The CIMB Group chief, Nazir Razak
and younger brother to the Prime Minister hit the nail on the head when he told
Financial Times that Malaysia must overcome corruption if it is to move up from
being a middle-income economy.
In fact, Nazir could be faulted for
erring on the side of caution and holding his punches for Malaysia, under Najib
Razak’s premiership for 39 months, is not only more corrupt than under the two
previous Prime Ministers Dr. Mahathir and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, but is heading
towards the dubious honour of being the only Asian-Pacific country to slip in
both Transparency International (TI) Corruption Perception Index (CPI) ranking
and score since the introduction of the annual assessment 17 years ago in
1995.
In the first TI CPI in 1995,
Malaysia was ranked No.23 out of 41 countries or the 6th highest-ranked nation
in the Asia-Pacific after New Zealand -1, Singapore – 3, Australia – 7, Hong
Kong – 17 and Japan –20, with a CPI score of 5.28. (10 stands for "highly clean"
and 0 for "highly corrupt")
Seventeen years later, after
numerous anti-corruption campaigns, two major anti-corruption legislation, the
"elevation" of the former Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) into Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), the National Integrity Plan, the 1Malaysia
Government Transformation Programme with massive infusion of public funds and
increase of staffing, Malaysia has now fallen to the lowest TI CPI ranking in 17
years in 2011, viz: No. 60 with the lowest CPI score of 4.3.
Malaysia has also fallen to No. 11
for country placing in the Asia-Pacific. The top TI CPI 2011 Asia-Pacific
ranking are:
New Zealand (1) 9.5
Singapore (5) 9.2
Australia (8) 8.8
Hong Kong (12) 8.4
Japan (14) 7.8
Taiwan (32) 6.1
Bhutan (38) 5.7
South Korea (42) 5.4
Brunei (44) 5.2
Macau (46) 5.1
Malaysia (60) 4.3
Even more serious, other countries
which had been down on the list of the TI CPI ranking are fast catching up while
Malaysia is fast falling down!China, Thailand, India and
Indonesia are such examples in Asia.
China was ranked No. 40 with a CPI
score of 2.16 in 1995. In 2011, China is ranked No. 75 with a CPI score of
3.6.At the annual average rate of
China’s improvement and Malaysia’s regression of their CPI score in the last 17
years, China will not only catch up but will leave Malaysia behind in the TI
CPI, both in ranking and in score in a matter of four years – come 2015!
Other Asian countries like
Thailand, Indonesia and India are making major strides in the battle against
corruption. Thailand, which was ranked No. 34 with CPI score of 2.79 in 1995
(out of 41 countries) is now ranked No. 80 (out of 183 countries) with an
improved score of 3.4. India was ranked No. 35 with CPI score of 2.78 in 1995 is
now ranked No. 95 with an improved score of 3.1.
Even Indonesia is making
significant strides in the anti-corruption front. Ranked at the very bottom of
No. 41 in 1995, with CPI score of 1.94, Indonesia is now ranked No. 100 with an
improved CPI score of 3.0 in 2011.Is there any other Asia-Pacific
country to keep Malaysia company of being hit with a double whammy of a lower TI
CPI ranking and score in the past 17 years?
Yes, there is another country – the
Philippines whose TI CP ranking was No. 36 with a score of 2.77 in 1997 and both
indices fell 17 years later in the 2011 TI CPI being ranked No. 129 with a score
of 2.6.
But the Philippines is
optimistically looking forward to great improvements in its CPI score if not CPI
ranking next year with the catching of several "big fishes" in the
anti-corruption campaign of President Aquino, most notably the sacking of Chief
Justice Renato Corona by the Philippines Senate impeachment court and the
indictment of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, former Transportation
Secretary Leandro Mendoza, former Commission on Elections Chair Benjamin Abalos
and Local Water Utilities Chair Prospero Pichay.
If Philippines join the queue of
other Asian-Pacific countries with the political will to fight corruption,
particularly "big fish" or "grand corruption", with improvement in its TI CPI
score, what is Najib doing to ensure that Malaysia is not stuck with the dubious
honour of being the only Asia-Pacific country to slip both in TI CPI ranking and
score since 1995?
Otherwise, Malaysia will literally
be the "sick man" in Asia-Pacific in the war against corruption– with other
countries making progress while Malaysia going backwards in the war against
corruption.
LIM KIT SIANG
Source :http://www.malaysianmirror.com/media-buzz-detail/136-letters-to-the-editor/58168-najib-losing-the-war-against-corruption
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