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Before adjournment next Tuesday, Parliament should pass an all-party motion to  declare an  all-out war against corruption and adopt the national objective for Malaysia to  be ranked among the world’s top ten least corrupt nations within a decade with an annual parliamentary anti-corruption report and debate 


Media Statement
by Lim Kit Siang

(Petaling JayaFriday): The first week of Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi as the new Prime Minister is a mixed record – long on promise but short on substance though Malaysians are still full of goodwill and best wishes that he will be able to bring about improvements and changes in the country to start  the long, painful and arduous process to become a normal country by repairing the damages of the past two decades to good governance;  the principles of accountability, transparency and integrity; a just rule of law and a truly independent judiciary;  democracy and  human rights. 

The most memorable event of Abdullah’s first week as Prime Minister was undoubtedly his maiden official speech which he gave in Parliament on Monday, which raised  hopes and even euphoria because of his pledge  to carry out his duties with integrity, trustworthiness, efficiency and fairness and his sensitivity and empathy with issues close to the hearts of thinking and patriotic Malaysians - democracy; separation of powers between the legislature, executive and judiciary; first-world mentality to go hand-in-hand with first-world infrastructure; an administration which is  “clean, incorruptible, modest and beyond suspicion” and his welcome of “criticism and contrary views to ensure that the culture of democracy thrives”. 

DAP welcomes Abdullah’s announcement after the Cabinet meeting on Wednesday to set up the Malaysian  Institute for Public Ethics and a National Integrity Plan. 

In early August, DAP had submitted a memorandum to the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA)  proposing a 10-year Anti-Corruption Action Plan to compete with Finland and be ranked among the world’s 10  least corrupt countries in the annual  Transparency International (TI) Corruption Perception Index (CPI)  within a decade.    Last month, I had suggested that the Mid-Term Review of the Eighth Malaysia Plan should formally incorporate as a national objective an  all-out war against corruption so that Malaysia can be ranked among the world’s top ten  least corrupt nations within a decade.  

Before its adjourns  next Tuesday, Parliament should pass an all-party motion to  declare an  all-out war against corruption and adopt the national objective for Malaysia to  be ranked among the world’s top ten least corrupt nations within a decade with an annual parliamentary anti-corruption report and debate   

The establishment of an Institute for Public Ethics is a step in the right direction, but it cannot on its own tackle root causes of corruption, abuses of power and the reasons for Malaysia’s dismal rankings in the annual Transparency International Corruption Perception Index, dropping to the worst  37th placing in the past nine years, as illustrated from Malaysia’s record  in the TI CPI  from 1995 – 2003:

 

 

1995  

1996  

1997  

1998  

1999  

2000  

2001  

2002  

2003

CPI country  rank

23

26

32

29

32

36

36

33

37

Countries polled

41

54

52

85

99

90

91

102

133

CPI score

5.28

5.32

5.01

5.3

5.1

4.8

5.0

4.9

5.2

 

CPI Score relates to perceptions of the degree of corruption as seen by business people, academics and risk analysts, and ranges between 10 (highly clean) and 0 (highly corrupt).

From Malaysia’s CPI score for the past  nine years,  Malaysia had been struggling to keep above the pass score of 5, and so long as Malaysia is bogged down at this level, there is no chance whatsoever for Malaysia to realistically aspire to be ranked among the world’s top ten least corrupt nations which are occupied by the following countries:

Rank

Country 

CPI 2003 score

1

Finland

9.7

2

Iceland 

9.6

3

 Denmark

9.5

 

New Zealand

9.5

5

Singapore

9.4

6

Sweden

9.3

7

Netherlands 

8.9

8

Australia

8.8

 

Norway

8.8

 

Switzerland 

8.8

 

Malaysia must demonstrate that it has the political will and stamina to break out of the  rut in the CPI score in the struggle to  keep above the pass score of 5 and  take the quantum leap to score above 9 if the nation is to be reckoned in the world’s top ten least corrupt nations – starting with Parliament passing an all-party resolution on  a National Integrity Pledge and Objective to be ranked among the world’s ten least corrupt nations within a decade.

In keeping with this parliamentary commitment, the Anti-Corruption Agency should be required to submit annual reports to Parliament which should form the basis of the annual parliamentary anti-corruption debate. Furthermore, an all-party parliamentary Standing Committee headed by an Opposition Member of Parliament should be established to monitor and review the war against corruption, with the power to convene public hearings as part of the all-out war against corruption.

(7/11/2003)


* Lim Kit Siang, DAP National Chairman