Accountability Q’s for Dr. M


February 14, 2013

Accountability Q’s for Dr M

by P Gunasegaram@http://www.malaysiakini.com

QUESTION TIME I became a journalist at the Business Times, then a standalone newspaper, in 1978.Three years later in 1981 Dr Mahathir Mohamad became Prime Minister of Malaysia, its fourth, succeeding Hussein Onn.

I have followed his career quite closely since and frankly I am not impressed. Dr M at PerdanaHe started off with promise – and promised a lot – but fulfilled none if any. In fact I would go so far as to say that he was positively the worst Prime Minister this country has ever had.

Through destruction of institutions such as an independent Judiciary, running roughshod over civil servants, bringing his brand of power, patronage and poor economics into decision making and making use of oppressive laws, he used an iron fist to rule and in the process brought more harm to this country than any other person alive or dead.

Much of the problems of Malaysia can be traced back to him and he has made it difficult for his successors to make major changes going forward, much of which would involve unwinding processes and linkages he had put in place before.

Mahathir, after he stepped down, questioned decisions taken by his successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. True to form, he never stopped intervening and systematically undermining Abdullah’s tenure by making disparaging comments and organising dissent against him.

Now he has admitted inflating voter rolls in Sabah during his tenure by giving citizenship to illegal migrants, justifying this by the independence agreement of 1957 which granted citizenship to migrant Chinese and Indians who came here during British rule.

AmbigaAnd he has controversially called for the Barisan Nasional to be given two thirds majority in Parliament so that they can revoke the citizenship of BERSIH leader Ambiga Sreenevasan, the clear implication being you can change the constitution of the country to take away citizenship of anyone at will, and presumably those who were given citizenship in 1957 and their descendants.

Questions to ponder on

In June 2006, three years after Mahathir stepped down, I wrote an article for The Edge, the weekly business newspaper where I worked then, titled ’22 questions for Mahathir’.  This basically questioned Mahathir’s leadership by asking 22 groups of questions for each of 22 years he held power as prime minister.

Considering all that Mahathir has said recently, here’s a list of those 22 questions to ponder again – but the original unedited ones which were slightly different and with minor revisions to take into account recent developments.

You can judge for yourself what kind of Prime Minister he was and what kind of weight we should put on what he says.

1. On clean government. You came to power in 1981 and introduced the slogan ‘Bersih, Cekap dan Amanah’ (Clean, Efficient and Trustworthy) the following year. What did you do to further that?

Did you make the Anti-Corruption Agency more independent and effective? Did you ensure that the Police did their job properly and reduce corruption in their ranks?

Did you ensure that Ministers and Chief Ministers did not have income The Politics of Make Beliefbeyond their legal means? Did you make the Judicial system more effective? Did you do things transparently? How many big guns were prosecuted for corruption offences during your long tenure? What happened to “Bersih Cekap dan Amanah”(right)?

Tempurung of a different order

2. Press Freedom. While your heavy criticism of the government under Abdullah and your ranting and ravings now get plenty of coverage in the local media, during your time criticisms against you by two former Prime Ministers – Tunku Abdul Rahman and Hussein Onn – were muted in the mainstream newspapers.

tun-razak-and-tun-husseinThe other, Abdul Razak Hussein, current Prime Minister Najib Razak’s father, had passed away then. Editors in UMNO-linked newspapers, too, were removed during your time for not toeing the line.  What have you done to advance the cause of responsible press freedom? Is it a concept you believe in at all?

3. Proton. You went ahead with the national car project in 1983 despite a number of experts disagreeing with you, especially with respect to lack of economies of scale.

Why, especially when Proton’s profit over the last 28 years came out of vastly proton_logohigher prices that the Malaysian public pays, resulting in considerable hardship, especially to the poorer people who could not afford cars?

More lately, Proton has been taken over by one of your close associates Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary’s DRB-Hicom. DRB-Hicom’s lack of expertise and economies of scale in car production promises continued high prices for Proton cars which no doubt you will support as Proton adviser.

4. Heavy industries. Why did you push into heavy industries such as steel and cement in the eighties, ignoring studies which suggested developing resource-based industries instead?

They caused major problems and billions of ringgit in losses. The steel industry continues to be protected largely because of moves that you allowed during your tenure as prime minister.

Consequences of thoughtless action

5. Population. Why did you encourage a population of 70 million for Malaysia and change the name of the National Family Planning Board to the National Population Development Board?

How do you expect poor people to take care of five, six or more children? What kind of quality can they provide to their children?  Is this not now reflected in rural poverty and widening income gaps between the rich and the poor?

