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Zaid: Hope and freedom come with a price PDF Print
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Tuesday, 03 March 2009 08:26

"He (Najib) represents the elite. He has been in politics for the last 20-25 years, and I do not think he is able to see what is on the ground. When he travels, he is treated in royalty, with a whole entourage following him when he travels." 

Tan Yi Liang, The Sun

A panel of media and political experts was of the view that there is a possibility for change and hope for freedom in Malaysia, provided the current system is reformed to allow room for discourse and dissent.


Datuk Mohd Zaid Ibrahim (Lawyer & Pilitician) during
Obama-Magic in KL forum at PJ Hilton, PJ.
"Hope and freedom and change come with a price. And the question is, are we prepared to pay the price. If we are not, then it will not come so easy," said former Minister in the Prime Minister's Department, Datuk Zaid Ibrahim.

"That price is not for any 'Malaysian Obama'', it is for the people of this country to answer whether they are ready for that," said Zaid, who was a panelist at the Obama-Magic in KL seminar, featuring Obama's campaign manager Roger Fisk.

"In our country, we have a long way to go for that freedom. We have elections once every five years, but we need a lot more for this country to mature, Zaid said.

"Our leaders today talk of uniting the people, they talk of freedom and democracy but I don't sense a real genuine desire to do that," said Zaid, who called on Malaysian leaders to embrace "ordinary" values.

"The reason we are in a state of flux is because we do not have the leadership that extols the virtues of ordinary people, of excellence, honesty and integrity."

"We take pride that we are clever at fixing and manipulating things, so long as we have power," he said, before comparing the Malaysian situation with the American Obama scenario.

"America has had its share of leaders who sacrificed for all these values, and we too have had leaders like that. But we need more of them. People who stand up for the normal, usual good things about leadership that you and I know," said Zaid, adding that Malaysian leaders should not gloss over principles of leadership.

"Leaders must have some principles that they stand for, and I think sometimes people gloss over this because they want to be practical," said Zaid, who was asked what advice he had for incoming Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

"I hope that he (Najib) he will be a leader for the country first, and not put UMNO first. This is very important. Sometimes issues and problems in this country are seen in the perspective of a particular party. I think we are bigger than that, and we have the capacity," added Zaid.

This view was also supported by blogger and fellow panelist Datuk Kadir Jasin, who said that change was nothing new to the Malaysian scene

"We cannot deny that Malaysia has survived because we allow gradual, step by step change to take place. I think change is happening in Malaysia."

"No government in this country, be it Umno or Pakatan Rakyat, or PAS or DAP can go back to the old ways," said Kadir, who pointed to the rise of blogs and "new media".

"We are now talking and we have a new way of getting the message across," said Kadir, who is the editor-in-chief of Berita Publishing.

He expressed his belief that change and reform was possible for all in Malaysia, including elements of the establishment.

"I think UMNO can change, as the flipside of not changing is death and I think they don't want to die," said Kadir, who cautioned that there will be no hundred days or honeymoon for Najib as a new PM.

Meanwhile advertising entrepreneur Datuk Vincent Lee said a reform in the media and leadership are necessary factors to bring positive change to Malaysia.

What we need to do is to free the media, and the question is what people want, he said.

"People want the three Ps- peace, prosperity and progress. However, we get three Cs from the politicians -- . Confusion, confrontation and corruption," Lee said.

Asked what advice he had for Najib when the latter assumes power, Lee said he would urge Najib to engage more with the grassroots.

"He (Najib) represents the elite. He has been in politics for the last 20-25 years, and I do not think he is able to see what is on the ground. When he travels, he is treated in royalty, with a whole entourage following him when he travels."

"Obama's campaign was very different. He was very single-minded and I think it shows that he believes in something. His personal beliefs have translated into the people's beliefs. He had a deep sense of belief, and he started a movement," said Lee.

"So, change must start from us first. I think if we wait for our leaders to change, it will never happen," he added.

However, theSun's special investigative reporting editor Nadeswaran said the people should accept responsibility for the leaders they elected.

"The majority voted for those they thought would deliver, and if they did not deliver, you are to blame. It is as simple as that. The government was not elected by the minority, it was elected by the majority," he said, adding that people will have to deliver the change they want.

"There is hope for change, but every time we find a man we can place our hopes on, he gets shot down," said Nadeswaran, who cited Zaid's case as an example.

