Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Abdullah sudah berang

Sejak sekian lama Abdullah Badawi cuba sedaya upaya untuk mempamerkan imej Mr. Nice Guy. Namun kebelakangan ini beliau nampaknya sudah semakin hilang sabar. Justeru beliau membuat kenyataan yang menembak ke kiri dan ke kanan.

Saya fikir lebih baik beliau menumpukan kepada usaha mentadbir negara ini dengan baik dan membuktikan bahawa semua anggapan bahawa beliau lemah dan tidak mampu memerintah adalah tidak benar.

Tidak ada gunanya beliau mengancam dan mengugut orang agar jangan mengkritik. Bukankah lebih baik jika beliau menunjukkan hasil dan tidak hanya bercakap sepanjang masa.

Kerja la macha!

4 comments:

Wizzerd said...

Just a curious onlooker.
I find that your blog insightful.
What future lies ahead for Malaysia if Pak Lah steps down?
For me, i think that there would be a stampede for positions with UMNO/BN. We have already seen the undercurrents now that the warlords are already jostling for positions under the very noses of Pak Lah.
Would it be a free-for-all?
How would Keadilan step into the picture as DSAI would only be qualified as a candidate in 2008.
Thanks

ahmad zaki yamani said...

hi wizzerd. I thank you for your opinion. Reformasi or the struggle for change has never been about the changing or merely the Prime Minister.

When Mahathir announced his intention to step down, keADILan' President wrote an article titled "Perubahan bukan dengan pertukaran Perdana Menteri semata-mata".

Thus, if Pak Lah steps down and UMNO-BN continues to hold power the future will not be any better for Malaysia.

Thus it does not matter for us, ordinary Malaysians, who leads UMNO-BN. What matters is for us to change the government of the day.

We must have a clean and corruption-free government. All this while UMNO-BN has shown that they are not willing to reinvent themselves, then they must go. We must put in power a government of the people, with check and balances in place.

Yes, they will fight, they will squabble, they will be at each others neck. But i ask you, is that of any import to us? Aren't they all the same? Be it Pak Lah, Najib or any other individual, they were all moulded from the same mould.

Thus keADILan will have to play an important role to lead the people for change. Anwar's being able or unable to stand as a candidate is secondary. The important thing is that he will be participating in this election. He will marshall the oppositions machinery, and i pray, to victory.

Of course there is a move to seek a Royal Pardon for Anwar. The case for this is now much stronger since the courts have made it clear that there was actually no case against him.

They were all trumped up charges!

I hope you will play your role to effect change in this country. The majority of Malaysians can be quiet no more. They must not only hope and dream for change. They must demand change and work to achieve it.

Wizzerd said...

Appreciate your prompt response.
Granted.
In the previous General Election, I voted for the very first time. I know some of my peers did not even bother to register, let alone vote.
How apathetic!
I agree with your arguments but it seems a bit idealistic. Sorry for being sceptical.
With the might of their election machinery and their control of the
media, they can create a climate of fear that riots will take place if the Opposition wins. I don't buy that but not the majority.
By virtue of that, BN would be voted back in power, not out of genuine support but out of fear.

ahmad zaki yamani said...

I believe it is ok to be idealistic in setting goals. Provided we are down to earth in our effort.