omong

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

Archive for July 21st, 2008

NEP had not brought significant benefits to the Malays

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

The New Straits Times Online…….

..The Member of Parliament for Gua Musang, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, said today he would revamp the New Economic Policy (NEP) to ensure better implementation if he were to become Umno president.
The policy was not meant to benefit the Malays alone but the other communities too, said Tengku Razaleigh who had offered to contest the Umno presidency in the party election in December.

“The DEB which was introduced when Tun Abdul Razak (Hussein) was the Prime Minister, was not meant to look after the interest of the Malays only, it was for the benefit of all races in the country.

“But it appears that the implementation of the policy had not brought about any  significant improvement in the economy of the Malays and as such, we need to amend it to tighten its implementation,” he said.

Read:

‘Bhumiputra’ policy has polarised Malaysia

Affirmative action: What went wrong

Discrimination and lack of meritocracy in Malaysia

Extremists fragmenting Malaysian society and destroying the Malaysian identity

Call to review unfair policies

Malaysia back-pedals into the future

Malaysia is a pale shadow of itself compared to 10 years ago

These people don’t want to work, they don’t want to learn

Umno implemented NEP for all  races, or for  Umnoputras ?

Umno’s formula – turn everything racial

Wither Malaysia, under BN ?

Posted in BN government, NEP, jijik, kosong | 1 Comment »

2008, 1998 – Anwar’s sodomy plot

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

Nasty in Kuala Lumpur – WSJ.com

..The same cast of characters from 1998 are in positions of influence today. The inspector general of police, Musa Hassan, was the lead investigating officer into Mr. Anwar’s 1998 case, and Attorney General Abdul Gani Patail was the lead prosecutor. Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak competed with Mr. Anwar for the leadership of the United Malays National Organization in the 1990s. Then, as now, Mr. Anwar’s popularity is a threat to the deputy PM’s political future.

Read:

Who is Saiful ?

Saiful met with Najib before lodging police report

Posted in BN government, jijik, najib | Leave a Comment »

Anwar Ibrahim : The ‘qualified’ mandate

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

Anwar Ibrahim : The ‘Qualified Mandate’ | My Sinchew

..we must commend him for one remarkable achievement which will earn him an esteemed place in Malaysia’s political history.

On March 8th at the helm of the Pakatan Rakyat, he shook the nation’s political foundations. Upending the stale status quo, he showed that there was an alternative to fifty years of Barisan and Umno, forcing the party of Merdeka into a measure of self-doubt and opening up our rotten political system to a degree of reassessment and possible reform. We owe him a debt of gratitude for his endeavours in this respect, and his formulation of ‘ketuanan rakyat’ remains a high-point of recent political rhetoric.

The Government won’t move on the reform agenda unless there’s continuous pressure to act. But with Anwar taken out of the equation reform may be  hindered: Umno will remain mired in money-politics and destructive ethno- centric ideas; the security and judicial system will languish and improved civil liberties will remain a distant mirage. Yet his assertions that there will be Parliamentary crossovers by September 16th may distract himself from the real task of coalition-building.

Still, Anwar’s return to the centre-stage has led to a reconfiguration of power – a shift that has forced the Malaysian elite to address glaring weaknesses in governance and politics. Without Anwar’s energy and continuous political legwork there would be no Pakatan, no opposition pact and therefore no dramatic victories along the West coast of the peninsula.

Only Anwar could have united such disparate forces and hammered out some measure of trust and cooperation between Hadi Awang, Nik Aziz, Lim Kit Siang and Karpal Singh. He prompted and then benefited from the tectonic activity that resulted in the tsunami. Before he pulled it off, no one had thought that it was possible. This Herculean achievement may be his enduring legacy, even if the grouping currently suffers from a serious cross-party communication problems. It might sound strange to be talking about an ‘enduring legacy’ when he is fully planning to secure the Premiership by mid-September. But the Pakatan, with its fraying internal linkages, may be unsustainable as long as he remains distracted by his quest to seize power. He may have lost the plot.

Anwar should be focusing his energies on building the coalition and strengthening intra-Pakatan bonds, particularly between DAP and PAS. If he can’t be bothered, the net result will be failure.

