them. There came a book on the Green Revolution at that time. The officer said, "Anything revolution -- out!" even though it was about agriculture. But the books kept coming. The officers were not even graduates, and [the books] were in English. They would say, "Anwar, out of 10 books, can you send back one?" So I would select something I had already read or something I was not interested in and say, "We should reject this."
On politics: Of course, you simplify the arguments [for politics], but the central thesis remains constant. People say, "Anwar, you are opportunistic. How can you talk about Islam and the Quran here, and then you talk about Shakespeare and quote Jefferson or Edmund Burke?" I say, it depends on the audience. You can't talk about Edmund Burke in some remote village in Afghanistan. Then you go to Kuala Lumpur and you quote T.S. Eliot. If I quote the Quran all the time to a group of lawyers, [they will think] I am a mullah from somewhere!
welldone anwar to be supergay of the month we love your butt!
ReplyDeleteAnonymous @ 3:58AM - You sound just like a closet gay. Most homophobes in patriarchal societies under the curse of Abrahamism are anal retentives because of early toilet training. Repressed humans tend to demonize the very traits they have been forced to suppress within themselves. I suggest you read my essay on paedo- necro- and coprophilia, mate. On second thought, forget it... I doubt you have the intelligence or the vocabulary to comprehend anything beyond the orders you're so accustomed to following. Akua yang ikut perintah sahaja.
ReplyDeleteAkua yang ikut perintah LOL
ReplyDeleteGood one Antares. These UMNO bloggers really are Katak Bawah Tempurung, aka The Village Idiot
The eunuchs in UMNO knew and feared this acknowledgement by the international community of Anwar's pedigree. But the ball-less UMNO critters are too dumb to stretch their imagination to conjure up anything more than the stale sodomy charge.
ReplyDeleteAbout the only stetching that would not be too strenuous for them would be to their genitals in order to reach their own arseholes ... just their deep-seated desire to sodomise themselves.