*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* { Sila lawat Laman Hizbi-Net - http://www.hizbi.net } { Hantarkan mesej anda ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] } { Iklan barangan? Hantarkan ke [EMAIL PROTECTED] } *~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* Undilah PAS : MENENTANG KEZALIMAN & MENEGAKKAN KEADILAN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: Nyem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mon 9:38 Subject: [alternatif-net] [fm] 50 Questions That Mahathir and BN will not answer To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] From: Nyem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Fifty Questions That Mahathir and BN will not answer As Malaysians approach the most critical general elections since Independence, we cannot do so without pausing to reflect on what we have learned in the past two tumultuous years. freeMalaysia believes we have not learned enough. We have not learned how we are to build a civil society without the necessary tools of transparency and open debate. We have not learned how this government will help us fight corruption, instill a genuine entrepreneurial spirit, or prepare us for our inevitable collisions with the vibrant and open global economy. What we have learned has only brought to light more questions. Questions that are critical to who we are and what we may become. freeMalaysia would pose 50 such questions to Dr. Mahathir and the Barisan Nasional leadership. Although we fully expect the officials of Barisan Nasional to remain mute to this challenge, they cannot pretend they are deaf, as well. freeMalaysia offers to publish - in full - their responses to these questions. There are just two conditions: the respondent must be an identifiable official in a position to answer authoritatively; and a substantial number of the questions must be addressed. The Questions 1. So where's the salty videotape of a supposedly bewigged Anwar Ibrahim caught flagrante delicto? This tape was shown last year to select Barisan Nasional politicos and UMNO officials as proof of Anwar's sexual deviancy. If it is genuine why hasn't it been submitted as evidence at either of the former Deputy Prime Minister's trials? Could the tape stand up to expert scrutiny, or was it just a sham? 2. For roughly a year or more, Dr. M was privy to allegations by Anwar's political enemies that the Deputy Prime Minister was a philandering bisexual. But it wasn't until his former heir apparent loomed as a political challenge that the premier chose to believe the allegations, which, by the way, have yet to be proven. Why did the allegations only become credible after Anwar and his allies intensified their campaign against high-level political corruption? 3. Is it possible that almost every foreigner in the world with an keen interest in Malaysia including most of our ASEAN neighbours is wrong when pointing out faults in Malaysia's judiciary; its police force; its lack of free speech and impartial media; its economic, financial and corporate mismanagement; and its growing corruption? Wrong sometimes, perhaps; but wrong all the time? 4. It has become the accepted practice in most democratic nations to permit criticism and investigations of their judiciary, just as they allow the same scrutiny of their executive and legislative branches. The belief is that accountability breeds institutional strength and integrity, as well as builds their publics' faith in government. Could it be that Dr. M and the Barisan have no confidence in the Malaysian judiciary's ability to withstand honest and objective scrutiny, as well as occasional criticism? If so, how much faith should the average Malaysian have in his courts to uphold his constitutional, contractual and human rights? 5. Has the Anti-Corruption Agency investigated the plentiful evidence suggesting improper relationships between a few top lawyers, such as VK Lingam, and the nation's top judges? If so, what has it found? If not, why not? 6. Is there any other explanation for the apparent lack of scrutiny of the court system other than the need for a cowed and subjugated judiciary that Mahathir can control to pursue the prosecution of Anwar and other enemies? 