COMMENT For some time before the news
broke that PKR's Rafizi Ramli was being charged with offences against
the Banking and Financial Institutions Act (Bafia), the fact that Prime
Minister Najib Razak is an obscurantist posing as a reformer had the
status of an open secret.
Anyone
with more than a passing knowledge of his career was in on the secret,
but given the way political society is configured in Malaysia, even
Perkasa chief Ibrahim Ali can be made to seem a born-again liberal
should he, with the connivance of the powers-that-be, so desire.
What
more, then, the possibilities of transfiguration - from latent
obscurantist to liberal poseur - for someone of Najib's pedigree and
manifest destiny?
During the penultimate stage of Najib's ascent
to the top of Umno's greasy pole, the Internet-accessing public were
privy to covert information, courtesy of a mobile phone conversation
between the then deputy prime minister and a friend of his about to be
charged with murder, that Malaysian politics does not just have
corridors of power; it has subterranean alleyways in which various
factors wage their devious battles with a talent for skullduggery that
has become de rigueur of those wanting to maintain their grip on power.
With the charging of PKR strategic director Rafizi (right in photo)
for disclosing information protected by banking secrecy laws -
information that has led to the exposure of a multimillion ringgit
scandal of the sort that could lead to the downfall of governments - the
cat is out of the bag that the Najib administration is certifiably not
reformist.
The next time that crapulous slogan ‘Government
Transformation Programme' trips off the tongue of a Najib administration
flunkey, his or her audience ought to remind the unfortunate
spokesperson that a word is not what Humpty Dumpty holds it to be -
‘Anything the speaker says it means'.
PM's patina of liberalism
The
administration began the year intent on leveraging on the unexpected
acquittal of Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim on a charge of sodomising
an aide - a development the PM lauded as indicative of the judiciary's
independence.
Najib managed to sustain this patina of liberalism
by initially signaling a placatory stance towards polls reform advocacy
group Bersih's bid to stage a third public demonstration in April to
bolster their case for a clean-up of the electoral rolls and fairer
practices during the electioneering period.
But a stance not propped up by the requisite attitude is soon revealed to be what it is: a facade.
How
flaky the Najib administration's liberal facade was became evident in
its eventual response to the Bersih demonstration, the biggest public
gathering for a political cause in Malaysia in decades.
The
harsh reaction of the police and the knee-jerk responses of the
government to the huge throng the Bersih demonstration succeeded in
calling out showed that the administration was keener on the rhetorical
posturing rather than in the actual substance of liberalism.
This
charade became even more tawdry when Anwar and two of his PKR aides
were not just charged with offences in connection with their
participation in the April 28 demonstration - the charges were augmented
and reinforced in a second round of indictments.
This was followed by the filing of the grounds of appeal in July by the attorney-general of Anwar's sodomy acquittal.
It takes a thief to catch a thief
Now
with whistleblower extraordinary Rafizi charged with offences under
Bafia on an issue concerning misappropriation of public funds for a
cattle-breeding project that has already led to the indictment for
corrupt practices of personnel involved in its management, you have the
farce of a ‘Government Transformation Programme' walking on all fours.
Though
Rafizi was called in by Bank Negara for questioning on purported
violations of Bafia, the prevailing sense on the matter was that someone
who had called attention to crimes that had not only taken place but
had led to the indictments of an array of suspects should not be
impugned on the theory that it sometimes takes a thief to catch a thief.
The
speculation is that when Rafizi went on to expose shenanigans that
allegedly occurred in the award of the contract for extension works to
the Ampang Light Rail Transit (LRT) line, his malfeasance-scouring run
of recent weeks had hit a highly sensitive nerve.
There's hell to
pay for exposes of that kind, given what the speculation is about who's
really in charge where the Najib administration is concerned.
Now it no longer a case of the PM being out-ed as a phony liberal; it's a case of whether he was any kind of liberal at all.
TERENCE
NETTO has been a journalist for close on four decades. He likes the
occupation because it puts him in contact with the eminent without being
under the necessity to admire them. It is the ideal occupation for a
temperament that finds power fascinating and its exercise abhorrent.
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