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Najib desperate for Indian votes

B Nantha Kumar | February 1, 2013
But the prime minister seems to be making all the wrong moves because of his advisers and BN component parties.

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak will attend a national Ponggal festival tomorrow (Feb 2) at Dataran Merdeka, which has come as a surprise to political observers.
It was this same Barisan Nasional government that fired tear gas and water cannons on the Indians who gathered in the streets of Kuala Lumpur in 2007.
The police had come down hard on the protesters despite many of them carrying posters of Mahatma Gandhi to indicate that their gathering was non-violent.
Following the rally, five Hindraf leaders were arrested under the Internal Security Act (ISA) and the Hindraf movement was declared an illegal body.
Ironically, the same government was now giving a “red carpet” welcome to Indians to gather at the heart of the city.
Whether the BN government had realised its past mistakes with regard to the Indian community or not, the fact is the prime minister is desperate for Indian votes.
Attending four Indian functions in three weeks proves this point.
Najib had attended the Indian Progressive Front (IPF) gathering on Jan 12 at Dataran Tesco Semenyih, where the former was delighted with the rousing reception from a 15,000-strong crowd.
The next day, he also met the Indian community on the eve of the Ponggal festival at Little India in Klang.
Apart from the Ponggal celebration, Najib was also supposed to attend the Thaipusam festival but due to his flight being delayed, deputy premier Muhyiddin Yassin went instead.
But the question now is whether the Indian community is happy with BN’s various initiatives.
Just look at the few major Indian functions funded and attended by Najib:
  • Indian New Year celebration in 2011 at Mines, Seri Kembangan (RM3 million)
  • Ponggal celebration at Klang in 2012 (RM3 million)
  • Thaipusam 2012 (RM2 million)
  • Musical Night at Stadium Malawati, by an Indian NGO (RM350,000, the attendance was 2,000)
  • IPF gathering at Semenyih (RM1 million)
  • Thaipusam 2013 (RM1 million)
  • Ponggal festival 2013 (RM3 million)
Despite millions being poured into these functions, how many poor Indians benefited from this? Nobody dares answer this, because even Najib doesn’t have a clue.
Worse still, there were also allegations that the funds were misused by certain leaders.
For example, a top-level BN Indian leader had allegedly bought a bungalow in Australia from the money allocated for the Hindu New Year celebration in 2011.
Another allegation was that a component party division chairman embezzled RM200,000, originally given to people for their transport and other costs to attend the new year celebration.
Thus, it is clear that Najib is just wasting his time and money.
What is Najib supposed to do?
For Indians, Najib must appear as the ticket that would lead the community to a better life. The prime minister should engage directly with the community instead of going through political parties and NGOs.
With the election being around the corner, he should do more walkabouts to meet Indian voters and listen to their grievances.
The best thing Najib should do now is steer clear from his advisers and go down to the estates and low-cost housing areas to get a true picture of the situation.
Najib, with the entire government machinery behind him, could provide instant solutions to problems such as high maintenance fees, better housing facility and others
Word of mouth is always the best marketing strategy and if Najib could resolve an issue, even a small one, the news would travel fast.
And instead of bringing the media to the area, Najib should upload pictures and comments on the activities done at these areas on official websites.
Moreover, people are sceptical about the reports published by the mainstream media, which are owned by Barisan Nasional parties.
It may be too late now but if Najib plays his cards right, he still may be able to do a little damage control.

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