7. In the midst of the furor about the legal system, it's hard not to wonder about the appointment in the past few days of the law firm of Shafee & Co as the official legal counsel for all Barisan Nasional component parties. Quite a prestigious, powerful and lucrative position, fM imagines. But is it just a coincidence that among the prominent clients of Shafee & Co, owned by legal veteran Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, is Dow Jones & Co, the publishers of the Far Eastern Economic Review and The Asian Wall Street Journal? The latter publication is embroiled in a high-profile lawsuit with notorious attorney VK Lingam, and the case cuts to the core of the independence of the judiciary. Indeed, in representing reporter Raphael Pura of the AWSJ, Shafee has planned to introduce damning evidence of Lingam's influence peddling and corruption involving the nation's highest jurists. Now that Shafee has been named top lawyer for all of BN, can we still expect to see this evidence and the case pursued vigorously? Or did BN just buy themselves some peace of mind? 8. Details about Minister of Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Dato' Megat Junid's gambling exploits in Australia, published earlier by fM and other Web sites, were interesting reading. But hasn't the ACA and others looked into them? After all, he allegedly was placing king-size bets at Oz casinos while he was Malaysia's Deputy Minister of Home Affairs. And the wagers he was allegedly making at the time were well beyond his declared means, besides being forbidden by his Islamic faith. 9. Why haven't Dr. M, the Attorney General, the ACA, the police and other Barisan leaders responded to Anwar's police reports about alleged corruption and misconduct at the very top of the administration? Their prolonged silence amounts to an admission of guilt for impartial observers. And, why hasn't Daim been questioned about Anwar's accusation that he took between RM700 million and RM1 billion out of the country before capital controls were invoked, in addition to his attempt to swindle RM800 million worth of shares belonging to UMNO? 10. Cabinet ministers must declare their assets but only to Mahathir. Is the cabinet's collective wealth just too hard to explain to the public they supposedly serve? Or does Dr. M need the leverage this provides over the political elite? Or is it both? And whom does the prime minister declare to? Himself? 11. Why is it that the monograph "50 Reasons Why Anwar Can't Become Prime Minister" was allowed to be freely distributed at the 1998 UMNO General Assembly, despite a court-ordered injunction banning its distribution? Did its distributors know that the courts wouldn't pursue their violation because they were protected by the prime minister? Is it any wonder why Malaysia's courts are roundly criticized? The judiciary does a fine job "scandalizing" itself no outside help required. 12. How is it, Dr. M, that so many of your other Cabinet ministers have been allowed to go uncharged and scot-free, despite conclusive evidence of misconduct and corruption? Is it only because they remain obedient, uncritical and carry out your every command that they remain free? Indeed, most members of your Cabinet live beyond their government salaries and reported means. How can you account for that? 13. Nowhere is the evidence of corruption more glaring than in the party leaders of UMNO's two main partners in Barisan, the MCA and MIC. Why has the MCA's Ling Liong Sik never been asked to account for the widespread allegations that improperly using his political influence he made his son a twenty-something billionaire (at least on paper) in the space of months? Is this the real reason that fugitive asset-trader Soh Chee Wen, a key figure in the Ling scandal, conveniently has yet to be found? The MIC's Samy Vellu, among his many scams, routinely skims capital gains off share allotments that are supposed to benefit the Malaysian Indian community. But, even when this practice surfaced with the diversion of Telekom IPO shares, Samy was allowed to skirt any serious probe. Are these practices the way he pays for multi-million-ringgit weddings for his kids? 14. Isn't it true that the new governor of Bank Negara, Tan Sri Ali Abul Hassan, who was director general of Dr. M's powerful Economic Planning Unit (charged with heading your privatization program) before replacing the former "uncooperative" central bank governor, Tan Sri Ahmad Mohd Don, had been under investigation by the ACA? And isn't it true that the ACA had unearthed evidence of wrongdoing and payoffs? But why has his case been closed? 15. Malaysia's law books are loaded with statutes outlawing racial incitement, rioting, most protests of any sort, sedition and treason, as well as a host of regulations and licensing requirements that have been used to curb freedom of expression, however peaceful or constructive. So why, after the Communist insurgency has long been eliminated, must the 49-year-old Internal Security Act remain the state's key legal instrument to deny Malaysians' their presumption of innocence and their right to a speedy and fair trial? Can Malaysia's police and the Attorney General's Chambers be so inept and unprofessional that they can't be trusted to successfully investigate and prosecute cases? 