6. Immigration. Why did you allow hordes of people to immigrate, mainly from Indonesia, in an unregulated way such that there are as many or more illegal immigrants than legal ones, now accounting for some two million or more people?

Did you not realise that this will cause serious social problems and depress the cost of Malaysian labour? Why did you give citizenship to thousands of them to tilt the balance of voting in Sabah? Where were your moral standards?

Tun Musa Hitam

7. On his first Deputy. Some five years after you came to power, there were serious rifts between you and your Deputy (Tun) Musa Hitam. What was the cause of these problems and is it because you were heavy-handed and did not consult your ministers?

8. On the first serious UMNO split. When Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah and Musa took on you and Ghafar Baba at the UMNO General Assembly of 1987, it caused a serious split in UMNO with you winning by a very narrow margin (761 to 718).

Why did you not seek to heal the rift in UMNO post the elections? Instead you purged UMNO and its successor UMNO Baru of those who opposed you causing an unprecedented split in Malay unity.

In 1987 were you not the leader with the least amount of support that UMNO had ever had? Were you not directly or indirectly responsible for the most serious split in Malay unity?

Ops Lalang9. Operation Lalang. Why did you have to resort to this move in October 1987, when you used wide powers of detention under the Internal Security Act to detain over 100 people, close down four newspapers and cause a wave of fear throughout the country?

Was it to consolidate your tenuous hold on power then by using an oppressive law? You could have used your position as Barisan Nasional leader to defuse the racial tensions at the time over the appointment of non-Chinese educated headmasters to Chinese schools.

Ghost entity ruling the roost

10. UMNO Baru. You are of course aware that UMNO’s correct name now is UMNO Baru because the old UMNO was declared illegal by the courts in 1988.

Why did you not take steps to legalise UMNO? Is it because the formation of a new UMNO Baru made it easier to keep out members who opposed you?

And why did you amend rules to make it extremely difficult to challenge the incumbent President and Deputy President?

Was it to forestall any more challenges to you? Didn’t UMNO Baru become less democratic as a result? Did you put in place measures to prolong your rule?

11. Judiciary. What was your motive in taking action in 1988 to remove the Chief Justice and several Supreme Court judges from their positions under allegations of judicial misconduct, a move which was heavily criticised by the Bar Council and other bodies?

hakim

The Esteemed Judges of a Bygone Era

Is it because you needed more compliant judges whose rulings will not threaten your position of power in a number of cases in court?  Was this the first step in dismantling the judiciary’s role as a check and balance against the legislature and the executive?

What have you to say to repeated assertions by many, including prominent ex-Chief Justices, who maintain that this led to the erosion of judicial independence and perceived abuse of power?

Why did you not take any action against a Chief Justice who had taken a holiday abroad with some lawyers?

Responsible for education decline?

12. Education. You presided over the education system at an important part of its transformation first as Education Minister in the seventies, then as Prime Minister.

Would it be correct to surmise therefore that you were responsible for its decline during those years?  Why did you not spend more money and resources to ensure that our education system was excellent and continued to improve but instead spent billions on other showpiece projects?

13. Former Finance Minister Daim Zainuddin.
Why did you give this one man so much power, allowing him to decide on the award of virtually all government projects and tenders, and other projects?

14. Cronyism and Patronage.
Did you not encourage cronyism and patronage by dishing out major projects to a few within the inner circle, and especially connected to Daim?

People such as Halim Saad (the Renong group – toll roads, telecommunications etc), Tajuddin Ramli (mobile telephone TRI group and Malaysia Airlines), Amin Shah Omar (the failed PSC Industries – multi-billion ringgit naval dockyard contracts), Ting Pek Khiing (Ekran – the Bakun Dam) to mention just a few? Why did you not use open tenders and auctions?

15. Privatisation. Why did you allow privatisation to take place in such a manner that the most profitable parts of government operation were given away to cronies?

Toll roads had guaranteed toll increases and compensation in the event traffic projections were not met. Independent power producers had contracts that guaranteed them profits at the expense Tenaga Nasional.

No pals in Politics holds true

Tun Ghafar and  Dr M

16. Ghafar Baba. Although Ghafar had the highest number of votes among vice-presidents when Hussein Onn became Prime Minister in 1976, you, who got the lowest number of votes, were chosen as Hussein’s Deputy.

Yet when you called upon Ghafar to be your deputy in 1987, he obliged, helping you to win the UMNO presidency.

But you did little to back him up when he was challenged for the deputy presidency in 1993 by Anwar Ibrahim. Can we say that you stabbed him in the back?

