PORR violates international best practices of good urban governance and public integrity  that government support for any privatization project should be defined upfront as a maximum so that the private sector can prepare realistic bids


Speech
- DAP dialogue on PORR  at Cheah Association
by Lim Kit Siang

(Penang,  Sunday) Recent statements by the Penang State Government on the RM1.02 billion Penang Outer Ring Road (PORR) project to create a handful of multi-millionaires by burdening  the people of Penang with 30 years of escalating toll without providing a medium-term let alone a long-term solution to the traffic congestion nightmare of the Penang Island has only deepened public disquiet and dismay about the transparency,  justice, viability and compatibility with sustainable transport policy of the PORR project. 

Some of these statements, especially those made by the Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Dr. Hilmi Yahaya inside and outside the Penang State Assembly, were:

 

In Malaysia, there would be no other government leader, whether federal or state including Cabinet Ministers, who could beat the Penang Chief Minister, Tan Sri Dr. Koh Tsu Koon in having spoken more or officiated at the most number of opening ceremonies of conferences and forums, whether international, regional or local, in his over a decade in office on good urban governance – and he should know better than anyone that the PORR project violates international best practices of good urban governance and public integrity that government support for any privatization project should be defined upfront as a maximum so that the private sector can prepare realistic bids. 

As no one except PMWSB was aware that the Penang State Government was prepared to support the PORR privatization bid  by granting a 30-year  toll concession, 31 ha of prime State land and 202 ha of reclaimed land off Gurney Drive worth cumulatively some RM5 billion, the whole award of the PORR concession is fatally flawed not only by lack of transparency but absence of public integrity as well. 

This is why there is a strong case in the public interest  for the re-bidding of the PORR privatization project to cure the double defects of lack of transparency and integrity in the award of the PORR concession to PMWSB. 

This will be a powerful ground for the convening of an emergency Penang State Assembly meeting to pass an unanimous motion to ask the Federal government to  re-open the bids for the PORR concession to invite the best offers based on two alternative State Government offers, one only with the right to reclaim 500 acres of seafront off Gurney Drive while the other with the added offer of 31 ha of prime state land worth RM200 million, without the right to impose toll in both cases – and I am sure public interests will be better served by adopting such  international best practices of good urban governance and public integrity. 

It is a matter of grave concern that the Penang State Government seems to have  reduced itself into an agent or servant of PMWSB by  “preparing to surrender vacant possession” of six parcels of 31 ha of prime State land even before the signing of the concession, when in the case of Jelutong Expressway, the concessionaire had to bear its own cost of squatter compensation.  Why this special favour for PMWSB? 

In August 1997, the then Penang Ratepayers Association president Datuk Lim Chong Keat lamented that  many  public projects in Penang were considered “overnight” without informing the public of the technical and planning studies involved, including proper environmental impact studies, and he specifically mentioned PORR as one such project. 

He said: “The people want to know whether the proposals are sound…Have the ramifications been fully studied, are the cost benefits convincing and have comparative evaluations been made? 

“Major projects should also be properly tendered in terms of pre-feasibility consultancy…the transparent way is to call for consultants in the country, and not just selected or invited privatisers, for the bidding.” 

Chong Keat’s critique of  PORR and other mega projects in Penang remains as valid today as when he made it five years ago, and for this reason,  the Penang State Government should freeze all preparations to surrender vacant possession of six pieces of prime state land to PMWSB and to ask the Federal Government  for a reconsideration of the PORR project, in the context of providing an efficient public transport system based on sustainable transport policy – including a rebidding of the PORR project in line with international best practices good urban governance and public integrity if PORR is to be proceeded with.   

(2/6/2002)


*Lim Kit Siang - DAP National Chairman