16. Dr. M has anchored his political career, in part, by alluding to evil plots by "foreign elements" and foreign governments determined to undermine Malaysia. Yet, never has he offered concrete evidence to back up his xenophobic paranoia. What evidence is there, and can it be presented to the nation? Could it be that after all these years, the only evidence he can provide is his twisted interpretation of history and current affairs and nothing more? 17. Dr. M repeatedly has warned that the Asian financial crisis was, largely, a plot by avaricious Western capitalists and speculators to force the sale of lucrative national assets to them for a song. Indeed, this had been one of Mahathir's chief justifications for installing capital controls. Nonetheless, since capital controls were introduced in September of 1998, foreigners have acquired more than 50% of the nation's cement-making capacity, have injected themselves into key controlling and decision-making capacities in our telecommunications companies and have secured influential stakes in several Malaysian insurance groups. The sellers of these financial interests obviously were under financial stress; still the sales came with the Mahathir government's stamp of approval and, in some cases, its financial assistance. How can these double standards be justified? Isn't this yet another hypocritical case of badmouthing Westerners in the kampungs, while quietly courting their support and cash? 18. If the Western world is really as odious and socially corruptive as Dr. M says it is, why has he always sought investments from the West and its support to play host to regional and global events? Does this not invite the very same evil Western elements to infiltrate Malaysian society and spread their ill will? Or is Mahathir simply lying to his own electorate and winking to his foreign corporate friends? 19. Not a peep more has been heard from the Mahathir administration about alleged corruption at the top of Perwaja Trengganu Steel. What of the evidence of wrongdoing uncovered by the international accounting firm of Pricewaterhouse Coopers? Why hasn't longtime Dr. M crony, Eric Chia, been investigated and charged for misusing hundreds of millions of ringgit in Perwaja funds? Or could it be true that Chia was only taking orders from Dr. M? 20. In a similar vein, isn't the expensive, government-driven MegaSteel project just another Perwaja replay and misuse of taxpayers' money, only this time with the direct involvement of a Dr. M son? 21. Could anybody -- particularly Dr. M, since this is his heavy-industry darling -- tell us where the national car program stands? Proton's CEO Tengku Datuk Mahaleel Tengku Ariff declared on July 25th that the national car effort is ready to stand on its own two feet and is prepared to compete on an equal basis against global car manufacturers "even before the establishment of the ASEAN Free Trade Area by 2003. " But then why is Dr. M's regime seeking to have Malaysia's domestic auto industry excluded from complying with the AFTA agreement? What is the future of the free-trade pact if all members start to shield their bloated, pet projects, as Malaysia is? 22. When does the Mahathir regime estimate that Proton and Perodua will be able to effectively compete domestically without special protective tax duties against imports, which force Malaysian car buyers to subsidize the national car makers' loss-making sales abroad? 23. freeMalaysia is well aware of the government's and the private-sector's studies to evaluate the economic feasibility of Dr. M's mega-industrial projects, such as the national car and Perwaja steel ventures. But why have none of these been made public and debated in Parliament? Is it because none of them could justify any long-term viability and economic benefit for the country? In the new spirit of transparency, is the government prepared to make these public now? 24. Moreover, and on a more current note, Dr. M himself has admitted that his administration hadn't given thorough thought to the amalgamation of Malaysia's 58 financial institutions. What, therefore, drove him to push for the mergers at such a hasty speed? What was the rationale for the anchor banks that were announced? And, finally, what were the reasons that persuaded him to back down from the pronounced aim? 25. Once again Daim Zainuddin is donning the black hat, this time because of Dr. M's backtracking on the bank mergers. Everyone has heard the rumors of a rift between the two. But isn't this just another case of Mahathir giving free rein to Daim's corporate skullduggery in the interests of both? Can Daim and Dr. M publicly commit to banks' real freedom to decide their own merger partners without official interference even if the Barisan captures a resounding general election victory? 26. Is Daim's Highway CLOBbery any different? With the vertically challenged finance minister playing bad cop to Dr. M's less convincing good or at least aloof cop. If Daim gets away with it, fine. We'll hear not a peep from Dr. M. If the issue become a political sore point, this too will fall by the wayside until after the election or some other more opportune time for Dam and Dr. M to wrest the CLOB shares from their owners at a steep discount. 