ANTIDOTE Could
Malaysia face UN sanctions, thanks to its lack of action on graft
allegations surrounding Sarawak's entrenched chief minister Abdul Taib
Mahmud?
A
coalition of 21 NGOs from nine countries, led by the Bruno Manser Fund
(BMF), has called on UN secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon to reprimand
Malaysia for "systematic breach of its obligations under international
anti-corruption and anti-money laundering treaties".
The
coalition picketed on June 4 in front of the UN Office on Drugs and
Crime in Vienna, Austria, the secretariat of the Convention against
Corruption, and the anti-money laundering Convention against
Transnational Organised Crime.
The
NGOs have also requested, in a letter to Ban, for urgent action against
the Malaysian authorities. The coalition argued that the government has
reneged on its commitments to both treaties, by failing to act against
alleged corrupt practices and capital flight by Taib.
The
letter was signed by NGOs from Sarawak, Switzerland, Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Germany, Nepal, Norway and the UK. Among these were
the BMF and Greenpeace, as well as Sarawakian human rights groups
Brimas, Ideal, Sadia and Tahabas.
Taib,
they wrote, was the "main person responsible for the unprecedented
destruction of the tropical rainforests of Sarawak, one of the world's
most biodiverse natural habitats and an important global carbon sink".
They
said Taib has "not only established an authoritarian government in
Sarawak but has also abused his political power...and illicitly gained
assets worth several billion US dollars, including logging and
plantation concessions, a monopolistic control over the export of
tropical timber and a monopoly over the production of cement and other
building materials".
The
NGOs alleged that the Malaysian authorities are "deliberately and
actively protecting ... Taib and his family members from criminal
prosecution" for his "massive corruption, abuse of public office and
money-laundering in third countries".
Taib
and premier Najib Abdul Razak are keeping a strained mutual truce, in
order to keep the BN in Putrajaya. Neither has commented on the
anti-Taib campaign.
The
Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) reports directly to Najib.
Its head Abu Kassim Mohamed made a languid announcement last June that
there was an ongoing investigation into Taib's wealth.
This
coy admission followed an avalanche of Internet reports regarding the
Taib family's land deals, corporate holdings and lavish local and
foreign properties.
On
June 3, the first anniversary of Abu Kassim's remarks, the MACC assured
Malaysians that the case was "not yet resolved". To date, it has failed to report any progress.
Conundrum for Pakatan
Political
observers note that the MACC "probe" might be an unsubtle reminder to
Taib to remain loyal to Najib, instead of defecting to the opposing
Pakatan Rakyat coalition, if the upcoming general election is close.
"...the
MACC appears not to be independent. It has no real control, but appears
to be used as a tool to keep the ruling BN coalition in power," the
NGOs said in their letter.
The
NGOs pointed out they had sent complaints to the Malaysian attorney
general, the MACC and inspector-general of police last December, but
have not received a reply.
"We
believe the ... government has instructed the addressees not to
reply...in clear violation of the spirit and stipulations of (the two UN
treaties),” the NGOs wrote.
The
BMF announced that, following their demonstration in Vienna, NGO
representatives were invited into a closed-door meeting with UN
officials.
This
complaint to the UN will cause Najib and Taib international
embarrassment, but will not lead to Taib's prosecution, with a general
election looming.
Najib
must hope most Malaysians know nothing of this: the state-controlled
media has kept grimly silent on the story. However, the growing numbers
of Internet-connected voters, including many in lower-income groups,
will inevitably learn of the international furore.
Now that Taib has become increasingly isolated, an interesting question arises.
If
the 13th general election results in a hung Parliament, would Pakatan
aspire to form the ruling coalition by accepting Taib's loyalty, and his
party's seats, in return for immunity from prosecution?
And what international response would Pakatan expect, if this scenario comes to pass?
No comments:
Post a Comment