Saturday, August 1, 2009

ISA protest


Updated: Saturday August 1, 2009 MYT 8:57:39 PM

ISA protest: Those arrested have to deal with the situation, says PM

By ROSLINA MOHAMAD

PEKAN: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said those who took part in the protest against the Internal Security Act (ISA) and got arrested would have to deal with the situation as he had already warned people against it.

''I have said before this that ISA is being reviewed and we are also in the process of discussions and getting feedback from various groups.

''As such, the demonstration was unnecessary because it only causes hardship and I have been informed of complaints by the public who got caught in the traffic jams caused by the rally.

“It is difficult for them to go from one point to another,'' he told reporters after launching a corporate social responsibility programme by Astro called 'Astro Kasih' in Kampung Ketapang Tengah here Saturday.

Najib, who is also Pekan MP, added that the rally was politically motivated and simply senseless.

He said that since the protesters were stubborn enough to proceed with the rally, they would have to face the music.

''They will need to deal with any action to be taken by the police.

''We want to advise them but if they refuse to listen, what can I do.

''It is up to the police and if arrests are made, we leave it to the authorities,'' Najib added.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Why must the staff become the victims of mismanagement?

Why must the staff become the victims of mismanagement?

With the involvement of Yg Bhg Datuk Mohd Suhaimi bin Abdullah (Ketua Bahagian, UMNO Gunung Jerai), it smells of UMNO connection!

On 29 July 2009 I have received a comment in my blog concerning BERNAMA BHD and Bernama TV under my posting of 17 July 2009 as follow:


“Kami warga perkhidmatan audio visual/bernama tv ingin meluahkan rasa tidak puas hati dengan pengurusan bernama yang membuat keputusan drastik terhadap kami yang terpaksa ditukarkan ke beberapa jabatan mengikut kepakaran masing2. Mulai 1/8,ada yang terpaksa pergi ke RTM dan beberapa jabatan tertentu di BERNAMA. Masalahnya penukaran tempat2 tersebut di buat dalam jangka masa 3 hari sahaja.

Secara asas kami bersetuju ditukarkan untuk memberi tekanan kepada btv synergy,cuma keputusan ini yang secara drastik melibatkan masalah2 terutama kepada mereka yang ditukarkan ke RTM. YB Wee ada sesetengah petugas perkhidmatan audio visual yelah bertugas di Bernama lebih 12 tahun, terpaksa menanggung kos akibat terpaksa berpindah ke RTM. Kata mereka ini adalah sementara, tetapi setelah banyak kali kami dijanjikan banyak harapan akhirnya kami yang menjadi mangsa.”

I am shocked by this comment and immediately did some checking. BERNAMA Bhd has taken action to terminate the agreement with Bernama TV Synergy Sdn Bhd (BTV) to broadcast news under the name of Bernama TV. BERNAMA Bhd has also filed a civil suit in the High Court to recover a debt of more than RM15 million from the BTV outfit. This is consistent with the answer given by the Minister of Information, Communication and Culture, YB Datuk Rais Yatim, to my question in Parliament on 17 June 2009 as follows:

“ BERNAMA TV dikendalikan oleh syarikat usaha sama BERNAMA dengan syarikat swasta di mana BERNAMA diberikan saham percuma sebanyak 33%. BERNAMA seterusnya membenarkan jenamanya digunakan.

Selepas beberapa peringatan diberikan kepada syarikat persendirian tersebut, tindakan mahkamah telah pun diambil untuk mendapatkan hutang tertunggak tersebut.”

Three Days’ Transfer Notice

First and foremost, it was most unfair for any organization to transfer its staff with only 3 days’ notice (1st August) for whatever reasons because of job security and other personal commitments. The staff should not be treated like a “football” to be kicked at the whim and fancy of the Board of Directors. I sincerely hope that the management of BERNAMA Bhd will take into consideration the welfare of the staff and give them at least a good one month notice for them to prepare themselves and to make the informed decision on the transfer.

Why must members of staff be made the victims of corporate mismanagement by the head of an organization?

The mismanagement:

BERNAMA Bhd was set up under the BERNAMA ACT 1967 with its objective clearly stated in Section 4 of the Act “to seek for and present complete, objective and impartial news matter of public interest and national interest, and distribute such news”. There is no provision in the Act for BERNAMA Bhd to allow its corporate name “BERNAMA” to be used by a private entity.

