By : CHUA JUI MENG
THE RM250 million Cowgate
fracas has hardly settled and now we have the RM40 million Sabah Umno crony
scandal. If the National Feedlot Corporation (NFC) had not been hijacked,
low-income Malaysians today would be enjoying affordable beef.
We will not be paying about
RM27 for a kilogramme of beef now when it was only about RM7 per kg in 2000.
The NFC project would have
been successful if the RM250 million had been distributed to 1,000 experienced
cattle breeders nationwide, with each getting RM250,000 to expand their herd of
cattle.
What knowledge or
credentials do Shahrizat Abdul Jalil’s husband and her children have to justify
them to be given the project allocation?
Now we have Minister in the
Prime Minister’s Department Nazri Abdul Aziz’s defence of Sabah Umno crony
timber tycoon Michael Chia.
After defending Chia in
Parliament, saying there was nothing wrong with Chia carrying RM40 million in a
suitcase for Sabah Umno, we are shocked by his son Nedim’s connection with
Chia.
Nedim was seen driving a
more than RM500,000 Hummer registered in the name of Michael Chia. Not only
that, pictures of Nedim wearing a Richard Mille Tourbillon (model RM 002 V2)
watch worth RM1,072,000 have surfaced in social network Facebook.
What is happening to
Malaysia and its ruling lawmakers? Scandals that expose their enormous wealth
are surfacing regularly while our RM502 billion federal debt continues to climb.
How many more financial
scandals that have emptied our national coffers can Malaysia afford?
Petroleum fund
Petronas was set up in 1974
and its first CEO Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah recently revealed that there were
plans for the establishment of a Tabung Warisan Petrolium (National Petroleum
Heritage Fund) for the future of Malaysians when our oil wells run dry.
Has there been any such oil
fund set up? As far as I know there has never been a disclosure by the
government of the existence of such a fund.
With the billions or even
trillions of ringgit in oil revenue over some four decades, there is absolutely
no excuse that is acceptable to Malaysians for this tragic betrayal of the
people’s trust by our “oil sheikhs … Mahathir, Abdullah and Najib”.
Norway, where they have oil
in the North Sea, the country’s oil fund known as Norway Pension Fund stands at
US$656 billion or RM2 trillion. And the country has a population of only five
million people.
UAE-Abu Dhabi Investment
Authority’s oil-revenue sovereign wealth fund is at US$627 billion or RM1.9
trillion.
Almost all oil producing
countries have established their own oil funds for their peoples’ future but
not Malaysia. This is a serious indictment of the present regime.
Instead, after 55 years, the
corrupt BN government has given us a RM502 billion federal debt that is fast
growing.
The Petroleum Act 1974 must
also be amended to remove the prime minister’s absolute powers over Petronas
and its finances.
Now, no one has the right to
question the prime minister’s decision. Only the prime minister, not even his
deputy, is privy to Petronas’ accounts.
Living in debt
Pakatan Rakyat has pledged
to make Petronas accountable to Parliament and this should lead to the
establishment of the long awaited National Petroleum Heritage Fund.
Just before Abdullah Ahmad
Badawi stepped down as prime minister, he paid an official visit to the Sultan
of Brunei, signing and giving away two oil fields to Brunei as gifts.
Abdullah claimed that the
gifts were in exchange for Brunei dropping its claim on Sabah’s Limbang.
However, the Brunei
government immediately denied Limbang was ever discussed in that visit.
What actually happened?
Where have all the rakyat’s wealth and oil wealth gone to?
What business does Abdullah have
to give away two oil fields to one of the richest man in the world while the
majority of Malaysians continue to live in debt and poverty. (FMT)
(NOTE : Chua Jui Meng is PKR
vice-president and Johor state chief. He is also a former MCA vice-president
and an ex-Cabinet member.)
No comments:
Post a Comment