Entire Cabinet should apolgise
to nation for disregarding Hanif’s serious and unprecedented allegation of
40% of senior police officers who could be arrested for corruption without
further investigations strictly on the basis of their lifestyles – and make
amends tomorrow by giving it top priority ________________
Media Statement (2)
by Lim Kit Siang
___________________
(Parliament,
Tuesday):
Nanyang Sian Pau’s report with
the headline “Hanif, Produce Proof – Musa’s comment on allegation that
40% of senior police officers corrupt” is the only newspaper to give
some prominence to the serious allegation by the country’s longest-serving
and most famous former Inspector General of Police, Tun Hanif Omar that
40% of senior police officers could be arrested for corruption without
further investigations strictly on the basis of their lifestyles.
It has taken the IGP Tan Sri Musa Hassan more than a week to respond to
Hanif’s serious allegation, and it was a most anaemic, perfunctory and
unimpressive response totally lacking in credibility – that the public
should lodge reports if they have information on corrupt cops and that he
would take action to investigate to determine the truth.
The failure of the Prime Minister, the Cabinet and IGP to respond
seriously to the unprecedented allegation of police corruption by a pillar
of the establishment like Tun Hanif in his Sunday Star column on August 12
that 40% of senior police officers could be arrested for corruption
without further investigations strictly on the basis of their lifestyles
is eloquent testimony that Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s
anti-corruption campaign has completely run out of steam and is a dismal
failure.
What Hanif exposed was not about individual cases of corruption but
systemic corruption of the police force and the public service.
If “40% of the senior officers could be arrested without further
investigations – strictly on the basis of their lifestyles”, we are
talking about a staggering figure of 1,400 out of the 3,502 senior police
officers from the rank of Assistant Superintendent to Inspector-General of
Police.
When in the past three years there had not been a single case of arrest of
a senior police officer out of the 1,400 who could be arrested for
corruption without further investigations, it speaks of a rotten system of
national integrity which will see Malaysia’s international corruption
perception index on a downward plunge.
In countries serious about eradication of corruption and not just playing
lip-service with a National Integrity Plan which does nothing to check
corruption, a revelation made by the country’s most famous former IGP
about such high-level rot and corruption would have merited being placed
on the top agenda of the Cabinet.
The Malaysian Cabinet meeting last Wednesday, however, had no time for the
serious allegation by Hanif as it was too preoccupied by a 24-year-old
rapper Wee Meng Chee and his Negarakuku rap and the demands of Umno
Ministers to demonise, criminalize and crush the undergraduate with the
whole might of the state!
The entire Cabinet should apologise to the country for disregarding
Hanif’s serious and unprecedented allegation last Wednesday, demonstrating
its utter lack of seriousness in fighting corruption and upholding
national integrity.
It should make amends at tomorrow’s Cabinet meeting by giving top priority
to Hanif’s serious and unprecedented allegation, and come out with a bold
decision and action plan to salvage the failed anti-corruption campaign
and restore public confidence in the integrity of the Abdullah
administration.
(21/8/2007)
* Lim
Kit Siang, Parliamentary
Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic
Planning Commission Chairman |