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Abdullah:
Umno is not a bully |
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Oct 18, 2008 |
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Prime
Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has dismissed suggestions that Umno
has over-dominated the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition at the
expense of other component parties.

Opening the
55th MCA annual general meeting in Kuala Lumpur today, Abdullah -
who is also BN chairperson - said the issue of Umno being a “bully”
has never arisen.
“Umno is not a ‘bully’ party, there is no such thing as bully, we are all
friends,” Abdullah said in reply to a point raised by outgoing MCA
president Ong Ka Ting in a farewell speech earlier.
“If that is our way (being a bully), many component parties would
have left BN by now,” stressed the premier. Ong, seated on stage,
smiled at Abdullah’s apparent rebuttal of his earlier remark.
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Umno not a bully? Yeah. Right
OCT 18 — Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi must be suffering from amnesia.
That is the most charitable conclusion to draw after he said today that
the perception of Umno being a bully in the Barisan Nasional was off the
mark.
Speaking at the annual MCA general assembly, the Prime Minister touched on
a topic that has been discussed and debated since non-Malay voters
deserted the ruling coalition in droves on March 8: the arrogance of Umno
politicians and the perception that the MCA, MIC, Gerakan, PPP, PBS and
every other component party were punished at the polls for their
subservience to the ruling party.
He said: “People say that Umno is a party that likes to bully. I actually
have no idea how to bully. There is no such thing as bullying.’’
MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Ka Ting and Gerakan president Tan Sri Dr Koh
Tsu Koon must have been bristling at the cavalier manner Abdullah
dismissed the issue.
Wasn’t it only a month ago that Umno division chief Datuk Ahmad Ismail
exhibited supreme arrogance when he showed no remorse for calling
Malaysian Chinese immigrants at a rally in the run-up to the Permatang
Pauh by-election.
And when Gerakan stood up to him, he behaved just like a schoolyard bully.
He asked for Gerakan to be kicked out of the BN. Not surprising that that
the incident did not register with Abdullah as he addressed the MCA for
the last time as the chairman of BN and president of Umno.
He and the party’s supreme council members only took disciplinary action
against the Bukit Bendera politician after being pushed into a corner.
Even then, it was half-hearted attempt to apply balm on the raw feelings
of the non-Malays.
Is this PM so out of touch with reality that he does not understand how
frustrated BN leaders have become in dealing with arrogant Umno
politicians.
Before he stepped down as a minister, Ong had to speak in hushed tones if
he wanted allocation for Chinese schools from the Education Ministry.
Speak too loud and the minister may be offended.
Koh had to stomach all the excesses of Penang Umno for years and had to be
careful not to antagonise them even when they complained about the lack of
opportunities in the state for Malays.
The arrogance and bullying did not stop there. And it hurt the MCA and
other component parties in many ways.
When the late Datuk Zakaria Deros broke every rule in the book and built
his mansion in Klang, and then displayed shocking contempt, it was the MCA
and Gerakan which felt the wrath of the voters. Their sin: being in the
same political set-up as the arrogant Selangor Umno warlord.
Even surveys conducted before and after the general election confirm one
fact: that the majority of non-Malays believe that the BN power-sharing
formula discriminates against non-Malay political parties.
A few of the polls also put down the strong showing of Pakatan Rakyat to
revulsion at the arrogance of Umno politicians.
A poll by the Merdeka Centre in July showed that 66% of Chinese and 60.1%
of Indians agree that the BN does not represent the voice of all
communities.
It’s telling that as he spoke to MCA politicians, Abdullah still was
prepared to defend a political party that has bullied him since the
general election; that refused to back his reform agenda and is now making
final preparations for his humiliating send-off.
Malaysians should save their sympathy and goodwill for another leader.
This man deserves the bullying treatment he is getting from his party
faithful.
Quoted from MalaysianInsider comment......
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PRS: Umno
is a bully, so is PBB
A Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) division leader has described Umno at the
federal level and Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu (PBB) in Sarawak as ‘too
dominant’ and indeed are ‘bullies’ in their dealings with smaller
component parties in the Barisan Nasional.
Taking a cue from the statement of former MCA president Ong Ka Ting who
has expressed similar sentiments, Balleh PRS publicity chief Beginda Minda
said this tendency of one party dominance has an adverse impact on public
perception and intra-BN relationships.
