8aim: I’ll release eE2 report
Mut council chairman says making it public is not for him to decide
PETALING
JAYA: Council of Eminent Persons chairman Tun Daim Zainuddin, along with another CEP member, supports the release of a 100-day report. In it are recommendations that was prepared by the council.
“I will release it. Release it to the public but that is not for me to decide. I was asked to chair the meetings and get the information, facts, analyse and make the recommendations. That is my role and I shouldn’t go beyond that,” he told The Star in an interview yesterday.
“I like to share information and debate so that you get the best.
“But there is information in the report that rightly is under Official Secrets Act (OSA).
“We always need feedback from the rakyat, what they are not happy about and what the government is not doing right. This feedback is very important as in the end, we have to solve their problems.”
The call for the full release of the report has grown louder in recent days with Economic Affairs Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Azmin Ali admitting that the report was not a matter of national security.
The report was prepared during the first 100 days of the Pakatan Harapan government after defeating Barisan Nasional at the 14th general election.
Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Mohamed Hanipa Maidin said the report had been classified under the OSA and was not for public consumption.
“It was submitted to the Prime Minister and the government has no intention to make the findings public,” he said in reply to a supplementary question from Wong Kah Woh during Question Time in Parliament on Thursday.
Daim said the report was prepared for Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and the purpose of forming the CEP was to calm investors and markets as the Cabinet had not been formed then.
“Before that, no one thought Barisan was going to lose – even investors. They, the investors, want continuity and suddenly this happened. The PM wanted to calm the markets,” he said.
“We were given 100 days to get all the information, which we did. We submitted (recommendations on) about 70 topics. We briefed the PM and some of it were highly technical. In the end, it is up to the government (to release the CEP report).”
Professor Jomo Kwame Sundram, a member of the CEP, now agreed that the report should be made public. He had reservations earlier as he felt there were legal and diplomatically sensitive matters. These are no longer present.