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CHIAROSCURO" The New Cabinet: The Mountains Roar ...


2001-01-18

I contributed this for my column at malaysiakini (www.malaysiakini.com), which published a lighted editor to what follows:

--------------------------

18 January 01

CHIAROSCURO

MGG Pillai

The Mountains Roared ...

The mountains roared, and out jumped a mouse. This is the best description one can put on the alleged cabinet reshuffle Dr Mahathir Mohamed announced yesterday, a few hours before he left for Japan. His earlier plans for a major reshuffle took a back seat when he realised that those dropped still had much ground support and could well move towards UMNO challengers.

But if they retained them, his new cabinet would bring the government down by inertia. He must reshuffle his cabinet, but he cannot. He is, in other words, worse off either way.

He created one new ministry, appointed two new ministers, two deputy ministers, one parliamentary secretary, dropped no one nor reshuffled portfolios. The new faces are all Senators. The UMNO anger at Tan Sri Musa Mohamed, then not an UMNO member, appointed education minister after the 1999 general elections can only increase.

The deputy minister in the prime minister's department, Shahrizat Abdul Jalil, is promoted to the newly created women's affairs ministry. Of the new appointees, she is the only elected. The director-general of Pusat Islam, Abdul Hamid Zainal Abidin, a retired brigadier-general who was chief imam of the armed forces, succeeds Dato' Abdul Hamid Othman, who resigned.

This reflects the twin concerns the Prime Minister has to wean declining support. The last election showed, especially in Kelantan and Kedah, that women turned the tide against the National Front. Which is why he formed Puteri UMNO, and now creates a women's affairs ministry.

Islam is the other contentious issue. Mahathir still believes in confronting PAS, despite the forthcoming talks on Malay unity, and Abdul Hamid is known for that. He would have preferred the mufti of Johore, but he could not obviously get him to come. Abdul Hamid so defends his turf that it angers the congregation at the National Mosque that worshippers leave the prayer hall when he rises, as occasionally, to deliver the "khutbah".

This raises an even more contentious issue: should Islam be confronted, as now, between the forces of UMNO and the forces of PAS, or should it be viewed in context with both joining hands to making Islam the religion of the land by acclamation? Abdul Hamid's appointment, for which he becomes a senator, would only grate.

The two new deputy ministers and one parliamentary secretary, all Senators, are the UMNO executive secretary (PSE CHECK), Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor, who becomes deputy minister in the prime minister's department; the People's Progressive Party president M. Kayveas as deputy minister of housing and local government; the former Utusan Malaysia editor-in-chief Zainuddin Maidin as parliamentary secretary in the information ministry.

As a journalist, I am appalled Zam, as he is popularly known, took the job. As editor-in-chief, he is equal to the best in the land, now he is a minor cog in a big wheel. Besides, how important a role would he play in this role? Or is it a reward for political loyalty? He is good man, and should have been entrusted higher office. He would have been a far better minister than many we have.

This cabinet evinces no major policy changes. If anything, it reduces Mahathir's effectiveness as leader. It would seem, looking at the new list, that the minimal changes is to make it easier for the deputy prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, to strengthen his forces. He is already under pressure from the UMNO ground as successor because he is an unelected deputy president of UMNO.

This would not have mattered at other times. It is crucial now. This cabinet reshuffle should have gone beyond the "sandiwara" is is. The guessing game of major changes -- the mountains roaring -- to what is -- the mouse -- could be high drama. But it is not.

The supercilliousness with which Mahathir treated the changes did not work this time. The general reaction this morning is one big yawn. But what happens now is more serious: little change in policy or attitudes while scurrying behind the scenes to stop the leaks that occur.

Mahathir did not make the changes he should have to give him a fighting chance to return to the Malay mainstream. Curiously, what this envisions is his earlier than expected retirement. If he now stays on too long, it would all but neuter his chosen successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. Even if he does not, the pressure for an elected UMNO president could be one either could refuse.

On balance, the changes are not one which would strengthem him, the cabinet, the National Front, or his successor, whoever he is. Unless it takes immediate steps, which it would not, to ensure the Anwar Ibrahim affair is settled to the demands of the Malay cultural ground.

Ends

 
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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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