omong

what Malaysian public figures say and don’t say in the press

Archive for July 8th, 2008

Umno conservatives stalling reforms

Posted by omong on July 8, 2008

Focus on reform agenda

.. Back in 2004, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi promised us change. He failed to deliver and suffered the consequences on March 8, after which he reiterated the same promises.

Now, more than ever (amidst the debris of the two scandals), the entire nation can see the extent to which our institutions – the police, the judiciary and the prosecution service in particular – have been weakened and politicised.

We cannot wait for the Umno leadership battle to be resolved and the Prime Minister cannot disappoint us again. Malaysians will not be so forgiving of either him or his party.

He must act and push the conservatives within the Cabinet – Syed Hamid,   Najib Razak and Nazri Aziz – to move forward.

Secondly, the government’s credibility needs to be safeguarded. As Shabery Cheek, one of the more open-minded men in the Cabinet says: “credibility is something you build up. But once it’s lost it’s very difficult to regain.”

Given current pathetic levels of trust, the Malaysian government has a lot of work to do.

Thirdly, Umno needs to be brought to heel and disciplined. Many of the current problems faced by the nation are due to Umno’s overwhelming influence within the administration and the inability to control prominent party members, especially the all-powerful division chiefs.

There are a web of relationships linking the party, the civil service, business and the security apparatus. This network needs to be opened up and subjected to more transparency. The backroom deals have to be exposed to the light of day and full media scrutiny.

For decades, Umno has presented itself as the saviour of the Malays and the arbiter of the national consensus. In the past, the party’s leaders – men such as Tun Dr Ismail and Tun Razak – were wise and pragmatic, balancing out the conflicting demands of our multiracial society as they delivered economic growth and prosperity.

However, the party has long since become middle-aged and lazy. The wheeler-dealer businessman in his black SUV has usurped the cikgu ethos of the past. Now, as the Malay proverb says pagar makan padi – the fence devours the rice – the guardian has turned on its charges.

Umno leaders, warlords and their financial backers must learn they are responsible and accountable to the Constitution and the institutions of state. If they break the law they will suffer the consequences.

This is where the reform agenda – the calls for a more open, fair and law-abiding Malaysia are important. We need Abdullah Badawi to remain focused on this agenda.

Get it right and the reform agenda will be his legacy for the future. Get it wrong and nothing else will save him.

As I said, we need to return the Constitution and the institutions of the nation (especially the police, the courts and the prosecution service) to their true position – namely, above the party, halting decades of deterioration.

However, as I said, many in the party don’t consider this to be a priority. For them it’s something secondary – the kind of issue beloved of ‘Bangsar liberals’, spoilt middle class journalists and noisy lawyers – people like me and you – people that Umno leaders felt ‘betrayed’ them on March 8.

Well, I have news for them: we didn’t ‘betray’ them –  they betrayed us (fully 49% of the voters opted for the opposition). Interestingly they also betrayed the original culture and traditions of Umno’s founders.

Certainly, whenever I discuss these issues with Umno types they’ll reply – “Karim, the voters in my kawasan don’t care about these things”.

Once again, I have to disagree with them on this point: Umno’s poor showing on March 8 was due to its refusal to acknowledge and address core issues of justice, fairness and equality – issues that we experience across the country when ‘enterprising’ and ‘clever’ Umno leaders suddenly acquire large houses, countless expensive cars and go on lavish foreign holidays.

Still, there are those in Cabinet like Zaid Ibrahim and Shahrir Samad who do recognise these weaknesses and have been trying to convince their colleagues that restoring trust in institutions is a top priority.

Shabery Cheek, for one, has been partly responsible for ‘freeing’ up the media.

As he says, refreshingly: “We need to realise that we do have a track record and culture of service. We needn’t be afraid of openness.”

Such courage – he’s also been willing to debate Anwar Ibrahim head-to-head – has earned Shabery the grudging respect of media practitioners.

Indeed, the ugly face-off between Anwar Ibrahim and Najib Razak is directly attributable to the current imbalance of authority – on the one hand a severely compromised security and legal apparatus and on the other a pumped up executive beholden to no one but the party and its warlords.

This has created an environment riddled with corruption, slovenliness, self-importance and racism.