But the management of BERNAMA Bhd not only allowed its name to be used by BERNAMA TV but also to incorporate a private company known as BERNAMA TV Synergy Sdn Bhd (Bernama TV). Bernama Bhd has also allowed BTV to use the BERNAMA official logo. Bernama TV also appears in the BERNAMA official website as though it is part of Bernama Bhd.

Up till now Bernama TV has no broadcasting licence. It is riding on the broadcasting licence of ASTRO and yet it gives the impression to the public that it is part of our national news agency, BERNAMA Bhd.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Liberalisation will fail without social justice

n 2005 Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim made a bold announcement that the New Economic Policy had to be replaced. The announcement shocked both friends and foes alike, who felt that — for whatever the statement’s merits — criticising the NEP was a political misstep.

The BN machinery went into full gear, claiming that Anwar had made a dreadful miscalculation and playing up its narrative that Anwar was a stooge of the West. Now — at least to the Malay community that supported Anwar in a big way in 1999 — they could paint him as pro-Chinese as well. The brainwashing camps of Biro Tatanegara (BTN) were now given more ammunition to convince students and government servants that Anwar was a threat to the country.

But many Malaysians were excited by the development. For my own part, I felt (and still feel) that eradication of race-based policies was the logical extension of the Reformasi movement. I was after all involved in drafting the motion tabled at the 2005 Keadilan congress which spoke of the need to replace the NEP with a Malaysian Economic Agenda that combined liberal market policies with a strong sense of social justice through needs-based affirmative action.

I joined Anwar’s office the next year, and by 2007 Anwar had drafted a pamphlet that fleshed out his perspective on why the NEP — while playing a big role in confronting the challenges of the racial inequalities that we faced in the 1960s and 1970s — had now been hijacked to keep us bound to the state for all things as the political elite took it as an opportunity to enrich themselves all in the name of “Malay interests”. Central to Anwar’s argument was a graph showing the growing gap between nations that had been our peers in the 1960s — Singapore, Korea and Taiwan. Now, Singaporeans on average earn five times more than Malaysians.

Anwar’s boldness was vindicated by the results of the March 8, 2008 general election. For my part, I spoke in my campaign in Seri Setia not about what we should fear from one another, but what we can do together. I spoke not only about Malay welfare, but about the need for Malay, Chinese and Indian issues to be seen as Malaysian problems that concern us all as citizens of this blessed country. Umno’s arguments that Malaysia was not ready for this were proven wrong.

Umno’s response has exposed their leaders’ collective schizophrenia. They use Utusan Malaysia to stoke racial tempers while appeasing the non-Malays that things will change, culminating in Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s 1 Malaysia slogan. Finally Najib accepted Anwar’s argument that Malaysia needs to go beyond the NEP, and has announced liberalisation measures to prove his point.

The first round included liberalisation of 27 service sub-sectors, whilst the recently-announced second round included the lowering of the Bumiputera equity quota as listing requirements and the rolling back of the powers of the Foreign Investment Committee.

I wonder how the spin doctors at the PM’s office will instruct the BTN to justify these policies. Najib’s first round of liberalisation measures exposed BN’s divide and rule tactics to the fore — while the English press spoke about removal of Bumiputera quotas, the Malay press — Utusan Malaysia included — only spoke about local quotas. This exposed that beneath the PR blitz of 1 Malaysia, BN still has not abandoned the old way of doing things.

I’m not saying that Malaysia isn’t in need of measures like these. Accepting the reality of liberalisation is crucial for Malaysia and the Malays to move forward. Markets are an important wealth-generating mechanism, with a major role in the economy. I accept that. But it must not be done with a sleight of hand or to simply hijack Pakatan’s agenda, but to openly make the forceful argument with the courage of conviction.

Najib and his cohorts have to actually believe in liberalisation in order for it to work. I wonder if they genuinely understand the benefits that really opening up the country, not only economically but socially and politically will bring — or are they just fishing for votes? If Umno/BN is sincere about liberalisation, then they can’t be content with these two thrusts but continue to push the envelope, in all areas of our national life — Pakatan Rakyat is more than willing to do so if given the chance.

These measures look good on paper, but the devil will be in the details.

What are the guarantees that it will not be simply “business as usual” on the ground, far away from the confines of Putrajaya? Malaysians have seen too many cases of bold pledges and initiatives wither away because of shoddy implementation and the lack of political will.

