The Unfolding of the Najibian Tragedy


August 25, 2015

Malaysia: The Unfolding of the Najibian Tragedy

by Manjit Bhatia

http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/newmandala/2015/08/10/witch-hunts-and-woe-in-malaysia/

As embattled Prime Minister Najib Razak still faces questions over the 1MDB scandal, the rule of law and justice are collapsing. 

Corruption2

The 1MDB saga continues on par with the soap-opera Days of our Lives.

The twists and turns come at a camel’s gallop. After all the promise of righting a wrong, Malaysians – and others – are still waiting to see if Prime Minister Najib Razak will launch a defamation suit against The Wall Street Journal. It’s been eerily quiet. Is this the lull before the storm?

Meanwhile, Najib Razak has not said a word on the source of the US $700 million found parked in bank accounts in his name. Nor has he said what he has done with the loot. Buying votes to win elections 2013 most likely.

All he has claimed is that the money is not his, and that he never benefited from it. There’s no element of greed here, nor of deception, on his part. So he would have Malaysians believe. Other than that his lips are Superglue sealed.

At the same time, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) poked its head out the trapdoor to claim its boss, Najib Razak, is clean, that the $700 million found in bank accounts he directly controlled – being in his name – came from the Middle East.

They were financial donations to the political party Najib leads, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), in a virtual one-party state. But why would anybody believe the MACC when it has been accused of murdering in custody DAP political activist Teoh Beng Hock and covering it up since?

And still more shenanigans and malarkey have happened over the last week. These are some of the best of Malaysia’s political trysts.

The MACC is probing the 1MDB fiasco. While the MACC has been raiding the offices and homes of those connected one way or another to the failed and bankrupt sovereign wealth-making investment fund, and arresting people for the purposes of questioning them, the Police under Inspector-General Khalid Abu Bakar was launching raids on the MACC.

In six short years Malaysia has morphed into one big looney farm. But then it has had a long gestation period – 39 years, to be sure.

Just the other day I saw an advertisement by Malaysia’s peak tourism body, funded by the Najib regime, pasted on the back of a bus in Hong Kong. It read: “Malaysia – Endless Celebrations”. I couldn’t decide whether to laugh or cry. Not so long ago, Najib himself had boasted Malaysia as the land of “endless possibilities”. I laughed hard then too.

On the weekend, I read a piece in The New Yorker by Jeffrey Frank titled ‘Nixon’s Nightmare – and Ours – Forty Years Ago’. We all know the story of Richard Milhous Nixon and his Watergate infamy, and how two Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, brought him down to his knees, milled a confession out of him on national television, and forced Nixon to quit the presidency before he faced certain impeachment.

Frank used two key expressions when discussing Nixon: the first, “fevered detestation”, which he claims, rightly, to have abated since today’s generation of Americans will have little to no clue what or indeed who Nixon was. And those who do are a dying breed.

Former US President Bill Clinton, at Nixon’s funeral, hoped that Americans would judge Nixon only on “his entire life and career” and nothing less. Perhaps Clinton was really speaking for himself, hoping people will never recall Lewinsky and his infamy. Najib has his own ‘gates’ too – too many to count. No doubt he’d be making similar wishes as well.

The second expression Frank used relating to Nixon was that the man “remains an emblem of political villainy”. Frank added:

He was, after all, a President willing to countenance law-breaking and then cover it up; we know this because he had the bad luck to leave an uncensored oral history: the secret White House tape recordings made between February, 1971, and July, 1973. They captured some of Nixon’s worst moments.

Which reminded me at once of Malaysia’s ongoing woes. These woes have become unquestionably severely embarrassing and also terribly dangerous for Malaysia and Malaysians.

Every day the risks of political, economic and social rupture is escalating. Malaysians have been entrapped in Najib’s and UMNO’s undermined institutions, none of which are worthy of the name or definition. Continuing from Mahathir Mohamad’s legacy, the mounting risks are, without doubt, high.

So desperate and so thoroughly incompetent is Najib that he cannot bring himself to admitting his wrongs. Instead, he has chosen to box himself into a corner and covering himself in Stalinist or Maoist stripes. He has suspended Malaysia’s premier local media The Edge for daring to uncover the truth of corruption that maligns Najib, UMNO and ruling coalition Barisan Nasional.

