Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Rasuah - tinjauan Transparency International kurang kredibiliti

http://anotherbrickinwall.blogspot.com/2009/06/mirror-mirror-on-wall-who-is-most.html

Mirror, mirror on the wall.... who's the most corrupt of them all?

On June 3rd, The Star publised a survey result on Malaysians perception of corruption. The Star and Malaysia Insider report is publised at the end of this posting.

To quote the report:
According to Transparency International’s 2009 Global Corruption Barometer, 42% of Malaysians viewed political parties, regardless of faction, as the most corrupt, followed by the civil service (37%), private sector (12%), judiciary (5%), legislative (4%) and media (1%).A few observations can be made out from this quote.In my personal view, the sample of this survey does not reflect an educated and knowledgable sampling. If TI could get themselves a magic mirror and chanted, "Mirror, mirror on the wall ... who is the most corrupt of them all?", the magic mirror would answer, "None of the above."All those answers are too general a description.

In my book, it is not the politicians, civils ervants, judges, etc.The most corrupt are them corporate boys!

Since we are dealing with perception, the public forms opinion from the words of the media, old and new, the frontline treatment, and the whisper and rumours spreading amongst the population.Naturally, 42% of the public would believe that politicians and political parties, from both side of the divide, as most corrupt. However, there is a contradiction. Only 4% believed that the legislative are corrupt.

Does the public sampled by TI capable of distinguishing between politician and legislature?Politicians encompasses the executives, legislatures, party position holders, activist, party workers and perhaps non-member party volunteer.

To say that political parties as most corrupt, can the public differentiate the politicians with power and authority to untake the act of corruption and those without?Hardly 0.1% of people associated with political parties are in position of power and authority. How many out of 3 million UMNO members could be positioned as legislature, executive, local council, special committees, and appointees in government companies and agencies?So they say that those with access to contacts and people in position are able to gain from corrupt act. That only means there are other parties involved and not the politicians per se. It could perhaps be a Minister or Exco member.For the Minister or Exco or other "politicians" to do the corrupt act, they need cooperative civil servants.

The portion of the public that viewed the civil service as corrupt is 37% but the portion viewing the private sector as corrupt is 12%.The differences is strange. The civil servant has the power but it takes the ways and means of the private sectors to make the corrupt act happen and to pay off politicians and civils servants.The blast from the past should remind us that if it had not for the towkey enticing and dangling a carrot for civil servants and politicians, they would not have turned corrupt.The reality is the businessman and corporation gets the choice meat but civil servants and politicians get the bone soup.The bulk of the bounty from corruption by private sectors and civil servants goes into their own pocket.For most of the politicians, it is to be funneled into their community and party activities.

This is not denying that some politicians do evolve to an unnatural progression into richness and luxury.Is the public reasonable and rationale in their corruption perception?None of the survey categories were precisely zeroing on the right categories.

Private sector is a broad segment that basically covers anything outside that is not political parties, civil servants, legislature, media, and judiciary.Definately beyond the knowledge of the common folks are the corrupt act of corporate boys in the public listed companies, financial institutions, proxy shareholder, and heading and board members of government linked companies.They are a group crafty with magic tricks capable of disappearing money by the billions. Under the name of enhancing shareholders value, majority shareholders bulldozed decisions at the detriment of minority shareholders.

Bank top management can be heatless and vindictive in their persecution of common businessman and send common folks to the poor house.The exteriors of them corporate boys are most deceiving. Corporate boys are educated and good boys who attend to their school. They start work in professional field. For intend purpose, they are honourable and respectable. They get Datoship with ease and with the titles open further their doors to the corridors of power.Good boys may seem like wimp. They do fuck.When they "fuck" a company, the manner they skim off money from their own companies transaction is masterly, elaborate, and in most time undetected by the not as bright police commercial crime division.Everything is done legally according to the due process, backed with proper documentations, and justified by professional second opinions and certified reports. It does not exclude when necessary, power abuse, collusion, manipulation in figures, intentional mistakes, political threats, use of gangsters, etc.

