Support for Malaysia's PM Najib dwindles after scandal
Opposition group calls for PM Najib Razak to quit, arguing he "grossly abused his powers" in a corruption scandal.
Stephanie Scawen | 02 Oct 2015 AJ
A US federal grand jury is examining allegations of corruption involving Najib and individuals close to him [Reuters] |
Another
group of anti-government voices in Malaysia has added to the chorus of
disapproval surrounding the leadership of Prime Minister Najib Razak.
Embroiled
for months now in allegations of corruption and embezzlement, the
self-styled Demi Malaysia group issued an open call this week for Najib
to quit, arguing the prime minister had "grossly abused his powers" and
the "country’s reputation is at stake".
Najib's
honesty and credibility have been under attack since July when the Wall
Street Journal first broke the story of approximately $700m deposited
in a personal bank account.
He
said the money came from an Arab donor. The question of why such an
enormous sum was in a personal account and not a political party one
remains unanswered.
The
WSJ report said the funds came via a series of financial transfers from
a heavily indebted state investment fund - 1MDB - which Najib, as
finance minister, also oversees.
Campaigners
say any other leader found in such a position would have stepped down
immediately to allow proper investigations. Yet attempts to do so in
Malaysia have not materialised.
For every day [Najib] succeeds to postpone his slow death, Malaysia is sinking a bit deeper in the quick sand.
Wong Chin Huat, political scientist at the Penang Institute
As
allegations have kept surfacing, public discontent has grown,
culminating in a massive anti-Najib rally on the eve of Independence
Day. Organised by electoral reform group Bersih, tens of thousands of
people rallied over two days calling on Najib to step down.
There
are reported investigations going on in Singapore, Hong Kong,
Switzerland, Abu Dhabi and now in New York which, as US dollars were
involved, comes under the jurisdiction of American financial regulators.
Yet 1MDB’s chairman Arul Kanda maintains he has not been contacted by any foreign investigation team.
Wong
Chin Huat, a political scientist at the Penang Institute, says it is
irrelevant whether people believe the explanation Najib has given about
the source of the $700m.
"What
can they do, even if they don’t believe the story?" he asked. "He has
survived mass protest and he will survive the parliamentary session - as
a no confidence vote could not be passed until [the ruling party] UMNO
is ready to remove him".
Najib's predecessor Mahathir Mohamed declared on his blog Chedet that Najib has to go.
"I
had worked hard to make Najib the prime minister of Malaysia. But now I
want him to be removed, to step down from being prime minister. It is
nothing personal. It is because he has failed terribly as prime
minister," Mahathir wrote.
Mahathir
has been campaigning for Najib’s removal for months, and this latest
statement does nothing for the prime minister, who has been in New York
for the UN General Assembly meeting.
Mahathir
still has strong support in Malaysia, despite being out of office for
more than 12 years. He helped manoeuvre his immediate successor Abdullah
Badawi out of office in 2009 to usher in Najib.
He
boldly told Najib that 'no-one believes' his explanation the money was a
donation from an anonymous Arab national. "Give us the proof," he
writes. "Show us the bank accounts".
Political uncertainty
The
longer the scandal remains unresolved the greater the pressure on Najib
and his government. The issue is being partly blamed for causing the
ringgit to its lowest level against the dollar in 17 years.
The
political uncertainty has also seen a rise in more race-based activism.
A pro-Malay Red Shirt rally was held to counter the perception that the
Yellow-shirted Bersih supporters were predominately Chinese.
Zainah
Anwar, a Muslim right's activist painted a more depressing picture in a
July article for Malaysian newspaper The Star when she said: "I am
beginning to feel as if this country and its rakyat are being crushed
and pummelled by wrecking balls. The wrecking ball of race and religion,
of insatiable greed, of desperation to stay in power, of never-ending
sense of entitlements, of unpunished crimes and abuses, of ideology over
rational thinking, justice, and fair play."
But while the calls mount for Najib to go, Wong Chin Huat does not see his resignation coming anytime soon.
Conceding
defeat and resignation is not an option for Najib as he fears criminal
prosecution. He won’t want to be imprisoned like former Korean
presidents Roh Tae Woo and Chun Doo-hwan or former Taiwan president Chen
Shui Bian, or living in exile like former Filipino President Ferdinand
Marcos.
Nor,
says Wong, can Najib quietly slide towards the exit. "He can't open his
mouth for one - that would be a sign of weakness and open the flood
gate for rebellion. He would in fact finish off anyone who dares to
openly rebel against him to prevent rebellion from snowballing."
Najib
has already seen the removal of the (now former) Attorney General Abdul
Gani Patail three months before his scheduled retirement. Gani was said
to be on the verge of filing corruption charges against him.
In
late July, Najib also ordered a cabinet reshuffle, ousting his deputy
Muhyiddin Yassin, who had been publicly critical of him and also
promoting four members of the Public Accounts Committee to the cabinet.
The PAC was looking into the 1MDB finances, and the quartet's promotion effectively stalled any inquiry.
Searching for alternatives
Some
analysts say that while the pressure on Najib mounts, he will aim to
stay in power until the next general election, not scheduled for another
three years - a date Najib reaffirmed this week.
But
even if he steps down, the question of who is fit to succeed him
remains. While history would normally dictate the deputy prime minister
takes over, that is not guaranteed.
And
with the main opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim in jail and his coalition
fractured, there seems no likely candidate from either side of the
political spectrum if there should be early elections.
Wong
draws an analogy with the political transition in South Africa from the
apartheid regime to a fully democratic one, when then apartheid
President FW de Klerk ended the policy of racial segregation
"We need - not so much a Mandela - but a De Klerk, who can convince UMNO to embrace the future.
"Till
then, Najib is painfully bleeding to a slow death which he tries to
delay as far as possible. And for every day he succeeds to postpone his
slow death, Malaysia is sinking a bit deeper in the quick sand."
Emails to the prime minister's press secretary Tengku Sariffuddin, asking for comment relating to this article went unanswered.
Source: Al Jazeera
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