It’s as if the former Deputy Prime Minister and global thought-leader can’t bring himself to discuss, negotiate and then hammer out solutions to issues in Ipoh, Alor Star, Shah Alam, Kota Baru and Georgetown. Is politics in small-town Malaysia so beneath him?

Malaysians voted for the Pakatan to get a better and more responsive form of government, especially at the state level. Whilst we were tired of Barisan’s high-handedness and corruption we definitely don’t want political tightrope-walking on a daily basis. Anwar is in danger of forgetting that the mandate he received from the Malaysian people is ‘qualified’. We entrusted him to help lead five states and to commit himself to the process of building a genuine and workable consensus within Pakatan that would in turn create a system of administration that was fairer, less corrupt and more attune with the needs of all Malaysians. We did not give him the mandate to occupy the Premiership. If he does a good job maybe we’ll make him our Prime Minister… (By KARIM RASLAN/ MySinchew)

Read:

BN politicians no shame, no moral, no ethics

Corruption at critical level – watchdog – Forbes.com

Federal allocation for Penang cut by 80%

Growing disunity under under the BN government…

Inflation is also due to corruption

Malays question Umno after 50 years in power

Mismanagement of government funds

Selangor under Khir Toyo, a sad state of affairs

Umno is a nest of conspirators

Umno on the way down

Umno’s arrogance of power

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

Umno politicians in for financial gains

What leadership should be, but is not in Malaysia’s politicians

Wither Malaysia, under BN ?

Posted in anwar | Leave a Comment »

Murder most foul

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

Asia Sentinel – Murder Most Foul

It is about time for Malaysia to drop the charade. Attempting to convict opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim of forcible sodomy is an embarrassment in contrast with the completely ignored and much more serious allegations linking the deputy prime minister to the execution-style murder of his reputed former girlfriend.

As has been reported widely, two sworn declarations have been filed that raise reasonable suspicions that the October 2006 murder of Mongolian woman Altantuya Shaariibuu is tied directly to Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and his wife, Rosmah Mansor. Yet instead of this high profile politician being in the dock to explain himself, one of those who filed a sworn declaration about his actions is about to go on trial for criminal libel. The other was dragooned into recanting his statement before he fled the country.

The courts and the legal system have deliberately overlooked allegations of Najib’s complicity in the Mongolian woman’s murder, and considerable related evidence of massive corruption on his part in the purchase of three French submarines for the Malaysian military - a purchase that Altantuya apparently participated in as a translator. This has been pushed under the carpet repeatedly and now the nation is being distracted by accusations of Anwar’s peccadilloes, real or fabricated.

Mahathir Mohammad, the long-serving prime minister who quit in 2002, had a single ambition – to reach developed-nation status by 2020. But you cannot be a first-world country with a legal system whose main characteristics are shared by the likes of Zimbabwe, Burma and North Korea. Mahathir, of course, bears a major part of the blame for the legal system, starting from his destruction of the judiciary in the 1980s. But what is going on now, six years after he was succeeded by Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, is nothing more than the United Malays National Organisation’s manipulation of the system a la Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. This has nothing to do with ideology but with the dubious necessity of maintaining a political party in power.

When the legendary American bank robber Willie Sutton once was asked why he robbed banks, he famously replied: “That’s where the money is.” Government in Malaysia is where the money is, and that is where UMNO intends to stay despite its disastrous March 8 election results, which cost the national ruling coalition the two-thirds hold on parliament it has enjoyed for half a century. There is no better example of this than the submarine and its ties to the murder of Altantuya.

As Asia Sentinel has repeated frequently, according to testimony in the trial of Altantuya’s accused murderer Abdul Razak Baginda, her then-lover and one of the three men accused of killing her, the murdered woman accompanied him to Paris at a time when Malaysia’s defense ministry, headed by Najib, was negotiating through a Malaysian company, Perimekar Sdn Bhd, to buy two Scorpene submarines and a used Agosta submarine produced by the French government under a French-Spanish joint venture, Armaris. Perimekar at the time was owned by a company called Ombak Laut, which was wholly owned by Abdul Razak.

