I am
beginning to feel as if Malaysia and its people are being crushed and pummelled
by wrecking balls.
The wrecking ball of race and religion, of
insatiable greed, of never-ending sense of entitlements, of unpunished crimes
and abuses, of ideology over rational thinking, justice, and fair play.
These concerns are nothing new.
What’s new is the breathtaking scale, the endlessness of it all, and the
shamelessness with which the perpetrators display their unscrupulous,
destructive and criminal behaviour, in words and deeds.
The seeds of this rot were sown a
long time ago. Any dominant party in power breeds its own seeds of destruction.
For too long, too many of its
leaders and party apparatchiks get away with all manner of transgressions. They
tend to believe they are immune from any form of retribution.I was in Geneva
two weeks ago and UN officials and activists I met were asking what was
happening to Malaysia.
How did things get this bad? We
were once a model country that others looked up to as a prosperous,
progressive, politically stable, multi-ethnic society. We are a high middle-income
developing country, not a basket case.Now we are looking more and more like
another banana republic, with scandals galore making global headlines.
The deep concern many feel that
these wrecking balls could lead to an implosion of everything that we have
built over the decades is real. And what is scary is that there are people who
are priming for trouble to break.
The Low Yat plaza riot will not
be the last in their scheme of things.Thank God, the IGP and his forces acted
fast in nipping the problem in the bud and stating the facts clearly and
unambiguously. It was a crime; not about one race trying to cheat another.All
those who exploited the situation by making hate speech to manufacture racial
conflict must be charged for their role in inciting violence.
Lessons must be learnt fast if we
want to stop those determined to destroy the country in order to remain in
power and preserve what they believe are their lifetime entitlements – on
nothing but the basis of birth.
As desperation over the inevitable
closing chapter sets in, there will be more attempts to ignite fires of racial
conflict.
The truth is the ruling elite is
becoming more and more beleaguered – under the weight and scope of allegations
of misappropriation of public funds, plummeting popularity and finding itself
devoid of new blood and new ideas, and certainly bereft of courage and will to
bring the transformation needed to win back public support.
Let’s manufacture more threats to
add to the standard “Malays under threat”, “Islam under threat”. Now it’s
“national security under threat” as more and more damning evidence of
mind-blowing brazen sleaze and corruption is revealed.
Who is really threatening whose
survival? And what has happened to the warnings given at the Umno general
assembly last year that Umno must “change or be dead”? It looks like the choice
Umno has made is very clear.
Unless a new breed of young
far-sighted leaders come forward with the will and courage to change the system
– political and economic – to become more inclusive, more just, more honest,
more transparent, we are really seeing the end of a long era in Malaysian
politics.
Time has run out for this old
form of authoritarian politics and rule by a privileged elite.
In their book "Why Nations
Fail", Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson argue with evidence across
history and geography that authoritarian “extractive” political and economic
institutions designed by elites in order to and perpetuate their power at the
expense of the majority of the people are bound to run out of steam.
The pride we have in our beloved
country is that was NOT our history. That was not how Malaysia began. But today
this is where we are heading.Just look at the alleged Mara scandal. An agency
set up to redress a historical economic injustice against the Malays ends up
led by people cheating the very group they are supposed to help, pocketing
millions in barefaced shenanigans.
A policy vehicle pumped with
hundreds of millions of taxpayers money to eradicate poverty on the basis of
race gets abused by the privileged elite of that race.This is yet another case
of "pagar makan padi".
Those entrusted to protect you,
instead betray you. And there are many more such scandals, just waiting to be
surfaced.
Let’s ask some hard questions
here.
Why after decades of rigorous
development planning, 40 per cent of Malaysian households earn only about 1,847
ringgit (US$484) a month?Why after more than four decades of the NEP, 75.5 per
cent of those at the bottom are Malays?
Why in spite of the billions
poured into education and boarding schools, 64.3 per cent of the bumiputra
workforce have only secondary qualifications?
Why some 90 per cent of the
unemployable university graduates are Malays?
Why of the 54 billion ringgit
worth of shares pumped to Malay individuals and institutions between 1984 and
2005, only 2 billion ringgit remained in Malay hands today?
And why oh why should the Malays
continue to raise a begging bowl and ask for more of the same kind of handouts
from the same ruling elite?
The bottom 40 per cent get crumbs.Let’s
focus our attention on these priorities. –
Zainah Anwar, The Star/ANN,
Petaling Jaya
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