17. Anwar Ibrahim. Did you move against him because he was a threat to anwar-n-mahathir1-psdyour position in 1998? Did you use the entire government machinery at your disposal to get him sentenced under trumped up charges of sodomy? Do you think he got a fair trial? Don’t you think the country suffered terribly because of this power struggle involving the two of you?

18. Bank Negara losses.
How could you tacitly encourage the central bank, Bank Negara Malaysia to engage in speculative trades, using as an excuse the need to protect foreign exchange reserves?

Bank Negara lost some RM32 billion in 1993, according to some accounts, as a result of taking positions in the foreign exchange market. In current prices, using an average inflation rate of 3.2% a year, that amounts to nearly RM60 billion!

19. KL International Airport.
Was it really necessary to spend RM10 billion on a showpiece airport at Sepang when the Subang airport could have been so easily extended?

The airport was operating way below capacity for years and it probably is today, 14 years later, judging by its emptiness at some times during the day. The RM130 million low-cost terminal carries more passengers that the main terminal!

20. Putrajaya. What is the justification for spending RM20 billion on a grandiose government city at a time when office space was available in Kuala Lumpur? Could not the money be put to better use such as improving educational resources?

21. Government-linked companies (GLCs).
Why did you not make efforts to improve the performance of GLCs?

Why did you allow funds such as the Employees Provident Fund and Kumpulan Wang Amanah Pencen to take up dubious investments to basically help cronies out of their problems?

These have led to billions of ringgit in losses to these funds. Thankfully, there has been improvements in these areas after you left.

22. Don’t you think you owe it to the nation and the people to Albert Einsteinoffer explanations over your 22-year tenure which is replete with examples of incompetence, corruption and cronyism, mismanagement and misallocation in the billions of ringgit and which has set the country back years?

Don’t you think, more than anyone else, you deserve to be branded as a traitor to this country for grossly abusing your position as Prime Minister?

38 thoughts on “Accountability Q’s for Dr. M

  1. He was smart enough to choose successors in office who will protect him. But for how long more,we must wonder. Put him before a Truth Commission to account for all actions he took during his premiership and then set him free to enjoy his retirement before, like the rest of us, he takes the flight to eternity. We need to set the record straight so that we can move forward. Do you agree? –Din Merican

  2. For many years I and unfortunately too few of us had been voting against, objecting to Mahathir running down Malaysia (as we saw it he was brilliant at ruining the country – no other PMs could have done so any better).
    Too many Malaysians had been held too spellbound and unable to see how he had devilishly acquired immense control (and wealth) and had maintained his power for so long (even now he still can express his will).
    More Malaysians must be made aware of his machinations so that no one will ever want to match or better Mahathir’s brilliance at it.

  3. Agreed. Because it must go down in history the errors in those times so that those who were too naive or too young to know will know, but that can happen when Pakatan wins.

  4. We have to bring on the old horse for the “Truth Commission”. This not for the urban folks but the kampung folks whom worship the ex-dictator as god.

    Kampung folks are still blinded by the truth, because god can do no wrong. Kampung folks are more happy supplied with lies, deceit and propaganda, and some bribe.

    Sabah and Sawarak folks seems to like it very much.

  5. I was very impressed with Mahathir during his first couple of years as Prime Minister. His propagation of Bersih, Cekap & Amanah, no nonsense type with civil servants and often went to the ground to address issues.

    But alas, his true colours was exposed when he was challenged by Tg Razaleigh in 1987. He did everything bad to ensure he remained in power including sacking judges in a very questionable manner in the aftermath of his victory(?) over Tg Razaleigh for UMNO presidency. Then the plundering of the nation’s wealth through cronyism and nepotism. The height was his sacking of Anwar Ibrahim in 1998 using dubious accusations.

    The wrongs Mahathir had committed are of the lowest level of morality and unacceptable from the Islamic perspective. I have always used this analogy in describing Mahathir…… A person may have done good deeds all his life but if one day he takes out a gun a kill someone, he is a murderer. And we know what’s the punishment should be, morally or religiously speaking.

  6. The fight against Madhater will cost Ajib.

    Madhater’s list will soon extend to itemize Accountability Qs for Ajib, and that will further fall BN.

    Again, who were the fools who allowed all these to happen? The People !
    In the land of the blind, one eye is King !

  7. Some aftermath of Mahathirism is seen in Sabah now; contentions aggravated by new oil discoveries, more illegal landings, territorial reclaim, restating autonomy et. al.

    Like S. Thailand, Sabah is oil rich. Grabbing Sabah will extend Philippines voice in the SCSea.

    Who are the illegal MyKads loyal to?
    In my opinion, the Sulu people and it can be done by insurgent threats to these illegals who avoid joining an uprising separatist movement.

