The Prime Minister flies to Antarctica
2002-02-13
Ten day before he left for his supposed holiday, a dozen Special
Branch officers flew into Buenos Aires to assess if the Prime
Minister, Dato' Seri Mahathir Mohamed, could holiday at his ranch
there without getting caught in the political fracas, and arrange
for a quick getaway should it be needed. A wise precaution
amidst the continued rioting in the Argentinian capital.
Another is his decision a week before he left for New York to
have the defence minister, Dato' Seri Najib Tun Razak, accompany
him. The minister's aides are angry at this disruption of his
plans, and at such short notice. But a wise precaution. He
cannot afford a political conflagaration caused by two of his key
ministers when he is away. It goes without saying that one man
who believes he, not Dato' Seri Abdullah, should be the next
prime minister, is the defence minister and UMNO vice president.
But, on the morning after, both might be left at the start, but
that is another story.
But as the Godfather, in Mario Puzo's novel of the same
name, says: "My friends I keep at a distance; my enemies I have
in my sight." Dato' Seri Najib an enemy? Of course not. But he
should not be in Kuala Lumpur making it worse for the deputy
prime minister, Dato' Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, than it already
is. To the latter goes the honour of the flak from the appeal to
the Federal Court by the former deputy prime minister, Dato' Seri
Anwar Ibrahim. That man, in the prime minister's view, should be
allowed to stumble on his own. The Federal Court continues the
appeal on 25 March to put a spoke in the prime minister's travel
plans: he may well be forced to forgo his presence at the Sepang
F-1 championship race ten days earlier.
So, after the World Economic Forum in New York, he flew off
with a party of 80 to Antarctica, a visit so important, so he
said, that he had to miss the MCA's annual Chinese New Year
celebrations. He is quoted as saying in the Malaysian newspapers
that "the opportunity to visit the Antarctica comes once in a
lifetime". But why is this visit important now? Could it not
have been arranged for some other time? Be that as it may, the
entourage includes business men who paid heavily for the
privilege, journalists, and others. The group breaks up from
there, with a small group flying with him to Argentina, where he
would have his holiday and the others be around at a safe
distance, and return home on 28 February.
A week later, he flies to Poland and Germany, his visit to
Moscow at risk after his unwise comment about the Russian
presence in Chechnya. Since the formulated it is the same Mr
Vladimir Putin who is Russia's prime minister, a miracle it is if
Moscow is on his itinerary now. It is when he arrives in Germany
that his plans become murky. He is rumoured to need surgery for
his hip; if true, it would be done there. His office is vague
if he would be at the F-1 championship. If he is here for it, he
cannot leave soon after. So, the Federal Court hearing would
happen when he is in town. He does not want that. His office
promised to confirm his presence before he left, but has yet to.
But could the Prime Minister visit Germany without Dato'
Seri Anwar Ibrahim's surgery for a bad back -- one which has him
in a neck brace, in a wheelchair and in intense pain -- resolved.
The prime minister turned his former protege's medical treatment
overseas into a political issue, insisting he should have it in
Malaysia when the recommended procedure was not; now he goes
overseas for a procedure for which local expertise is deemed
better than average. But what is allowed Zeus is disallowed the
cow. It is clearer by the day that every move of his is dictated
by the "Anwar factor", more so now than at any time since the two
men fell apart as mortal enemies.
This not is not lost on those who prepare for the succession
that must come sooner than later. Dato' Seri Abdullah does not
have the clear run the advantage of office gives him. Dato' Seri
Najib would not allow it. He fights a rear-guard battle. My old
friend, the Hermit of Langgak Golf, remains a perennial to
succeed, but only when the present frontliners cancel each other
out. He himself rules himself out, so he tells me. The front
runners form strange alliances, with the Malay genius reflected
in the speed with which the UMNO warlords change sides that one
does not know from one moment to the next where they stand and
who their mentor of the moment is.
This is Dr Mahathir's nightmare. For this is the continuing
fallout of his unthinking humiliation of a Malay chief in
defiance of Malay feudal conduct. More than that, it is a fight
for the Malay soul. The Anwar affair dispossessed UMNO of it,
and its attempts to bring it into its heart is complicated by the
still unresolved matter of his humiliation. So, while Dr
Mahathir exudes a confidence to suggest he is as strong as ever,
the nightmare which threatens to confine him to history's
dustheap is real indeed. He cannot turn the clock back. He does
not know how to stop his ministers from snapping at each other.
Nor prevent them going at each other's throats, as Dato' Seri
Abdullah at the de facto law minister, Dato' Seri Rais Yatim's
recent comment about illegal immigrants.
M.G.G. Pillai
pillai@mgg.pc.my
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This archive was created as a tribute to the late veteran
journalist MGG Pillai. We believed his writings are useful to develop a critical
thinking analysis.
By the way, the original mggpillai.com web site (2001-2006) was actually created
by one of us.
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