“It is my view that in Sarawak, PRS, a component party inside the state
and federal Barisan Nasional has been bullied by what could collectively
be called the 'BN leadership'," he said in a statement to Malaysiakini
today
Elaborating, Beginda explained that in the case of Sarawak, the BN system
has generated a state-level entity where there has been one dominant party
- the PBB which is leading the state BN government.
Very powerful Taib Mahmud
PBB
president Abdul Taib Mahmud (left in photo) is also state BN
chair and chief minister of Sarawak for the past 27 years.
He has long been described as
Sarawak's most powerful personality and is known to be intolerant of
dissent within the party's ranks.
“Just as there is a public
perception of Umno being too dominant at the national level, there is also
a similar perception that in Sarawak, the dominant role of PBB has had an
effect on the conduct of smaller parties, such as PRS,” Beginda said.
Prime Minister and national BN chair Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has
responded immediately to Ong’s remarks on Oct 18,
denying that Umno has bullied others in the BN. Umno information chief
Muhammad Muhammad Taib has also asked for evidence of Umno bullying.
Responding to Muhammad Taib’s request, Beginda cited two recent instances
of Umno and PBB bullying PRS.
The first was during the 2006 state election when a component BN party was
‘allowed’ to steal a PRS seat
“Neither the state nor federal BN intervened effectively to stop a
component party from interfering in the affairs of another. Where was BN
when effective action was needed?
"It was as if the BN was
shutting its proverbial 'eye' to the intra-BN infighting in Sarawak. By
letting the problem fester, it was acting as a bully, not a problem
solver,” Beginda pointed out.
The second incident was during the March general election when two of the
party’s candidates were rejected without any reason.
Beginda queried why was PBB allowed to choose its candidates to contest on
PRS seats.
“Where is the principle that component parties ought to be free to conduct
their own affairs and make the selection of candidates themselves? Is this
not a case of dominance and bullying?” he asked.
“As a result, PRS was caught in a dilemma. The choices were two: PRS could
have rejected the suggested replacements or it could have accepted them.
"A refusal to accept the
replacement candidates could have left the party open to accusations of
being disloyal to BN, a grave enough political sin. Such a move would have
put PRS leadership in hot soup and perhaps alienate the party from BN.
“The impact on PRS was that it was a tremendous 'let down'. To paraphrase
Dato Seri Ong, the perception was that a partner in Sarawak BN - the PBB -
was being 'too dominant'."
Despite
these internal BN problems, Sarawak managed to deliver all but one of its
31 parliamentary seats to the BN. The ruling coalition only lost Bandar
Kuching to DAP.
PRS is led by Dr James Masing (right)
who is the party's founder president. He is also state land development
minister.
PRS has six members of
parliament. Its vice-president Joseph Entulu serves at the federal level
as deputy minister for national and rural development.
Other options, other than BN
On the current situation within
the Sarawak BN, Beginda said it would seem that “we in PRS are still back
in a bad school environment where the weaker students are being bullied by
the more senior ones.”
He called for a mechanism in the BN for components parties to be protected
from the predation of others, no matter what the excuse.
“Umno and PBB could be strong but that should be so without being dominant
up to the level that it could openly ‘interfere’ into the internal affairs
of another component party,” said Beginda.
Stressing
that the BN leadership must be just, Beginda said the organisational
integrity of a component party like PRS must be maintained.
“Its decisions, such as the nomination of candidates, must be respected.
Failure to do this could lead to fragmentation at the peripheries and
ultimately could spread to the centre,” he warned.
Beginda also emphasised on the need for re-generation, re-vitalisation and
re-growth within the BN.“
The BN machinery is seen as an
ossified body, presently unable to respond effectively to the needs of
component parties and that of the country as a whole.
The message is that such
dominance need to be rectified and ways be found as a means of
resuscitating the rest of the BN partners so that the BN machinery could
be energized and respond to the people more effectively," he said.
Beginda reminded the BN top leadership that the coalition must wake up to
current political realities and stop being in a state of denial.
“Before, there was only BN which could provide the national leadership.
After March 2008, it is clear that PRS has other, perhaps better,
options,” he ended with a veiled warning, without elaborating what these
options might be.
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