
“I think that elections are more likely sooner rather than later. The longer UMNO waits, the more problems will come out, the longer the opposition will have to organize and campaign,” Malott told Malaysia Chronicle.
Indecisive or plotting to complete tenure
Basically, Prime Minister Najib Razak has until April 2013 to call for nationwide polls before Parliament automatically dissolves. So far the Malaysian leader, known for his flip flops, has responded with characteristic indecisiveness when pressed on when his countrymen could expect to go to the ballot boxes.
In some of the foreigh media, Najib said he hoped to hold GE-13 “soon” while the local media reports that he will only do so after fulfilling the government’s promises, and reforms start to show some impact. The Malaysian leader’s ambivalence has given rise to talk that he may actually defy pundits' advice by holding elections only in 2013.
His party is also due to hold an internal vote by October and if GE-13 is still pending by then, Umno members would have no choice but to re-elect him so as to show a united front going into the bigger war against the ‘real’ enemy – the Pakatan Rakyat led by Anwar. So the theories spun by the various factions in Umno go.
Nothing has been done
In fact, to some including Malott, nothing has been done so far despite the formation of a Parliamentary Select Committee in the aftermath of the landmark July 9, 2011 Bersih 2.0 rally for free and fair elections.
“I don’t think anything has been done yet. All talk, no action. The point is, these reforms need to be put in place before the general elections are held, or the results will not be credible,” said Malott.
Lip service
However, apart from the recently announced decision to adopt indelible ink, few concessions have been made by the BN-controlled PSC while many counter-proposals have been floated that the Bersih committee has objected to on the basis that these made the situation worse than before.
Most glaringly, the Election Commission has evaded the issue of cleaning up the electoral roll, while the Pakatan Rakyat has been exposing case after case of false names and phantom voters on the registered list.
Additionally, nothing has been done to strengthen the public institutions, or to stop dirty politics. As for corruption, behind the lip service deployed by the Najib administration, abuse of power has actually worsened with Umno leaders rushing in a free-for-all ‘last grab’ before GE-13, when it is highly plausible that they may finally lose their 5-decade hold on the country.
RTM and Bernama belong to Umno?
“I think the most important reform of all is to make sure that RTM and Bernama, which are owned by all the people of Malaysia, are fair and balanced in their reporting,” said Malott, the US envoy to Kuala Lumpur from 1995 to 1998.
“Right now they act like they belong to UMNO and not the Government. The restrictions on distribution of the opposition’s newspapers also should be removed. The ruling parties and the opposition should be treated the same. That is the only fair way.” - Malaysia Chronicle
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