If the public feels Merchant Bankers and Investment bankers are respectable as your neighbourhood banker becasue they dressed up nice to work, they are wrong. They do advise their corporate clients how to evade tax, legalise something illegitimate, cleansing dirty money, hide problems from being known by company stakeholders, and many other unsavory tricks.Inspite of all the slimy shit that they do, corporate boys keep kaki among politicians, legislature, civil servants, judiciary, bankers and securities authority to protect them if things go wrong.

For those corporate boys in government linked companies, they are as good as untouchable. They do all the shit but the politicans get the blame.Politicians can get elected out, shortened their term in office, and shamed into resignation, but corporate boys in this country are seldom reprimanded for their wrongdoings.One hardly hear corporate boys or members of the board of directors resigning, if not en bloc, for bungling a transaction.Some corporate boys are as described by the Malay nursery rhymes, "Enjit enjit semut, siapa sakit nik atas." There are those that get promoted even if they had fumbled big time.Like a den of thieves, corporate boys protect each others.Put corporate boys to head powerful government economic agencies and in no time, they become instant corporate player amassing PLCs.What took the late Tan Sri Lim Goh Tong most of his life to build, these corporate boys can build it in just few years.

This blogger personally witnessed a former official of an economic recovery agency meeting with regularity shady chacters at an isolately located restaurant of a hotel. After few years in that position, he resigned to hold a majority stake in new market darling public listed companies. He now owns a private jet.There is one GLC top official used to be part of a consultancy company. When in a position of undisputed power and influence, he conveniently get a bank to buyout his former consultancy firm. How do one value a firm when its asset is only specific people. Why can't the Bank offer them a lucrative contract instead of buying the firm?If one check the records, he has sold his shares and not named as a shareholder. Just observe, after he resigned. Will he suddenly own a big chunck of a PLC? Will he suddenly live a lavish life later?For all the rhetorics spewed by Pakatan Rakyat, one of their Menteri Besar is a corporate boy.The public can perceive all that they want. Corprate boys are not nicnamed as korporat for nothing.Mirror mirror on the wall ... let me tell ye, the most corrupt of them all are the corporate boys!

Monday, June 15, 2009

Janji KSN untuk tangani rasuah, tapi realitinya bagaimana?

Malaysian Insider
Sidek pledges re-engineering to cut graft, red tape

KUALA LUMPUR, June 14 – Chief Secretary Tan Sri Mohd Sidek Hassan says the answer to corruption and inefficiency in the civil service is to cut red tape and re-engineer the way contracts are awarded and payment for work is approved. “If you have a roadblock everyone has to slow down but if there are no roadblocks people can drive faster. Of course if I were lazy then I don’t have to work. So you have to catch it at the post-audit stage,” he told The Malaysian Insider in a recent interview at his office in Putrajaya.

Hari ini dapat dilihat penjawat awam memang terlalu lambat melaksanakan projek sehingga menyebabkan kelembapan ekonomi. Tender terbuka pula dikatakan menjadi tempat KSU, TKSU, SUB, ahli jawatan kuasa teknikal dan kewangan sehinggalah kepada kerani untuk mengambil kesempatan bukan lagi menerima, sebaliknya meminta dan menuntut rasuah. Mari kita tunjukkan kepada KSN bahawa dia sememangnya `terlena' ketika pegawai-pegawainya menuntut rasuah dari orang ramai sehingga dikatakan menjadi punca begitu banyak projek dan penawaran tender tertangguh. Sekiranya para pembaca mempunyai maklumat mengenai perilaku rasuah dikalangan pegawai kerajaan di kementerian-kementerian, sila laporkan diblog ini untuk tindakan.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Amalan rasuah dalam negara membimbangkan

ARKIB Utusan Malaysia : 20/05/2009

JOHOR BAHRU 19 Mei - Amalan rasuah di negara ini berada pada paras yang membimbangkan apabila persepsi masyarakat terhadap amalan itu menunjukkan penurunan dari setahun ke setahun.

