UMNO's
Diminishing assets
UMNO accounts handed in by the outgoing Diam Zainnudin make
gloomy reading. Malaysians wonder how much of the billions
in shares still remain in the party.
July 6, 2001
On June
16, outgoing party Treasurer (and Finance Minister) Daim
Zainuddin handed the UMNO accounts over to his boss, Dr.
Mahathir Mohamad before disappearing into private life.
Since
the Prime Minister had gone through the books, several things
have happened.
Firstly,
Dr. Mahathir has himself taken over the post of Finance
Minister and says he is in no hurry to pass it to some one
else.Tradition is that it goes with the post UMNO Treasurer,
which means he also takes charge of party assets.
Then
11 days later, he announced, for the first time, that Malaysia
had lost US $250 billion during the Asian financial crisis
in 1997. This is 2-1/2 times Singapore's total foreign exchange.
Of this,
US $50 billion was attributed to the share-market fall,
which doesn't augur well for UMNO shares.
When
Dr Mahathir became Prime Minister in 1981, he put Daim in
charge of Fleet Holdings, UMNO's investment arm, whose objective
was to accumulate wealth for the party.
This
was the reason why the two posts - finance minister and
UMNO Treasurer - were held by the same person in at least
17 of the past 20 years.
It was
a golden era of fast growth - through industrialisation
and privatisation - and UMNO wanted a lion's share of the
new wealth. With Dr. Mahathir and Daim as a team, optimism
and wealth rose.
Renong,
United Engineers (M), and a whole range of banks, media,
hotels, property, infrastructures, etc. all came under control
by Fleet Holdings and extensively referred to as "UMNO
shares."
Optimism
flowed from the belief that UMNO was a wealthy party. Today
much of it has waned.
In fact, few UMNO members have even the slightest clue how
many shares their party really owns - by holding companies
name or on its behalf by individuals.
Today's
lack of transparency stems partly from a court ruling that
UMNO was an illegal organisation.
This
ruling provided Mahathir the opportunity to reconstitute
the party as the UMNO Baru (New UMNO), while purging his
rivals.
In the
process of being legally disestablished, UMNO appeared to
lose direct control of its vast corporate holdings.
In fact,
UMNO corporate entities funneled resources to particular
individuals, building new bases of wealth and support while
stripping the UMNO holdings of assets that might be claimed
by the breakaway forces.
These
proxies are close friends and associates of UMNO leaders,
especially Daim, Treasurer and Finance Minister.
In recent
years, some of the what used to be "UMNO shares"
were now - during recent years - referred to as Daim-linked
counters.
Today
party rank-and-file can hardly distinguish what are "Diam
shares" and what are "UMNO shares."
Said
Mr Lim Kit Siang, leader of the opposition Democratic Action
Party: "Once he became financial czar, you could never
tell where UMNO companies ended and Daim companies began."
Within
UMNO, he was Treasurer, exercising direct and indirect control
over a substantial network of holdings, primarily through
UMNO's Fleet Holdings.
At the
same time, Daim continued to pursue his own private business
interests.
Some
insiders say Dr Mahathir was shocked to discover the poor
state of the party's finance - and his decision to retain
the finance portfolio and party Treasury is partly due to
this.
"He
wants to repair the damage before the next election (due
in 2004)," said one source. If true, Dr Mahathir has
three years to do something that depends on stock market
volatility. So apart from Anwar and the country's economic
health, he faces a third problem.
That
is the diminishing party assets, especially when members
start raising questions about them. They may force him to
start on checking Daim's tenure to make sure there was not
hanky panky.
The
first was to sort out what are UMNO's shares and what belong
to Daim or his cronies.The second is to find out how to
rescue them. Many of the companies it controls are either
deeply in debt or have negative flows.
Some
desperately need bail-out.
Kuala
Lumpur is also abuzz with speculation about a book due to
be released shortly about Daim. It was by the same author
of "50 reasons why anwar should not be prime minister."
That book led to the arrest and imprisonment of former Deputy
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.
Is this an omen for Daim?
Seah Chiang Nee