Najib's fate is in Khairy's hands: Is this still true?

From  the embarrassing case of the missing jetfighter engines to the morally  degenerating but politically opportunistic 'Allah' issue, it appears  that Najib's administration could do nothing right at least not in the  ends of those who hold the real power - the people. Comparatively  speaking, Abdullah Badawi when in power seemed far less scandalous.  Furthermore he did win a General Election with an overpowering mandate;  something Najib has yet to be able to prove he could match.
Ever  the incessant fiddly kingmaker, former PM Mahathir was quick to  interject that his young protégé Najib was probably in a fitter state of  mind to rule the country since he doesn't sleep on the job - a  proverbial but blatant jibe at Badawi - but his obviously fading memory  must be finding it hard to remember that the current playboy PM's most  tainted accusation has not rested well with the country and abroad. For  someone in his position to take power as the country's most powerful  individual with the conscience of a murdered Mongolian looming as large as his scheming wife's complicity couldn't be easy.
That  being said, Mahathir's typical self-serving and self-important nature  doesn't allow anyone to question his failures much less any allegations  that he might have corruptibly enriched his own family for 22 years. And  so when claims were made that he had squandered RM100 billion worth of  taxpayers' money during his despotic rule, he was obviously annoyed but  when looked at from Barry Wain's claim, he fell somewhat short of a full  denial, preferring instead to level the accusation at Badawi for being  'even more wasteful.' Surely if there is any hint at all, this is the  best one that underscored his own tacit admission that he isn't the  angel that he had long painted himself to be. Oh how politicians are all  such pathological liars...
With such fine examples on parade -  from Mahathir to Najib, Khir Toyo and Hishamuddin and so many other -  nobody should ever be surprised at the languid effortlessness that UMNO  can defraud the entire nation. So languid that even when blatant  corruption is revealed, there isn't any panicking from the perpetrator.  Under the able wings of Najib's administration, he has the pickings of  the best judiciary, best anticorruption agency, best military, best  police and best media to shield him and make sure that he can go into  hiding for a while just to cool the heels of his pursuers. Once matters  die down enough, he can then return from a self-imposed 'exile' and  continue his merry way. Despite opposition outcries to investigate him,  it would be case-closed amounting to a judicial acquittal usually based  on 'insufficient evidence.'
Much as all of us know - it is  unworldly to even suggest that, like others before it, the current  UMNO-led ruling government is incorrupt. Tell that to even a market  vendor and he'd laugh at our face. No thanks to Mahathir, corruption has  become the number one telltale cultural signature of Malaysian society  and there are no signs of it abating. From the bottommost to the top  rung of society, corruption festers at deepening levels so worrying that  foreign direct investments have been in steep declines for many years  now. Transparency agencies have long criticised the corruption crisis at  government levels in Malaysia but no one seems to want to take notice.
If  you're someone visiting Malaysia as a tourist, you won't see anything  too unpleasant. If you have been here for sometime, you'll understand  that there are 'certain ways' to do things and for all intents and  purposes, these are ways to 'work around' issues where money is  inevitably involved in buying favours, squirming out of premeditated  problems or fast-tracking permits and licences. Even foreign companies  have learned that Malaysia 's modus operandus involves a strong dose of  questionable morals in order to get things done.
Now that we're  into the second year fresh out of the previous General Election, the  tremor of the shock might have begun to settle. Najib's administration  would be very quick to gloss over that patch of history and scheme to  undermine the opposition in bids to recover lost territory. However the  problem is far larger than he thinks because the prospects of returning  Barisan Nasional to its past glorious days are rather quite gloomy. In  fact everything points to the ruling alliance's first ever wholesale  defeat in the next coming general election. At the rate that the ruling  politicians are plundering the country, corruption is slated to worsen  before it could get any lesser. Given that there is no good news to tell  the people at large, what would Najib's administration do?
Simple. Loot more!
