13 April 2015

Kalu PR berkuasa,depa cekup Mahathir dulu lepaih tu Najib...

Dr Mahathir ditangkap sebelum Najib jika PR berkuasa...

Bekas menteri penerangan Tan Sri Zainuddin Maidin memberi amaran Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad akan ditangkap sebelum Datuk Seri Najib Razak jika Pakatan Rakyat (PR) menang pilihan raya umum akan datang.

Zainuddin yang lebih dikenali sebagai Zam berkata demikian dalam tulisan terkini di blognya semalam sebagai respons kepada kenyataan Dr Mahathir yang mengatakan pemimpin Umno akan ditangkap dan dipenjara sekiranya Barisan Nasional (BN) tumbang.

"Tentunya apabila PR menang, (Datuk Seri) Anwar Ibrahim akan dibebaskan seperti Dr Mahathir membebaskan 21 orang tahanan ISA sebaik sahaja menjadi perdana menteri," tulis bekas ketua pengarang Utusan Malaysia itu merujuk kepada Akta Keselamatan Dalam Negeri.

"Tetapi, Dr Mahathir sendiri yang dianggap sebagai autoritarian akan ditangkap dan ditahan lebih dahulu dan disusuli dengan tangkapan ke atas Najib dan lain-lain untuk didakwa atas tuduhan salah guna kuasa, skandal 1MDB atau lain lain."

Dr Mahathir menjangka PR akan menangkap dan memenjarakan seteru politik mereka ditakdirkan memegang tampuk kuasa.

Kenyataan sama pernah dikeluarkan Dr Mahathir pada awal 2013.


Dr Mahathir secara sinis berkata beliau lega akan didakwa dan tidak disumbat ke dalam penjara semata-mata di bawah ISA yang baru sahaja dimansuhkan pada masa itu.

Menulis lanjut, Zam berpandangan kenyataan itu dibuat Dr Mahathir sebagai desakan "tersirat tetapi keras dan pedas" supaya Najib meletak jawatan.

"Beliau yakin hal ini akan  berlaku sekiranya Najib tidak meletak jawatan dari sekarang untuk memberikan masa yang cukup  kepada BN memulihkan keyakinan rakyat," tulisnya.

Sementara itu, Zam turut mengkritik wawancara Najib yang disiar Edisi Khas TV3 baru-baru ini sebagai tergesa-gesa.

Katanya, ia merupakan satu percubaan yang tidak meyakinkan walaupun Najib cuba tampil dengan "wajah yang berani".

"Yang tersembunyi ialah kemunculan Najib yang tergesa-gesa tanpa promosi pengumuman lebih awal menerusi media cetak dan lain-lain media seperti yang biasa dilakukan terutama untuk meyampaikan mesej yang sangat penting kepada rakyat.

"Ia lebih bersifat untuk memenuhi seruan dari dalam parti sendiri terutama dari Ketua Pemuda Umno, Khairy Jamaluddin dan Anggota Parlimen Tan Sri Shahrir Samad yang mahu Najib memberikan jawapan langsung kepada Dr Mahathir.

"Namun, kepada umum tidak ada jawapan. Pementasan sokongan tidak menggambarkan keadaan yang sebenar," katanya. – tmi

Hai...nak takut apa? Hangpa dah perosok Anwar 2 kali dalam lokap atas tuduhan palsu salahguna kuasa/sodomy, maka dah tiba giliran hangpa pulalah untuk merasakan betapa nikmatnya hidup dibelakang jerejak besi di Sungai Buloh Resort...t/s

najib mahathir
Mahathir fears for his own fate...

Dr Mahathir Mohamad will be the first to be arrested if Pakatan Rakyat comes to power, former information minister Zainuddin Maidin has predicted.

Commenting on a warning to Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak that Mahathir has made in a video interview, Zainuddin says the former premier was actually voicing out a fear for his own fate.

In the interview with a pro-Umno blogger on Thursday, Mahathir warned Najib and other Umno politicians that they risked being exposed, tried and jailed if Barisan Nasional got voted out of power.

“What I fear most is that if the opposition wins and we lose, they will spare no quarter,” Mahathir said. “They will dig everything out. When they dig, people may be charged in court and may be found guilty. So if BN loses, this country will be seeing a lot of chaos. A lot of people will have to pay a big price.”

Referring to Najib, he said, “If he steps down now, at least there will be a few years to remedy the situation.”

The interview has been uploaded to YouTube.

In his latest blog posting, Zainuddin writes, “Dr Mahathir, who is considered to be an authoritarian, will be arrested and detained first, and this will be followed by the arrest of Najib and others, who will be put on trial for power abuse and over the 1MDB scandal and other wrongdoings.

“Implicit in Dr Mahathir’s gentle but stern warning is the sounding of an alarm not only for Najib’s benefit, but his own as well. He’s looking out for the common good.”