The contract was not competitive. The Malaysian ministry of defense paid €1 billion (RM4.5 billion) to Amaris for the three submarines, for which Perimekar received a commission of €114 million (RM510 million). Deputy Defense Minister Zainal Abdidin Zin told the Dewan Rakyat, Malaysia’s parliament, that the money was paid for “coordination and support services” although the fee amounted to a whopping 11 percent of the sales price for the submarines.

Altantuya, by her own admission in the last letter she wrote before her murder, had been blackmailing Razak, pressuring him for US$500,000. She did not say how she was blackmailing him, leaving open lots of questions.

Myriad questions have been raised by the year-long trial of Razak and two of Najib’s bodyguards for Altantuya’s murder. At every turn, those questions could have been answered by calling Najib to the stand. How could Razak, a civilian and Najib’s closest friend, get the two bodyguards to kill Altantuya without Najib’s knowledge? Najib could answer. How could the record of the victim being in the country disappear completely from Immigration Department records, as was sworn in court? Najib could answer. How could the murderers get their hands on the plastic explosives available only to the military used to blow up her body? Najib could answer. Why did neither the prosecution nor the defense push to investigate a statement made by Altantuya’s cousin on the stand that she had seen a picture of Najib, Razak and Altantuya together at a dinner? Najib could answer.

The statutory declaration of P Balasubramaniam, the private detective hired by Razak to keep Altantuya away from him after their relationship had ended, is so closely detailed that it beggars disbelief that it was fabricated. It makes Najib an integral part of the case, something most of Malaysia’s top government and judicial officials have been seeking to avoid ever since the trial began.

Balsasubramaniam released his sworn statement in the company of his lawyer, which makes it difficult to believe he was coerced. But immediately afterward he was summoned to a meeting with an assistant superintendant of police in Jalan Brickfields, where he was convinced – outside the presence of his lawyer that his memory was faulty. He then signed a statement that his original one had been compelled, and left the country.

In the original declaration Balasubramaniam said Razak told him he had been introduced to Altantuya “by a VIP…who asked him to look after her financially.” Najib, the declaration said, had introduced Razak to Altantuya at a diamond exhibition in Singapore and that Najib had had a sexual relationship with her in the past. Razak was to look after the woman because Najib “did not want her to harass him since he was now the Deputy Prime Minister.”

Is that true? Najib could answer.

Interestingly, according to the document, Razak told Balasubramaniam that Altantuya liked anal sex, which is illegal in Malaysia whether performed with men or women. Anwar might like to make that point to the authorities.

Balasubramaniam also detailed cell phone calls between Najib and Razak in the period after Altantuya’s murder. Did the police check Razak’s phone? Najib could answer.

Raja Petra Kamaruddin, the influential internet journalist, is expected to go on trial for criminal defamation for saying that Najib’s wife was present at the murder. Rather than bringing in Najib and Rosmah to answer questions, they have gone after Raja Petra, who has threatened his own time bombs during his trial. Asked by Asia Sentinel what those revelations might be, he said he would prefer to save them for testimony under oath.

The one truly sad dupe in all this is the prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who in all of his sorry reign as prime minister has largely preserved his reputation for integrity despite his fecklessness. Badawi has defended his deputy’s reputation in the face of the fact that virtually all of Kuala Lumpur’s chattering classes have long since become convinced of the couple’s complicity. Unleashing two thoroughly corrupt law enforcement officials to go after Anwar – Abdul Ghani Patail, the head of the anti-corruption agency, and Musa Hassan, the head of the police, who plainly fabricated evidence in Anwar’s 10-year-old conviction on the same offense, is particularly egregious.

This isn’t to say Anwar is innocent. The jury, to use a newly valid cliché, is still out. But compare the two. What kind of priorities does this government have in going after a 61-year-old opposition leader with a bad back who presumably would have had a hard time chasing down a mobile 23-year-old aide, when there is the possibility of finding the true perpetrators of an execution murder of a defenseless 28-year-old mother? This is the behavior of a despotic system with an eye only to its own preservation. The Malaysian people deserve better.