In fact it was Umno’s previous obsession with equity quotas that exposed how much the political elite benefited from such policies when it meant little to the ordinary Malays — the fishermen, the farmer and the factory worker — who were supposed to be the NEP’s main beneficiaries. After all, the NEP’s main contribution has been the creation of a Malay middle class through education and training, not solely quotas that Umno Youth leaders constantly harp on — as when Khairy Jamaluddin stated at the 2006 Umno Youth assembly that the NEP’s quotas should not be 30 but 70 per cent instead. We need capacity-building, not get-rich-quick schemes.

Hence, while we accept the need for a liberalised market, we need to look at the other important elements to be a developed nation. This includes an effective education system that caters for both for the brightest Malaysians as well as those who are left behind, an accessible and efficient healthcare system and an administration run on democratic principles that are competent, accountable and transparent.

We are being held back by archaic regulations and corruption, venality as well as inefficiency in all these areas. Where are the liberalisation measures here? We await them with bated breath — and Pakatan’s stand on these areas ought to be clear enough for anyone who has read our various manifestos.

Furthermore, any move to liberalise the market should be done in tandem with ensuring social justice for all Malaysians as well. Without going together, the great inequalities in our society today will exacerbated. Malaysia already has a very unequal society, and disparities within the Malay community are far bigger than other communities. Malaysians — regardless of whether they are Malays, Indians, Chinese or Ibans — at the bottom of society will not be able to rise up and enjoy the country’s development and progress if there is no imperative for the welfare of the people in our policies.

One does not have to go far to realise the plight of ordinary Malaysians. In my constituency, every week dozens of my constituents come to me to ask for welfare assistance. Some are elderly, abandoned by their children. There are single mothers left behind with children by their philandering husbands.

Yet when we forward their names to the Welfare Department, most end up frustrated by the extremely narrow definition of deserving beneficiaries and the red tape involved in order to qualify for aid. Most are disqualified on the smallest pretexts. While the Muslims have access to payments related to zakat, the non-Muslims do not.

I’m not sure how abolishing the FIC guidelines and the liberalisation of the rules related to the ownership of financial institutions will help cases like these. The lessons from the last two decades all over the globe have informed us well and truly that trickle-down economics doesn’t work.

One isn’t advocating that Malaysia construct a nanny state, and indeed having overgenerous welfare provisions are not healthy either. Nevertheless, some form of universal social safety net that compels and empowers its recipients to go back to work (such as the welfare-to-work programme in the US) can provide for effective social security in a market economy.

The Umno/BN government has been unable to provide this despite their claims to the contrary. The latest slew of faux liberalisation policies increases the worry that the poor of Malaysia will be further neglected. It will be just awful if the liberalisation policies end up not really making it easier to do business or invest in Malaysia, and also lead to more social inequality.

We have to concede it is commendable that the government is embracing a brand of change that was until just recently termed as a betrayal to the Malays. Yet without addressing the other issues of governance, and indeed that of mindsets, in a comprehensive manner, liberalisation will not be the panacea to our nation’s many woes.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Rubber Issue To Dominate Manik Urai?

The plight of rubber smallholders and tappers is expected to be among the issues to dominate the Manik Urai by-election campaign which starts on Monday.

Issues at the state and national levels like the demand on oil royalty and logging in the forest reserves are not expected to have a big impact on the 12,293 voters in this state constituency.

This is because 80 per cent of the 30,000 residents of Manik Urai, especially those in the Malay villages along the Kuala Krai-Gua Musang stretch depend on rubber for their livelihood.

"As the Perakians say, we have to 'lara' (follow the current) with local issues which are close to the people's hearts. In the case of Manik Urai, priority must be given to rubber as many of the people here are rubber smallholders and tappers," said political analyst Prof Dr Ahmad Atory Hussein.

Manik Urai, about 110km from Kota Baharu, is categorised as rural with Jalan Kuala Krai-Gua Musang being the main link between Kuala Krai in the north and Gua Musang in the south.

This state constituency in the Kuala Krai district also comes under the purview of the South Kelantan Development Authority (Kesedar) and Rubber Industry Smallholders Development Authority (Risda) which focus on the rubber and palm oil industry.

Risda projects like the replanting scheme with assistance given in the form of capital and expertise are considerations for the locals, except for the over 1,000 voters living outside the area or state.

The Malay villages with their rubber holdings like Kampung Bukit Budu in Manik Urai have not been on the public radar except perhaps for the Lata Rek waterfalls, which is popular with people in the state that has been under PAS rule since 1990.

