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Malaysia: New Cabinet and Beyond PDF Print E-mail
Posted by Raja Petra   
Sunday, 23 March 2008 10:51

Mushtak Parker, Arab News

The big Cabinet shake-up announced by Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi this week may not be enough to stave off a leadership challenge when the United Malaysia National Organization (UMNO), the dominant party in the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition which has ruled Malaysia for some 51 years, meets for its annual conventional later this year.

Still smarting from a bloody nose delivered by the electorate in the March 8 general elections, which saw the BN coalition suffering its worst poll setback to date, Badawi has surprised many with some of his new ministerial appointments, which could come back to haunt him and some members of his last Cabinet. The prime minister is officially in denial, instead talking about his huge new electoral mandate.

At a stroke, the Cabinet is leaner and meaner — cut back from 90 in the last government to 69 in this government. Gone are the parliamentary secretaries and third-ranking officials in each ministry.

Gone is the “Old Guard” associated more with Badawi’s predecessor, Dr. Mahathir Mohammed. They include Rafidah Aziz, the enigmatic trade & industry minister, who has been in the job for 21 years and who is also head of Wanita UMNO, the women’s wing of UMNO; Sammy Vellu, the telecoms minister and leader of the Malaysian Indian Congress, one of the BN coalition parties; Zainuddin Mydin, the information minister who lost his seat; Shahrizat Abdul Jalil, the rural affairs and women’s minister who also lost her seat; and Tengku Adnan Bin Tengku Mansor, the tourism minister, and Jamaluddin Jarjis, the science & technology minister — both of whom have put in lack-luster performances as ministers.

In come fresh new younger faces more attuned to the centrist faction within both UMNO and the BN. And perhaps, most importantly, there is no room for this controversial son-in-law Khairy Abdullah, who has been elected for the first time as a member of the Dewan Rakyat (the Malaysian parliament). Khairy’s real or perceived influence on his father-in-law especially in policy-making and his sudden elevation to the deputy-head of UMNO Youth has assumed legendary proportions amongst the political mischief-makers and gossip columnists in Malaysia. He has antagonized many in UMNO and the electorate in general.

This, stress UMNO sources, was partly the reason why the BN lost its two-thirds majority and was returned with a simple majority of 140 seats compared with the Opposition’s 82 seats.

But two important oversights may indicate that Badawi’s reformist instincts are not as liberal or democratic or consensual as he might suggest. At a time when racial tensions amongst certain sections of the country’s minority Chinese and Indians seems to have resurfaced, Badawi actually relinquished the Internal Security portfolio, which was traditionally held by the incumbent prime minister.

Instead he has merged the key Internal Security Ministry with the Home Ministry and moved his erstwhile foreign minister, Syed Hamid Albar, to head this new super ministry. Either the prime minister sees any threat of racial tension and potential political instability as very minimal, or he thinks that reform in this area is crucial and should be under the purview of a dedicated senior minister.

This indirectly ties in with Sen. Zaid Ibrahim, a new minister in the prime minister’s department, a no-nonsense independent and well-respected lawyer who in the past has openly attacked Malaysia’s judiciary and abuse of human rights and deficiencies in social policy. Ibrahim’s mandate is to reform the Malaysian judiciary and perhaps the very electoral system that denied him a chance and the right to stand in the March 8 elections. He gets into the Cabinet through being appointed a senator in the upper house, which is a rather curious route to the heart of government for a seemingly radical Malay political maverick and now the de facto law minister.

The Malaysian judiciary has been under attack on several fronts in recent years for toeing the government line too closely and for being institutionally biased in favor of Muslims in court cases involving Muslims and other faith groups in the country. One of his first tasks would be to sort out the VK Lingam video scandal, apparently showing a lawyer talking on the phone with a judge brokering top judicial appointments and the mentioning of Tengku Adnan Bin Tengku Mansor, the erstwhile tourism minister.

The expectations of the legal fraternity in Malaysia, judging by the positive comments to Ibrahim’s elevation to the Cabinet, have been raised to dizzy heights. But, whether the minister can deliver the reforms, only time will tell.

