Mahathir, Taib like-minded culprits


Sarawak’s PBB is a mirror image of Umno and like Umno, it wants to stay in power indefinitely.

Also during his tenure, the country saw massive borrowings from financial institutions and the public fund board like the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), a free fall of the ringgit currency, the hijacking of the independence of the judiciary, unfair power-sharing formula with other component parties, the curbing of the anti-corruption agency’s powers and the suppression of the opposition and the human rights.

Awang Abdillah, Free Malaysia Today

The Barisan Nasional coalition concept was actually mooted by certain Sarawak leaders who had lived through the experiences of the Sarawak Alliance Party during its 1966 crisis and the fragile position of Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) while under the Sarawak coalition government in the early 1970s.

In the 1974 Sarawak election, the BN entity had helped to strengthen the performance of its Sarawak partners when it won 30 seats and Sarawak National Party (SNAP) which was in the opposition won 18 seats.

Following that election, the BN government faced yet another crisis when SNAP threatened to destabilise the coalition.

The federal-level BN quickly stepped in and helped to diffuse the crisis by negotiating for SNAP to enter into the BN fold in 1976.

Despite these hiccups, the overall BN concept of a multi-party alliance had worked at the time.

Unfortunately over the years and taking advantage of the federal BN protection, the domineering power of PBB at state level began to breed bad elements of bad governance.

The chief minister then, Abdul Rahman Yaakub, began to issue timber licences to his family members and cronies.

The Malays felt the PBB policies had marginalised them.

Domineering policies

Consequently, a new party, Parti Pajar, was formed demanding the removal of the chief minister.

The BN federal government at that time was under prime minister Hussein Onn.

Being a man of clean character, he eventually forced Abdul Rahman to step down in 1981.

Rahman’s nephew Taib Mahmud took over from him the same year.

From 1981 onwards, the grand alliance under the BN brand started to show its true colour.

Events in Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia began to slowly take a very ugly turn.

PBB and Umno, being the backbone of BN parties in Sarawak and the Peninsula respectively, started to adopt domineering politics to establish their political and economic hegemony over the state and the country respectively.

Like Sarawak, the federal government has sacrificed good governance and replaced it with massive abuses of power and corruption.

Elements of bad governance began to flow far and deep into all corners of the political and economic systems of the country.

Mahathir’s Umno

The abuses of power and corruption began to get worse by the day .

The major abuses of the Dr Mahathir Mohamad-led government were the award of mega projects and businesses to family members , henchmen and cronies worth billions of ringgit.

Also during his tenure, the country saw massive borrowings from financial institutions and the public fund board like the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), a free fall of the ringgit currency, the hijacking of the independence of the judiciary, unfair power-sharing formula with other component parties, the curbing of the anti-corruption agency’s powers and the suppression of the opposition and the human rights.

Eventually, Umno established itself as the most powerful party in the country.

Mahathir believed that when Umno is powerful nothing can stop it from doing whatever it wants to do.

But what seemed to have escaped Mahathir is the fact that when an organisation has absorbed too much political and economic power beyond its abilities to handle it, it creates within its system a race to sustain and garner more power.

Umno divided

A power struggle from within began to take shape in the mid-80s, which eventually split the party down the middle.

In 1988, a faction led by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah emerged to challenge Mahathir’s leadership. The party crisis eventually led to the de-registration of Umno.

In 1998, another power struggle emerged. A strong faction led by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim began to challenge Mahathir.

This time, Anwar, who was the former deputy Umno president, managed to form his own party called Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR). It formed a pact with other opposition parties, PAS and DAP , and called themselves Pakatan Rakyat.

The results of the 2008 general election has changed the fate of Umno drastically.

In the 12th general election, the voters punched Umno on the head.

Now Umno seems to come to the realisation that not only has it lost so much power but it is now fighting for its own survival.

All kinds of desperate measures have come into play to arrest the decline.

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