|
I
have three politicians, I consider my heroes. The first is the late Tan
Sri Dr Tan Chee Khoon, father of the now retiring MP for Segambut. The
father, like the son, always spoke the truth, always spoke in love and
always spoke with grace and hope. For the father’s long and unflinching
service to the people, even the then government of Malaysia recognised
his services and awarded him a PSM which carries the title of ‘Tan
Sri’. The second is the late Datuk Dr Syed Hussain Alatas, the
former UM vice-chancellor who passed away recently. In a discussion
before our 4th Integrity Congress, he advised me that the fight against
corruption must be a peoples’ fight; it does not belong to the
government. He explained how he was ‘removed’ as VC some years ago
because he stood up for some perennial principles related to
credibility and integrity. The third person is a faithful but
not-so-‘successful’ grass-roots politician - my father, a founder
member of the Kedah MIC and community worker in Sungai Petani, our home
town where he was popularly known as ‘Pak John’. He was a sincere
politician but not a cunning enough one to make it big in politics; and
therefore his advice to me was always to stay out of politics. I
followed his advice for 27 years and then one day asked him at the age
of 49, ‘Dad should I consider getting involved into politics?’ He
looked towards my younger brother, and said, ‘I suppose now he can!’
But now that I have been involved in my own style of ‘non-partisan
politics’ my father is still not sure, because I have started to speak
and write against all those whom I believe lack integrity; the same
principle I expect from of all my good friends who choose to criticise
my views as well. I really believe that one’s credibility and integrity
are a very good basis for all types of politics and an equal principle
for integrity in our lives; for our every human action, and non-action. Therefore,
on July 6, 2000, I decided to opt out of public service. I wrote to the
then chief secretary and the then public services head, and gave my
many reasons for an optional retirement. One of the primary reasons, I
argued, was that the Public Services Department was no more interested
in serving the public interest. She had lost her neutrality and had
become blindly biased towards the Umno agenda, and often consequently,
sacrificed national interest in the name of public interest. I
was a PTD Officer trained in the old school and traditions of the
British public service mindset that taught that all public servants
were servants of the King and loyal only to the party in power so long
as they served the national interest. The public services until today
does sign-off, Saya yang menurut perintah which means ‘we
serve at the pleasure of the King of Malaysia and serve only the public
interest, never the partisan interests of any singular party. Not Umno
or Barisan Nasional. ‘Kelantanese mafia’ Nonetheless,
after more than 50 years in power, the BN has evolved a culture of
‘executive political correctness’ which ensures that only those who
blindly (and often non-rationally) support the Umno agenda will get
promoted. Sometimes today, when you talk to the highest level of
leaders in the public service, you are not sure whether you are talking
to a neutral public servant or to a high-ranking Umno member. No wonder
then that the few types of non-Malays including Christian Bumiputras
are not getting promoted based on merit. For instance, I know
for a fact that the only non-Malay Christian bumiputera
secretary-general was promoted, not because of the JPA, but because the
minister insisted upon his promotion and wrote to the PM about it. Many
other similar stories of the like abound, inclusive of cases of
non-Tamil Christian secretary-general candidates that have been
by-passed because the MIC president who objected that they were
Malayalees! Race was not really a factor in public service promotions;
only the issue of how one chooses to be subservient to the given
political climate at any one time. I remember for instance, in
the early 1970s, when it was a well-known fact that the ‘Kelantanese
mafia’ controlled the Public Services Department (PSD) and therefore
sought to push up their own candidates throughout the service. Ask any
senior retired public servant and they will admit the truth of this
matter. There is even the story of how senior public servants who did
not follow the pencil-inscribed directives of the then Finance Minister
were transferred within 24 hours without any due process. Saya yang menurut perintah
therefore became the blind force of obedience to the minister of the
day without due consideration for public interest in each and every
case. Therefore, the public service slowly but surely became corrupted
by being forced into a framework of political executive correctness. Of
course, consequently, the compliant ones were rewarded with titles and
board appointments simply for political obedience. Many
government-linked companies are today filled with retired public
service board members who scratch the back of the government in return
for their blind and loyal obedience. In fact, while at Mimos
Berhad, I remember that one human resources consultant who discovered
that more than 80% of the employees were ‘psychologically compliant
personalities’. An R&D organisation needs staff who challenge the
paradigm; that is what the scientist, Thomas Kuhn, called the
‘structure of scientific revolutions’. Paradigms needed to be shifted
for scientific discovery, not maintained. How could anyone then
undertake R&D within an organisation filled with compliant
personalities? Is it any wonder then that after 23 years in existence,
the biggest government R&D organisation - allocated over one
billion ringgit in development funds - has little to show for their
efforts apart for the efforts of Jaring and the work of the NITC? Their
wafer fabrication plant, in fact, remains a white elephant until today.
