Mahathir's
Dilemma Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad wants a modern, secular state — but his
out-of-date tactics go against his vision
By PETER
CORDINGLEY
It was the kind of scolding that Mahathir Mohamad routinely hands out to
ministers and party officials he thinks are not performing up to par. But this
time the Malaysian prime minister was on the receiving end. The scene was a
meeting in early December of the supreme council of his ruling party. As senior
officials looked on in astonishment, longtime member Shahrir Abdul Samad told
the premier he was the reason the government had suffered a humiliating
by-election defeat just days before. According to a party member present at the
meeting, a stunned Mahathir had little to say in his own defense.
Asia's
longest-serving elected leader humiliated in front of his lieutenants? And his
tormentor walks away with his head still attached to his shoulders? Things have
clearly changed in Malaysia. The problem for 75-year-old Mahathir, say his
critics, is that he has failed to keep pace. There was a time when he could
capitalize on the traditional mistrust that divided the opposition into Islamic
and Chinese camps. Those days are gone. Nor can he automatically rely on the
support of the Malay majority. Many have turned against him, bitter that the New
Economic Policy (NEP), devised to give them a fairer share of the national
wealth, now seems to be a tool for rewarding crony businessmen. International
investors are walking away, complaining that vital reforms have been abandoned
in favor of buddy-based economics.
Many Malaysians wonder what happened
to their dream of a modern, just and multicultural society. After 20 years of
Mahathir's rule, the country seems as deeply divided as ever along racial lines
and by social class. A study late last year at the University of Malaya shocked
the nation when it revealed that only 10% of students see themselves as
Malaysians first. The rest identify themselves as Malays, Chinese or Indians.
But in the world of politics, a new Malaysia is emerging. Reformasi, the battle
cry of supporters of imprisoned former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim, is taking
hold — and the race barriers are coming down. Says Tian Chua, vice president of
Keadilan, a mainly Malay opposition grouping formed by Anwar's wife, Wan Azizah
Wan Ismail: "Corruption and cronyism are more the issues than racial
identity."
Race — a four-letter word that can normally get you in serious
trouble in Malaysia — is all over the front page of the newspapers these days. A
Chinese pressure group is clamoring for a system in which it plays less of a
role. And Mahathir is using it to pander to his fellow Malays by labeling the
group and its followers as extremists. Unfortunately for the premier, political
rivals in the opposition have found a common enemy: him.
Perhaps the
biggest sign of changing times is the way Parti Islam SeMalaysia (Pas), which
espouses an Islamic state, is reaching out to the Chinese community. In
Trengganu, where Pas runs the state government, it has offered more than
$260,000 to 10 Chinese schools to use as they see fit. In Kelantan, the other
state it controls, the Islamist grouping has approved the use of Malay reserve
land for the expansion of Chinese temples and schools and is talking about
building a multicultural mosque that would incorporate Chinese, Indian and other
influences.
At the same time, Pas and the predominantly Chinese
Democratic Action Party (DAP) are increasing cooperation. Pas now prints the
English- and Malay-language editions of the DAP's Rocket newspaper. That
publication and Pas's Harakah appear on alternate weeks, ensuring there is
always an opposition voice on the streets. "Politics used to be defined along
racial lines, but now the issues are justice, denial of rights and demanding
those rights," says Pas secretary-general Nasharudin Mat Isa. "Therefore our
supporters are reading each other's newspapers." Privately younger Pas and DAP
members of Parliament say they find each other "easier to work with." One young
Pas MP remarks: "We are young and we realize we are in the same trench fighting
the same war."
Meanwhile, a growing number of community leaders and
politicians, including some in the government, are voicing out loud the
previously unthinkable: that it is time to overhaul the NEP. This
affirmative-action program was introduced in 1971 to eradicate poverty and
increase the stake of bumiputras (Malays and other indigenous groups). Among the
benefits, it provides them with a guaranteed number of places at university,
preferential treatment for government contracts, cheaper loans and discounted
blocks of stocks. While accepting that the measures were necessary at the time,
pro-reformers argue that the NEP is now holding Malays — and Malaysia — back by
creating what author Bakri Musa calls a "subsidy mentality." The sooner the
country has a more competitive society, the better, declares lawyer T.
Kuhanandan. "Eventually, Malaysia will be forced to become a meritocracy by the
WTO [World Trade Organization], the cyber era and open globalization," he says.
"We will have to compete and stand on our own two feet."
The debate over
the future of the NEP dates back to 1999, when a Chinese community group, Suqiu
(meaning "Appeal"), released an 83-point proposal for the eradication of the
racial divide between bumiputras and non-bumiputras. "Affirmative action should
be based on the protection and enhancement of the status of the weaker sectors
and not on race, social background and religious belief," it says. Many agree.
Says a Chinese head of research at a stockbroking firm, who asked not to be
named: "We are living under [pro-bumi] quotas in almost every aspect of our
lives — in school, university and business. There is some merit to affirmative
action, but should it be maintained eternally?"