27. This further raises the question about whether Dr. M fully realized the ramifications of instituting his capital control program. The evidence is fairly clear now that the program made little, or no, difference to Malaysia's nascent recovery, for the capital outflows throughout the region were already reversing when it was instituted. So did he push it through only to insulate the markets from the reaction to his persecution of Anwar? Or did he already realize that the planned multi-billion-ringgit bailouts of cronies could only succeed in an artificially protected financial arena? 28. If not, then why has Dr. M been so willing to rapidly dismantle what he describes as his successful capital-control regulations? Is it the realization that the regulations have frightened away investors and are impeding Malaysia's economic recovery? 29. And if it was short-term speculators who were are the root of Malaysia's financial implosion in 1997-98 and the subsequent economic crisis, as Dr. M persistently avers, then why did he recently lower the exit tax on repatriated profits on short-term investments? How does this fit with Dr. M's stated aim to encourage only long-term, productive investors who now must pay the same exit tax as their short-term brethren? 30. Why has Malaysia's mainstream media shied away from addressing any of these currently pressing queries? Why are Mahathir and other figures in the leadership allowed to contradict themselves, outline inconsistent policies and flat-out lie without being held accountable in the media? (Probably for the same reasons that the media has seldom performed its institutional role as a safeguard for Malaysian democracy and enlightened discussion. Could it have been otherwise with the media under the control of the government, the ruling parties and the cronies of Dr. M?) 31. And is this the reason why the mainstream media has neglected to publish photographs of Dr. M's new palace at Putrajaya? Is it so palatial and extravagant that the media fear an electoral backlash against its political protectors and financial controllers? Or is it because Dr. M has ordered a news blackout? Both, fM suspects. 32. Could someone kindly provide an accurate estimate of the cost to build Mahathir's new palace in Putrajaya? The RM17 million figure released in Parliament obviously is a gross underestimation. The RM200 million figure cited by Anwar from jail appears closer to the mark. But after seeing photographs of his Versailles baru, even RM200 million may be too low, especially after considering the structure's fits, finishing and finery. So what is it, Mahathir? How much are we really paying for your palace? 33. Further afield, why has Renong chieftain Tan Sri Halim Saad acquired a hacienda in Uruguay in the last year or so? To fM, this smacks of a Nazi-like escape route, should things go bad for him and his benefactors in Malaysia. Could Uruguay's lax extradition treaties have any bearing on Halim's choice in residential property? Perhaps it's just the climate he likes. 34. Is Dr. M aware that two-time Finance Minister Daim Zainuddin met privately with Mahathir's archenemy, renowned hedge-fund operator George Soros, in London several years ago? Given the events that have transpired since that meeting, such as the Asian financial crisis, shouldn't Malaysia's Finance Minister disclose what he and Soros discussed? 35. Since Malaysian-based foreign banks came to the Mahathir government's assistance earlier this year in engineering a multi-billion-ringgit loan -- billed publicly as foreign-currency credit, but in reality from domestic deposits indexed to forex rates -- the most helpful of the bunch have initiated a spree of branch reshuffling and new-branch construction. Malaysia's banking community interprets this as confirmation of a quid-pro-quo agreement between the foreign institutions and the government. What other concessions were made to the foreign banks in order to secure the loan? 36. Isn't it obvious why Dr. M feels politically compelled to hold the general election in 1999? As it is, his UMNO-led, 14-party ruling coalition probably won't secure its customary two-thirds majority in a free and fair poll. But with the New Year's addition of 700,000 newly registered voters to the electoral rolls, the Barisan Nasional might be hard pressed to secure a solid majority. Moreover, UMNO itself might find its number of parliamentary seats sharply reduced. Many of these new voters are young and will have to shoulder most of the burden of Mahathir and Daim's economic mismanagement. They have the most to lose from the surge in official debt and from reckless bullet-repayment bailouts. They will pay for Malaysia's mortgaged economic future because aging cronies want to spend now. Given all this, isn't it paramount to give them a voice in the coming election? 