As soon as Prime Minister Najib Tun
Razak announces the date for 13th general election, it will probably sound his
political death knell.
For the benefit of the rakyat, and
in front of the television cameras and news photographers, Najib and his
Cabinet present a united front; but behind the scenes, another story emerges.
Damaging leaks about the
shortcomings of his leadership continue to undermine Najib. His grip on the
party is tenuous. His strongest ally, the self-styled First Lady Rosmah Mansor,
will do her utmost to ensure he succeeds.
Last month, the independent
organisation, the Merdeka Centre for Opinion Research, found that Najib had
high popularity ratings of 63% among voters in Peninsular Malaysia.
For the sake of “completeness”, why
not a survey among voters in Sabah and also, Sarawak? It would have been
interesting to gauge Najib’s popularity in Sabah, before and during the
proceedings of the Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) for Sabah.
If the same survey had been
conducted among ministers in Najib’s own Cabinet, the results would be a good
gauge of their confidence in his leadership.
The war that is being waged against
Najib is on two fronts – he has to defend himself against the opposition and
fight off guerrilla raids from invisible enemies, within Umno.
Najib, the son of Malaysia’s second
prime minister, has had a poor grounding in life. Born with a silver spoon in
his mouth, he is only exposed to the suffering of the rakyat, in the months
before election. To alleviate their pain, Najib distributes bags of rice and
food, and tars their roads, rather than sorting out the issues which have
plagued the people, over the past five years.
The prime minister’s privileged
schooling is denied to the ordinary Malaysian. Najib may have been a product of
a mission school, but mission schools are dying a slow death, deprived of money
and support from the Education Ministry.
In his secondary schooling at
Malvern College, a Church of England school, Najib would have attended daily
chapel services, compulsory Sunday service, Remembrance Sunday, and Carol
services in the Christmas term.
Najib has remained a Muslim despite
attending these services, but he would have gained a thorough understanding of
Christianity. Despite that, he has said nothing to persuade the extremists in
Malaysia to practise tolerance and moderation.
He missed the chance
What can one expect from a career
politician? When he defended his father’s seat, which had become vacant on his
death, he won, presumably because of the sympathy votes.
How can a man who has not
experienced the perils faced by the unskilled worker, the struggling graduate,
working man and father know what it is like to live in Malaysia, where house
prices are beyond most people’s reach, where car prices are jacked up, where
justice is sold to the highest bidder and where most services require a
sweetener? Najib’s education has not been put to good use to help his fellow
Malaysian.
This privileged son of a former
premier has been in politics for almost 37 years. Those years have been marred
by scandal and sexual intrigue. They have been stained by corruption and
murder. The highlights are excesses and abuse of power. Najib started his
premiership by betraying the Perak people. He claimed that he would tackle
corruption but became deeply embroiled in it, himself.
When he became prime minister, Najib
portrayed himself as a moderate, and his calls for moderation won praise from
the delegates at the UN’s 65th General Assembly. The hollowness of his claims
could damn him at the polls because he failed to take any action against
Ibrahim Ali, the leader of a right-wing extremist Malay NGO, when he announced
that he would torch Malay language Bibles.
Some quarters say that Najib’s
weakness stems from his lack of control over his wife’s behaviour and spending
habits. This is a disservice to women. What has a man’s poor leadership
qualities got to do with his ability to “control” his wife? Do some Malaysian
men marry to exert control?
When Najib announced his
“1-Malaysia” slogan, Muhyiddin Yassin, his deputy, was among the first to stick
a knife into him, thus precipitating further murmurings of dissatisfaction
within Umno.
Perhaps, his only solace was to go
abroad, which he did with increasing regularity. This did not endear him to the
rakyat, as problems were mounting at home, and remained unresolved.
Embattled by dissatisfied and
equally power-hungry Umno politicians, Najib found that he also had to dodge
the master tactician, the former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad. With a
legacy to protect and a dynasty to propagate, Mahathir has already hinted that
Najib should step down and hand over power to Muhyiddin.
The knives are already being
sharpened in Putrajaya and Umno MPs are probably stoked up and on red alert,
awaiting their orders, not from Najib, but from Mahathir. No other politician
has perfected the art of treachery and vindictiveness, like the weasel
Mahathir.
When Najib came to power, the
country was sliding in many aspects: corruption, national debt, illegal
immigration, unemployment among graduates, violence, crime, racist attacks, religious
intolerance.
The prime minister had the perfect
opportunity to act, but he neglected to do so. Consumed by greed and power,
like many politicians in Malaysia, he looked the other way.
It was said that Mahathir would
allow his ministers and cronies to be corrupt, so that he would have a “hold”
over them and demand favours from them, in the future.
Najib is aware that the rakyat is
consumed with hate for Mahathir. He knows that this country has lost faith in
its once trusted institutions, and crucially, in itself.
Najib could have used the rakyat’s
venom to regain the nation’s trust in its politicians, but he misused this
chance.
Najib had the power to change things
around and save Malaysia, but he fell prey to avarice and temptation. The
“1Malaysia” that he governs is far less united than the Malaya that he was born
into.
That is why, come GE13, it is the
rakyat who will have to drag itself out of its apathy and make that change
happen – for ourselves, our children and for the country.
Mariam Mokhtar is a FMT columnist.
Thanks:Free Malaysia Today
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