Anwar
Ibrahim
'Ends preferences for Malays'
They should be given to deserving poor of all races. malaysiakini.
Oct 29, 2005
Former
deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim has called for the immediate
suspension of the New Economic Policy and an end to 35 years
of
preferences for Malay Malaysians.
"For
saying this, I have been accused of being anti-Malay,"
he lamented.
"But
no deserving Malay will be denied of government assistance.
In
fact, more funds could be expended in this area.
"However,
the Indians in the estates, poor Chinese and the bumiputeras
in Sabah and Sarawak equally deserve assistance."
His
call for an end to the current NEP, which was implemented
since
1970, was made in a foreword for a newly released book,
Where to,
Malaysia?, written by political commentator Kim Quek.
"I
am in favour of some form of affirmative action and government
intervention to rectify unacceptable social and economic
disparity. But
such initiative must not be based on racial line.
"It
must be targeted towards the poor, irrespective of race
or ethnicity," said Anwar.
He added
that given the abuses of the NEP through "corruption,
cronyism
and nepotism", the policy must undergo a "major
surgery".
"(The)
practice of the NEP today is the dishing out of government
contracts, often overpriced, to cronies. The NEP has become
a cover for
self- and crony-enrichment among the already mega-rich."
Criticism
not new
According
to Anwar, criticism of the policy was not new.
"Way
back in the 1980s, a group of UKM (University Kebangsaan
Malaysia)
economists - they are all bumiputeras - have subjected its
practice and
its effect to close scrutiny. Their conclusions were not
very flattering to the government.
"One
cannot imagine such trenchant criticism of a major government
policy by scholars is even possible today," said Anwar,
referring to the climate of fear in university campuses.
His
criticism of the NEP is in deep contrast to his former party's
call
for further enhancement of the controversial policy at the
Umno annual
general meeting early last month.
Anwar,
once the heir apparent to former prime minister Dr Mahathir
Mohamad, was sacked in 1998 and subsequently charged and
convicted for
sodomy and corruption.
He was
later slapped with a 15-year jail term but walked free last
year
after serving six years when his sodomy conviction was quashed
upon
appeal to the Federal Court.
From
the onset, Anwar claimed that the charges were trumped-up
as there
was a political conspiracy against him. However, Mahathir
has denied this.
Trenchant
analysis
Quek's
381-page Where to, Malaysia? is mostly a collection of articles
written over the past six years on various political and
economic issues
afflicting Malaysia.
It also
contained a trenchant analysis on Prime Minister Abdullah
Ahmad
Badawi's leadership.
Quek,
a retired accountant based in Johor Baru, argued that the
report
card on Abdullah's reform achievement in the past two years
since he
took over from Mahathir was "almost blank".
"None
of the repressive laws had been repealed or amended, free
press is non-existent, corruption has worsened, open and
fair government tenders
continue to be elusive, crime rates are still raging, social
ills remain
endemic, education continues to be mired in mediocrity,
and judicial
integrity is as low as ever with judges tainted in the Anwar
trials
continue to be given speedy promotion over others more deserving,"
he wrote.
Quek
warned that Malaysia could see the return of Mahathirism,
especially through Deputy Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak,
who is widely considered as the torch bearer of the Mahathir
legacy.
"There
is little doubt that Mahathir has made a forceful comeback
to
public life.
"Being the creator and perpetrator of the largesse
system of governance, to which almost the entire heirarchy
of Umno owe their presence affluence, Mahathir's resurging
influence in Umno cannot be over-rated."
malaysiakini