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A Prime Minister on the ropes PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Corruption, abuse of power by the police, nepotism in high places and the rise of religious and communal sectarian politics became the salient features of Badawi’s his first term in office

Farish A Noor

On Monday, 23rd June, Malaysia’s political future may be decided on a permanent basis. Three months after the elections of March 2008, and in the wake of the most disastrous showing for the ruling National Front coalition led by the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) party that has been in power for more than half a century, the Badawi administration is facing yet another challenge that it cannot afford not to take seriously.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi came to power in 2004 riding on the biggest mandate ever given to any Prime Minister in Malaysia’s history. The overwhelming votes cast in favour of his UMNO party and the Barisan coalition it leads should have given him ample opportunity to carry out many of the reforms that he had promised the Malaysian electorate. Badawi had promised to be ‘the Prime Minister of all Malaysians’, to listen to the plight of the racial and religious minorities of the country, to open up the judiciary, police force and government sector to public enquiry and to create a new mode of governance that was more accountable and transparent.

Instead in the space of four years, practically none of these reforms were ever achieved. Corruption, abuse of power by the police, nepotism in high places and the rise of religious and communal sectarian politics became the salient features of his first term in office, and his inability to act decisively at a time when the Malaysian public wanted a decisive leader were among the factors behind his untimely downfall.

A significant example would be his poor leadership handling cases of inter-religious marriages and divorces where time and again the non-Muslims felt they were being discriminated against in a country that was moving further to the right in terms of conservative Islamist politics.

Yet again and again, Badawi failed to act as a moderate and balanced statesman who could and should have stepped in the fray, to defend the rights of the minorities.

Now it would appear that the costs of his inaction have finally piled up and the bill has been served. Malaysia is divided into East and West Malaysia, with much of the wealth and development of the country on the side of the West. The East Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak, located on the northern coast of Borneo (Kalimantan) remain lagging behind in terms of economic development and political representation at the centre of power in Kuala Lumpur.

Since the elections of March 2008, the Parliamentarians of East Malaysia who now play the role of king-makers in Malaysia’s convoluted racialised politics have been demanding more representation and more power in the face of a beleaguered government that has lost its two-thirds majority in Parliament.

Cognizant of the fact that it was the parties of East Malaysia who helped the ruling National Front stay in power, many of the representatives of East Malaysia are now demanding what they feel is due to them.

This week one of the East Malaysian parties — the Progressive Party of Sabah (SAPP) — has come out with a series of demands and the warning that they will table a vote of no-confidence in Parliament on Monday, 23rd June.

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