Twitching in his grand seat, Najib parceled out his troopers on a witch hunt the likes of which would have made Joseph McCarthy enormously proud. So rather than tell the truth, Najib has chosen to shoot the messenger – one of the final acts of a desperado.

Najib-It takes a worried man

Najib had has grown even more desperate.He sacked his Attorney-General, Gani Patail, who was said to be in the midst of poring over investigation papers on Najib Razak. He sacked Shafie Apdal, his Rural and Agriculture Minister, who’ is a key member of the king-making UMNO Supreme Council, despite Apdal’s multitude of chronic gaffes. And he sacked Muhyiddin Yassin, his deputy PM, who claimed Najib had confessed to the US $700 million in his bank accounts.

Sacking Muhyiddin inevitably brought back searing memories of Mahathir sacking Anwar Ibrahim at the height of the late 1990s Asian economic crisis, and the former deputy PM’s subsequent imprisonment.

Najib demanded that UMNO leaders – who had also benefited from distribution of the US $700 million in his accounts – ought to end their hypocrisy. So it comes back to the money, its murky trail, the question of exactly who his Middle-Eastern donors were — and why them, specifically – and why, indeed, the money trail continues to be linked more directly to the bankrupt, debt-ridden 1MDB.

A crucible the size of a giant ocean-going ship’s anchor now hangs around Najib’s neck, and its leaden mass is weighing him down by the minute. Either he drowns in his own villainy or UMNO leaders move against him sooner rather than later.

Najib is now surrounding himself with his loyal sycophants who can be easily bought with promises of wealth and power. This has been Malaysia’s moral destiny – corruption, a cancer that was unleashed not in 1969 but earlier and within the ranks of UMNO and the Malay (Bumiputera) Economic Congress. The longevity of Malaysia’s political power rests almost entirely on what Yoshihara Kunio called “ersatz capitalism”.

The moves against the MACC and other investigatory bodies, such as the Public Accounts Committee of the Malaysian Parliament, which Najib has practically dismantled by promoting its committee head to a cabinet position, are a sign not dissimilar to Richard Nixon’s in the late 1960s. William Scranton, a friend of Jeffrey Frank, described the state of Nixon’s mind then as “darn paranoia.” Worse, Najib – like Nixon – appears to be encouraging lawlessness in Malaysia, or at least extra-judicial powers in the executive.

Few if any Malaysians will have read much less heard of one of Arthur Miller’s great body of literary work, The Crucible. It is a play, first published in 1953, and based in Salem, a village in Massachusetts, in 1692. A group of girls fell ill, becoming victims of hallucinations and seizures. Accusations of witchcraft became rife. Villagers are accused of consorting with devils and other evil spirits, and the state government and its judiciary are accused of being heavily influenced by religious dogma. Dozens of people are jailed on mere suspicion.

Literary critics have argued that Miller was criticising McCarthyism through the play. The co-incidence is more than uncanny. Those in Salem who refused to incriminate friends, relatives and colleagues would lose their careers or be blacklisted from potential jobs. Malaysia’s opposition Democratic Action Party’s outspoken and adept finance spokesperson, Tony Pua, has been banned from traveling abroad, as is S. Ambiga, the former head of electoral reform movement Bersih.

Najib is becoming hysterical. He’s afraid. He sees his proverbial political neck stretching in the proverbial political noose. Whatever his game going forward, his time is quickly coming to an ignominious end. His reputation he has ruined by his own hand.

Like his erstwhile enemy and one-time mentor Mahathir Mohamad, Najib Razak is desperately trying to empower himself by concentrating more power in his hands with the help of the worst of Malaysia’s institutions – the corrupt Malay-dominated bureaucracy, the corrupt Malay-dominated police, the incompetent Malay-dominated armed forces chiefs, and the corrupt Malay-dominated judiciary.

Najib Razak is devoid of all political legitimacy and personal integrity. He can’t save himself any more than he can be saved by others.