37. For years, Dr. M, you have maintained that being a physician was the best qualification for being a successful politician. In your own words: "That training later became very useful to me in politics where you constantly need to gauge people's reactions and must be able to tell whether or not you are hearing the truth. . . . Doctors go through the process of observing a patient, recording his or her medical history, then you make a physical examination, do lab tests, and finally arrive at a diagnosis. The process is basically the same in politics. " Is this, Prime Minister, the same process you exercised when immediately dismissing Anwar's well-grounded fear that he systematically was being poisoned? Given the still-unanswered questions about the rapid deterioration in Anwar's health, why have you blocked a fuller, independent investigation into his physical condition? 38. While fM is on the subject, was it your medical training and keen observation of patients over the years that led you to the diagnosis that Anwar actually beat himself about the head before he was hauled into court for his corruption trial? How many patients had you treated as a physician that actually gave themselves black eyes and numerous other bruises before coming to your office? 39. More generally, Dr. M, you took a Hippocratic oath to uphold the medical ethics of you profession, including the obligation to "First, do no harm. " Yet, as Malaysia's Home Affairs Minister for the better part of your 18 years as Prime Minister, you subjected many of your fellow citizens to cruel and life-threatening torture while they were incarcerated under the Internal Security Act. Was it just your oath that you abandoned, or was it ethics entirely that you dropped after entering politics? 40. Furthermore, Dr. M, you profess to have been a fine country doctor and claim to still adhere to the calm and rational logic of a dedicated physician. Yet, when Malaysia was struck in late 1998 with a rare form of viral encephalitis, now known as the Nipah virus, your administration bungled its early diagnosis, leading to the needless death of more than 100 Malaysians, the slaughter of more than one million pigs and the effective decimation of the country's US$1 billion hog industry. Why has there never been a public accounting for the mistakes made, for the delay in calling on the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Protection for help, or for the cover-up that followed? Without an analysis of the mistakes and a commitment to change the system, can you as a medical practitioner expect the nation to be ready for the next health crisis? 41. For years, Dr. M's diehard supporters have defended the Prime Minister against the criminal excesses committed by Malaysia's police force, even while he was its ostensible boss as Minister of Home Affairs. Never, however, has Mahathir shown any inclination to rein in the many rogues who sully the force's reputation. Why is that? Does the Special Branch have an incriminating dossier on Dr. M, just as Mahathir compiles dossiers on his those in his inner circle to keep them all in line? Or are the police force's rogues as important to Mahathir's control of power as the judicial rogues? 42. Dr. M, don't you find it in the least bit ironic that it was you, along with a coterie of other supporters of former Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak, that orchestrated in the late 1960s and early '70s the "overthrow" of Malaysia's Bapak Merdeka, Tunku Abdul Rahman? The Tunku, however, only dismissed you from UMNO. And though there were widespread rumors of your imminent arrest, it never came. Why is it that when you are faced with a similar political in-fight, you see fit to have your principal rival sacked, beaten, convicted, probably convicted again, possibly poisoned and perhaps eventually killed? Are you that evil and remorseless? And can the financial stakes be that high for you and your cronies to resort to such extreme measures to avoid being exposed and held accountable? 43. Marina Yusoff, a longtime UMNO member wise in the wily political ways of Malaysia's dominant party, recently called upon Dr. M to disclose his party's role in fomenting the violence of the May 13th riots. Mahathir's party proxies balked, saying it would only serve to dredge up bitter and racially divisive memories. Or was it because an objective assessment would have highlighted Dr. M's behind-the-scenes role before and after the riots, as well as draw attention to the racial politics he will manipulate leading up to the next election? 