Abdullah's early exit and Anwar's failure to take over raise the spectre of Mahathir's return







by Abdar Rahman Koya

(Saturday, November 15, 2008)

"Since the March 2008 elections, Anwar was seen as a vulture waiting to pounce upon the carcass of a dying UMNO. With Abdullah out and Najib in, it is feared that the vulture may turn out to be the eighty-something Mahathir, dying to have the last laugh. That is a scenario most Malaysians would want to avoid, at any cost."

The creases from his predecessor’s seat had hardly settled when Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced on October 9 that he would step down as prime minister and president of the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) in March 2009.

The announcement was not entirely unexpected, because many had felt that although the pressure for him to resign was strong, the stakes were even higher for a prime minister to resign voluntarily. Abdullah had earlier promised to hand over power to his deputy Najib Razak in 2010, in a move seen to appease heightened criticism from his own party and the ruling coalition over his leadership. His decision to resign early is seen as a blow to the anti-Mahathir faction in the party that wants to end Mahathir’s legacy that sowed the seeds of UMNO’s growing unpopularity.

One thing almost all observers agree on is this: with Najib as prime minister, the ghost of Mahathir will be resurrected. The former PM had all along treated the prime minister’s office as his private property, arguing and naming candidates who were more eligible to become the next prime minister. Now that his wish to see Abdullah gone is fulfilled, Mahathir is seen to be readying to put a brake on many of the reforms agreed upon by Abdullah. Najib, tainted by numerous scandals and unanswered accusations, is seen as the man who would dance to his tune.

During his short tenure, Abdullah earned Mahathir’s wrath for undoing many of his pet projects as well as initiating some reforms that were aimed at undoing Mahathir’s legacy. Coming at a time when reforms in the form of fighting corruption, greater media freedom as well as a credible judiciary were in their infancy, or being paid mere lip-service at this stage, the change in leadership may not bode well for Malaysia’s cleansing process after years of mess left by Mahathir.


In spite of his weak leadership and fickle-minded administration style, Abdullah’s short five years are not entirely without achievement. His government has at least admitted to the need for reforms, the battle cry of the opposition since it was galvanized by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim not long ago. The government-controlled media picked it up only in the last five years; prior to that it would have landed any person who espoused such thoughts behind bars.


All this of course has been helpful to the opposition, who got a shot in the arm with Anwar as its leader. As the opposition’s parliamentary leader and designated prime minister-in-waiting, Anwar serves as a reminder to government backbenchers about the opposition’s seriousness to take over even at the federal level beyond the five state governments it controls since the March 2008 elections. Many also believed that it is this prime ministerial aura that Anwar carries with him that has made the opposition coalition durable, lasting longer than expected, in spite of ideological differences, particularly between the Islamic Party (PAS), and the Chinese-dominated Democratic Action Party (DAP) which strives for a secular Malaysia.



The Malaysian opposition’s feared readiness to take over would be the envy of opposition parties in many countries. This fear reached a climax on September 16, the date mentioned by Anwar and parroted by other opposition leaders to signal the end of the UMNO-led National Coalition’s half-a-century grip on power. Events unfolding later showed that something went wrong with the takeover plan as Anwar tried to explain that the delay, or rather the anti-climax, was due to “technical glitches”. Even as this article is being written, the prime minister-in-waiting is adamant that the much-awaited change will occur, and he definitely does not mean that to be after the next general elections due in 2012. Only, as he has repeatedly claimed, he wants to ensure a smooth transition and is weighing several options, which include talking to the king who can ask the prime minister to step down should Anwar prove he has the numbers through defectors from the ruling parties.


But signs of weariness emerged on October 22 when Anwar conceded, for the first time that he was running out of options to unseat the government. “I am not saying we have no options left, but I’m saying it’s getting to be much more difficult,” he recently told Bloomberg. That is what the rumour had been all along that although Anwar may have had enough defectors as claimed, he probably did not have the consent of the king to form the new government.
Anwar may have given up convincing Malaysians that he has the numbers. Weeks after the crucial September 16 date, even fewer are convinced now about his plan. None of the so-called defecting government lawmakers–more than 30–have had the courage to identify themselves publicly. Opposition quarters have offered the excuse that it could be due to their fear of government action under such draconian laws as the Internal Security Act. If that is a risk the lawmakers are not prepared to take, many wonder if these defecting MPs are indeed suitable to effect change in the first place.