In Act III in The Crucible, one of Miller’s main characters, Danforth, attempting to understand the dichotomy between God and the devil, whether dissent is associated with satanic forces, and the underlying logic of the witch trials, resolves thus: “A person is either with this court or he must be counted against it.”And so it is too in Malaysia.

Manjit Bhatia is Head of Research at AsiaRisk, an economic and political risk consultancy firm.

23 thoughts on “The Unfolding of the Najibian Tragedy

  1. The apple does not fall far from the tree. From whatever information that is available publicly, it seems that father and son share the same aspiration to get and stay in power regardless of the ruins that have befallen the country and the lives that have been lost and may be lost in future.

  2. In the business world when the Papaya becomes rotten the businessman will usually slice off the bad parts and sell what is left in the form of sliced Papaya. And in most cases he can recover cost plus profit if he does it in a timely manner.

  3. But you have to admit that this fellow has staying power. When both the financial scandals unfolded a lesser person would have folded, awarded himself the Tunship, handed the reigns to his DPM and Deputy UMNO president and departed the scene. The fact that he has not done so is simply indicative of his deep personal involvement . It amounts to a sink or swim situation and that is why I have serious concerns about the Bersih rally. Najib and his cohorts are capable of unspeakable actions to preserve his position.

  4. Methinks embattled in the first line is not the right word for this character.
    It implies a good and honorable man being besieged by evil.
    I would have preferred cornered. As in rat.

  5. The economy is going into crisis but the 1PM-cum-1Finance Minister and his merry men (and women) continue to spin and talk rubbish (“economic fundamentals are sound”, the ever weakening ringgit is actually a good thing etc)
    Is this is not incompetence, negligence and outright dishonesty?

    Urgent action is needed e.g. the immediate setting up of a non-partisan National Economic Action Council as a first step.

    You can fool (some of) the people (some of the time). But you cannot fool the financial markets!

  6. Quote:- “….the corrupt Malay-dominated bureaucracy, the corrupt Malay-dominated police, the incompetent Malay-dominated armed forces chiefs, and the corrupt Malay-dominated judiciary”

    Another ignorant “foreigner” who knows nothing about our Malaysian history and culture?

  7. Of the US700million, the only statement that came out from the Macc is that it does not come from 1MDB but from a middle east donor. I have not heard them clearing or ‘cleaning’ Najib or say the money was a ‘donation’. Donor is one who gives or donate something. For want of a better word they use the polite word ‘donor’ and not ‘giver’ which I think means the same thing in Najib’s case.

    Why..only yesterday the Macc came out with a statement that they are still investigating the RM2.6billion and ask parties which are clearly Umno Ministers, not to make statements that could confuse people.

    Why are they saying they are still investigating???? And why investigate?? You investigate because you believe or reasonably suspect that a crime ie in Najib’s case, a corrupt offence may have being committed pertaining to the RM2.6billion received.

  8. Canadian intellectual Naomi Klein says this about Argentina, Argentines and its economic crisis of 1998-2002:

    “People responding to an economic crisis by coming together and demanding deeper democracy”

    Is the same occurring in Malaysia today, with the “Clean” movement?

  9. “……the worst of Malaysia’s institutions – the corrupt Malay-dominated bureaucracy, the corrupt Malay-dominated police, the incompetent Malay-dominated armed forces chiefs, and the corrupt Malay-dominated judiciary.”

    That sums it all. The very people who eat nothing but halal food and publicly exhibit their piety.

  10. Najibian Tragedy? That’s elevating this despicable serial criminal to the level of a Shakespearean tragic hero.

    No. This scumbag is merely the finished product of what his scheming father laid the foundations for – arrogant, incompetent, immoral, self-serving, conniving, crooked and rich… without ever having to put in an honest day’s work.

    He is a true representative of the NEP Malay.