But Manik Urai will grab national attention tomorrow with the nomination of candidates for the by-election which is expected to see a straight contest between Kuala Krai Umno Youth head Tuan Aziz Tuan Mat, 39, and Kuala Krai PAS treasurer Fauzi Abdullah, 50.

Tuan Aziz is a former Kesedar officer while Fauzi is a fish wholesaler.

The nominaton of candidates will be held at Dewan Petra, SMK Sultan Yahya Petra 1, Kuala Krai, tomorrow morning and polling will be on July 14. The by-election is held following the death of the incumbent assemblyman Ismail Yaakob on May 22.

The rubber issue has also taken centre stage after PAS supporters mocked Umno information chief Ahmad Maslan following pictures of him tapping rubber trees in Kampung Bukit Budu and Perial Baru appeared in the media.

But Ahmad, the son of a rubber tapper in Sungai Benut, Pontian, Johor, said his action was not just political acting but to empathise with the problems faced by Manik Urai folk.

From his observation of things in the area, Ahmad suggested that Kesedar and Risda fix the income distribution at 60 per cent for the owners of the rubber smallholdings and 40 per cent for the tappers, who are mostly Thais. Previously, it was 50-50.

"In Temalir I saw the towkay (rubber holding owner) riding a Honda Cub (motorcycle), but the hired rubber tapper was driving a Honda Accord. This is not right," he said.

Ahmad also said that Umno would promote Kelantan Umno liaison chief Datuk Mustapa Mohamed, who is also International Trade and Industry Minister, as an icon especially for the people of Kelantan.

He said if PAS spiritual leader and Kelantan Menteri Besar Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat was highly regarded by many people, Mustapa too could be an icon due to his vast experience at the national level and his services to the country and state.

"I think there's no problem with this strategy (icon versus icon). Politicians have their own strategies. Ultimately, the people will evaluate and make their choice," said political analyst Assoc Prof Dr Mohammad Agus Yusoff.

However, he said, the politics of idolising individuals should be avoided as what was more important was service to the people.

"The party's machinery must be strong too. Whatever strategies you use will not get you anywhere if the party machinery is weak," added the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia political science lecturer.

Rift in PAS as theories abound over "conservatives" and "liberals"

"In Malaysia’s highly racialised politics, a unity government will spell the end of multiracial governance, the battle cry of Anwar’s opposition coalition which earned it the support of voters of all stripes. There will be a dangerous dichotomy of Muslim-Malays only as the governing race on one hand, and the non-Muslim dominated opposition on the other. In a multi-religious Muslim country, this can have a destructive effect, especially if the non-Muslim opposition takes their grievances to foreign powers or gets financial backing to wrest power “democratically”, such as what has been happening in Nigeria and Lebanon."

What started as a media manufactured rift in Malaysia’s Islamic Party (PAS) soon became real after its top leader openly condemned a section of the leadership who has been in talks with the ruling UMNO.

The rift was supposed to have started in the weeks leading to PAS’s general assembly last month. Both the mainstream and opposition media were indulging in that usual and now-familiar analysis of contemporary Islamic political entities: imaginary divisions between “conservatives” and “liberals”. The outcome is that those lumped in the “liberal” category started believing that they were popular, only to find that their “conservative” brethren are far more liked by the younger generation who are often mistaken for seeking to challenge the “conservatives”.

The deluge of ‘expert’ analyses of a ‘rift’ in PAS reached its peak as elections were held for its top positions. Most of the news reports are based on self-styled “PAS experts” whose understanding of Islamic politics and Islamic movement is shallow. Yet they have succeeded in convincing most people that PAS, not unlike other Islamic organisations subjected to “expert” analyses, is locked in a power struggle between the “ulama” and “liberal” factions. The former in this case are represented by PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang on one side, and the so-called liberals led by what they describe as “younger” party leaders who want closer cooperation with other opposition parties. In the weeks that passed however, it became clear who the “liberals” were: those who display their vehement hatred of UMNO. Ironic as it seems, this faction is called the ‘moderates’.

But a quick check would reveal that the experts’ formula for analysing the debate within PAS (as with other Islamic movements) is far from scientific. For one, lumped together with the so-called ‘liberals’ of the party was also Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat, the revered PAS murshid al-am who acts as the spiritual leader, and whose opinions and views have always been condemned by the media as conservative (and therefore “backward”). In this instance, Nik Aziz lent his support to those against Hadi who has been floating the possibility of cooperation with the ruling UMNO, a plan once mooted by former prime minister Abdullah Badawi before he was pressured to resign early this year over the UMNO-led National Front’s loss of support in the general elections.