    Separated by a large sea, it would be challenging to contain the situation.
    Lessons from Thailand in different dimension should be learned.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Thailand_insurgency

    Whoever governs after GE13, the Sabah issue will implodes, Que Sera Sera?

  8. Happenings in South Thailand has the potent incitement upon Sabah.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Thailand_insurgency
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/13/us-thailand-violence-south-idUSBRE91C07V20130213

    It is easy for filipino to shift thousands of people to Sabah than for our military to occupy it from across a very large sea.
    Military against insurgents is useless like against phantoms and human bombs.

    Yong Teck Lee and Jeff Kittingan are equally as dangerous as UMNO Sabah coalition.
    Sabah has upstream politics of 3 corner fights with 3 dif ideologies: status quo, change and autonomy. This 3 corner fight is further dangled by the new oil field discovery carrot.

    Illegals can swing loyalty to Philippines through peasantry ideologies e.g. peasant power during Mao’s time. During Mao’s time, some who rebutted him holed up in Tsinghua and Peking univ. but were gradually rounded into the mines. Some of those who survived have to drink their own urine.

    Sabahans are seriously in very trying times so will be Labuan.

  9. Madhater knows with the ISA gone, he cant be arrested just like he did with Ops Lalang
    He is too proud to feel guilty esp for what he did to judiciary system and all the rest cited.
    He is too proud to negotiate for sentences knowing people wont throw him into the jail at 87 yo.
    So what is going to be done other than rewrite history of his wrong doings listed here? There will be a chapter about him in school history books. He will be famous for sure for all the stuff he did.

    What is possible is “Saya sudah lupa” and his doctor will say he is not fit to stand trial because of mental instability so how?
    He may just freak out in court as added proof of mental instability which we know not true coz he is ever sharper and cunning than the people put together.

    But would be ultra interesting to see him defend his deeds. He definitely has all answers ready to take on Malaysians.

    He is in a class of its own. A colorful hearing will avail for LISTENING pleasure. Too late to regret. We just have to kick our own butts for voting status quo.

  10. Yep, i would like to put him in the witness stand and be grilled by a commission or lawyers, not kid gloves , then yes set him free. I want him to pay a RM 100 fine for every million he lost and spent some time in toil maybe wipe tables or pick rubbish for two days , if he is found positively guilty, then yes free to play with his grand kids. He is high vindictive and needs rehabilitation and has not been put right as a major Malaysia problem child!

  11. Who has the guts or conviction to prosecute let alone tell him to shut up? Of late he is being given too much news coverage that I think he feels “syiok sendiri”seeing himself in the limelight on daily basis.

  12. One More Question. Did we allow foreign IMG workers into this country so that wages could be depressed and the money used to finance all this mega projects and expand our electoral roll..

  13. “Now he (Mahathir) has admitted inflating voter rolls in Sabah during his tenure by giving citizenship to illegal migrants, justifying this by the independence agreement of 1957 which granted citizenship to migrant Chinese and Indians who came here during British rule.”

    This is vintage Mahathir in ‘loyar burok’ mode.

    U.K. subsribes to the priniciple of jus soli – meaning if you are born in the U.K. you are a U.K. citizen irrespective of the immigration status of the parents. Malaya was a British colony and they ruled by their British standards.

  14. The Brits were only accepting responsibility for their role by making it a condition that Chinese and Indians brought to Malaya to meet their needs at home were given citizenship status. What would have been the acceptable alternative? Send them back??

  15. Er.., why are you guys flogging a dead horse? Does it make you feel any better?
    My message to Octo is simple: ‘Mors tua, vitae mea’. (Your death, my life)
    By the time you guys finish the accounting, Mat Rempits (irregardless of those riding superbikes or kap-chais) would have pauperized you, besides gutting and skewering the fruit of your loins.

  16. Malaysians can be real naive. UMNOMelayu will never allow itself to loose the elections. It has all the tricks in place to ensure another 5 years and more of its dominance and thus allow Mama kutty to ride the waves in his own style. Dream on.

  17. “Don’t you think, more than anyone else, you deserve to be branded as a traitor to this country….? ”

    He’s a traitor alright. What do we do to traitors? That’s a good question. I can think of only one punishment.

  18. There is one important question that the author has overlooked. What happened to all the billions of ringgit made by Petronas and the amount government has siphoned off from the rakyat.
    And while we get excited over the news of the new discoveries in the Malay basin and even though the natural resource belongs to Malaysia,it will be interesting to reveal what the profit ratio is – how much goes to the Malaysian government ( Petronas Carigali) and how much goes to the foreign exploration company (Lundin Petroleum) and more importantly the tax concessions given to Lundin.
    I won’t be surprised that even before and after going through the final kick back siphoning system, only a pittance of the oil revenue will eventually go to the national treasury.
    Any experts out there to give a clearer insight?