Presiden Institut Integriti Malaysia (IIM), Datuk Dr. Mohd. Tap Salleh berkata, daripada skala 10 sebagai skor penuh, Indeks Persepsi Rasuah Malaysia berada pada skor 7.04 pada 2006, merosot kepada 6.76 pada 2007 dan turun 6.32 pada 2008."Kebimbangan tinggi masyarakat sehingga menyebabkan indeks persepsi rasuah yang semakin buruk, dipengaruhi kemunculan banyak kes tangkapan, aduan dan siasatan pada tahun lalu. Amalan rasuah ini tidak boleh dihapuskan tetapi kita boleh kurangkan dengan mendadak menerusi penubuhan Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia untuk lebih agresif menangani gejala ini," katanya.

Definisi rasuah (bahasa Latin: corruptio daripada kata kerja corrumpere = busuk, rosak, menggoyahkan, memutar balik, menyogok) - "perilaku di jabatan-jabatan atau pejabat-pejabat awam, termasuklah para politikus dan pegawai-pegawai, yang secara tidak wajar dan tidak sah/menurut undang-undang, mengayakan diri atau memperkaya kerabatnya (keluarga dan sahabat handai), dengan menyalahgunakan kuasa dan kepercayaan awam yang diberi kepada mereka."

Malaysia’s Ranking on the CPI
 2006 - 44th
 2005 - 39th
 2004 - 39th
 2003 - 37th
 2002 - 33th
 2001 - 36th

CPI 2006 Ranking within Asia Pacific
 Singapore – 5th
 Hong Kong- 15th
 Japan – 17th
 Taiwan -34th
 S. Korea – 42nd
 Malaysia – 44th
 Thailand – 63th
 China/India – 70th
 Philippines – 121st
 Indonesia – 130th

Bagaimana hendak hentikan rasuah?

THE ANTI-CORRUPTION LAW
By
Dr. Mahathir Mohamad on June 2, 2009 12:16 PM Comments (67) TrackBacks (0)
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1. We need a law against corruption just as we need laws against all crimes. But sometimes the laws are so framed that they promote crime rather than prevent them. Such a law is the Malaysian law on corruption.
2. It seems logical and right that those who receive illegal gratification should be considered guilty of breaking the law and should therefore be punished. But when we talk of corruption we think of those endowed with power abusing their power in order to gain personal benefit. We think that those who offer gratification as being the victim and should be given some consideration.
3. But the law says that those who pay for the service they receive should also be considered as guilty and should be equally deserving of punishment.
4. Since both the giver and the recipient may be charged with corruption, both would be unwilling to report the incident. This of course make corruption difficult if not impossible to be brought to a court of law and tried successfully.
5. Besides the process of law would be much prolonged, as each would seek lawyers to argue on his behalf. Not only will the trial take ages but the result can be quite unpredictable.
6. But there is another factor. The person reporting would be marked by those sympathetic to the other party so that it would affect his dealings with them as well. If they are Government servants whose approval would be needed, the approvals may not be forthcoming at all later, even if other officers are involved.
7. Because of the ineffectiveness of the laws corrupt people often get away with their corrupt practices.
8. Yet corruption is such a bane on society that it must be stopped somehow. If the law is ineffective then it must be made to be effective. One of the ways is to give immunity to the aggrieved party reporting the case, provided that the evidence was substantial and not perjury.
9. In the case of political corruption both parties may be willing participants. The bribe is given by a candidate to a willing recipient to gain support for himself. Both are therefore unlikely to complain and reveal the act.
10. The recipients on the other hand would be glad to receive the bribe, unless he is a person of high principal unwilling to betray the cause his party was fighting for.
11. In political corruption it would be extremely difficult to get evidence of the bribe being given or received. Electronics now play a role to hide the act. The money is deposited into the account of the person (voter) concerned via the ATM machines. The recipient would be called via phone to ask whether the money had been received, giving the name of the candidate.
12. Despite the difficulties for detection, a Government that is truly determined to prevent corruption can find ways of detecting corruption. But if the Government itself is corrupt then corruption cannot be stopped. In fact corruption would spread in every direction and would become a way of life. At this stage nothing can really be done