Many people in Malaysia were disappointed with the non-event of September 16. Hit by the biggest fuel price hike of any petroleum-exporting country, it created a chain reaction of rising cost of living, unemployment and all the ills that come with them. Anwar’s promise to slash petrol prices back to its former level was virtually the single most important issue used to garner public support for his mid-September plan. Yet it is also true that a large segment of the population is convinced that a new government with new approach to governance may just be the answer to many of the country’s problems. Thus when the government hurriedly slashed the price of petrol just two days before the Permatang Pauh by-election that Anwar won on August 26, it had no effect on voters compared to Anwar’s repeated promise to become the prime minister in three weeks. He went on to win by a big margin in what is seen as a sweet comeback almost ten years after he was arrested, tortured and jailed on trumped up charges.
September 16, however, has passed without the much-trumpeted change; Anwar’s credibility has suffered somewhat, perhaps badly. It seems the only way he could regain his popularity to the level it was in the days following his electoral victory would be if the takeover were to actually happen. But as days pass by, a dwindling number of people are convinced that this will happen. Many people are so fed up with the status quo that they would welcome a change whenever it occurred.


Since the March 2008 elections, Anwar was seen as a vulture waiting to pounce upon the carcass of a dying UMNO. With Abdullah out and Najib in, it is feared that the vulture may turn out to be the eighty-something Mahathir, dying to have the last laugh. That is a scenario most Malaysians would want to avoid, at any cost.

MPSP BERSAMA AMK TASEK GELUGOR BERGOTONG ROYONG





TASEK GELUGOR-Aktiviti MPSP bersama pendudk kampung jarang-jarang dapat di lihat kerana belum ada kerjasama para pendudk dengan majlis tempatan di lakukan.majlis gotong royong ini di ketuai oleh YB Lau dan juga Ahli majlis Sdr Johari Kassim di kawasan Tadika.

LAWATAN KERJA YB MOHD FAIRUS








PULAU PINANG- Lawatan kerja YB Mohd fairus bersama Setiausaha Perhubungan negeri Pak Mus ,Ketua AMK permatang Pauh Sdr Amir ke beberapa lokasi.Nibong Tebal dan Permatang Pauh.
Maklumat lanjut dalam Suara keadilan

Plus Expressways Berhad (Plus) dijangka menurunkan kadar tol

SEPANG: Plus Expressways Berhad (Plus) dijangka menurunkan kadar tol di lebuh raya kendaliannya dan pengumuman mengenai perkara itu akan dibuat oleh syarikat berkenaan Selasa ini, kata Menteri Kerjaraya, Datuk Mohd Zin Mohamed. Beliau bagaimanapun enggan mengulas lanjut mengenai perkara itu, tetapi menjelaskan persetujuan berkenaan dicapai selepas kerajaan mengadakan rundingan dengan semua syarikat pemegang konsesi, termasuk Plus bagi menilai semula bayaran tol lebuh raya di seluruh negara, sejak beberapa bulan lalu.


"Saya yakin pengumuman berkenaan akan memberi khabar gembira kepada sebahagian besar pengguna lebuh raya di negara ini," katanya ketika ditemui pemberita selepas merasmikan bangunan baru Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Cina (SJKC) Tche Min, Sungai Pelek, di sini semalam. Sebelum ini, Plus dilaporkan sudah menyediakan semua maklumat yang diminta kerajaan berhubung rancangan untuk mengkaji semula perjanjian konsesi bagi mengurangkan kadar tol.


Pada 1 Januari lalu, kadar tol di enam lebuh raya iaitu Lebuh Raya Seremban-Port Dickson, Lebuh Raya Utara-Selatan Hubungan Tengah, Lebuh raya Kulim-Butterworth, Laluan Kedua Malaysia-Singapura, Lebuh Raya Pintas Selat Klang Utara Baru serta Tambak Johor dan Plaza Tol Bukit Kayu Hitam, dinaikkan antara 30 sen hingga RM10.70.


Bagi lebuh raya yang dikendalikan Plus, Jambatan Pulau Pinang, Lebuh raya Bertingkat Ampang-Ulu Klang (Prolintas) serta Skim Penyuraian Trafik Kuala Lumpur Barat (Sprint)-Kerinchi dan Damansara Link, kadar tol tidak dinaikkan. Kali terakhir Plus menaikkan kadar tol di lebuh raya kendaliannya ialah pada 2005. Bagaimanapun, Mohd Zin kesal kerana ada pemegang konsesi seperti Lebuh Raya Damansara Puchong (LDP) enggan menurunkan kadar tol, walaupun sudah mencacat keuntungan besar. Sebelum ini, beliau dilaporkan berkata kerajaan sehingga kini sudah membayar pampasan tunai RM630.5 juta kepada LDP bagi pengurangan dan penyusunan semula kadar tol antara 1999 hingga 2007, manakala kutipan tol sejak tempoh konsesi bermula pada 31 Disember 1996 pula mencecah RM1.28 bilion.