The dichotomy of Badawi’s new “’reforming” Cabinet is further underlined by the appointment of rural and regional development minister, Muhammed Muhammed Taib who, as a Selangor state politician, was caught trying to smuggle $4 million out of Australia a few years ago.

Badawi refuses to relinquish his Finance Ministry portfolio, leaving Malaysia the only country in the world with the ridiculous ministerial appointment of second finance minister or finance minister II, as the current incumbent Nor Mohammed Yakcop prefers to be called. This on top of two deputy finance ministers to assist both Badawi and Nor. The erstwhile deputy finance minister, Adek Awang Hussin, a former deputy governor of Bank Negara (the central bank) and director general of the Labuan Offshore Financial Authority, is another casualty of the Cabinet.

This practice was first instituted by Mahathir in the aftermath of the losses suffered by Bank Negara in the currency markets during Anwar Ibrahim’s tenure as finance minister in the 1990s and further reinforced during the Asian financial crisis to hit the region in 1998. If Badawi is so keen to jettison any semblance to Mahathir’s rule, then this is the portfolio that he should also have relinquished to a dedicated minister.

Nor, now emboldened as an elected member of Parliament and the archetypal technocrat, is reportedly not happy with the present set-up, but may be abiding his time should there be a leadership change at the UMNO convention — a suggestion which the prime minister has dismissed.

The other “failure” is the empowerment of more women within the Cabinet ranks. The number of women ministers has shrunk and Badawi has gone back on his promise that the BN should have a target of 30 percent women members of Parliament. This target is institutionalized in the BN’s Gender Empowerment Policy. The target has now been revised downward to 20 percent.

Perhaps the telling appointment in Abdullah Badawi’s Cabinet is Muhyiddin Yasin, who started his ministerial career as sports and youth minister and who has replaced Rafidah Aziz as Minister for International Trade and Industry. Yasin, who hails from Johor in the south, is an ally of both Badawi and Syed Mokhtar, the tycoon and playmaker who owns huge chunks of Johor including the international airport there, which is the only privately owned international airport in Malaysia.

If change is the intention of Prime Minister Badawi, then it seems to be change tempered with some boldness, some confusion, some dichotomy and some contradictions.

Comments (5)Add Comment
...
written by BennyG, March 23, 2008 11:06:28
Wow. Did this come from a foreign journalist? Amazing that he seemed to hit the nail spot on. Congrats to Mushtak Parker for a piece well written. The points I particularly liked are:
1. "The prime minister is officially in denial"
2. Nor is abiding his time should there be a leadership change [Abdullah, you don't even know who are your friends or foes. WAKE UP!!]

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written by rakyatmalaysia, March 23, 2008 21:05:58
Did Pak kaLAH actually made this new cabinet ? i thought he always sleeping wan ?? anyhow, this more like humpty dumpty cabinet..just need a little push over the wall..and all will fall in thousand of pieces. smilies/grin.gif smilies/cool.gif smilies/wink.gif
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written by Eskay Lim, March 23, 2008 21:38:24
PM Badawi had just formed a "rag-tag" cabinet of ministers and deputies to rule the country for the next 5 years. In his cabinet, he had included many new faces, some very old faces and an unclean face as well and it looks as if Badawi is having problems getting the talented & professional ones to join his team.
His main aim this term is to carry out rigorous development projects that will bring benefit and prosperity to all Maaysians.
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written by PakPandir, March 23, 2008 22:34:49
Putting M2M , the guy with the bag of money caught in Australia.. back to cabinet ???
Badawi again showed BN has below-zero Value-standard. Clearly BN's days are numbered and now, very short-numbered.
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written by R Hum, March 24, 2008 04:51:14
Sen. Zaid Ibrahim, a new minister in the prime minister’s department,should reinstate Tun Salleh Abbas as the Lord President and pay compensation for the misdeeds done by Mahathir. All the other judges who were removed with Tun Salleh should also be reinstated and pay compensation.

The compensation should be offset from the pension that Mahathir received from the government. In this way, there is a measure of closure for all these judges, who suffered under Mahathir's excesses.

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