  19. Pok Li,

    that time many people thought he was God sent and we believe his Cepat, Bersih Amanah slogan.

    actually he is still a God sent but to test our stupidity and sure enough we were darn stupid to keep voting for his party UMNO BARU.

    So? have we learned our lessons? If not then we ask to be poke another 5 years maybe then we may wake up?

  20. I agree 120% with the writer,even what was questioned ( 22 questions ) is just the tip of the iceberg,1 very important question,If transparency were your Motto,then Why isn’t the accounts of Petronas made public, at least in Parliament??? Where did your son got the money to buy a majority stake in San Miguel???So many question I can ask you,but then I’m sure you’ve forgotten your reasons then, ini pseudo Melayu mudah lupa,am I not right???….Oouch!!!

  21. Loones 74, it is a waste of time and money proscecuting Dr M, in fact his cotorie is vast and wide and the excess of 30 years of misrule is big, so i am with Ambiga in principle a truth and reconcliation body post mortem should tell the turth and hear it and accept it. But post it i am really with other Asian Cultures like Japs or Koreans where do need to shame , lest our sons and daughters learn the wrong thing, we learn the wrong thing you can escape huge wrongs just make sure it involves many people and lost of money and enough lives lost so it it becomes too much to proscecute us. Dr M is mordern Duryoduna from Mahabharat, you see immense parralell to these two characters , not less applies unfornuately these is no show and tell and shame in our society , we encourage them from Zakaria Mat Deros, to Ibrahim Ali to the super sophisticsted Dr M.

  22. I think because of the ignorance of Malaysians , mostly the Malay group who make-up a big portion of population in our country that had voted Mahatir for so long.And , this same group of Malays are now living in poverty with unsolid education and lost their competitiveness in this modern society of lifestyle. Mahatir must be sentenced and punished is commonly accepted by all Malaysians.Not only that , Mahatir must also be stripped off from our history book and his graveyard should not be allowed to be stoned in the land of Malaysia.If the new coming goverment of Pakatan is not in time to put Mahatir behind bar , we rakyat will surely work harder to make sure Mahatir’s son and families be charged accordingly to his sins.Watch up you old SATAN.

  23. This mamak and the najib/bn unmo gang are of the same calibre. They are good in committing cheating, lying, frauds, corruptions, racialism, croyism etc, We have to stop these evils from committing further harm to our nation at the next election!

  24. From day one when he became Prime Minister I knew the country
    is doomed to failure. And that is what happened exactly. All his cronies and UMNO supporters should be stoned to death after
    confiscating all their properties and assets.

  25. “All his cronies and UMNO supporters should be stoned to death after
    confiscating all their properties and assets.”
    A PR government shall do no such thing. The objective is to correct a wrong and prosecute but never to persecute the guilty.
    A truth and reconciliation commission will be more effective and the reason why it was carried out in S. Africa was because Mr. Mandela being a Christian believes that before we can ask of God’s love and forgiveness, we have to first love and forgive our fellow humans because in the eyes of GOD, no one is perfect.
    Having said that, forgiveness will only be given after repentance which includes admission of guilt and recovery of loot otherwise, it will be prosecution to the full extent of the law.
    The purpose of the commission will be to extract truth and repair and to heal the damage done to civil society but that is only the first step to be taken to rebuild Malaysia.
    The second step will be to install laws and structures to check and balance the executive powers of the government of the day, independence of the judiciary and civil services and secularisation of Malaysian politics (not society).
    The third step is to allow BN to redevelop into a strong and viable opposition force to act as an effective part of a two party system to keep the ruling party on its toes.
    That is the only way we can collectively, as a nation,dig ourselves out of the mess. The time for blame game was over yesterday. The silent witness who saw the perpetration of a crime and did nothing to end its perpetuation is as guilty as the criminal. It is time for serious nation rebuilding.

    Lest we forget, Hitler came to power because the German people gave him that power. The conscientious objectors who opposed him were powerless to stop him.
    But to the conscientious objectors who oppose the BN, you have the power to remove them from office. Exercise your powers by voting them out of Putrajaya!!! Enough is enough!

  26. Oops..
    The second step will be to install laws and structures to check and balance the executive powers of the government of the day, RESTORE independence of the judiciary and civil services and secularisation of Malaysian politics (not society).

  27. With a lot of pain I have to agree with Din Merican. However I do believe Mahathir did what he did because of altruism but his cronies did the negative and he is now carrying all the baggage.

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