Knowing  that there isn't much time left to rake in the money leisurely, every  current minister, deputy minister and their secretaries and all  high-powered government official aren't wasting time anymore. Instead -  as you can see from the unfolding news - scams and scandals are emerging  at breakneck speeds as everyone in government is filling up their  pockets before there is nothing left to fill. Everyone knows that when  the opposition marches in and takes over, their days are gone. What  needs to be done now is to steal as much as one can, apply for permanent  residence in a safe country for the whole family (including the  mistress I suppose), pre-book your open airline tickets and go on a  standby status ready to take off at a fleeting moment's notice.
Knowing  that voters empowered by the Internet are fast seeing the real picture,  the days of pulling the wool over their eyes are long over. Of course  it's not game over yet. While the federal government is examining all  sorts of ways to undermine the opposition's inertia, the worse has yet  to come. Be that as it may, even the most ignominious BN/ UMNO  politician now realises that there is no guarantee that the government's  efforts to neutralise the opposition will work as before. And with that  thought, the plundering this time will proceed at warp speed!
Against  the backdrop of the obvious, the ruling government has not given up. In  many ways they cannot afford to give up. Scrounging as much as possible  is one thing - getting hauled to the courts and jailed for life is  quite another. Najib's pirates are actively conjuring anything to swing  back some percentage votes. So if you think you have seen everything  yet, brace yourself - as the new trade winds blow your way, hold on  tight because the storm is about to rock and the sea is about to get  extremely choppy.
Here are some of the things they are likely to do:
1.  Pre-register soldiers as early as possible and do a multiple deployment  at various election points during election day - these are used  instrumentally in crucial safe seats and must-win electorates
2.  Don't discount gerrymandering because this is one way to weaken  traditionally strong electorates for the opposition - if they can force  the mergers of certain neighbouring seats of power, they may be able to  manipulate the chance of winning to their advantage
3. Employ  foreign expertise ( India anyone?) in Internet security and pay them  handsomely to hack into opposition blogger sites, ruin their database  servers, destroy their login management and generally cause costly havoc  - this is chiefly to thwart Raja Petra Kamarudin's influence
4.  Further undermining of the PKR-based Selangor state government by  dividing PAS allegiance - central to the government's agenda is to win  back the premier state at all costs including lives (as we have now  seen)
5. Heighten more MACC hits on opposition leaders and  politicians - this is aimed to discredit the opposition political power  and shame them in public
6. Nail Anwar Ibrahim's ass once and for  all, chuck him in jail, cripple him and throw the key away - so long as  the status quo amongst the opposition remains the same, putting him  away for good is key to nullifying the main threat to the government
7.  Continue the pogrom of deliberately damaging their own mosques - this  is to continue the bid to get Malays to believe that these are the works  of non-Moslems (principally targeting at Chinese Christians)
8.  Persistently play the religious card amongst the rural Malay population  and to force PAS to show its hand of allegiance to Islam and hopefully  force them to leave the Pakatan Rakyat alliance - it is obvious that the  integrity of this alliance will be broken if they can compel - not PKR  or DAP - but PAS to abandon
9. Build larger and more opulent  palaces for the Sultans as a way to bribe them into owing favours (to  the government) - in any case, most of the Sultanates continue to play  into the hands of the government due to their own corruptibility and  criminality
10. Secretly buying up favours with various pockets  of influence amongst the Chinese communities by way of promising  lucrative projects with profitable returns in return for votes - the  government always believes that the Chinese are the easiest to corrupt  because of their relative material greed
It is all too obvious  that good governance is an alien concept to Malaysia 's ruling  government. By the same token, efforts to restore popularity have  continued. Najib's poorly conceived '1- Malaysia ' concept has been  mocked at derisively not just in Malaysia but elsewhere around the  world. Critics see it as no better or worse than previous attempts such  as Mahathir's cynical 'Malaysia Boleh' or Badawi's banal 'Gemilang'  nonsense. In the face of the country's anti-Israel lobbying, it might be  surprising that Najib has courted a marketing company in America run by  powerful and influential American Jews to develop and run the  government's '1-Malaysia' theme. There you go again - liars, liars,  pants on fire...