The credibility crisis is literally eating away at our national consensus. It is undermining our capacity to move forward at a critical juncture economically when leadership and focus is required to guide the nation through a period of unprecedented inflationary turbulence.

The Malaysian people do not trust the security apparatus to act fairly and impartially. Moreover, this failure has emboldened opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim to play to the gallery.

He knows that in the absence of a credible legal forum, the court of public becomes the ultimate arbiter of his innocence and/or guilt.

The party of Merdeka has got to come to terms with modernity. Yes, Umno in its earlier incarnation helped bring Independence to Malaya and yes it did ensure the position of the Malays within the Federation.

But the party of the 1950s and 60s is no more. Fifty years on and Umno is  symbolised by the late Zakaria Mat Deros’ extraordinary mansion in Port Klang.

The party has lost all sense of propriety and service. The party is focused on serving its own needs. The mass of Malays and Malaysians have been forgotten.

Read:

Umno divisions in Klang did not settle assessment arrears

Umno full of Yes-men and hypocrites

Umno hegemony is under threat, Malays are not under threat

Umno implemented NEP for all  races, or for  Umnoputras ?

Umno politicians in for financial gains

Umno rebuked for its arrogance, corruption and shrill racist rhetoric

Umno’s arrogance of power

Umno’s formula – turn everything racial

Umno’s day is over until it learns to respect Malaysian people with more dignity

Posted in kosong, najib, nazri, umno | 143 Comments »

Balasundram’s nephew corroborates Balasundram’s first statutory declaration

Posted by omong on July 8, 2008

First SD consistent with story we heard, says PI’s nephew

The contents of private investigator P. Balasubramaniam’s first statutory declaration are consistent with what he had told his two nephews the past six months in relation to the murder of Mongolian woman Altantuya Shaariibuu.

According to Segar Ramakrishnan, 34, his uncle had told him and his brother Kumaresan, 27, for the last six months that he would make a statutory declaration one day on what he had been telling them.
Missing: Police patrolling the neighbourhood in front of Bala’s empty home yesterday.

“How can he subsequently on July 4 say the allegation about Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak (having a relationship with Altantuya) had been concocted?” he asked.

Segar was speaking to reporters after he and Kumaresan were questioned under Section 112 of the Criminal Procedure Code at Gombak District Police headquarters yesterday.

On Saturday, Kumaresan lodged a police report on the disappearance of his uncle, wife and three children at the Brickfields District Police headquarters.

“When he came to my office to pass a copy of the July 1 declaration, he seemed normal and perfectly fine. He asked me to wait two days to see what would happen.

“You can compare his facial expressions in the video clip of the first press conference with that of when he withdrew it to see whether he was under duress during the former or the latter.

“Suddenly on Friday, he appears with a new lawyer withdrawing the allegation against the Deputy Prime Minister.

Segar, a car service adviser, suggested his uncle may have been forced to make the second statutory declaration.

Kumaresan, an IT personnel, said if his uncle had wanted to run away, he could have done so after the first statutory declaration.

“They were doing things as usual after that. I’m afraid for my uncle, my aunt and their children. My parents are no longer alive. My aunt is like my own mother. ”

Segar and Kumaresan, who were accompanied by lawyer N. Surendran, expressed disappointment over the Federal CID chief Datuk Bakri Zinin’s remark that his family had not been cooperative with the police.

“This is baseless and totally not true. On Saturday itself, we made an appointment with Chief Inspector Fadil (of Gombak District Police headquarters) to come and give a statement this morning.”

Read:

Private investigator in Altantuya case says Najib knows Altantuya

Balasundram’s statutory declarations

What happened to the Altantuya case ?

Graft in Malaysia’s Defense Ministry ?

What did Najib know and when did he know it?

Najib-Altantuya photograph, court did not ask witness to produce photograph

Altantuya case raises some troubling questions in Malaysia

Najib and Altantuya: A Picture Connects Them

Najib denies links to Mongolian model

Najib in trouble?

Malaysian Model Murder Gets Stickier for UMNO leader

Press sec: DPM has never met Altantuya

Posted in [s]Altantuya, jijik, najib | Leave a Comment »