"Unless you have a group of people who say cohesively that what they are doing is for the people, nothing is going to change," added Nadeswaran.

Meanwhile, asked about how a report alleging that Obama was pro-Hamas, Fisk responded that consistency in the campaign message was of paramount importance.

"The very important thing was not having your message dictated by the news cycle and maintaining absolute clarity about the core values of the campaign.

"If you hold campaign meetings to discuss how you will respond to the news, you will look back and find that all you have done is react," said Fisk, who added that a good campaign "does not have to respond to everything".

"We have always had faith that if people were really going to believe that Senator Obama was predisposed to one side of the Palestinian or Israeli conflict too much, then they would pick up on that themselves.

"Just because the New York Post has a cartoon, or one or two stories in a news cycle have such news does not mean that you have to respond to that," he said.

Comments (11)Add Comment
...
written by adan, March 03, 2009 08:33:56
'I am monarch of all I survey
My power none can dispute'... That is me,Najib..
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written by Bigjoe99, March 03, 2009 08:36:10
Najib should have attended the talk. The Obama campaign idea was straightforward - a consistent message that people want to hear... Its the same message that PR is selling. BN message is the same as Hilary's - inconsistent, changing with circumstances, untrustworthy...
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written by technoboy, March 03, 2009 08:38:28
Datuk Zaid, with UMNO crooks bend on holding on to power no matter what the consequence, let's hope the price is not another 1969 which the current bunch of crooks is definitely capable of doing, look at the way people like Toyo behave, with many in the like of Ahmad Ismail such a scenario is not too remote. We need those sensible guys like you in UMNO to do something real quick to arrest such culture in UMNO which is not going to do any race any good, be it Malays, Chinese or Indians.
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written by DreamLady, March 03, 2009 08:50:12
Judging from the numerous blunder UMNO regime has made consciously and purposely, I doubt it will change, cos' it chooses to be arrogant and corrupt. It knows it stinks, but still it prefers to be in foul smell for as long as it holds the reign!!

People who choose to vote for the stinking UMNO regime have got themselves to blame, don't blame others for the present hardship and intimidation. It is time for everybody to wake up from the nightmare, to fight against the demons of the century, and to hope for a better future for all malaysians minus the highly decomposed carcasses from UMNO regime!!!
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written by red1, March 03, 2009 09:27:55
Zaid is our Obama.
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written by mikewang, March 03, 2009 09:49:35
I think the best way for UMNO to reform is to relegate it to opposition at the federal level, just like the nationalist party in Taiwan.

The hiatus did them good as they were able to shed much of their earlier corrupt and arrogant ways.
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written by fireduck, March 03, 2009 09:56:35
"In our country, we have a long way to go for that freedom. We have elections once every five years, but we need a lot more for this country to mature, Zaid said.

According to one particular former minister, Malaysians have an erection once every 5 years. All other times, we are IMPOTENT (politically). Maybe be humourous in the mispronunciation, but damn true nonetheless.
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written by savemalaysia, March 03, 2009 10:39:58
Najis and his bunch of UMNO's goons can change but unwilling to do so because they want the perks and fringe benefits that come with power and enjoy the cozy comfort of their ill-gotten palatial mansions.
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written by Jit Dharma, March 03, 2009 11:47:06
There is a disconnect in this discussion about Najib because
they ignore the cloud that hangs over him. How do we say in
public that in all likelihood, he is an accomplice to the
capital crime of murder.Politely they sidestep the issue. We
the Rakyat will make him remember.Najib is unfit to be PM.
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written by lynn, March 03, 2009 23:56:45
We should have a public debate on these issues; rakyat watching it can be educated & come away with the knowledge that these are all unacceptable :-

(1) corruption, cronyism, nepotism - what do they mean? How are they committed?
Give real life instances ? No problem, of course.

(2) abuse of power - what exactly does this means? What kind of actions constitutes A of P?

Are these acts crimes? Maybe the Bar Council / lawyers can participate too? If you do have a public debate which reach out to a million or so people, wow, these people can go on to educate others, family members, relatives, friends?

And lastly, we must ask "are you registered to vote?" If not, why? Many non-registered eligible voters are extremely proud to tell all of us, "I am proud to say I have never voted in my entire life". Yet they refuse to realise that that vote they hold can make or break a corrupt govt.
They have no fcuking idea.

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written by amjoem, March 04, 2009 13:02:23
Umno are a den of skunks; they stink.!!
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