Whether or not any of these will bear good fruit  for the government remains to be seen. The question is whether people  see in Najib efforts that are sincere or more of the same cynical ploy  merely to win votes but not to permanently change the mindset.
These  efforts are best seen in Najib's decision to follow in the footsteps of  his late father in the visit to China and his recent decision to call  on the Indian state of Tamil Naidu.
In China , Najib hopes to  repeat his father's success in wooing the local Chinese communities.  Something tells me the Chinese are not that stupid that they cannot see  through this veneer. Certain things are just not that easy to forget and  the Chinese are continuing to wait for the right answers to come from  the government (knowing they won't come). By visiting Tamil Naidu where  some 85% of Malaysia 's Indians hail from, Najib hopes also to drum up  support and restore the damaged Indian vote. In both cases, it's a lost  cause for the government.
While all that might sound worthwhile -  after all Najib badly needs to repair his deteriorating reputation -  but in the final analysis, this use of taxpayers' money is yet another  example of money not well spent. Najib believes it's a brilliant  masterstroke but come the next general elections, the people will remain  on track to send a resounding vote of no-confidence especially after  his public endorsement of mass demonstrations in protest against the  court decision to favour the Catholic weekly Herald in the use of the  word 'Allah.' It's like taking two steps forward but ten steps back.
There  is not a single person in the country whose vote is worth something who  doesn't believe that the attempted arson attacks on the churches were  none other than the work of the darker sinister princes at UMNO. Najib  did not do himself any favours by denying this. He would have looked a  whole lot better to the voters if he instead said he would get serious  and flush them all out. Without a doubt, Hishamuddin and Najib were both  toying with fire, with the possibility that another 'May 13' would  calamitously trigger another race-related riot.
It is possible  that they believe this would be the best course of action to retrieve  power from states lost because curfews tend to do that by nature - as  the military forces roll in, state powers are frozen automatically.  Military generals then take over and in the end, powers of governance  are returned to the federal government. Should that be the case, all  hell will break loose. But no one can deny this is a distinct  possibility. Remember, in politics, anything can happen..
What  the government did not see coming was the passivity of the Christians'  response to the arson attacks. Instead of retaliation - verbally or  otherwise - the country's 9% minority Christian community responded by  forgiving the as-yet-unseen perpetrators and went all out to conjoin  with the rest of the non-Christian population in a scene unprecedented  and unthought of by UMNO and/or Barisan Nasional. In a massive show of  affection, understanding and accommodation, Christians throughout the  country not only underplayed the seriousness of the attacks but showed a  level of maturity that diffused any possibility of a riotous response.  And in so doing, much to the dismay of the government and its UMNO  machinery, they had to think of something else. And that something else  was to hurl abuse at their own mosques. That is called, 'political  expediency.'
UMNO believes that by doing so and within such a  short time frame, people around the country will align the mosque  attacks with Christian Chinese and force a few things to unfold -  firstly to win back the exclusive use of the word 'Allah', secondly to  corner PAS into leaving the opposition alliance and joining UMNO and  thirdly to secure the electoral promise that they are better than anyone  else at quelling violence and restoring peace.
Frankly UMNO  can't be bothered with the word 'Allah' - most of them aren't that godly  to look into the semantics. The ploy has always been political and not  religious. If the authoritative Islamic scholars at Al-Azhar University  in Cairo already see no issue with the use of the word by other  religions, why should it matter in Malaysia ? The whole basis behind  this debacle is purely to politically undermine the stability of the  opposition powers at federal and state level. This is a good example of  politicians selling out on God but putting up a godly face.
