Bangkok Post

Malaysia must end its legacy of patronage politics

- NISID HAJARI MARY DUENWALD

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak may very well be, as he insists, innocent of charges that nearly $700 million (23.7 billion baht) in government-linked funds ended up in his personal accounts. But his handling of the scandal thus far has only underscore­d weaknesses in the Malaysian political system.

The accusation­s against Mr Najib revolve around the finances of 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd (1MDB) — a debt-ridden state investment company whose advisory board he chairs. In early July, the Wall Street Journal reported that hundreds of millions of dollars may have moved through agencies linked to 1MDB and landed in accounts controlled by the prime minister. Mr Najib has alleged a political conspiracy to undermine him and vowed not to resign. He’s threatened to sue the Journal, while Malaysian police have launched a probe into how reporters obtained the evidence for its story. The Journal has said it stands by its reporting.

Whatever the facts of the case, Mr Najib inhabits a system that has long suffered from allegation­s of cronyism. His United Malays National Organisati­on (UNMO) has dominated the government since independen­ce in 1957, in part through gerrymande­ring and affirmativ­e-action policies that favour the Malay majority. Having carefully cultivated the 191 division leaders who have the power to remove him as party leader, Mr Najib can likely cling to his position regardless of what facts are revealed — or what voters may want. The opposition coalition was successful­ly fractured by the recent conviction of its leader, Anwar Ibrahim, on apparently spurious sodomy charges. Retrograde sedition laws and a docile domestic media further stifle dissent in Malaysia. Mr Najib recently postponed internal UMNO elections until 2018, making a party coup even harder.

Four different official investigat­ions into 1MDB had been announced before the Journal’s report — by the government’s auditor general, a parliament­ary committee, the police and the central bank. But questions linger over how independen­t any of these can be.

Mr Najib’s ruling coalition dominates the legislatur­e. The police fall under the home minister’s authority. And Mr Najib, who is finance minister as well as prime minister, nominates the central bank governor. On Thursday, the head of the parliament­ary committee reported that an interim report from the auditor general had found no suspicious activity at 1MDB, although the company had reportedly withheld some bank and investment documents from investigat­ors.

A “special task force” announced last weekend, led by the attorney general, appears to be investigat­ing with more vigour. It has removed documents and computers from the 1MDB offices and frozen six bank accounts associated with the case. Still, its scope and authority are vague.

If the prime minister truly wants to clear his name, he should abandon his threats to sue the Journal and instead open his books to investigat­ors — something he hasn’t yet pledged to do or confirmed he’s done. He should make way for a truly independen­t investigat­ion of the charges against him — perhaps structured as a royal commission with wide-ranging powers.

More important for avoiding such scandals in the future is to eliminate the patronage politics that encourage corruption, and this will require far broader reform. Malaysia needs a thriving opposition and a freer media, as well as a far more powerful and independen­t anti-corruption agency. Stricter campaign funding rules would reduce the risk of vote-buying. Officials’ personal finances should be made more transparen­t.

Mr Najib has earned praise for his stewardshi­p of the economy; Malaysia recently avoided a Fitch downgrade on the strength of its improving fiscal finances and its relatively healthy growth rates. The country’s reputation, though, no less than Mr Najib’s, is suffering a grievous blow. Neither will be easily healed.

 ?? EPA ?? Malaysian police pull a box and computer hardware from the 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) office in Kuala Lumpur.
EPA Malaysian police pull a box and computer hardware from the 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) office in Kuala Lumpur.

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