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The Star says: Pak Lah can still salvage his legacy |
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Sunday, 12 October 2008 09:24am |
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©The
Sunday Star (Used by permission)
SO much to do, so little time. There’s a long list of things that Datuk Seri
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi wants to do before stepping down as Prime Minister in
March. And it looks like a tall order.
He has pledged to reform the judiciary, beef up the fight against corruption,
make enforcement agencies more accountable, widen the country’s social safety
net and improve inter-racial, inter-religious ties.
Sneering critics have been quick to deride the targets as unachievable, noting
the unfulfilled promises of the 2004 general election which he won with the
biggest mandate ever.
The discontent festered for four years, leading to an opposite swing of support
and resultant tectonic political shift in the March 8 polls.
Abdullah, who has experienced both the zenith and nadir points of popularity,
has had a tumultuous time since then, fending off attacks from the Opposition
and from within his own party.
Those who had been accusing him of incompetence and indecisiveness expect an
ignominious end to his political career. But he can still prove that he is no
lame duck.
Six months may be a blink of an eye but it is a window of opportunity to salvage
his stalled legacy as a political reformer. Time, after all, can stay long
enough for anyone who wants to use it.
Abdullah has already started the ball rolling on inter-religious relations by
seeking solutions to long-standing rancorous issues — the conversion of
non-Muslims to Islam through marriage, problems faced by spouses who do not
convert and the bitter tussles over burial rites.
It has taken some time for him to acknowledge it publicly, but such issues
should indeed be tackled through rational discussions, focusing on the points
that unite rather than divide the people.
Abdullah’s aims for a Judicial Appointments Commission for an open, merit-based
judiciary and an Anti-Corruption Commission modelled on Hong Kong’s much-feared
ICAC are laudable.
The Special Complaints Commission to ensure integrity of enforcement agencies,
however, falls short of the original recommendations for an Independent Police
Complaints and Misconduct Commission.
Shortcomings aside, Abdullah should be given the opportunity to get the
respective Bills tabled, debated and passed in Parliament with amendments if
needed, as they would result in better governance and democracy.
And it will all have to be done in double quick time.
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