steadyaku47

Thursday 4 April 2013

If not DSAI then who? REPRISE.




If not Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim then who?

What is most vivid in my memory of the time when Mahathir was Prime Minister and Anwar Ibrahim his Deputy was in the manner by which they both conducted themselves. God and demi God! Tales abound as to how Mahathir dominated Cabinet and all facets of Government – if need be he knew who was the OCPD of any District and if required would and did direct that OCPD to do his bidding at district level. 

Anwar too was no slouch at getting things done. The manner by which he turfed Ghaffar out of the DPM post is now stuff of legends. These two rule the roost and Malaysia was their stomping ground. Any lesser being then these two had reason to fear their ire.

How things have changed today. Mahathir is now a caricature of himself.

While in the past during the Mahathir’s years as PM this  Ibrahim Ali would not have been able to approached Mahathir even on bended knees, today Mahathir is Advisor to Ibrahim Ali’s Perkasa! Now Mahathir stands beside this Ibrahim Ali waving a Kris to denote his support of Ketuanan Melayu to the Malays?   

Where Mahathir once could silence the Malaysian Cabinet by letting it be known that he was not amused with the antics of its Members, today he is reduced to using sarcasm to show his displeasure at the antics of KJ, Nazri or anything else that displeases him. More often than not his words falls upon deaf ears or are dismissed with contempt by the recipient of his ire.

He could once decide the fate of Deputy Ministers, Ministers and Menteri Besars. Today he shots blanks at Pakatan Rakyat and increasingly finds himself to be the target of an ever increasing group of people that treats him with utter contempt and disgust. And these are people whom Mahathir would not have the time of day for in his years as PM.

Anwar is not any better then. In Mahathir he had a good teacher and Anwar was an eager disciple. Do you all not remember the rarefied atmosphere of the rich and the powerful that Anwar moved in then? He had his people everywhere  - especially in the corporate world.

I marvelled at how these two have managed to put themselves into that strata of the high and the mighty without ever considering the need for humility in the job that they do – that of being leader to the people of Malaysia. Humble leadership was not in their vocabulary!

To them being ever so confident, bombastic and extrovert without an ounce of humility was what they perceived to be the way to go! If you were to see any humility in them it was feigned and certainly insincere! But those were the days.

Things are different today. 

No one now fears Mahathir anymore.  Mahathir is politically impotent and has been so  for many years now though through bouts of self medicated Viagra in gestation he has from time to time manage to stand erect above the UMNO fray to spout forth his views on what ever he thinks would give him that fleeting recognition and attention from the public that he so much craves. What self imposed humiliation is worse for Mahthir than to be the Advisor to PERKASA. The old Mahathir would have considered it beneath his dignity to even be in the same room as Ibrahim Ali what more be his ADVISOR! Huh how the mighty have fallen!

DSAI is finding his feet again. He stands tall amongst his peers but this time in a different arena - in the strange world of those who are not in government. To succeed in the new world that he is now in he has to distance himself from the world he was once part of. And there my friend lies the problem for Anwar Ibrahim.

Anwar and Mahathiir knows enough about each other to bury the other!  So why have they not done so? They both know that even if one of them were to strike the mortal blow to the other, there would still be enough time for the dying to do enough to kill the other. So for self preservation they will joust with but not kill each other.

For both the days of glory, unbridled power and influence is long gone and will never comeback. Today Mahathir and Anwar fear the people they once dominate. 

When the people fear the government there is tyranny, when the government fears the people there is liberty.”

Liberty is close for us but not yet a certainty. But I think there are more good people amongst us than evil ones.Those in political power  can no longer deceive or overawe us with the pomp and circumstance that they surround themselves with. 

My greatest hope is that Anwar Ibrahim is a change man. We all would like to believe that the sum of all the experiences that he has gone through has made him into a better man. We have need of a changed Anwar Ibrahim. Many of us will give Anwar the benefit of the doubt but there are still many who will not do so. But as I have often asked before…if not Anwar then who?    

8 comments:

  1. Sir, It is a good strategy Anwar contesting in the Silver state while Mr Lim Snr battles BN's southern fortress. The word that comes to mind is "gagah" fighters. But the Perakians need to listen when this Zahidi says he will bury Anwar in their state. Perakians need to understand that they are subservient to the violent masters who want to retain the state at all cost. This is the state with the biggest state debt (RM1billion) thanks to the thieving BN regime, unchallenged by the royal family who are gagged with blackmail and strung along on an unsustainable lifestyle. I am waiting for one royal brave enough to stand up and say "enough is enough" and resuscitate respect for the royal houses. Let's see one royal champion stand up to the regime and command its subjects to end this tyranny.

