Taken from the Linkedin Page of Datuk Vinod Shekar.
I’m Singaporean and so it becomes a little challenging
to admit it but something miraculous happened in Malaysia. It’s challenging to
admit because, generations of Singaporeans have grown up with the notion that
we’re simply better than our cousins across the Causeway. We’re like the pretty
girl that can walk into a room and without trying, gets every guy turning his
head just to get a glance at her. Malaysia, by contrast, is our elder sister,
who despite having lots of advantages, never seems quite able to get guys interested
in her and when we talk to our cousins in Malaysia, we tend to be like that
pretty girl who felt sorry enough for her older sister by arranging a date with
one of our rejected suitors.
Its especially true when it comes to the topic of politics
and law. Say what you like about the Singapore government but Singapore
politics is wonderfully boring. You know the results of every election before
it even happens and as former Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean once said, “In
Singapore, what you see is what you get.”
Malaysian politics by contrast, is colourful. For over
50-years, the same party won the election and politics was dominated by
prominent characters in that party.
Corruption, which is officially “non-existent” in Singapore is a given in
Malaysia and whilst Singapore made it a point to know that it was “regardless
of race or religion,” Malaysia has proudly favoured one ethnic group over the
rest.
However, this
has been a year for the older sister to show the younger sister a thing or two.
First, Malaysia saw to it that its former Prime Minister Najib Razak will go to
jail for plundering the country. Mr. Najib was the enabler of the now infamous
1MDB scandal and he was probably the only world leader who tried to explain
that the US$700 million in his personal bank account was a donation from another
nation. The jailing of the once untouchable Mr. Najib showed that the rule of
law was working. Even the most powerful was being held to account.
Then, there was
the fact that Dr. Mahathir, Malaysia’s longest serving Prime Minister was voted
out and lost his deposit. The good doctor, who is 97, has been a force in
Malaysian politics over three decades. Dr. Mahathir is credited with bringing
up the Malaysian economy but he has been accused of being the architect of the system
of patronage that was abused by Mr. Najib. The Malaysian voters had grown
tiered of the good doctor and showed him the exit by the most effective means. His
electoral defeat showed that the voters were willing to get rid of people
regardless of who they were.
Then, there was
the fact that Mr. Anwar Ibrahim, former Deputy Prime Minister has finally bee
sworn in a Malaysia’s Prime Minister. Mr. Ibrahim is what my former client, Mr.Vinod Sekhar, called a good guy. Mr. Ibrahim was once a rising star in Dr.
Mahathir’s government and seen as a potential successor. However, when the
Asian Financial Crisis hit, Dr. Mahathir turned on him and sent him to jail on
trumped up charges of sodomy (forbidden in Islam – Mr. Ibrahim being known as a
devout Muslim). Mr. Anwar Ibrahim spent the next 30-years of his life moving in
and out jail, fighting legal challenges as well as fighting the political
battles.
While it might
be a stretch to call this Malaysia’s “Mandela” moment, the fact that a former
political dissident can get to the top job by sheer persistence is encouraging.
It is a case of it doesn’t matter who you are as long as you work hard.
Sure, Malaysian
politics has been colourful. However, the system has been toughened and institutions
like the courts and parliament and the monarchy have been tested. One has to
ask, would we, on this side of the Causeway be able to pass the tests that have
afflicted the Malaysian system?
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