ULU TIRAM, Malaysia (Reuters)
A non-Muslim woman is running as a candidate on the list of Malaysia's Islamic party (PAS) in next month’s elections for the first time ever.
"My fellow Indians were very shocked because I'm not a Muslim and they asked me what I wanted to do," Kumutha Rahman, a 29-year-old Hindu, told Reuters in an interview at her campaign office in Ulu Tiram, a town near Johor's capital Johor Baru, near Singapore.
"But they now appreciate what I'm doing. People here are open-minded," said Kumutha, who heads the women's division of the PAS' supporters' club in Johor.
PAS is known for advocating a theocratic Islamic state. Rahman is standing in a mainly Malay Muslim constituency in southern Malaysia, becoming the first ever non-Muslim candidate running on a Parti Islam se-Malaysia's (PAS) ticket.
Analysts said PAS' move to field a non-Muslim candidate is aimed at making the party more inclusive to attract wider support in the March 8 elections.
At the last election in 2004, PAS suffered heavy losses to the multi-racial Barisan Nasional ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, a moderate Muslim.
Indians form about 8 percent of Malaysia's mainly Muslim population of 26 million.
Kumutha, a former bank clerk, said she had studied PAS' constitution and found there was nothing in it against her principles.
As she spoke, bearded party activists wearing Islamic skull caps were preparing campaign leaflets showing top officials in Abdullah's government kissing or hugging the opposite sex, with a warning: "This is their culture: dirty, filthy, disgusting. Do you support this culture?"
PAS's goal is to turn Malaysia into an Islamic state, but it is shying away from this long-standing objective in its campaign and is instead saying Malaysia should become a "welfare state".
Mohammad Agus Yusoff, a political scientist from Malaysia's Universiti Kebangsaan, said PAS' attempts to become more inclusive would not make a dent in support for the ruling coalition.
"Johor has always been a Barisan stronghold," he said.
Kumutha faces Barisan's Maulizan Bujang for the Tiram state constituency. Maulizan won the seat in the 2004 election with an overwhelming majority of nearly 16,000 votes. |