Supporting Hadi’s call is his deputy Nasharuddin Mat Isa, who was widely criticised by other opposition activists last year after revelations that he had secret discussions with some UMNO leaders to form governments in states that the opposition coalition controls. This effectively means Nasharuddin is lumped with the ulama (read: conservative) faction. Yet only four years ago, he was being paraded by the media as the “progressive” face of PAS after winning the deputy president’s post, which was said to have effectively challenged the leadership of ulama in the party. This time around, when Nasharuddin was challenged for his post, many opposition politicians had discreetly thrown their support behind the “liberal” faction, represented by Husam Musa, seen close to Nik Aziz. As such, reports and analyses, coupled with internet blogs, were almost confident of Nasharuddin’s defeat. The result, which saw Nashar-uddin win by a large margin surprised many quarters, including PAS’s allies, the National Justice Party led by Anwar Ibrahim, and the staunchly Chinese-based Democratic Action Party, although they could not show their disappointment openly due to their political comradeship.

That did not stop some opposition leaders from generating an outcry over Hadi and Nasharuddin’s call to consider unity talks with UMNO. The controversy was a godsend for Prime Minister Najib Razak. Far from offering an olive branch to PAS, UMNO’s tactic has been to create divisions among PAS rank and file by praising PAS in the media and calling for dialogue to find common solutions. Many opposition leaders, especially the younger ones who sometimes underestimate UMNO’s capability despite its waned support, fell for this tactic and began condemnation of PAS leaders who want to talk to UMNO.

Nik Aziz appeared to be the least happy with the development, especially when PAS has been so far respected for honouring its word with allies. Moreover, it is the only political party whose elected politicians, in spite of being less “savvy” than other loud politicians, have withstood pressures to jump parties. This was proven during the last two decades of its rule in Kelantan, where UMNO since the era of strongman Mahathir has been known to entice PAS legislative members with lucrative offers, failed miserably due to strong discipline and loyalty to the party’s Islamic ideals, besides Nik Aziz’s charisma as the chief minister. Many would find it hard to contest the argument that the Islamic party’s discipline and credentials stand stark in contrast with other political parties.

If a “unity government” does indeed come into existence, its short lifetime is a foregone conclusion. It will not be the first time that PAS joins UMNO in a coalition government, only to break away after differences over issues such as Islam and policies related to it. Even Mahathir, who recently got a shot in the arm and started appearing more often in public after Abdullah’s departure, acknowledges this fact, saying that a unity government consisting of PAS and UMNO would not work.

In Malaysia’s highly racialised politics, a unity government will spell the end of multiracial governance, the battle cry of Anwar’s opposition coalition which earned it the support of voters of all stripes. There will be a dangerous dichotomy of Muslim-Malays only as the governing race on one hand, and the non-Muslim dominated opposition on the other. In a multi-religious Muslim country, this can have a destructive effect, especially if the non-Muslim opposition takes their grievances to foreign powers or gets financial backing to wrest power “democratically”, such as what has been happening in Nigeria and Lebanon.

In the long term, the bigger loser, needless to say, would be Anwar. Already grappling with yet another sodomy allegation with badly-plotted evidence reminiscent of a decade ago, any recognition by PAS of UMNO means his road to prime ministership will be rife with even bigger hurdles than the ones he managed to clear so far.

Nik Aziz, seen close to Anwar, is respected by all Malaysians. Not only his much-talked about austere lifestyle that has attracted many non-Muslims to re-evaluate their outright rejection of PAS as a replacement to UMNO, he has increasingly been seen as the grand old man of Malaysian politics, and his words are rarely opposed publicly by party leaders. Anwar knew this reality well; which explains why his close relationship with Nik Aziz may have paid off during the present crisis in the form of Nik Aziz’s slamming the door on any move to cooperate with UMNO.

The bigger question is where PAS sees its ultimate objective — that of Islamising the society–lie. Is it with Anwar — an influential and highly-wired politician with the potential of becoming a prime minister — or in UMNO, the most powerful party whose influence penetrates every corner of the country?

Or, does it lie in its own ability to recognise why it has so far failed to implement all that it has been fighting for, even when it has a share of power, such as now? Perhaps the current rift in PAS may be a time for contemplation and renewal of struggle, yet again.

Will Anwar Ibrahim go to jail?