Zainuddin, who has made no secret of his admiration for Mahathir, urges Najib to make the “proper” decision in  light of the warning.

He says Najib’s attempt to explain himself in last week’s recent interview with TV3 was less than convincing although he tried to put on a “brave face”.- fmt

Mahathir - UMNO mampuih, kalu PR menang...

Bekas perdana menteri Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad berterus terang apabila mengakui bahawa jika BN kalah dalam pilihan raya umum akan datang, ramai orang bakal dihadap ke mahkamah.

Beliau mengulas berhubung skandal firma pelaburan 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) yang dibimbanginya boleh menjatuhkan BN pada pilihan raya umum akan datang.

"Saya fikir, kalau dia (Najib) tak ada, BN menang. Sebab itula ia perlu buat sekarang, sebab kita mempunyai masa untuk bekerja untuk memulihkannya.

"Tapi yang saya takut sekali, apabila parti lawan menang, (dan) kita kalah, parti lawan tak ada simpati.

"Nanti dia cungkil. Bila dia cungkil, mungkin ada yang akan dihadap ke mahkamah, dan mungkin akan didapati bersalah.

"Kalau BN kalah... banyak orang akan berdepan kesan yang lebih besar," kata Dr Mahathir dalam satu video klip temubual yang dimuatnaik dalam Youtube semalam.

Wawancara lima bahagian yang dimuatnaik sejak 10 April lalu oleh seorang penulis blog yang dikenali sebagai Din Turtle, yang mendakwa merakamnya dalam satu majlis melibat blogger pada hari tersebut. - mk


Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad says Umno leaders are loyal because of the kickbacks they receive. – The Malaysian Insider file pic, April 12, 2015.
Many will be charged if BN loses, says Mahathir...

Former PM Dr Mahathir Mohamad in a rare moment of candour admitted that if the ruling BN party loses the next general elections, many people may be charged in court.

He was commenting on the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) scandal that he feared would drag BN down at the next polls if Prime Minister Najib Razak refuses to step down.

"If he (Najib) is gone, BN will win. That's why it has to be now, because we still have two years to work, to recover.

"But what I am most afraid of is, if the opposition wins, and we lose, the opposition has no sympathy.

"They will dig (for answers), and if they dig, people will be charged in court and may be found guilty.

"So if BN loses ... a lot of people will have to pay a big price," said Mahathir in a private interview uploaded on Youtube yesterday.

The interview was uploaded in five parts over a few days starting April 10 by a blogger called Din Turtle, who claimed they were recorded at a blogger’s function earlier that day.

In the clips, Mahathir severely criticised the 1MDB scandal as well as issues related to BR1M, the crooked bridge and the gruesome murder of Mongolian national Altantuya Shaariibuu.

Mahathir also uncharacteristically favoured opposition MPs in helping to get to the bottom of the 1MDB scandal.

Expressed a lack of confidence that the auditor-general would do a thorough probe, he said the bipartisan Public Accounts Committee (PAC) would likely get answers, if they were allowed to.

"The PAC, I think, would ask questions, because opposition is there. But when (can they be deployed)?" he asked. - mk


The Secret of Malaysian PM Najib’s Staying Power
The Secret of Malaysian PM Najib’s Staying Power...

Keeping the cadres fed well

Given the wide array of scandals nipping at his heels, eroding electoral support and powerful foes inside his own ruling party it might be reasonable to question how Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak manages to fend off his critics and stay in power.

But there he is. Defying the expectations even of his rivals, Najib retains his hold on the machinery of the United Malays National Organization, with some of his staunchest foes giving up on their dreams of booting him out of the premier’s job. The latest to throw in the towel is Deputy PM and UMNO Vice President Muhyiddin Yassin, say sources in Kuala Lumpur. 

The 67-year-old Muhyiddin, who hardly qualifies as a reform candidate himself, is not the only one to attempt the overthrow.  Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has been trying to do the same thing since August of 2014 with the help of former Finance Minister Daim Zainuddin and an army of bloggers led by A. Kadir Jasin, the former editor of the New Straits Times newspaper group. The opposition, led by the Democratic Action Party’s Tony Pua and Rafizi Ramli of the Parti Keadilan Rakyat, has clearly delineated major scandals, only to be investigated by officials for sedition and other charges. Rafizi has spent the weekend in jail for alleged sedition.



Najib has been under fire from within his own party because of the loss by the national ruling coalition of the popular vote in the 2013 general election for the first time since 1969 although it maintained power through gerrymandering.  He is also the author of a long string of scandals going back to his period as defense minister. He has undergone scathing criticism for allegations of vast mismanagement of the 1MDB state investment fund, which has billions of ringgit in unfunded liability.  His wife’s profligate spending, which seems impossible to inventory adequately  from a husband who has spent his life in public service, has also enraged critics.

