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    Ten  questions for Abdullah on his campaign 
    trail in Ipoh Timor on fulfillment of his pledge for a clean, efficient, 
    trustworthy and accountable government and development of First-World Ipoh Media  Conference Statement
 - 
    
    at the DAP Ipoh Timor election operations 
    headquarters
 by Lim Kit Siang
 
 (Ipoh, 
    Monday): 
    The unprecedented visit of the  
    Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi  to Ipoh Timor later today 
    has demonstrated that  the Battle for Ipoh Timor is not a battle between Lim 
    Kit Siang and Thong Fah Chong but a battle between the DAP and the Barisan 
    Nasional and  two Visions about the future of Malaysia � whether there 
    should be a meaningful restoration of parliamentary democracy, whether 
    Abdullah�s pledge of a clean, incorruptible, people-oriented government 
    which wants to hear the truth from the people should remain at the level of 
    words but not deeds and whether to preserve or abandon the 46-year Merdeka 
    �social contract� that Malaysia is a secular democracy with Islam as the 
    official religion but not an Islamic State, whether ala-PAS or ala-UMNO.  
    When he first became Prime Minister, Abdullah said he does not want 
    �apple-polishers� and  wants to hear the truth from the people.  MCA 
    parliamentary candidates like Thong Fah Chong is the stereotype 
    �apple-polisher� in the Barisan Nasional, and if Abdullah really wants to 
    hear the truth from the people, he should come and meet me, for I can tell 
    him the real truth from the people which he can never hear from the MCA or 
    Barisan Nasional candidates.   On 
    the historic occasion of Abdullah�s visit and campaign trail in Ipoh Timor, 
    I hope he can throw light on ten  questions on the fulfillment of his pledge 
    for a clean, efficient, trustworthy and accountable government and 
    development of First-World Ipoh:   
      
      Why  is he conducting the 
      shortest and most undemocratic election campaign in the 11 general 
      elections in the nation�s 46-year history � only 7 � days, which is even 
      shorter than the nine-day election campaign period in the dirtiest general 
      election of the five Mahathir general elections � when he should be 
      conducting the most free, fair and clean general election with an end to 
      the 3M abuses of money politics, media manipulation and lies and the abuse 
      of government machinery and resources. 
      
      As the Anti-Corruption Agency 
      director-general said last month, that �There are so many rivers in the 
      country, the sea is so huge, how can there be no fishes�, why not a single 
      �shark� had been arrested in his four months as Prime Minister for 
      corruption � as there were only two �middling fish� in the two 
      high-profile arrests of Eric Chia and Kasitah Gaddam.
      
      Is Abdullah prepared to change 
      the meaning of �Malaysia Boleh� by declaring as the nation�s objective the 
      goal for Malaysia to be internationally recognized as among the ten least 
      corrupt nations in the world instead of falling 14 places from 23rd 
      position in 1995 to 37th position in 2003, by the introduction 
      of two measures: 
    (i)                
    Ministers, 
    Deputy Ministers, Parliamentary Secretaries, Mentris Besar, Chief Ministers, 
    State Excos required to publicly declare their assets and those of their 
    next-of-kin to be subject to public scrutiny where  there is obscene, 
    ostentatious  and disproportionate wealth and incomes from ill-gotten means; 
    (ii)              
    Sacking of 
    Ministers, Deputy Ministers, Parliamentary Secretaries, Mentris Besar, Chief 
    Ministers, State Excos and confiscation of disproportionate wealth and 
    income as compared to their known salaries.
 
      
      As Abdullah has said he does 
      not want �apple-polishers� but want to hear the truth from the people, is 
      he prepared to end unfair and undemocratic press laws and censorship to 
      restore press freedom, starting by opening up radio and television to all 
      fair and democratic use by all political parties and candidates in the 
      2004 general election? 
      As education is the key to the 
      nation�s international competitiveness and prosperity, is he prepared to 
      totally revamp the education system to ensure quality of education in 
      tertiary, secondary and primary schools where meritocracy will be fully 
      restored as the most important  criteria, with Malaysian universities 
      internationally recognized as in  the league of the world�s best 
      universities, with appointment of University Vice Chancellors, 
      Professorships and academicians guided solely by meritocracy.
      
      Whether he will support a  new 
      deal for mother-tongue education, where Chinese primary schools are built 
      or relocated not because there are votes to win in a general election, but 
      solely based  on needs and  demands by pupils and parents because a 
      Barisan Nasional  government must recognize this as a  fundamental right 
      of Malaysians in our multi-racial nation.
      
      Whether he will defend the 
      46-year Merdeka �social contract� that Malaysia is a democratic, secular 
      and multi-religious nation with Islam as the official religion but not an 
      Islamic State, admit that the �929 Declaration� by UMNO and Barisan 
      Nasional that Malaysia is an Islamic State is unconstitutional, arbitrary 
      and unilateral and formally withdraw the declaration. 
      
      Whether Abdullah will agree to 
      restore local government elections in Ipoh so that the people of Ipoh will 
      have an elected Ipoh Council reminiscent of the days of the Seenivasagam 
      brothers � with the people of Ipoh themselves creating a first-world Ipoh 
      and  deciding the future, welfare and quality of life in Ipoh and not as 
      at present, subject to the whims and fancies of unelected politicians and 
       irresponsible and bureaucratic civil servants. 
      
      Will he establish a Royal 
      Commission of Inquiry to inquire into the mismanagement, 
      maladministration, abuses of power, breach of trust and all forms of 
      malpractices of an appointed-Ipoh Council for the past 30 years, in 
      keeping with his commitment to efficiency, accountability and integrity. 
      In the sixties, a Royal Commission of Inquiry was established to inquire 
      into the corruption, abuses of power and maladministration of 
      opposition-run elected local government for the years 1959 � 1963. The 
      time has come for a Royal Commission into the corruption, abuses of power 
      and maladministration of the appointed Ipoh Council for the past 30 years, 
      which should also specifically deal  with the following issues: 
    (i)                
    Taman Hock Lee 
    scandal where, against all principles of good governance and planning 
    principles,  a light industrial estate was approved in the heart of a 
    residential area; 
    (ii)              
    The highest 
    assessment rate in the country � at some 16% as compared to 8 � 9% in other 
    parts of the country; 
    (iii)            
    The parking 
    meter scandal with each meter costing RM34,000; 
    (iv)             
    The outrage of 
    the Ipoh Council acting as �moral guardian� and �moral police� in 
    persecuting youngsters by issuing summons to couples holding hands in city 
    parks; and 
    (v)               
    The despoliation 
    of the aesthetic beauty of   Gua Kek Lok Tong as a popular place for all 
    races, posing health hazards with the erection of pylons.   
      
      10. Is Abdullah prepared to apologise as Home Minister for the past six 
      years because of the double rise in crime rate and the fear of crime, 
      whether in the streets, public places or even the privacy of the homes; as 
      illustrated by the gruesome abduction-rape-murder of Canny Ong, who hailed 
      from Ipoh, and to state when Malaysians can feel safe again for themselves 
      and their loved ones and to be free from the fear of crime by restoring to 
      all citizens the right to safety and security in their home,  communities 
      and country. 
     
    (15/3/2004) 
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    Lim Kit Siang, DAP National 
    Chairman |