How Political Opportunism Breeds Extremism in Malaysia
Malaysia often congratulates itself for avoiding the large-scale terrorist attacks that have scarred other parts of Southeast Asia.
Security agencies deserve credit:
they have dismantled networks linked to the Islamic State, arrested radicalized
youths, and disrupted transnational cells connected to Jemaah Islamiyah and
Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia.
Nevertheless, the country’s
counter-terrorism success story hides an uncomfortable truth. The ideological
ecosystem that nourishes extremism is not created only by clandestine terrorist
networks or online propaganda.
It is often fertilized by
mainstream actors: religious demagogues, race-based organizations, and
opportunistic politicians who weaponize identity for power.
The Malaysian state has focused
heavily on security responses: preventive arrests, intelligence operations, and
legislation such as the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act. These tools
disrupt plots and dismantle networks.
But they treat the symptoms of
extremism rather than its ideological soil. That soil is increasingly shaped by
a toxic convergence of religious absolutism and ethno-political mobilization.
Extremist ideology rarely emerges
in isolation. It grows from narratives that portray society as a battlefield
between believers and enemies, between one race and another, between a
supposedly “pure” faith and a corrupted world. Terrorist organizations merely
radicalize these narratives further, transforming them into violence.
In Malaysia, the early stages of
this ideological ladder often appear in far more respectable spaces: religious
places, political rallies, social media sermons, and NGO campaigns framed as
defending religion or race.
Over the past two decades,
certain religious preachers have propagated exclusionary interpretations of
Islam that divide society into rigid moral categories. These narratives often
portray minorities as threats, dismiss pluralism as weakness, and claim that
Islam itself is under siege.
While such rhetoric does not
always call for violence, it normalizes hostility and moral absolutism, both of
which are central ingredients of extremist recruitment.
Groups like the Islamic State
rely on precisely these emotional triggers. Their propaganda frames global
politics as a war against Islam, a message that becomes far more persuasive
when domestic voices constantly reinforce the idea that Muslims are under
existential threat.
This is where the political class
enters the picture.
Malaysia’s political landscape
has long been shaped by race-based parties and identity politics. Politicians
across the spectrum both from government and opposition: frequently exploit
religion and ethnicity as mobilizing tools.
Campaign speeches warn voters
that their faith, language, or privileges are under attack. Social media posts
amplify fears of demographic replacement or cultural erosion.
Such rhetoric may deliver
short-term electoral gains, but it comes with long-term security consequences.
When leaders normalize the idea
that politics is a struggle for religious or racial survival, they validate the
worldview promoted by extremists. The difference between mainstream identity
politics and extremist ideology then becomes a matter of degree rather than
principle.
This ideological overlap is
particularly dangerous for young people navigating identity crises in an
increasingly digital world.
Recent arrests of Malaysian
youths: some still minors illustrate how easily online radicalization can
occur. Encrypted platforms such as Telegram or Discord provide spaces where
extremist propaganda circulates freely. In these online communities, recruits
encounter narratives about religious duty, heroism, and global injustice.
But these messages resonate only
because they echo ideas already circulating in society. When young Malaysians
hear political leaders constantly framing politics as a defence of religion,
the leap to militant interpretations becomes psychologically easier.
Radicalization thus follows a
continuum. At one end lies everyday identity politics and sectarian preaching.
At the other lies violent extremism. The transition from one to the other may
involve online recruiters, but the underlying narratives are often familiar.
The same dynamic can be seen in
cases involving migrant communities. Authorities recently dismantled a network
among Bangladeshi workers who were raising funds and spreading ISIS propaganda.
These migrants, often marginalized and socially isolated, are particularly
susceptible to ideological messaging that offers belonging and purpose.
Nonetheless, even here, the
ideological framework did not appear out of nowhere. Transnational extremist
networks exploit global narratives of Muslim victimhood, narratives that gain
credibility when echoed by political and religious actors in multiple
countries.
Malaysia’s counter-terrorism
strategy has rightly focused on law enforcement and deradicalization.
Rehabilitation programs, religious counselling, and psychological support have
helped reintegrate former militants. Intelligence cooperation with neighbouring
countries has disrupted cross-border networks.
But these policies operate
downstream from the real problem.
The upstream battle is
ideological. It requires confronting the ecosystem of hate speech, sectarian
rhetoric, and ethno-religious mobilization that permeates public discourse.
Unfortunately, this is precisely
where political courage is weakest.
Religious hardliners command
large followings. Race-based NGOs mobilize powerful voter blocs. Politicians
who challenge these narratives risk losing electoral support. As a result,
leaders often condemn terrorism while remaining silent about the rhetoric that
incubates it.
This selective outrage is
dangerous. It allows extremists to position themselves as the logical defenders
of ideas already circulating in society. When mainstream discourse repeatedly
insists that religion or race is under attack, extremists simply take the next
step: arguing that violence is justified to defend it.
Breaking this cycle requires more
than policing.
First, political leaders must
abandon the cynical strategy of weaponizing religion and ethnicity. Electoral
competition cannot justify narratives that divide citizens into enemies and
defenders of faith.
Second, religious authorities
must actively counter the absolutist interpretations propagated by extremist
preachers. Islam in Malaysia has historically coexisted with pluralism and
cultural diversity. Reclaiming that tradition is essential for undermining
radical narratives.
Third, civil society must
challenge the growing normalization of sectarian rhetoric. Extremism thrives
when hateful ideas are tolerated as “just politics.”
Malaysia has shown that it can
effectively dismantle terrorist networks. But dismantling an ideological
culture that enables extremism is a far more difficult task.
If religious demagogues,
race-based NGOs, and opportunistic politicians continue to inflame fears for
political gain, the seeds of extremism will remain embedded in the national
discourse.
Security operations can uproot
militant cells. But unless Malaysia confronts the narratives that nourish them,
new ones will inevitably grow.
09.03.2026
Kuala Lumpur.
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https://focusmalaysia.my/how-political-opportunism-breeds-extremism-in-malaysia/
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