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Enter Najib, with baggage PDF Print
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Friday, 03 April 2009 15:11

In an earlier case, a company the opposition claimed was linked to Razak Baginda, an adviser to Mr Najib, was paid juicy fees for services provided over a contract for the purchase of French submarines. A Mongolian woman, said to have worked as a translator in the negotiations, was shot dead and her corpse destroyed with explosives in 2006.

The Economist, 6 November 2008

ONE could certainly say that Najib Razak was born to be Malaysian prime minister. He is the son of Abdul Razak, the second man to hold that job following independence from Britain, and the nephew of his successor, Hussein Onn. Elected to parliament aged 23, on his father’s death, he rose to become deputy to the present prime minister, Abdullah Badawi. However, Mr Najib, expected within months to become the country’s sixth post-independence leader, will enter under a cloud of allegations, including ones linking him to a murder case, all of which he categorically denies. But some Malaysians will be wondering if he is a fit person to lead them.

 The quizzical Mr Najib

Facing a revitalised opposition, in an election earlier this year the governing coalition, led by the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), lost the two-thirds majority it needs to change the constitution. Since then, the knives have been out for Mr Badawi. Despite his efforts to cling on he is being forced to quit next March. The contest to succeed him as party president, and thus prime minister, at first promised to be lively. But party officials, fearful of the challenge from the opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim (a former UMNO deputy leader), chose to hang together rather than hang separately. By November 2nd Mr Najib had won enough nominations to block his only rival, Razaleigh Hamzah, a former finance minister, from getting on the ballot-paper.

Like Mr Badawi before him, Mr Najib comes to the job promising reforms, including of the system of preference for members of the ethnic-Malay majority for state contracts and jobs. Mr Badawi achieved little, though he allowed a bit more freedom of expression than had his predecessor, Mahathir Mohamad. Expectations for Mr Najib are lower still. It is possible, notes Edmund Gomez, a political scientist, that he will use the worsening economic outlook as a pretext for reverting to Mahathir-style repression.

Mr Anwar has failed to carry out his threat to topple the government through a mass defection of parliamentarians. Even so, there is a palpable fin de régime air around UMNO. Mr Badawi, Mr Mahathir and other leaders are publicly lamenting how corruption and cronyism are rife in the party. But his opponents say Mr Najib is hardly the man to restore confidence. In the latest scandal to which they are linking him, the defence ministry (which he oversaw until recently) has deferred a big order for helicopters following questions about their high price. A parliamentary committee this week cleared the government of wrongdoing, but admitted not investigating whether “commissions” were paid.

In an earlier case, a company the opposition claimed was linked to Razak Baginda, an adviser to Mr Najib, was paid juicy fees for services provided over a contract for the purchase of French submarines. A Mongolian woman, said to have worked as a translator in the negotiations, was shot dead and her corpse destroyed with explosives in 2006. Mr Razak was put on trial over her killing, along with two policemen. The case has dragged on for months and seen various odd goings-on, including changes of judge, prosecutors and defence lawyers at the start of the trial. A private detective signed a statutory declaration implicating Mr Najib, retracted it the next day, saying it had been made under duress. Calls by the victim’s family for Mr Najib to testify were rejected. On October 31st the judge ruled that the prosecution had failed to make a prima facie case against Mr Razak.

The policemen’s trial will continue. A blogger who linked Mr Najib's wife to the case is on trial for criminal libel. None of this, however, seems likely to interfere with Mr Najib’s accession to the prime minister’s job. A bigger threat may yet emerge from the resurgent opposition and Mr Anwar, who nurtures a long-thwarted ambition to take the job himself.

