| PM should give his personal attention to end the 
    growing malaise, drift and even rudderlessness in leadership and governance 
    in his administration or we will be heading further south
 
    ________________________________ 
    
    Media Statement by  Lim Kit Siang
 ________________________________
 
 (Parliament, 
    Wednesday): 
    The Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Radzi Sheikh 
    Ahmad and the Attorney-General Tan Sri Gani Patail should explain the cause 
    of the “miscommunication” yesterday about the repatriation of 130 
    Muslim-Thais seeking refuge in Malaysia, making the Malaysian government the 
    laughing stock in Bangkok.
 
 The announcement by Radzi and Gani that the 130 Muslim-Thais, who had fled 
    to Kelantan in August,  had been released and sent home, created a
 seven-hour confusion in both countries until Gani came out with a retraction 
    and apology for the “miscommunication”.
 
 This seven-hour blunder of the Malaysian government, which  was the 
    staple of the Thai press  and even international media, was blacked out 
    in the
 local  mainstream media today.  Who issued the instruction for 
    such a “blackout” as if there is no need for accountability for such a 
    blunder?
 
 Malaysians are entitled to know how such a blunder and “miscommunication” 
    could have happened, involving the Minister in the Prime Minister’s
 Department and the Attorney-General, as it has adversely affected Malaysia’s 
    international image about the quality of leadership and
 governance in the country.
 
 Recently,  there is an increasing national perception of a 
    deterioration in the quality of leadership and governance in the 
    administration of the
 country, with a growing sense of malaise, drift and even rudderlessness in 
    many sectors of government.
 
 There are examples galore about such government malaise, drift and 
    rudderlessness just in the press reports of  the past few days, e.g.:
 
 •        The damning condemnation of the 
    poorly-managed and “chaotic”  Insolvency Department by the  Court 
    of Appeal, with Judge Datuk Gopal Sri Ram asking: “Is everyone taking out 
    their blanket and pillow  to sleep because of the cosy atmosphere in 
    the air-conditioned office? Nobody knows what is happening.” More and more, 
    the question asked is whether  the Palace of Justice is  all 
    “palace” but no “justice”?
 
 
 •        Education Minister Datuk Seri 
    Hishammuddin Tun Hussein announcing that a final decision would be made 
    tomorrow on whether to allow schoolchildren to use handphones in schools, a 
    week after the Education Director-General Datuk Dr. Ahmad Sipon had 
    announced the lifting of  the ban.
 
 Why wasn’t a full and proper consultation conducted before an important 
    decision was made or unmade?  The major reason cited by parents who
 support the lifting of the ban is the safety and security of their children 
    in school. Isn’t this an indication of a very serious development where 
    parents have lost confidence about the safety  and security of the 
    school environment for their children, which should warrant full attention 
    of the education authorities and not just whether to allow schoolchildren to 
    use handphones in schools?
 
 •        The heinous 
    abduction-rape-murder of Universiti Utara Malaysia graduate and marketing 
    executive, Chee Gaik Yap, 25, in Sungai Petani and the
 endless spate  of serious and  gruesome crimes in various parts of 
    the country -  grim reminders that Malaysians have not got back  
    their fundamental rights to be free from crime and the fear of crime.
 
 The Chee Gaik Yap case is also a reminder   of the heinous Canny 
    Ong abduction-rape-murder in Kuala Lumpur in mid-2003, which sparked  a
 nation-wide outrage that Malaysians have lost the right to feel safe and 
    secure in the streets, public places and even the privacy of their 
    homes,leading to the establishment of the first Dzaiddin Royal Police 
    Commission – but with no  appreciable change in the sense of personal 
    safety or security for the citizenry.
 
 Nobody knows what has happened to the first Dzaiddin Commission Report and 
    its 125 recommendations, particularly its recommendation for an
 Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) in the past 
    seven months, while the public is waiting for the publication of the
 second Dzaiddin Commission Report!
 
 •        The six-month delay in the 
    repair of the cracked RM238 million Middle Ring Road Two (MRR2) Kepong 
    flyover, which had to be closed for four months from August to December, 
    with bigger cracks on 31 of its 33 beams, despite endless meetings, studies 
    and assurances.
 
 •        The formation of  the 
    75-strong “snoop team” by the Religious Department of the Federal 
    Territories (Jawi) for Putrajaya, the Putrajaya Islamic
 Council Volunteers Squad, to be on the lookout for “indecent acts”, such as 
    Muslim couples showing mutual affection in public, including holding hands.
 
 How can Jawi form such a morality police under the nose of the Prime 
    Minister and Cabinet in Putrajaya, when the Cabinet had only last year
 issued a directive to Malacca Chief Minister, Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam to 
    put a stop to its snoop squad initiated by the 4B Youth Movement?
 
 The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi should give his 
    personal attention to end the growing malaise, drift and even rudderlessness  
    in leadership and governance in his administration, or far from eradicating 
    the “First-World Infrastructure, Third-World Mentality” disease, we are 
    heading further south.
 
 
    (18/01/2006)
 
 
    *  Lim Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP
                          Central Policy and Strategic Planning Commission 
                          Chairman |