  11. 1. Interesting discussion by an interesting collection of intellectuals:

    Joseph Stigliz, Naomi Klein, Hernando de Soto, David Harvey (Chair)

    2. I’m thinking – how are we going to clean up the 1MDB mess in Malaysia? Who are going to bear the costs?

  12. ”Najib Razak is devoid of all political legitimacy and personal integrity. He can’t save himself any more than he can be saved by others.” ….
    ……And so would be the pseudo Umno ( Baru) born out of those who institutionalized Money politic, Abuse of power, Corruption, Cronyism and Puppetry= MACCP, the rogue culture of Mahathirism, not only had expanded into Najibism but replicating boundary-lessly that will ”bury” them all, by ”Bersih is 4 ACGT ”, eventually.

    Yes, Bersih is 4 Accountability Competency, Governance and Transparently=ACGT,
    also the 4 acronym bases for gene sequencing, from which the foundation of Bersih’s fight for free, fair and clean elections was built, meaningfully, should also bear the true identifications of the people, their aspirations and the country.

    For more effective empowerment to achieve the goal of the people and the country collectively, I suggest to the Chairman and Committees, this new slogan,

    ‘’BERSIH 4 ACGT’’,
    be included and adopted along-side with

    ‘’BERSIH 4 MALAYSIA’’,
    for the coming Bersih 4 rally to be held on 29, 30th August.

    Malaysia be blessed- for the present and the future generation in posterity.

  13. Tris,
    Hold on! My dear lady! While Najib’s daddy is one cunning fella. One got to differentiate between his dad and Najib. As for Conrad………I am not to sure. Heard of one austro-hungarian field marshall who was called Conrad who nearly devastated the entire austro hungarian army. While Conrad von hötzendorf is not related to that Conrad but character wise……..leaved much to be desired……
    Perhaps, we should ask Conrad to ask to Gobind Deo himself what Conrad thinks about DAP

    See the similarities……

  14. “..we should ask Conrad to ask to Gobind Deo himself what Conrad thinks about DAP”

    Knowing Gobind, he would probably despise spineless wankers like looes74.

  15. looes74: I’ve not undergone a sex change op…as far as I know.

    As for the older Razak, I know more about what he did (and why) than most Malaysians do. Don’t forget who brought Mahathir in from the cold, why Mahathir in turn (by his own admission) promoted this criminal.

  16. TrisTan,
    My apologies for I do not know. Yes, Razak did a brutus on Tunku but so did Tunku played out on Donald Stephen and literally “kill” kadazan political strength and initiate sabah islamisation. Ask Tok Cik why sabahans till today have resentment towards KL authority
    Remembering Donald Stephen

    Oh yes, Ku Li…….You studied in Queen Belfast University. I have been there before the Good Friday Agreement…….

    The minority catholic in Northern ireland ain’t that docile

  17. In response to “Wayne’s” comment:

    I suppoose that is why your moniker is “Wayne”. It might as well have been Dwayne. Understand that Malaysia’s — or Malay history of Malaysia — is not the greatest thing since sliced bread. It is for the most part whitewashed, with the whitewashing continuing. It is also hopelessly steeped in worsening forms of racism, bigotry, unhindred corruption and kleptomania. What upsets you, it seems to me, is that this “foreigner” — an Australian — has plugged into Malaysian politics and understands it better than most Malaysians do. Just because you happen to live in Malaysia does not make you an expert of your own country. The tag “foreigner” that you used on Manjit Bhatia demonstrates only your hate and ignorance, your joingoism, and, may I add, all of which also explains why you so cowardly attack the writer rather than the substance in his article. In fact it says plenty. Doesn’t it?

  18. Commander(Rtd) S.Thayaparan August 25, 2015 at 8:17 am
    “..long gestation period.. 39 years” starting from his father?

    No, Commander (Rtd) S Thayaparan, the descent down the slippery began in Oct. 27, 1987 – Operation Lalang. And it has been lovely meeting up with you in Penang years earlier. I am glad that you have continued to write.

    One significant victim in all this is that the reputation of the Malay bureaucrat, long celebrated to be one of the best in the world. That reputation has gone to the dogs, if I may say so with a lot of reverence!

    On another aspect, after all this is over, it is my hope that Malaysians will come to realise that in accordance with the “gold, silver and bronze” theories of Plato distinguishing people and their role (see http://hgapplepie.blogspot.my/2011/06/platos-conception-of-appropriately.html), politics and business DO NOT mix.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.