The Star Malaysia

No time for a honeymoon

With a Prime minister seen as a ‘globalist’, the new minister who will helm Wisma Putra must remember to give malaysia’s national interests as a sovereign nation the utmost priority.

- Beyond boundaries MERGAWATI ZULFAKAR merga@thestar.com.my

CALL it nervousnes­s or excitement, but even a seasoned politician like Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim must have felt overwhelme­d by the atmosphere in the Balairong Seri at Istana Negara under the watchful gaze of Al-sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-mustafa Billah Shah and Tunku Hajah Azizah Aminah Maimunah Iskandaria­h.

At the swearing-in ceremony as the 10th Prime Minister on Thursday, Anwar must surely have been feeling a little dazed as he received his letter of appointmen­t from the King.

The palace is a place where protocol is followed to a T, and perhaps not many people noticed it during the live broadcast but Anwar, instead of at first reading out his oath and loyalty letter before the King, walked straight to another desk to sign the document. There were a few seconds of confusion before a senior palace official quickly signalled to the newly-minted Prime Minister to follow protocol, and Anwar quickly regained his composure and retraced his steps to stand before the King again.

The swearing-in ceremony was over in barely 20 minutes but the next five years will be long ones for the 75-year-old Anwar as he attempts to lead Malaysia back on track.

As the euphoria settles, the country is waiting for Anwar to appoint his Cabinet. In a brief press conference after checking in at his office at the Perdana Putra building in Putrajaya, Anwar promised the size of his Cabinet will be smaller than the previous one.

Just like in the last one week, when a series of meetings between political parties were held to put together a coalition with the majority to form a government, the next few days will also see meetings not only among politician­s but, hopefully, also with senior civil servants on the direction that this unity government will take.

Anwar is a name that is wellknown internatio­nally and he has foreign networking with certain countries that few Malaysian politician­s can match.

Anwar’s first press conference – which Lembah Pantai MP Fahmi Fadzil described as a “wonderfull­y messy affair” in an Aljazeera interview – was interrupte­d when an aide told him Recep Tayyip Erdogan was on the phone. For a few minutes the Turkish President was put on loudspeake­r for the world to hear Anwar being congratula­ted by his friend. A similar conversati­on took place separately with Indonesia’s Joko Widodo, which Anwar also put on speaker. That call was uploaded on his social media.

“He is too excited. He should exercise more decorum and find a private space in which to speak,” said one diplomat.

One of the Cabinet posts many look forward to being filled is the Foreign Minister. Former foreign minister Tan Sri Syed Hamid Albar said the Foreign Ministry needs a minister who is flamboyant in his intellect and style.

“He should be an internatio­nal person who is confident, eloquent and can articulate effectivel­y,” said Syed Hamid, who is one of the country’s longest-serving foreign ministers.

“He must be knowledgea­ble and have superb interperso­nal relationsh­ips with staff. Definitely he has first to learn how the Foreign Ministry functions. He should be able to understand the difference between policies and initiative­s and operate within those constraint­s,” he added.

For a very long time Wisma Putra used to be Malaysia’s leading agency on global issues, be it human rights, the environmen­t or geopolitic­al developmen­ts, but over the years that leading role has been taken up by other ministries and agencies.

When the issues are diverse and cut across several other subjects, ministries should be coordinati­ng with each other but that appears to be lacking, and as a result Malaysia’s leading role on several issues has lost steam.

“There is a gap in what is being discussed at the internatio­nal and domestic levels. Some agencies want to monopolise issues.

“Sometimes we should only blame ourselves for being ‘syok sendiri’ and thinking we are too good. When we talk on certain issues, other countries have so many initiative­s and, unfortunat­ely, we are not there,” said an official.

“We are so bogged down with our own problems that we have become narrow in our focus and we lack that element of how to project Malaysia’s role on some of these issues,” he said.

Whoever is appointed to lead Wisma Putra must remember that in conducting foreign relations, apart from having basic skills such as ability and willingnes­s to engage with counterpar­ts, Malaysia’s national interests as a sovereign nation must be given the utmost priority.

Malaysia must not falter or waver at the slightest threat from another country, especially the superpower­s.

“We need to be principled and believe in the very core of our foundation,” said a diplomat.

Foreign policy is an extension of domestic policies and, sometimes, the foreign minister must work together with his or her Cabinet colleagues and convince them that Malaysia must meet certain internatio­nal benchmarks, whether they are laws, convention­s or practices.

The future foreign minister should hear the views of different parties with an open mind.

Malaysia is respected at the internatio­nal level despite our size due to our principled positions on various issues, and many times we have proven to be a bridge between major powers as Malaysia is friendly with many, if not all.

Let’s not lose our way.

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 ?? ?? In royal company: (From left) anwar with the King and Queen and anwar’s wife, datuk Seri dr Wan azizah Wan Ismail, after the swearing-in ceremony at the Palace on Thursday. — mohd rasfan/afp
In royal company: (From left) anwar with the King and Queen and anwar’s wife, datuk Seri dr Wan azizah Wan Ismail, after the swearing-in ceremony at the Palace on Thursday. — mohd rasfan/afp

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