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Media Statement by Lim Kit Siang in Petaling Jaya on Tuesday, 8th
April 2008:
Belated Abdullah reforms – will PM go full-steam to make up for lost
four years or will he be just be “reform sloganeering” in his open war
with Mahathir?
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said in Kota Kinabalu
yesterday that the reforms promised by Barisan Nasional in its election
manifesto will be aggressively pursued.
He said it should be noted that the reforms in the judiciary and police
began when he was appointed prime minister and there had been no let up
since.
Abdullah said he would not run away from his responsibility of
continuing with the reforms despite BN not securing a two-thirds
majority in the recent general election and that the effort to fight
corruption would also be continued.
He said: “I have implemented many things since I became prime minister
but I recognize that people are still not happy.”
Malaysians react with mixed feelings to Abdullah’s promise that there
will be no let-up on reforms.
The question Malaysians are asking is whether the Prime Minister will go
full steam in reforms to make up for the lost four years or he will he
be just “reform sloganeering” in his open war with his nemesis, Tun Dr.
Mahathir.
From Abdullah’s statement, the Prime Minister has not fully emerged from
the cocoon of denial – casting doubts that he has at last found the
political will to carry out the promised reforms.
Abdullah’s claim that he had instituted reforms in the judiciary, the
police and to fight corruption does not bear scrutiny.
Two days ago, in opening fire on Mahathir, Abdullah blamed his
predecessor for “many things that were not right”, citing the 1987
Operasi Lalang crackdown, the erosion of confidence in the judiciary and
lack of freedom in the media as examples.
Abdullah is right on all three counts – Operasi Lalang, the judiciary
crisis and clampdown on media freedom.
But it is precisely because Abdullah has nothing to show on all these
and other fronts as Prime Minister for more than four years that it
precipitated the March 8 political tsunami which caused the end of the
two-thirds parliamentary majority of the Barisan Nasional and its loss
of five state governments.
Abdullah is right that the problems on the judiciary did not start
during his era. Abdullah had lamented two days ago:
“Many countries do not have confidence in our judiciary. And when there
are differences between our countries, they do not want to refer the
matter to a Malaysian court.
“They would rather take it to a court in Singapore, Hong Kong or
Australia so I thought I had to do something about it to restore
confidence because the people are hoping for reforms in the judiciary.”
But what did Abdullah do in the past four years to initiate judicial
reforms to restore national and international confidence in the
judiciary? He did nothing. In fact, public confidence in the
independence, integrity and quality of the judiciary suffered new blows
during the first term of the Abdullah premiership with judicial scandals
like the fast-track appointment of a long-standing UMNO activist, Tan
Sri Zaki Tun Azmi to the bench - the triple jump to become Federal Court
judge in September without ever being High Court or Court of Appeal
judge and the quadruple jump three months later up the judicial
hierarchy to become the Court of Appeal President. Will Zaki make
quintuple jump to be appointed Chief Justice of Malaysia in October when
Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad steps down from the topmost judicial post?
Seven years ago in January 2001, Tan Sri Mohamed Dzaiddin started his
tenure as Chief Justice of Malaysia publicly admitting the "unpalatable
fact” that “public confidence in the judiciary has eroded in the last
few years" and that this negative perception had held back the country’s
development as multinational corporations and foreign investors were
reluctant to invest because they perceived there was no level playing
field, causing them to prefer arbitration outside Malaysia in the event
of dispute.
Seven years later, after being a Prime Minister for more than four
years, Abdullah is making exactly the same complaint about the woes of
the judiciary as that made by Tun Dzaiddin in 2001! Is Abdullah prepared
to accept the responsibility not only for the failure to institute
judicial reforms but also for the further slides in public confidence in
the independence, integrity and quality of the judiciary in the past
four years?
As for police reforms, is Abdullah now prepared to acknowledge the
message of the March 8 “political tsunami” that Malaysians want an
Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) to
create an efficient, incorruptible, professional world-class police
service to reduce crime and restore to Malaysians their fundamental
rights to be free from crime and the fear of crime?
On the fronts of anti-corruption and media freedom, what reforms could
Abdullah boast about in the past four years?
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Lim
Kit Siang, MP for Ipoh Timor & DAP Central Policy and Strategic
Planning Commission Chairman
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