By : LIM KIT SIANG
WILL Najib take a leaf from
Hu Jintao and give prominence to the grave problem of corruption in Malaysia in
his Umno Presidential Address at the Umno General Assembly at the end of the
month?
China's President and
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Secretary Hu Jintao warned at the 18th CCP
Congress over the weekend that corruption could trigger the collapse of the
Party and the fall of the State.
Would the Prime Minister and
Umno President Datuk Seri Najib Razak take a leaf from Hu Jintao and give prominence to the
grave problem of corruption in Malaysia in his Umno Presidential Address at the
Umno General Assembly?
There is in fact more reason
for Najib than Hu Jintao to give priority to the grave problem of corruption as
in the last two decades, China have been making measurable progress in the
battle against corruption while the reverse is the case for Malaysia.
In the first year of the
annual Transparency International (TI) Corruption Perception Index (CPI) in
1995, China was ranked in the lowly position of No.40 out of 43 countries with
a CPI score of 2.16.
In contrast, Malaysia was
ranked No. 23 with CPI score of 5.28 - sixth for Asian-Pacific nations after
New Zealand (No. 1 - CPI score 9.5), Singapore (No. 3 - 9.2), Australia (No. 7
- 8.8), Hong Kong (No. 17- 7.12) and Japan (No. 20 - 6.72).
Seventeen years later, in
the 2011 TI CPI, China was ranked No. 75 out of 183 countries with a CPI score
of 3.6 - an improvement of 1.44 marks in 17 years - while Malaysia suffered the
rare double ignominy of a worse ranking of No.60 with a worse score of 4.3.
In the past 17 years,
Malaysia's CPI score fell by more than one full point compared to Malaysia's
best CPI score of 5.32 in 1996.
If the trend of China's
improvement in the TI CPI and Malaysia's regression continues unchecked, China
will be placed in a better position in the TI CPI in less than five years.
Already in the past 17 years,
Malaysia has lost her position as the sixth top Asian-Pacific nation in the TI
CPI 1995 to another five countries,namely Taiwan, Bhutan, South Korea,Brunei
and Macao while other countries like Thailand, Indonesia and even Philippines
are closing the gap to overtake Malaysia.
To illustrate the gravity of
Malaysia's worsening corruption problem, Malaysia has also been overtaken by
six Islamic countries when in 1997, Malaysia stood head and shoulders over all
other Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) countries in terms of
transparency and accountability.
Umno and Barisan Nasional
have become synonymous with corruption in Malaysia and the 43 months of Najib
premiership have shown that Najib is only good at mouthing anti-corruption
slogans but totally lacking the political will and commitment to root out
corruption, especially grand corruption involving political and government
leaders.
Only a change of government,
from BN to Pakatan Rakyat in Putrajaya, can create the conditions for a serious
war against corruption to introduce a new political culture of zero tolerance
against corruption.
This will be one of the
priorities of a Pakatan Rakyat government in Putrajaya, starting with a Royal
Commission of Inquiry into corruption including a full-scale inquiry into the
scandal of the RM40million currency trafficking and laundering involving Sabah
Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman and Sabah timber trader Michael Chia.
(Note : Speech by DAP
Parliamentary Leader and MP for Ipoh Timor Lim Kit Siang at the DAP Ubah dinner
in Kudat on Sunday 11th November 2012 at 8pm)
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