The  problem with blaming the mosque attacks on Chinese Christians is that it  doesn't stick well. It is not that easy to unsettle the Chinese  Christians into doing something this violent. Furthermore a closer study  of the mosque attacks reveals a few clues that these weren't the work  of the Chinese Christians or anyone else but the right-wing UMNO  factions. By the nature of such an attack and to really push the  confrontation beyond repair, the perpetrators would have been far better  to use pigs' heads rather than those of wild boars but to do so would  have broken their cover since only the Chinese - and no other  communities - sell pork in this country. Given that therefore, the  identity of the perpetrators would have been easy to reveal.
Getting  and killing wild boars, on the other hand, is a relatively easy task  since most of the forest rangers are Malays themselves. So getting the  cooperation to ease into the jungles would have been as effortless as  shooting the wild boars and cutting off their heads. Out in the jungles,  visibility is minimal and it's not so easy for anyone to see. That is  the idea anyway but some people theorise that while it may not have  provoked the Chinese Christians, perhaps others might have had a hand in  these incidents. So what about the Chinese Buddhists then?
Chinese  Buddhists have no direct argument with anyone; not yet anyway. They  have not come out to demonstrate the way the centrist and moderate  Malays and the Indians have. The Buddhist communities are far larger but  more resilient. They're not that easy to budge and since none of the  attacks provided them any reason to retaliate, it just doesn't make  sense. Perhaps this might pave the way for UMNO to start targeting  Chinese temples - we'll just have to wait and see.
If it weren't  the Chinese Christians and/or Buddhists, maybe it's the collective  Indian population but this also doesn't make a lot of sense. Indian  Christians are an extremely small minority and they generally coalesce  with the Chinese Christians in a unifying sort of way. Indian Hindus may  have had altercations with UMNO, resulting in right-wing Malays  brandishing the infamous cow's head but this issue is now up with the  courts and no decision is available yet.
The Hindus do not have  any reason to foment things because of the lack of court decision.  Furthermore the attacks weren't against Hindu kuils (temples) but  churches, which then leaves us to consider that the dispute is a civil  inter-Malay problem with the right-wing radicals in one corner and the  more logic-prevailing moderates in the other. This isn't something that  the government had wanted in the first place but in the bargain, that's  what they ended up with.
UMNO's decision to toy with the Malay  sentiment is simple - to create confusion and then point the finger at  those who raise race and religious issues and from there, they believe  they have the wherewithal to regroup all Malay-ethnic votes in time to  face the elections. Obviously they felt wise to start all these early  and not wait but doing so also gave the public plentiful opportunities  to realise the government's game plan.
Part of the prize money  that UMNO hope to earn from all these is to wrestle back power of the  premier state, Selangor. Allegedly they have caught the 'perpetrators'  but I'm willing to bet that this is a complete ruse. Let's see if the  so-called 'perpetrators' would then 'admit' under questioning that they  staged the arson attacks under the instructions of a certain Anwar  Ibrahim. From thereon a few things will take place. Even if Anwar's  legal counsel wins his day in court, he'll still land up in jail for the  arson attempts. Then the so-called 'perpetrators' are sentenced to  death, which means the public won't be able to get to see their faces  anyhow. On the day of their execution, prison authorities will switch  prisoners so that instead of these perpetrators ending up at the  gallows, it would be other convicts on death row. They get hanged. We  don't see the bodies or the faces. Everything gets hushed up but  importantly for the government, Anwar is in jail. Now wouldn't that be  interesting!
Najib's 'art of war' doesn't work today. It might  have back in 1969 with the May 13 race riots but in this new millennium,  this ethnic divide-and-rule policy is fairly limiting because it's no  longer Chinese-versus- Malay. As much as UMNO and the federal government  are hell bent to repeat history to their advantage, consensus on the  ground tells a diametrically different story. Rather today's political  complexion is a tripartite ethnic conflict against a monobloc political  entity called UMNO. Hence it is the Malay-ethnic, Chinese-ethnic and  Indian-ethnic railing against an incorrigible and belligerently  corrupted UMNO-ethnic.