 

Comments (19)Add Comment
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written by Fuminari, April 03, 2009 15:35:00
deepest condolences to malaysia n malaysian.
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written by smeagrooo, April 03, 2009 15:45:25
Enter Najib, with baggage

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Yea, I saw that baggage too walking alongside him as they enter the Balai Rong Seri but still you shouldnt have put that as your title here. Shame on you!
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written by Kaneeneh, April 03, 2009 15:50:14
Heavy baggage. For check-in, Mongolia, Submarine, and Sukhoi. Hand carry Altantuya, she could be serviceable. PM no extra bagge charge, it's OK.
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written by SCM, April 03, 2009 15:55:11
Dear Economist,

Can you please interview Najib and ask him:
1. Why neither the prosecution and the defence during the Altantuya murder trial did not subpeona him to testify? After all, everything during the murder trial involved him, his bodyguards, his political secretary, his defence ministry contract and the highly guarded C4 explosive of his Defence Ministry, and his alleged lover.
2. Why he wasn't called to court to answer to that SMS message he sent the murder accused Razak Baginda not to worry as he was seeing the IGP that day and to "be cool"?
3. Why are there NO immigration records of Altantuya entering or leaving Malaysia?

Just start with these 3 questions. See how he trembles and answers with lies.

Your title should have read, "ENTER NAJIB, WITH GARBAGE".
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written by SamSan, April 03, 2009 16:14:08
My advice to Najib is to shed off Rosmah and you can rest assured that all baggage will be forgiven and forgotten. For that to happen, Najib has to find ways to ward off the strong jampi shrouding him which was mischievously created by Rosmah to keep him perpetually mesmerised and bewitched to her. Can someone help in removing this strong jampi that is shrouding Najib so that he can awaken to true reality.
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written by Fight4Justice, April 03, 2009 16:22:10
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WO...index.html

The whole world knows but of course, our legal system is above all..
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written by ahmadneil, April 03, 2009 16:24:28
Tonight Anwar will give Najib a nightmare.Watch out!
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written by BGs, April 03, 2009 16:25:30
....& there's the heavy baggage fat mama & the ultralight baggage of Atlantuya' ghost!
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written by InspectorSahab, April 03, 2009 16:31:16
Today's Headlines: 6th PM will bring Malaysia to greater heights...

Yup, to a greater heights that will totally linked Malaysians to Mongolians!
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written by *********, April 03, 2009 16:57:01
Someone needs to lodge a report with the International Court of Justice so that an investigation can be carried out on Najib based on the Liberation report...More http://*********.********.com
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written by ibabonma, April 03, 2009 17:28:18
Fikir. Ini Perdana Menteri Malaysia yang ke-6, nauzubillah?
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written by Kaboda, April 03, 2009 17:30:21
LOL nice picture, was that after they asked him if he knew where Mongolia was on the map.
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written by educationist, April 03, 2009 17:46:49
It matters not what baggage he carries
The fact is that he is now PM.
What more can't he do?
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written by Khan, April 03, 2009 20:58:19
'13 Isa detainees to be freed and ISA to be reviewed'. Is Najis C4 trying to project himself as the Obama of Malaysia ?(Obama announced closure of Guantanamo Bay as one of his first act as President of US).

NajisC4....The detainees whoever it is, deserved to be freed and ISA ought to be reviewed. But these acts does not make you a saint. You must first come clean from being a suspected murderer...
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written by Lim Lim, April 04, 2009 00:17:38
najis is always looking towards his right without realizing it himself !according to psycho-expert,this is a sign of 'lying'!!
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written by batsman, April 04, 2009 10:49:41
Enter Najib the Garbage
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written by toroono78, April 04, 2009 23:48:13
ENTER NAJIS THE SHIT AS PM OF MALAYSIA.
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written by StevenO, April 05, 2009 03:22:40

They are no longer baggage any more!! They are warehouse/gudang full of skeletons.
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written by lampard, April 05, 2009 12:22:29
A MURDERER!
MAY 13, 1969...LIKE FATHER LIKE SON. DECLARED AND CONFESSED HE WOULD BATH HIS KERIS WITH CHINESE BLOOD AND THE MURDER OF MONGOLIAN AMINAH ABDULLAH...WHAT MORE CAN I SAY?
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