ORGANISATION.....Saifuddin
Abdullah says the organisation, with regard to whistleblowers, spearheaded by
PKR's Rafizi Ramli, is essential for good governance
By : SYED JAYMAL ZAHIID
SUNGAI BESI: As the
government copes with accusations of political persecution on whistleblowers,
Deputy Higher Education Minister Saifuddin Abdullah today gave his endorsement
to an opposition initiative to encourage informants to expose power abuse.
The Temerloh MP, one of the
few progressive leaders in right-wing Umno, said the formation of the National
Oversight and Whistleblowers (NOW) was timely amid widespread calls for a joint
public-government effort to fight corruption.
The non-profit organisation
is spearheaded by PKR’s prodigal “exposé man” Rafizi Ramli, whose series of
exposé on scandals implicating the Najib administration have caused much damage
to the ruling coalition’s self-styled reform image just ahead of the national
polls.
“We need to raise public
awareness on the important role of whistleblowers. That they are not
mischievous people with bad intentions, but, rather agents of change,”
Saifuddin said in a statement faxed to Rafizi amidst NOW’s launching here
today.
And it is exactly for the
same reason the PKR man – who is also facing legal action under the country’s
banking laws for his exposé on the RM250 million National Feedlot Centre
scandal – had decided to set up NOW.
Confidence
crisis
The timing of the project is
also key. Rafizi told participants at the launching that his outfit wants to
encourage whistleblowers to come forward at a time when public confidence in
government agencies have dipped to an all-time low.
The PKR strategy director
said NOW aims to provide an alternative to the anti-graft battle in light of
the “confidence crisis” in key government institutions like the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission and police.
Low conviction rate over
graft cases involving the “big fishes” and repeated cases of custodial deaths
have forced voters to perceive the agencies with pessimism despite Prime
Minister Najib Tun Razak’s vow to make the fight against corruption an
important aspect of his government.
This included the
introduction of the Whistleblower Protection Act. But with the charges against
Rafizi and another public informant in relation to the “cow-gate” scandal, the
law’s effectiveness is seen as questionable.
“I think the public
generally distrusts them and this is when NOW steps in – to help whistleblowers
come forward,” said Rafizi.
Advice
on legal risks
The centre will prepare a
step-by-step process for whistleblowing, which will include offering advice to
informants on the legal risks they may face with their disclosures should they
agree to proceed.
This will be followed by a
thorough vetting process of the credibility of the information and evidences
provided before they are revealed to the public through the media.
However, the law only offers
protection to whistleblowers if they make a disclosure of improper conduct to
an authorised enforcement agency, which means it does not accord protection to
whistleblowers who go to the media.
This means Rafizi’s NOW will
likely force the outfit to deal with lawsuits and prosecutions.
But any legal action against
the outfit could be good for the opposition. Any prosecution will likely be
seen as a move to silence the ruling coalition’s political rivals which can
jeopardise Najib’s reform credentials.
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