The government basically cornered itself  on its own doing because today, the major source of conflict is no  longer racism but corruption. Moderate Malays no longer cared if they're  fighting fellow Malays who are in political leadership and/or walk the  corridors of power. What they have awoken to is a realisation that they  have to team up in a dynamic with fellow Chinese and Indians in a mass  fight against corruption that has gone utterly out of control. And since  corruption is synonymous with everything that UMNO represents, Malay or  no Malay, that fight is no longer ambiguous.
And if the  government is still having its head buried in the sand, it also means  that they have not been questioning why serious and sensitive  information keeps getting leaked out to the media and public. We had the  Altaantuya murder not too long ago. Then there were the Scorpene  submarines. Other than that we now have the missing two Northrop F-5E  jet engines, which were then followed very quickly by news of the  completely missing jet fighters from where they were parked in  California . We also know that for whatever banal reason, the sales  receipts are missing.
So who has or have been fast-tracking these  news out to the public? Would they be inside people who support Najib's  administration and UMNO or would they be like us - people who are just  sick to the back teeth with the corruption - and therefore see all these  as opportunities to equip the public with the means to topple the  government? I'm willing to bet that even at the top levels of Najib's  government, there are people who share our grief, who are just as angry  about the corruption and who are empathetic with the commoner. These are  the people who feel that it is in their patriotism to show up a corrupt  government once and for all.
Remember one thing about UMNO - not  everything is well inside that party. There are some seriously  polarising factions at deadly power play in there. Najib is propped up  by Mahathir's faction of influential kingmakers but when they deftly cut  short Badawi's tenure, they also truncated his son-in-law's ambitious  roadmap as well. What that did to Khairy Jamaludin was to incense him  enough to plan his own personal revenge. Although it is fair to say that  his circles of influence aren't anything like Najib's and Mahathir's,  there are always political swingers who pursue where the smell of money  goes.
So long as you can follow the money, there's always a trail  that leads to interesting discoveries and one of these is Khairy and  his bitter determination to now undermine the faction that humiliated  him and his father-in-law. From what we know of Khairy and his  self-centredness, I don't think he cared much about Badawi's reputation  although he is enraged enough to now want to pull the carpet from  underneath UMNO's top mandarins all the way to the old cantankerous pimp  himself.
There are a lot of theories bandying around concerning  how Khairy will be orchestrating his moves and strategically unfolding  them in the years to come. We all know we haven't seen the last of  someone as ruthlessly ambitious as he is. We have a theory circling the  Internet that he could be working covertly with Anwar where he sees his  best hopes for Prime Ministership lie. No doubt if this were true, that  means in a post-Anwar period as Malaysia 's future PM, Khairy could step  up to the plate. There is another theory that involves Khairy moving in  the undercurrents of UMNO's political turmoil, looking to seize the  advantage, sight unseen, as and when the opportunities arise. With his  political career and aspirations in tatters, he can no longer rely on  the UMNO Youth faction where he was once quite powerful. With  Hishamuddin offering rearguard defence for his inept playboy PM cousin,  Khairy doesn't have a lot of manoeuvrability - at least not yet.
Whichever  of the two is more plausible, there is no denying that there is no love  lost between Khairy and his immediate enemies as well as those of his  father-in-law's. Either way, Khairy will be poised to dismantle Najib's  administration since everyone in the cabinet has played him out  including those who had sworn allegiance to back him in the heady past.  However since everything in politics is about money, he'd soon realised  that even his political amigos could so easily be bought over.
The  bad blood between Khairy and the rest of Najib's administration has  long been downplayed but in the run up to the next General Election, it  will be instrumental. As a balancing act of power, Khairy holds a very  important pivotal sword that could either raise Anwar Ibrahim to  premiership or the other way around. He holds the sword (or keris as it  were) that will indefinitely spill blood.
The question is whose blood will it be.
- The Iowan Register
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