Excerpt #2 The Decay Long In The
Making
Abdullah
and Najib squandered Malaysia’s precious first decade into the new millennium.
It was a wasted if not lost decade. It would be academic to judge who is worse,
Abdullah or Najib. When both scored “Fs”, it matters less whether one is F
minus and the other simply an F.
There
is little prospect for change, at least until the next election due no later
than mid 2018. Even if there were to be divine intervention, Najib’s deputy,
Muhyiddin, is no better. Malaysia is doomed; it cannot escape its present sorry
trajectory.
If
nations do not progress, then ipso facto
they regress. Human progress is neither automatic nor inevitable, noted Martin
Luther King. Corruption in Malaysia is now approaching the “tipping point”
where it would be irreversible and permanently cripple the nation a la Nigeria. Meanwhile religious
fanaticism continues unabated, abetted by Najib and his deputy. That too may
soon reach the point of no return when Malaysia would be another Pakistan. Then
Malaysia would be a Nigeria and Pakistan combined, wrecked with crippling
corruption and haunted by religious fanaticism.
Those
two challenges are crippling enough but there are others, as with the
deteriorating institutions. In the judiciary, even senior judges think that
their job is to protect their paymaster, the government. Likewise, the Election
Commission sees itself as an agency of ruling Barisan coalition.
All
these are obvious to ordinary citizens; they do not need reminders from august
bodies like the UN. Its Human Development Index showed that Malaysia improved
by 1.05 percent in the decade of 1980-90; and 1.12 from 1990-2000. During the
decade 2000-13, it grew only half as much (0.58), justifying my calling it the
wasted decade.
The
UNHDP Index is buried amongst the tons of all-too-frequent glowing reports by
foreign consultants and international bodies, all paid for handsomely by the
government of Malaysia. It took a catastrophic tragedy as with the
disappearance of Malaysian Airline Flight 370 from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on
March 8, 2014 to expose on the world stage the nation’s inattentive military
radar operators and bumbling ministers. Malaysian leaders could not answer even
simple questions from the families of the victims.
In
fairness to Abdullah and Najib, the rot did not develop overnight. The Malaysia
of today is still burdened by Mahathir’s legacy, quite apart from his role in
anointing Abdullah and Najib.
This
is Malaysia, so the race factor is never far from the surface. Already
Muhyiddin, Najib’s deputy and presumptive successor, is threatening the nation
with another “May 13,” the horrific race riot of 1969. That is Muhyiddin,
always looking back, never forward. His is the collective mindset and caliber
of UMNO leadership, consumed with fighting the last battle.
The
issues they should be confronting are far different. Rampant corruption,
deteriorating institutions, vicious religious extremism, and an entrenched
rentier economy, among others, are what would doom Malaysia.
Although
the racism and ethnic viruses can easily be reactivated (look at Northern
Ireland and the Balkans), Malaysia has a low probability for another
interracial conflagration of the 1969 variety despite attempts by the likes of
Muhyiddin to scare citizens, especially non-Malays.
Excerpt #3: Intra-racial
(Specifically Intra-Malay) Conflict Greater Threat Than Inter-racial
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