The money river flows

The reason that Najib is unassailable, however, is the unceasing river of money that flows from government coffers to UMNO cadres. Thus the unanimous confidence vote in early March, when the prime minister called together 160 of the 191 UMNO division chiefs to a party meeting in Kuala Lumpur. That was followed a strong confidence vote from other component Barisan parties.  It is money that not only appears at election time, to pay for lunches or small items like tin roofs for constituents’ whose kampung houses leak, but pays them wages between elections.

The payments are made through various government agencies including the Village Security and Development Committee, to which the cadres are appointed.  They are also appointed to four propaganda agencies under the Ministry of Information Communications and Culture, which have offices in each of Malaysia’s 13 states and three federal territories. The bulk of the money to support these propaganda agencies comes from the 1MDB Foundation, from which more than RM1 billion was siphoned off, purportedly for charity work, a well-placed source told Asia Sentinel.



In addition there are contracts, such as the “Cowgate” one handed to Sharizat Abdul Jalil, the minister for women, family and community that in 2012 resulted in accusations that funds meant for a cattle project resulted in personal use of RM250 million to pay for condominiums, vacations and a Mercedes-Benz, among many other irregularities.  Rafizi, the PKR minister, has been charged with violations of the banking and financial  securities act for revealing the details of the scandal in addition to a wide range of other charges including those mentioned above for sedition.

The money also flows to Barisan partners, who have made an even bigger mess of things. In 2007, the Malaysian Chinese Association was handed the chance by the Barisan to develop the Port Klang Free Zone, but which because of corruption ended up with unfunded liabilities of billions of ringgit because of cost overruns and crook dry resulting from the fraudulent valuation of land underlying the project.  Five people have been arrested, none of them prominent MCA figures.

Thus money politics is hardly new but Najib is a master of it. He was the country’s longest-serving minister for defense, first from 1991 to 1995, then from 2000 to 2008, when he became prime minister. As defense minister, he oversaw the modernization of the country’s military to the tune of billions of dollars. Three contracts in particular stand out.  One was for the purchase of navy patrol boats, a second for Russian Sukhoi jet fighters and the third was the notorious purchase of Scorpene submarines. Together, those contracts are said to have produced at least US$300 million for UMNO cronies and others, in addition to the amount that probably rubbed off on Najib himself.

Military procurement

All three of the contracts, which were approved under Najib and have been widely cited by the opposition, fit well into the patronage scale. Bringing the three together, and taking a new look at their associations, is instructive. As Asia Sentinel reported in 2012, documents seized from the French munitions firm DCN by investigators showed that the purchase of the submarines and an attendant €114.9 million [US$125.1 million at current exchange rates] “commission” was okayed by former Premier Mahathir, The commission, according to the documents, was to be steered through a dummy company called Perimekar Sdn. Bhd. that was wholly owned by Najib’s close friend, Abdul Razak Baginda.

“In Malaysia, other than individuals,” the documents showed, “the ruling party [UMNO] is the largest beneficiary [rather than Perimekar, the company to which the commission was directed]. Consultants [agents or companies] are often used as a political network to facilitate such transfers and receive commissions for their principals.” 



Najib was called “the driving force” behind Malaysia’s military modernization program by the US-based think-tank Foreign Policy in Focus. In addition to the submarines, the shopping list, the think tank reported, “includes battle tanks from Poland, Russian and British surface-to-air missiles and mobile military bridges, Austrian Steyr assault rifles and Pakistani anti-tank missiles…and an unspecified number of Russian Suhkoi Su-30 fighter aircraft.”

It was the Sukhois that have become the second controversial purchase brokered by Najib. The deal, worth US$900 million (RM3.2 billion), was through a Russian state company, Federal State Unitary Enterprise ‘Rosoboronexport’ in 2003. IMT Defence Sdn. Bhd. was appointed the local agent for the Russian company and received 12 percent of the purchase price — US$108 million (RM380 million). The principal figure and chairman of IMT Defence was Mohamad Adib Adam, the former chief minister of Malacca, previous Land and Development Minister and a longtime UMNO stalwart.



A third military scandal was reported by Malaysia’s Auditor General, in a report tabled in Parliament in 2007, which alleged that a contract to build naval vessels given to PSC-Naval Dockyard, a subsidiary of Penang Shipbuilding & Construction Sdn Bhd, which was owned by another UMNO crony, Amin Shah Omar Shah, resulted in the payment of RM24 billion (US$6.52 billion at current exchange rates) .

All of these contracts, under Najib’s sponsorship, are believed to have steered vast amounts of money to UMNO to be used to maintain the party in power.  The standard kickback paid on each of these contracts is 10 percent to 15 percent.  That has poured vast amounts of money into UMNO coffers to maintain the party’s position as the premier political institution in Malaysia. The cadres have Najib to thank for much of it. It is little wonder they want to do him the favor of maintaining him in power to protect their own.- asia sentinel





cheers.

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