By New Mandala – Asian Correspondent
As
corruption scandals plague the PM, this is the moment Malaysians should openly
demand justice in their country – something the law and judiciary won’t give
them, writes New Mandala’s Manjit Bhatia
WHEN
on July 8 Defence Minister Hishamuddin Hussein declared that no-one in Malaysia
is “above the law”, many Malaysians would have either shrieked in horror or
laughed till their stomachs hurt.
But
nobody would have shuddered at the idea that Hishamuddin would shamelessly tell
another bald-faced lie or trumpet yet another cockamamie from his loft.
Coming
from a regime renowned for hiring congenital liars and compulsive shysters
since 1969 — although one could also revisit some wild porkies told in the 1950s
and ’60s — Hishamuddin’s attempt at grabbing the political middle-ground, to be
seen as some sort of conciliatory ‘statesman’-like figure, flatly slammed back
into his face.
Most
Malaysians will have experienced the crudely thwarting ability of the 58 year-old
ruling UMNO-Barisan Nasional regime to make the country’s laws bendable. So
pliant are they, that today Malaysia’s laws are inherently farcical. Malaysian
laws, in general and specific terms, are an ass.
Malaysian
laws serve UMNO-BN’s narrow, immediate, ideo-political and economic interests. Malaysians
understand there is no such things as equality before the law, let alone
justice in this increasingly pariah, Third World state with grand pretensions
of becoming an “advanced nation” by 2020.
Najib
Razak, Hishamuddin’s cousin and boss, Malaysia’s prime minister and finance
minister to boot, is directly implicated in a monstrous corruption scandal, the
likes of which Malaysians have never seen. Some US$700m is alleged to have been
transferred to several bank accounts in his name, while 2 million
ringgit ($529,000) has
been allegedly depositedinto his wife’s bank account. It is difficult to
see Najib extricating himself with comprehensive inculpability, much less
virtuousness, from the mounting shambles around his integrity and political
legitimacy.
This
is precisely the moment Malaysians should openly demand justice in their
country along principles of ‘justice as fairness’. It will not happen.
Hishamuddin, an UMNO vice-president who, in 2005, while clutching the
traditional Malay keris (short-sword), threatened to spill non
Malay-Muslim blood in the name of Malay superiority, knows this well. So, too,
Malaysia’s Bar Council, which has remained peculiarly quiet. Not a squeak.
To
all intents and purposes, the entire Malaysian cabinet, including Hishamuddin,
would have been aware that the monies transferred into Najib’s personal bank
accounts — exposed by The
Wall Street Journal on July 2 — had been used to rig the 2013
elections and yet again defraud Malaysians of their right to regime change.
That
outcome is now history. But it is another ugly chapter in this country’s
growing repulsiveness when added to its penchant to also practice racism and
bigotry. No court in Malaysia will sit in judgment on these matters. If and
when it does, judgment almost always never comes in a hurry, if at all.
Islamic
groups — financed by taxpayers and ideologically supported by UMNO, an
exclusively Malay-Muslim political party — engage in body and identity
snatching: recurring episodes of forced, surreptitious and illegal conversions
of non-Muslims to Islam.
Their
blackguard actions are soiled in the politics of Islamising the country for
purely desperate politically reasons. The greater the Muslim base of Malaysia’s
30 million population, the better the chance of the rightwing UMNO continuing
to rule Malaysia under false pretenses.
Not
that the regime-pliant judiciary would dare preside against the illegalities of
the 2013 general elections that clearly depicted UMNO’s fraud, led by Najib. Since
2014, Malaysia’s Federal and Appeals courts have deferred the decision to
declare the 2013 poll null and void to the Registrar of Societies. ROS is
answerable only to the home minister, a draconian character. In historical
terms ROS augments UMNO’s autocratic rule and electoral fraud alongside the
regime’s handpicked Election Commission.
Ruling
politicians are accorded the same treatment by Malaysia’s ‘laws’, and at a much
higher level: they are effectively untouchable. Like all former
Inspector-Generals of Police, the current IGP is not a public servant but a
puppet of UMNO, whom he and his police force, debauchedly corrupt, protect,
come hell or high water. It makes lighter work for Malaysia’s judges.
In
his time as prime minister (1981-2003) Dr Mahathir did his darnedest to destroy
the constitution and substantively reduce the position of Malaysia’s monarchs. They
are today voiceless, powerless, and were happy to become a despotic class. To
the extent that Mahathir for the most part hid behind his repressive laws and
the malleable judiciary, Najib has been doing likewise in his bid to stifle
popular dissent and the potential for mass revolt.
Najib
has learnt well from his mentor. Mahathir’s political cretins, in the Gramscian
vernacular, have gotten away with some of the worst graft accusations, mostly
via their business cronies. Najib and perennially bungling ministers and senior
bureaucrats know they need never fear fronting a Malaysian judge. So much so,
the rot has continued like an unbridled market for lecherous grubbiness.
Najib
has never been before a judge for all the scandals that have erupted under his
charge as either a minister in other portfolios, and as prime minister and
finance minister since March 2009. His name continues to be linked to the
cold-blooded murder of 28-year old Altantunya Shaariibuu, the Mongolian model
and translator in the scandalous Scorpene submarines deal when Najib was
defense minister.
To
be sure, Najib is most unlikely to be indicted, despite the fact that there is
sufficient evidence to, at the very least, raise the possibility if not
probability of corruption and electoral fraud. After all, laws in Malaysia are
severely asymmetrical and deeply prejudiced. Malaysian laws serve to dispense
immediate justice on behalf of its political masters, advance their
self-interests as well as those of the filthy-rich class of Malaysians with
direct political connections.
There
is literally no dispensation or indeed chance of dispensation of credibly
proper and full justice against UMNO-BN chieftains and or their business
cronies regardless of the existence of irrefutable evidence of various
illegalities in their depraved wealth accumulation.
This
situation is not helped when the IGP refuses to investigate any of them but is
happy to make chronically ill-thought political judgments on behalf of his
puppet masters. His investigatory judgments based in law are non-existent.
It
is also not helped by the current attorney-general, whose job description is
scarcely dissimilar to the IGP’s; the foremost protection of the odiously
corrupt, deceitful and treacherous UMNO-BN regime.
UMNO
ministers have crawled out of their hiding holes to state and restate with
hyena-like frequency that Najib is not legally bound to step down, even as
various investigations into his alleged corruption proceed apace. Or that he
need not step down at all because he has not broken the law.
The
second claim is true — so far, and up to a point. The first one, though, is
born of heightened scandalous stupidity. At stake are the names of the offices
of prime minister and finance minister and of the country (already damaged
goods).
Malaysia
is almost wholly dependent on international financial markets, international
investors, and international trade for its national income, where the budget
deficit is inching up, the current account is narrowing by the month, where
unemployment is rising, and where domestic and international capital flight
could whack the economy sideways and backwards.
But
never mind, just as long as patron Najib, UMNO-BN politicians and their cronies
and nepotists remain above Malaysia’s spineless laws. They need not worry in
any case: there are no laws in Malaysia to speak of in the first place.
Manjit
Bhatia is head of research at AsiaRisk, an economic and political risk
consultancy firm.
Photo: Malaysian
Prime Minister Najib Razak at a government event in Putrajaya, Malaysia, last
week. Pic: AP.
This
article was first published by New
Mandala
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