The second finance minister knows of this case personally. MAS vs AirAsia Therefore, what then are the key or core issues as the nation approaches the 12th
general election and all of us seek to exercise our right as citizens?
To me there is only one serious and core issue. After 50 years of
independence, are we as a nation moving in the right direction? Do we
consider that our feelings of national unity are better today than four
years ago, before Pak Lah began his governance? Are we cleaner today in
terms of corruption and abuse of authority and power; in terms of the
integrity agenda that Pak Lah promised? Is protection and preservation
of the environment better today? Are our water resources being better
handled today? Are our toll roads better managed today? Are our
airlines better managed today? Are FDI investments better today and
more importantly are they sustainable to ensure our continued growth
into the future? Are we more competitive as a nation today? Are
the so-called economic corridors really going to improve our
competitiveness or are they merely high class free-trade zones focused
on infrastructure development for government-linked companies to get
more public contracts? Are our government-linked companies better
managed today than in the past? Is our nation run based on the federal
constitution or based on the political zealotry of over-enthusiastic
government agents? These are questions that need answers. Very
sadly, my answer to all these questions except one is a definite ‘no’.
The only area where I will give some credit for better management in
the last four years ago is for the government- linked companies but
these too, one can really only know the real situation if they become
more transparent and open their books! There is an article floating on
the Net about the behind-the- scene stories involving MAS versus
AirAsia and many of the under the counter dealings and non-disclosures.
The truth is that the ordinary citizen is left without information on
all these GLCs because ‘somehow’, the Cabinet has decided that GLC are
off-budget agencies, much like Petronas’ financial accounts, even
though they involve the people’s funds. But why is this so? Are
they not also based on public funds, assets and allocations made
through Parliament? Why are they not accountable to the people through
Parliament? Where are the laws which disallow Parliament from
questioning and investigating such public service expenditure? Why do
all these companies not come under the Parliamentary Audit Committee?
Why do they not come under the Auditor-General’s report? I can ask one
hundred questions but the ones here should suffice. My conclusion
on the core issue for this general election therefore is - can we
integrate this nation with integrity, under the current Barisan
Nasional model of leadership and governance? Sadly and disappointingly,
my answer is a definite ‘no’. BN’s multi-ethnicity has outlived her
usefulness. But then, is the Barisan Alternative the answer? My answer
is ‘no’ too. What then is the way forward for those of us who love
Malaysia and for the Anak Bangsa Malaysia who consider themselves as
Malaysians first? Keris-wielding antics I personally believe that the answer may lie in the Barisan Rakyat; along the lines of the Merdeka Statement
framed by the CPPS. Frankly, I do not yet fully know who are the real
voices and actors behind both of them, but their agenda looks credible
enough. To me, I give credit to all of such planners and strategists,
as they have tried earnestly and honestly to find a common ground which
unites all Malaysians from different ethnic backgrounds. We can and
must celebrate diversity. Surely we are now well past the Umno’s Ketuanan Melayu
agenda for that is only good for the Persekutuan Tanah-tanah Melayu.
Likewise with PAS’ Islamic state agenda - that may be only good for
Kelantan and Trengganu but surely not suitable for the whole Federation
of Malaysia! The only real and viable Malaysian Agenda maybe DAP’s
‘Malaysia for Malaysians’ or Gerakan’s multi-ethnicity, but I have my
doubts there too. I have, therefore, always stood for the
familiar Bangsa Malaysia Agenda as per the Vision 2020 adopted by the
BN government in 1981. It was a total and complete embodiment even
among all Malaysian parties and peoples; except for some sections
within Umno who are still trying to resurrect the Ketuanan Melayu mindset of the Tanah Melayu days.
My views are therefore that we have to as a people have put an end to
this backward and regressive agenda once and for all. And the
only way for doing it is by evolving a Malaysian-minded community of
people that will clearly demonstrate this by denying the government
their two-thirds majority. Then we can go back to review the original
social contract of 1957 and the legal Merdeka Agreement of 1963; with
full and due respect for the supremacy of the federal constitution.
Only then can we exorcise the ghosts of the past that keep re-emerging
over the last 50 years. Therefore, we must translate this
desire into action at the ballot box. All moderate-minded Malaysians
must vote against the Umno-driven government as a way of saying that we
cannot and will not tolerate the keris-wielding antics of
Umno and their race-based agenda. I am sorry for the Barisan partners
of Umno but I am not sure that there is really any other alternative
way. Only then will the Umno-led Barisan go back to the drawing
board to revisit some real and serious issues. Whether we call it
Bersih or Hindraf or simply the Barisan Rakyat Agenda, we have to say
it for them with our votes against the Umno-led government. May God
have mercy on Malaysia come polling day. *courtesy of Malaysiakini.com
|