By : ERNA MAHYUNI (TMI)
DR MAHATHIR is probably the
greatest politician our country ever had or will ever produce. But Malaysia
needs statesmen, not politicians. Not Anwar, who, for all his showboating,
achieved little during his ministerial tenures. Not court jesters like Perkasa
or most of Pakatan’s own crazies. But leaders with vision, compassion and a
sense of honour. Sadly, those traits do not seem to manifest in Malaysian
politicians.
“But don’t you think (Tun
Dr) Mahathir (Mohamad) should be condemned for all he’s done?”
So asked a young, idealistic
undergrad over supper.
My answer was, “No.” The
young lady was intrigued enough to let me explain to her just why Dr Mahathir,
for all his missteps, did not deserve to be vilified.
This is what I told her.
Dr Mahathir’s greatest flaw
is his unwavering belief that the end justifies the means. Yet, as a Malaysian,
I find myself unwilling to demonise this highly complex individual who, for
better or worse, shaped this nation.
It all starts with the best
of intentions and I think our former prime minister really did believe his
decisions were for the greater good. But part of the reason he became the
über-controlling, extremely paranoid individual we know is due to
circumstances. Circumstances on which I blame Umno as well as de facto Pakatan
Rakyat head Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.
Umno may have started out
with patriotic, altruistic aims, but by the 80s it had become much like the
cesspit we all know and love. It’s every man for himself, with members
voluntarily playing a vicious round of musical chairs and the modus operandi
being to push your opponent off his chair to win.
Anwar would probably be
prime minister now if he hadn’t made the biggest career mistake of his life:
Attempting to force Dr Mahathir to step down. Perhaps his ego persuaded him to
believe that he could pull off what other Umno members had tried but failed to
do. Tun Musa Hitam’s own joint coup attempt ended with his own political career
virtually ended.
If Dr Mahathir hadn’t been
constantly assailed by other Umno members jockeying for the prime ministership,
would he have become a better leader? I wonder that, sometimes.
Smarter politicians would
have recognised Dr Mahathir’s propensity to hold a grudge and his vengefulness.
But Umno being the doofus-magnet that it is, Dr Mahathir probably realised
quickly that he was surrounded by selfish incompetents all too ready to make
clumsy attempts to backstab him.
While most of us do wish the
supposedly retired Dr Mahathir would just clam up already, you can understand
why he’s so vocal. Our prime minister is vulnerable like Dr Mahathir never was.
While Dr Mahathir could bend the party to his will, Datuk Seri Najib Razak has
to contend with his own set of fools with daggers.
For Dr Mahathir, it’s
probably status quo. He’s still gnashing his teeth, feeling as though he’s
surrounded by dimwits who won’t stop and listen to him. Because if there was
one thing Dr Mahathir truly believed, it was that he was always right.
History proved him wrong,
though. And it is a tragedy that what should have been a great legacy is
tainted by civil rights abuses, rampant corruption, systemic racism and
institutionalised government incompetence.
Before Barack Obama came up
with “Yes, we can”, Dr Mahathir had his “Malaysia Boleh.” It should have become
a rallying call, our way of believing what Dr Mahathir tried to impart ― that
we had potential to be so much more than we are. Instead, it has become a
mocking cry we utter when we comment on our nation’s many failings.
Dr Mahathir is probably the
greatest politician our country ever had or will ever produce. But Malaysia
needs statesmen, not politicians. Not Anwar, who, for all his showboating,
achieved little during his ministerial tenures. Not court jesters like Perkasa
or most of Pakatan’s own crazies. But leaders with vision, compassion and a
sense of honour. Sadly, those traits do not seem to manifest in Malaysian
politicians.
Malaysians also reflect the
shortcomings of our politicians. We shortchange, empower corruption (boleh
settle, boss?), top Asian rankings of laziest workers... because we have come
to believe that it’s fine to only care about our own and do whatever it takes
to protect our own interests. So long as my family/race/religion/business comes
out on top, to heck with everyone else.
It is high time Malaysians
start asking of themselves what they expect of their leaders: putting the
nation above their own concerns, prove incorruptible and ensure fairness for
all.
We should not condemn Dr
Mahathir, because in many ways, he reflects all the worst in ourselves. Like
him, we are learning too late that the end should never justify the means.
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