Berikutan itu, katanya, LDP adalah lebuh raya yang merekodkan keuntungan dan sewajarnya meringankan sedikit beban pengguna kerana tempoh konsesi mereka hanya berakhir pada 31 Disember 2029. Beliau juga dipetik berkata, mutu perkhidmatan lebuh raya berkenaan sudah merosot hingga ke tahap 'F' di Plaza Tol Petaling dan Penchala serta tahap 'D' di Plaza Tol Puchong Barat dan Puchong Selatan, manakala lokasinya pula tidak menyediakan laluan alternatif yang munasabah. Dalam perkembangan lain, Mohd Zin berkata, kaedah Sistem Binaan Berindustri (IBS) mampu mengurangkan penggunaan tenaga kerja asing sebanyak 75 peratus dalam industri pembinaan negara, mulai tahun depan.

CUEPACS boikot PTK jika tidak dimansuh 2009

KOTA KINABALU 15 Nov. - Kongres Kesatuan Pekerja-Pekerja Dalam Perkhidmatan Awam (CUEPACS) menggesa Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam (JPA) memansuhkan peperiksaan Penilaian Tahap Kecekapan (PTK).

Presidennya, Omar Osman berkata, proses kenaikan pangkat kakitangan awam yang dinilai mengikut prestasi dan temu duga secara lisan oleh ketua jabatan lebih berkesan berbanding kaedah peperiksaan yang digunakan sekarang.

''CUEPACS akan memboikot peperiksaan PTK jika ia tidak dimansuhkan tahun depan dan kita memberi tempoh hingga 31 Disember ini kepada JPA untuk membuat keputusan, sama ada meneruskan sistem itu atau sebaliknya.

''Justeru, kami mahu proses kenaikan pangkat dinilai mengikut prestasi kerja dan temu duga secara lisan oleh ketua jabatan,'' katanya pada sidang akhbar selepas persidangan CUEPACS peringkat kebangsaan di sini hari ini.

Omar berkata, pihaknya telah mengadakan perbincangan dengan JPA mengenai kaedah peperiksaan PTK yang baru untuk kakitangan awam Kumpulan Sokongan Satu (Gred 17 hingga 40) dan Kumpulan Pengurusan dan Profesional (Gred 41 hingga 54) sebelum ini.
Selain itu, katanya, perbincangan yang sama juga sudah diadakan untuk kakitangan awam Kumpulan Sokongan Dua (Gred 1 hingga 16).

Tambah beliau, perbincangan kedua-dua pihak tertumpu kepada pemansuhan peperiksaan PTK dan jika ia tidak diterima, CUEPACS mahu kaedah baru iaitu kenaikan pangkat mengikut prestasi kerja dilaksanakan.
Katanya, kaedah itu lebih adil berbanding peperiksaan PTK yang diamalkan sekarang kerana ia memberi tekanan kepada kakitangan awam.
Dalam pada itu, Omar berkata, CUEPACS mahu Elaun Kos Sara Hidup (COLA) diselaraskan di seluruh negara.

Menurutnya, ketiadaan elaun COLA bagi kakitangan awam dari Sabah dan Sarawak yang berkhidmat di Semenanjung atau kawasan terpencil di negeri masing- masing menimbulkan ketidakpuasan hati mereka terhadap JPA.
Katanya, walaupun isu berkenaan sering disuarakan oleh kakitangan kedua-dua negeri itu, tetapi tidak mendapat layanan JPA dan menyebabkan mereka berasa dianaktirikan oleh kerajaan Pusat.
''Kami juga mahu imbuhan tetap perumahan antara RM180 hingga RM230 yang dipersetujui oleh Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi pada Mei 2007, dilaksanakan pada tahun depan," ujarnya.





ZAMAN MAK BAPAK AKU DULU YANG SENIOR NAIK PANGKAT BESERTA KELULUSAN.MULAI ERA MAHAZALIM YANG PANDAI BODEK,CIUM TANGAN,IKUT KATA CEPAT NAIK.TU LA SISTEM ZAMAN KOLONI..........BILA BANGKANG....HAAA...NIH PEMBANGKANG.