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  2. Anon 6.38, you will not see any of the members of the Royalties to have any principles. Are they not in cohort with the devil we know UMNO/BN especially what happened in Perak? The royalties need to sustain their high living. The are not interested on the welfare of the people. The would like to think that they are. On the surface. to those simpletons, these are the order of the day. They don't dust off the surface to see what is underneath. SAD!!!

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  3. Cik Hussein,
    A very insightful article on these two "characters".
    I have been observing Anwar since his student days in MU, when he led PBMUM or the Malay Language Society of the University of Malaya in the early 70's. in fact we attended the same convocation in May '72 although we were from during faculties.

    I was not impressed with this racist student leader,

    Then he joined Mamak's UMNO and rose to DPM. I saw exactly what you have described him to be in your article.

    I was not impressed with this slithe politician with a perfect UMNO DNA profile.

    Now after a bout of misfortune of being bashed up and locked up, hopefully the said DNA had muted to something that can serve the Malaysian people well.

    If that being the case I would vote PR in the blink of an eye. And all Malaysians should likewise.

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  4. Dear Ms Chin, for an old-goat like me who has seen the shenanigans of the Joh, Sel and Pah royal houses, I live in hope that just one will stand up and be counted. Remember TAR or was he before your time?
    I will return to vote PR not because I believe Anwar is the best candidate for PM-ship but rather the incumbent gov has to be removed. My children, nieces and nephews who studied and settled overseas cannot be persuaded to register to vote. Disenchantment has set in for them. But Malaysia is my tanah-air. And when you read about other overseas Malaysians getting ready to return to vote, you need to delve deep into your conscience and do what your country needs of you.

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  5. Salam Bro,

    Undi salah tak undi salah,
    Ditangkap sudah,belasahpun sudah
    Dihina, difitnah sampai tak sudah
    Rakyat sedar lagi tak kisah

    12 penggal rakyat masih susah
    Pada DSAI & PR harapan diserah
    Walau diumpan anika rasuah
    Undi kami kepada PR tetap cerah.

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  6. Prime ministers are not forever (not even mahathir). Let them serve us for a while. what better time to serve the people than when you are new and blazing with enthusiasm and idealism, especially after a stint in the prison, like Mandela. And the wonderful thing about a truly good president or prime minister is to leave with grace ( like Mandela) after a certain time, leaving behind as much good deeds as you possibly can. So please remember, in our judgment of anwar, let that be a measure too. We really expect him to be everything - a trailblazer, a visionary, a savior, a pragmatist, a revolutionary, an icon. When we expect too much, we are definitely in for a fall because he is just a human being with flaws and all. But at this point in time, he is the best person to lead us out of this quagmire of corruption and deteriorating racial polarization and that I think will be his legacy if he becomes prime minister. Then it's up to the younger generation to follow up and hopefully continue on the right track

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  7. I for one who had found Anwar Ibrahim while he was in UMNO the politician we must and did detest.

    Then we saw the horrible humiliation he had suffered with most of us must have said didn't he deserved all that and in very much good measure! We would say that's the most deserving of punishment and may all that be some atonement for what he had done all of which was just to please Mahathir.

    For all what dastardly he did but most probably did not include the wholesale robbery like what Mahathir had done. Otherwise it wouldn't be only the sex expose, would it?

    As he has gone through hell so to speak, Anwar Ibrahim we hope will be the PM we want him to be, InsyaAllah!

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  8. I had experience with both, and I can tell you Mahathir came out wanting. Even from his early days, whenever Mahathir visited to give a talk, we, the civil servants, will be instructed to fill the hall. We had to leave our posts and our duties to make the body count. Some heads of departments would even have a discreet roll call. God help those who stayed back to do their duties to the people. Instructions are clear; "clap and applaud at every pause of his speech"! Maybe that was why he feels so exalted and superior. The experience with Anwar was different and quite personal to me. An UMNO chieftain who knew Anwar wanted me removed from my post. The usual slanderous letters went in. Anwar was heading the ministry then. Nothing was done as the superiors knew the truth of the matter. Then letter after letter went direct to the Minister himself. The latest letter even contained so-called sexual impropriety. My immediate superior even advised me to get ready for a demotion, transfer etc. I heard long after the incident that Anwar had sent his personal assistants to get at the truth. Seems he made it clear that he wanted the truth and none of that same-party bias. Suffice it to say that instead of being demoted, I was promoted. My superiors told me that I was very lucky. Was it luck? God was kind to me that day. Syukor!

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