Suqiu's suggested
elimination of bumi rights did not sit well with some Malay groups, but most of
the broader proposals received general support in the run-up to the 1999 general
elections, including from three predominantly Chinese parties in the ruling
Barisan Nasional coalition. But when Suqiu published its proposals on its new
website last August, the political heat rose swiftly. Mahathir seized on the
suggestions in what his opponents say was a shameless attempt to demonize the
lobby group and generate support for his United Malays National Organization
(UMNO). With the ever-faithful press howling in support, the premier called the
group's members "extremists" and compared them to the communist insurgents of
the 1960s, who were mostly Chinese. It was a classic Mahathir move — but it was
also a tactical mistake that critics say displayed just how out of touch he is
with the new Malaysia.
In a parliamentary by-election a few weeks later
in Kedah, Chinese electors struck back at the premier and helped vote in a
Keadilan candidate. A once-safe seat — in the prime minister's home state — had
fallen to the opposition after 42 years in government hands. The embarrassment
was immense. Lim Guan Eng, national vice chairman of the DAP, says the Chinese
showed they expect to be treated with respect. "They are very angry that after
giving the [government] their full support in the [1999] general elections, they
have been compared to communists and extremists and called ingrates," he says.
Lim, who spent a year in jail on charges of sedition and publishing false news,
believes Mahathir has decided that the only way to recover Malay support is to
whip up sentiment against the Chinese. Not a good policy. "Anyone playing the
race card will have a rude awakening," says Abdul Razak Baginda, executive
director of the Malaysian Strategic Research Center.
These days, instead
of supporting Mahathir in the face of Chinese economic domination, many Malays
see the prime minister himself as the problem. For some, only his departure can
save the day for UMNO. "He must be the only party leader I know who is a
liability to his party," says supreme-council critic Shahrir. The problem
springs partly from distaste at the fate of Anwar, once Mahathir's chosen
successor, who was sacked, beaten up in prison and jailed for 15 years on
charges of abuse of power and sodomy. "A lot of people put their hopes in a
newer generation of UMNO that might be more conciliatory, more liberal," says
Keadilan vice president Chua. "They thought Anwar could bring that. They saw the
best formula as a future represented by Anwar and a present represented by
Mahathir. When Anwar was sacked, that dream was shattered."
It wasn't the
only one. Some Malays say the premier has perverted the vision behind the NEP,
turning it into a welfare fund for a few politically well-connected — and
largely unsuccessful — businessmen. Among them is tycoon Tajudin Ramli, who
bought the government's controlling stake in Malaysian Airlines in 1994. A
farmer's son, Tajudin was praised in official circles as precisely the kind of
person who could create Malay wealth. But after three years of losses, the
debt-laden airline was bought back last month on extraordinarily generous terms
for Tajudin. The government purchased his 29% stake for over $470 million — more
than twice its market value. Says P. Ramasamy, a political scientist at the
National University of Malaysia: "It took the financial crisis of 1997 to lay
bare the true nature of how [the government] has sought to assist individuals
and groups with connections to the top leadership."
Backroom deals such
as the Malaysian Airlines buy-back are scaring off investors. Nearly $2.6
billion has been pulled out of the Malaysian stock market in the past six
months. Direct foreign investment is down to a trickle. The wide-ranging
privatization program of the 1980s, when ports, airlines, roads, sewerage and
water distribution were denationalized, appears to be unraveling. "Privatization
has lost its direction," says Chong Sui San, chief investment officer at
Malaysia British Assurance in Kuala Lumpur. "The government has to put on its
thinking cap and come up with new business models." Even the new chief justice
frets about investor confidence. After his first official meeting with the
country's judges Jan. 13, Mohamed Dzaiddin Abdullah told reporters: "I told [the
judges that], in reality, this negative perception has held back the country's
development as multinational corporations and foreign investors are reluctant to
invest because they perceive there is no level playing field."
Mahathir
insists that he knows best how to choose who deserves the government's help. "I
help people who have ability," he says. "If you have ability and you can do
things, I will help. I don't care what the world says, but it is my duty to
help. So there is no cronyism here." The premier took the same message — and a
warning — to a gathering of senior civil servants on Jan. 13. "There are those
who feel this government is not Islamic and reeks of corruption and cronyism,"
he said. "Such perceptions have yet to hinder our development efforts, but it is
not a good sign. If it is allowed to fester, the first evidence of our country
cracking will show rapidly. We can fall in two to three years."
There is
much to lose. Under Mahathir's leadership, Malaysia has progressed from an
almost exclusively agricultural economy to one largely based on technology and
knowledge. He has given his nation a respected voice on the international stage
and has instilled in the Malaysian people a pride in themselves and their
country and its achievements. Says Azim Mohamed Zabidi, an UMNO supreme-council
member and chairman of Bank Simpanan Nasional: "History will judge the prime
minister well."
Thirty years after authoring The Malay Dilemma, a
controversial work that asked blunt questions about the Malays' role in society,
Mahathir now faces a dilemma of his own. He genuinely wants a modern, secular
and multicultural Malaysia. But his out-of-date tactics are working against his
vision. He broadens ethnic divides by raising the bogey of ambitious Chinese
seeking to challenge the Malay birthright. And he alienates the Malay masses by
dividing up the nation's wealth among his businessmen friends. The Malay Dilemma
was penned during Mahathir's years in the political wilderness. Will this new
dilemma finally close the book on his career?
With reporting by
Santha Oorjitham and Arjuna Ranawana/Kuala Lumpur and Choong Tet Sieu/Hong
Kong
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