|  Media Statement by Lim Kit Siang in Parliament on Wednesday, 8th October 2008:  
		
		D-Day for Abdullah � honourable or 
		dishonourable exit? It is exactly seven months ago this day that 
		the March 8 political tsunami struck the Malaysian political landscape, 
		resulting in today as D-Day for Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi � 
		whether he will defend the Umno presidency.
 Yesterday was a day of utter confusion with conflicting news throughout 
		the day that Abdullah had been persuaded to �fight it out� including 
		against his deputy, Datuk Seri Najib Razak, with all the weapons 
		available to him to defend the posts of Umno President and Prime 
		Minister.
 
 The general consensus, however, is that �sanity will finally prevail� 
		and Abdullah will succumb to the Umno Supreme Council pressures for an 
		orchestrated five-month exit as Prime Minister by not contesting for the 
		top Umno post.
 
 If so, then the two most pertinent questions are:
 
			1. Is it going to be an honourable or 
			dishonourable exit for the fifth Prime Minister? and
 2. Will the five-month succession interregnum pave the way for an 
			end to the worsening multiple national crisis of confidence in the 
			past seven months or whether it will plunge the country into a 
			deeper rut and rot?
 When he was asked on Monday what would be his 
		focus in his remaining days as prime minister, regardless of when he 
		decides to leave, Abdullah said he would use the time to make good on 
		his promises to the rakyat.
 He said: �There are uncompleted things, such as reforms I promised the 
		rakyat.
 
 �I will undertake them. Of course, I have to do it because what I 
		promised, I will deliver.�
 
 It is sad and pathetic to see Abdullah end his five-year premiership in 
		a mirage - cocooned in total denial.
 
 If Abdullah cannot deliver his many reform pledges when he was at the 
		height of his power as a result of the greatest electoral victory and 
		mandate ever won by any Prime Minister in half-a-century in March 2004, 
		what could he achieve when he is being forced out of office after 
		suffering the most ignominous electoral defeat in Umno and Barisan 
		Nasional history?
 
 It is a million times more difficult for Abdullah to deliver his reform 
		pledges once he has announced his exit-plan today than when he won the 
		landslide electoral mandate in the March 2004 general election.
 
 But this could still be done, if Abdullah is prepared to �do the 
		impossible� and use his last five months as Prime Minister to honour all 
		the unfulfilled pledges and promises of the past five years � but this 
		must be evident from today�s Cabinet meeting as well as the first day of 
		the reconvened Parliament on Monday, October 13, 2008.
 
 This will be an honourable exit for the fifth Prime Minister. It will be 
		Abdullah�s tryst with destiny.
 
 Can Abdullah embark on such an �impossible mission� in his last five 
		months as Prime Minister, when there will be a de facto Prime Minister 
		who will immediately and increasingly be more powerful than the de jure 
		Prime Minister?
 
 *
    
      Lim 
    Kit Siang,  DAP 
		Parliamentary leader & MP for Ipoh Timor  |