One of the most watched events on the Malaysian political stage is the unfolding drama of Anwar Ibrahim’s sodomy trial that is now twisting and turning through the maze of Malaysian courts.

While the trial is going through its motion, we cannot comment on the merit or demerit of the case, so as not to influence the judges either way, on pains of committing the offence of contempt for the court. But the political fervour connected with this controversial court case deserves nothing less than considered analysis.

If Anwar is found guilty eventually, after all the channels for his appeal have been exhausted, he will certainly be jailed yet again. That may not be all bad for his political movement, for every cause needs a martyr to fuel and sustain the passion of the martyred leader’s followers. Nelson Mandela comes to mind immediately.

anwar-saiful-4.gifThere are those who may have worried that PKR would be ineffectual without the commanding personal presence of Anwar Ibrahim, as was evidenced in the declining fortune of PKR after his jailing following the tumultuous events in 1998. The rising of PKR to the role of a major national player also coincided with his release from jail before the general election last year.

But the times have changed. Many other leaders of PKR have emerged, especially after the March 8 political tsunami last year. Besides, Anwar also had the foresight of recruiting Zaid Ibrahim, the former Umno law minister, and a hugely popular new hero of the PKR support base. Articulate and eloquent, Zaid could easily be groomed to be the heir apparent to Anwar, barring jealous opposition from other competitors in his party.

Anwar himself seems more than pessimistic about his prospect of being cleared of the charges by the court. He appears to have the impression that the whole system of institutions of state are involved in a concerted conspiracy to get him behind bars.

We would like to see the law take its proper course of course.

Unfortunately for Malaysia, after the revelation of the Lingam tape incident, the controversial court decisions in the ongoing cases over the Perak constitutional imbroglio, the trial of Raja Petra Kamarudin, and the activist criticism of the former judge NH Chan, the public’s confidence in the judicial process in the administration of justice has been tainted with bitter cynicism.

Given the vibrant liberated space of the Internet, all Malaysian judges are now working under the added pressure of the public gaze. Not giving a written judgement in any controversial case is ground for much uproar in cyberspace. Any written judgement is also swiftly posted on the Internet and dissected by one expert or another into smithereens.

You could say that, in this new age of digital instant communication, the judges presiding over Anwar Ibrahim’s sodomy case are themselves on trial in the virtual court of public opinions, no matter how much they resent it.

We understand and sympathise with our Malaysian judges. We also heap upon their very human shoulders our hope for them to do the right thing in all the cases that come before them and restore the dignity and integrity of the country’s judicial system. Justice must not only be done; it must also be seen to be don

As Pakatan squabbles, Malaysians left between a rock and a harder place

KUALA LUMPUR, July 4 — It is true that Pakatan Rakyat (PR) may not end up being the coalition many Malaysians invested hope in.

God knows the kind of open quarrelling between the partners of the political alliance that Malaysians have witnessed recently is beginning to suggest they are close to having irreconcilable differences.

And yes, the two-coalition system which we hoped for may not take off.

But even PAS, PKR and DAP standing on an individual platform appear to still offer more than what Umno and Barisan Nasional (BN) can offer.

Umno has not changed much since March 2008.

It remains arrogant and corrupt. Few of its office bearers can pass the living beyond your means test.

In fact several of its MPs will not be able to account for their cars, houses or wealth they have to the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC).

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad is right.

Several of them should not be in Cabinet or hold positions in the party. But they do.

Despite the prime minister’s promise of reforms, most of his party members from his deputy downwards continue to rely on the old race card.

If anything the words coming out from the mouths of some Umno members have made it hard for Malaysians to believe that the party has changed much since last March.

BN’s component parties have also not represented the interests of the non-Malay communities for years now.

The MCA has been in decline, Gerakan is hobbling, MIC is struggling for relevance and PPP is… well, PPP.

The PKFZ fiasco and the manner in which Umno/BN is trying to paper over the loss and impropriety, the Perak power grab and rampant wastage of funds (RM253.6 billion) all point to a decaying political power.

Dr Mahathir may have done Malaysians another favour when he asked what happened to the RM253.6 billion drawn down by the BN government in the last six years.

Do the maths and one can come up with the conclusion that each and every single Malaysian could have been given a tidy sum if the money was distributed to everyone.

A simplistic analysis would suggest that the multiplier effect of giving away Petronas money to all Malaysians could have had a more positive impact on the economy than whatever the government did.

In the final analysis: Yes the PR alliance looks to be in trouble but let’s ask the question: Who made Malaysia the mess it is today?