DEC 2 — The policy speech by the Umno president at the annual general
assembly is often a kind of political show the entire nation closely
watches. Unfortunately, this year’s show has been hijacked by former IGP
Tan Sri Musa Hassan.
Even as Najib Razak hit out hard at Pakatan Rakyat and tabulated the
accomplishments of the Barisan Nasional government, Musa Hassan’s
shocking revelation has nevertheless exposed the administrative
weaknesses of our government agencies.
Musa Hassan is no ordinary retired civil servant, and as such the
government should seriously consider setting up an independent panel to
probe his accusations which must not be downplayed as immaterial or be
trifled with.
If Musa Hassan’s accusation that politicians have intervened in
police affairs is true, the operation of the police force will be
adversely affected and its integrity eroded.
The police force is tasked with the responsibility of keeping the
social order intact and, therefore, must exercise its professionalism to
achieve this in the absence of political intervention.
Musa said when the police were about to arrest some heavyweight suspects, they would often receive calls from those in power.
If the country’s laws cannot be justly upheld, how do we expect the public to have faith in our law enforcement?
The Malaysian police force should be an unbiased enforcement
institution. If it fails to operate independently, it would be very
difficult for it to carry out its duties during the upcoming general
election.
Musa Hassan also exposed links between senior police officers and
illegal gangs, an accusation that would jeopardise the integrity of the
police force.
When police discipline is involved, things will suddenly become very sensitive.
Because of Musa Hassan’s previous objection to the setting up of the
Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC), the
issue of police misconduct remains unresolved to this day.
The MACC investigations and subsequent charges against Musa Hassan
and former CID chief Ramli Yusof are nothing we can be proud of. The
police force must strive to improve its image instead of persistently
rejecting supervision.
If a split takes place at the top ranks of the police force, how do we expect them to set a good example for their subordinates?
Thirdly, Musa Hassan also queried the reliability of the police’s crime data, and this has begun to arouse public suspicion.
Well familiar with the modus operandi of the police force, Musa
Hassan highlighted the fact that some police officers have resorted to
converting unresolved cases to “no further action” cases in a bid to
achieve the government’s crime reduction targets.
Without true and genuine figures, the minister will be kept in the
dark and thus wrongly assess the actual crime situation in the country.
This August, the Centre for Policy Initiatives (CPI) received a
letter said to be from an anonymous police officer making the same
accusations. As such, it is imperative that the police’s crime figures
be appraised by an independent third party institution with the hope the
root cause of the problem could be identified.
Fourthly, why do some senior civil servants continue to slam the government after their retirement?
Some notable retired senior officers have joined PAS, including
former Bukit Aman CID chief Fauzi Shaari, former chief secretary for the
ministry of land and cooperative development Nik Zain Nik Yusof, former
solicitor-general Mohd Yusof Zainal Abiden, and former TUDM officer
Mohd Nazari Mokhtar.
The BN government has been taking very good care of our civil
servants; the defection by any of them could deal a serious blow on
Umno. — mysinchew.com
No comments:
Post a Comment