44. In the '60s and '70s, it would have been enough to have Anwar declared a Communist, force him to deliver a coerced and televised confession, and then keep him in a restricted residence out of public view for a few years. But is the current show trial for sexual promiscuity and deviancy any more credible than the trumped up charges against Communist fellow travelers of Dr. M's generation? Is this case against Anwar truly the best that Malaysia's prosecutorial minds could do? And why is it that hard evidence is so elusive? DNA tests put to rest the only objectively provable allegation -- that a philandering Anwar had fathered an illegitimate child. 45. The mid-year ploy of releasing a list of so-called Anwar cronies never picked up the momentum that the Mahathir administration intended. Indeed, the exaggerated list was so shot full of gaping omissions and odd mentions that the roster soon was dismissed as a ruse to temporarily sidetrack mounting criticism against the Prime Minister's own crony coterie. Indeed, even this selected list revealed more about how pervasive Dr. M's cronies are than it did about Anwar or anyone else. Using the same criteria Mahathir attempted to apply to Anwar's crony list, isn't it apparent that Mahathir and Daim's boys already control the lion's share of Malaysia's corporate assets, with possibly much more to come if the bank mergers are pushed through after the election? 46. Daim's avariciousness never ceases to amaze freeMalaysia. Equally amazing is D. M's willingness to turn a blind eye Daim's way whenever he is caught out in yet another sordid corporate deal or conflict of interest. Among the many deals was one in the 1980s that captured much attention: the acquisition of a controlling interest in United Malayan Banking Corp. (now part of Sime-RHB) while he was Dr. M's Finance Minister for the first time. Some 15 years later, Daim goes and does it again; he acquires a controlling stake in Hock Hua Bank (Sabah) Bhd. while acting as an official economic adviser to the Mahathir regime and then continues to hold the interest after being appointed Finance Minister for the second time. What is it that Daim holds over Mahathir that allows him and his protιgιs to repeatedly get away with shenanigans that thoroughly embarrass Dr. M at home and abroad? 47. None dare deliver bad news and criticism in the court of Mahathir Mohamad. He's surrounded by sycophants who feed his delusion that the overwhelming majority of Malaysians still regard him as their heroic leader and that his political power is undiminished. But does he know that informal polls among Malaysia's civil service indicate deep enmity toward him and a willingness to block his self-serving directives? And is he aware how futile are the heavy-handed efforts to stem the disaffection, including the stern letters demanding that public servants not participate in any Reformasi activities? 48. In the early years of commercial flight, nations insisted on owning their national carriers, such was the prestige and such, they thought, was their countries' reputation on the line. Well, it didn't quite work out that way, taking many of these nations years to realize that competitive international flight service didn't suit hidebound civil servants without a nose for commerce. Malaysia sought out a middle ground by privatizing its Malaysian Airline System Bhd. but still keeping it under government control. This formula proved no more effective. But it would have helped if the Mahathir regime had selected a knowledgeable airline executive to head MAS. Instead, Dr. M selected a flunky former merchant banker and Daim crony, Tan Sri Tajudin Ramli, to safeguard Malaysia's national carrier. What was Dr. M smoking? No wonder he prefers to fly private aircraft these days. But what about the rest of us? 49. Datuk Ibrahim Ali, chairman of UMNO's anti-defamation committee, probably has the least credibility of all the party's senior officials. The one-time Mahathir critic now plays the role of Dr. M's former pet buffoon, ex-Information Minister and race-relations dropout Datuk Mohamed Rahmat. Could this be Mahathir's way of testing Ibrahim's fickle allegiance? Or is it that Mahathir can't find anybody else willing to mouth the most outlandish lies on his behalf? 50. Dr. M, you have said repeatedly that you would leave office after receiving a "signal" that the Malaysian public has tired of your rule. However, you never defined what you meant by "signal. " Will it take something as catastrophic as what has happened in Indonesia to make you face the fact that you have overstayed? And for that, we all have overpaid and will continue to do so for years to come. 28 October 1999 --------------------------- ONElist Sponsor ---------------------------- GRAB THE GATOR! FREE SOFTWARE DOES ALL THE TYPING FOR YOU! Tired of filling out forms and remembering passwords? Gator fills in forms and passwords with just one click! 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