Read:

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, najib | Leave a Comment »

Different police treatment for Barisan Nasional politicians and non-Barisan Nasional politicians ?

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

Bloomberg.com: Opinion

A Mongolian woman, an aspiring model, is blown to bits with C-4 explosives.

Allegations are made of an illicit affair, of bribery in a defense deal, of a dinner in Paris.

A private investigator points his finger at the deputy prime minister who strongly denies any involvement. The detective retracts his statement and then, well, disappears.

An opposition politician releases grainy videotapes of a top lawyer purportedly trying to fix judicial appointments.

Charges of sodomy surface against the politician.

Masked policemen arrest him.

That, in a nutshell, is Malaysian politics.

Investors don’t stand a chance predicting what will happen next: This pulp fiction may even be beyond Quentin Tarantino’s capacity to piece something together.

The sordid saga took a dangerous turn yesterday after the police in Kuala Lumpur apprehended opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who has said he will have enough lawmakers on his side by Sept. 16 to bring down the government.

Malaysian stocks fell to a 16-month low; the country’s currency, the ringgit, slumped the most in two weeks.

Malaysia ought to serve as a statutory warning to fast- growing Asian nations about the pointlessness of chasing the dream of Western-style prosperity while failing to build strong democratic institutions. It’s wishful thinking that the latter would miraculously appear when a threshold level of per-capita income is crossed.

Desperate Moves

Laws that curb free speech and assembly and allow people to be put in jail indefinitely without trial create an illusion of stability, which can last a long time.

However, the moment cracks appear in the leadership, the government panics, and so does the challenger.

Both are driven to take extreme steps because each knows how tough it is to wrest power — or to regain it — in a game where the incumbent sets all the rules.

Anwar’s arrest came after allegations by a former aide that the 60-year-old politician sodomized him on eight occasions.

Anwar denies the charge and says it’s a conspiracy by leaders of the ruling coalition — which has governed Malaysia uninterrupted for 51 years — to hold on to power. Anwar has filed a defamation suit against his 23-year-old accuser.

Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak denies he ever met — let alone had an affair with — Altantuya Shaariibuu, a 28-year-old Mongolian woman murdered in Malaysia two years ago; Abdul Razak Baginda, a political analyst who was once employed by Najib, is currently on trial for abetting the slaying.

Trading Charges

Anwar says the sodomy allegation against him was instigated by Najib, who, in turn, says Anwar is framing him to divert attention from his own homosexuality.

This isn’t Anwar’s first brush with the sodomy law.

A similar charge had been brought against him in 1998 when he was becoming a threat to then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad; the allegation became the basis for Anwar’s dismissal as finance minister. The Federal Court overturned the sodomy conviction in 2004 and released Anwar from prison.

In national elections held in March this year, Anwar staged an upset. The ruling Barisan Nasional, which means National Front, fell short of a two-thirds supermajority in parliament; it lost power in five states, including Selangor, Penang and Perak, three of the most economically developed.

This led Mahathir to demand, with increasing stridency, the ouster of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the current prime minister. In May, Mahathir even quit the party he led for 22 years to protest against Abdullah’s continuation.

Anwar’s Challenge

Abdullah this month said he will hand over power to Najib in 2010. That may be too late for Barisan Nasional and a section of the Malaysian elite. Anwar last year produced a videotape showing that top judicial appointments in Malaysia during Mahathir’s rule were influenced by businessmen with vested interests.

A government-appointed commission has found the video clip authentic and called for further investigations.

No one really believes that Anwar’s arrest will end the power struggle in Malaysia. The country in 2008 is different from what it was in 1998 in several key respects.

Blogs and other Internet-based news sources now inform public discourse, even as the mainstream media continue to be dominated by parties in the ruling coalition.

Gorbachev Figure

The other difference is that in 1998 Anwar was challenging Mahathir, who had no intention of losing the fight. One can’t be so sure about Abdullah’s tenacity. Wittingly or otherwise, Abdullah has positioned himself as a transition figure, with the Economist magazine comparing him to Mikhail Gorbachev in an article this month.

