|  | 
        Media Statement by Lim Kit Siang in Petaling Jaya on Tuesday, 10th 
		June 2008: 
		
        If government can increase oil prices from 41 to 63 per cent, why can’t 
		it slash the entertainment allowances of Ministers and deputy ministers 
		by 50 per cent?  The first of many questions that come to the mind of Malaysians on 
		the RM2 billion cost-cutting package announced by the Prime Minister, 
		Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is:
 If the government can increase oil prices from 41 to 63 per cent, why 
		can’t it slash the entertainment allowances of cabinet ministers and 
		deputy ministers by 50% and not just a paltry 10%?
 
 The question becomes all the more poignant when it is disclosed that the 
		current entertainment allowances are RM18,865 for the prime minister, 
		RM15,015 for the deputy prime minister, RM12,320 for ministers and 
		RM6,000 for deputy ministers.
 
 What about all the other allowances, including tips allowances which run 
		into hundreds of ringgit a day, which ministers and deputy ministers are 
		entitled to?
 
 For a start, all the various forms of allowances which cabinet ministers 
		and deputy ministers are entitled to should be made public not only as a 
		a form of leadership by example in terms of accountability, transparency 
		and good governance but also to demonstrate that the ministers and 
		deputy ministers feel the pain of the people caused by the 
		unconscionable and callous oil price hikes ranging from 41 to 63 per 
		cent.
 
 Abdullah’s statement that the cost-cutting measures he announced 
		yesterday “will not be the first or the last” and that many other 
		announcements will be made by the government is testimony that these 
		measures are “after thoughts” after the public anger and outrage over 
		the brutal and hefty oil price increases when mitigation measures should 
		have been part of any Cabinet decision causing far-reaching inflationary 
		repercussions imposing great financial hardships on all vulnerable 
		sectors of the Malaysian population.
 
 The public anger and outrage at the unconscionable and callous oil price 
		hikes had been aggravated by the lack of any sign that the government is 
		prepared to end its waste, extravagance, misappropriation of public 
		funds, lack of accountability and the many mega-scandals like the 
		Petronas billions and the RM4.6 billion Port Klang Free Zone (PKFZ) 
		bailout scandal – further example that the Cabinet had not learnt the 
		lessons of the March 8 “political tsunami” to be a caring, responsible, 
		just and people-oriented administration.
 
 It is no wonder that Malaysians regard the RM2 billion cost-cutting 
		measures, described as the “first” of such measures, as not only too 
		little and too late, but shows lack of seriousness to provide proper 
		government leadership by example to lead Malaysians to tide through the 
		hard economic hard times facing the country.
 
 *
    
      Lim 
    Kit Siang,  DAP 
		Parliamentary leader & MP for Ipoh Timor  |  |