Race-based quotas that discriminate against ethnic Chinese and Indians in jobs and education, too much government involvement in the economy and the attendant cronyism all need to change in Malaysia.

But above all, the politics need to be cleaned up.

Read:

Umno hegemony is under threat, Malays are not under threat

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

Umno is a nest of conspirators

Umno on the way down

Posted in BN government, jijik, kosong, police | Leave a Comment »

A rakyat’s feeling about Terengganu Barisan Nasional government’s purchase of Mercedes

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

A complete waste of funds!

A STATE government has changed its fleet of so-called “ageing” Perdana V6 for a new fleet of Benz E200k at RM3.43mil.

Replacing four-year-old cars does not seem to make sense these days. Cars of company executives and directors are usually replaced only after five years (if the company is making money).

Since the Government is using public funds, they should use it wisely. The oil price has increased, but it does not mean that they should replace the Perdanas with E-class Benzs for low-cost maintenance and safety.

A Benz is not cheap to maintain. It is not even in the top 10 list of least problematic cars. Topping the list are three Japanese cars.

Buying Japanese would save RM1.3mil. Maintenance cost would likely be 30% to 50% less than what the Benzs will incur. The millions saved could be used to build schools, roads and provide help to the hard-core poor.

Our Prime Minister has just told us to be moderate on luxury, change our lifestyle and set a good example for the people, but this is the news we get from a “rich state”.

ALEX NG TZE SHIN,

Kuantan.

Read:

  Terengganu Barisan Nasional state government replaces Perdana with Mercedes

BN politicians no shame, no moral, no ethics

Corruption at critical level – watchdog – Forbes.com

Federal allocation for Penang cut by 80%

Growing disunity under under the BN government…

Inflation is also due to corruption

Malays question Umno after 50 years in power

Mismanagement of government funds

Selangor under Khir Toyo, a sad state of affairs

Umno is a nest of conspirators

Umno on the way down

Umno politicians in for financial gains

What leadership should be, but is not in Malaysia’s politicians

Wither Malaysia, under BN ?

Posted in BN government, jijik, kosong | 1 Comment »

Terengganu Barisan Nasional state government replaces Perdana with Mercedes

Posted by omong on July 21, 2008

MB on why Terengganu bought Mercedes cars

The state government has defended the purchase of 14 Mercedes E200 Kompressor cars at RM3.43mil for the use of its state executive councillors and senior officials.

Mentri Besar Datuk Ahmad Said said the state government had planned to purchase the cars for a long time now to replace its Proton Perdana V6 Executive fleet in a move to cut cost.

“Please understand that the Proton Perdanas go through continuous long-distance journeys. It’s costing us a lot of money due to high cost of maintenance.

“We are not saying that the national car is not good but in reality we are coughing up more money for maintaining the Proton Perdanas, particularly the gear boxes,” he said.

ahmad said Ahmad cited the example of the Proton Perdana of state Commerce, Industry and Environment committee chairman Toh Chin Yaw, which has twice undergone expensive repairs costing RM50,000 within 36 months.

“In the long run, Mercedes cars are cheaper to maintain and could also save us fuel costs.

This is the state’s long-term plan – we are farsighted. The cars could also fetch  a high market price, when sold as second-hand cars.

“We studied all angles before deciding to buy the Mercedes E200 cars,” he added.

Ahmad also denied that the oil royalty money was used to buy the cars.

“In the first place we have yet to receive the oil royalties from the Federal Government.

“The funds to procure the cars were from our own coffers and has nothing to do with the oil royalties,” he said.

Read:

Rakyat rues waste of public funds by Barisan Nasional

BN politicians no shame, no moral, no ethics

Corruption at critical level – watchdog – Forbes.com

Federal allocation for Penang cut by 80%

Growing disunity under under the BN government…

Inflation is also due to corruption

Malays question Umno after 50 years in power

Mismanagement of government funds

Selangor under Khir Toyo, a sad state of affairs

Umno is a nest of conspirators

Umno on the way down

Umno politicians in for financial gains

What leadership should be, but is not in Malaysia’s politicians

Wither Malaysia, under BN ?

Posted in BN government, jijik, kosong | 3 Comments »