Malaysiakini : What would be the consequences of Najib receiving a royal pardon? Any
right-minded, sane, and law-abiding person with half a brain will know
that the message it gives will do a lot of damage to the country.How will the rakyat react? Najib's supporters will be celebrating, but what about the average Malaysian?
Instead
of reducing corruption, a pardon may encourage more bribery and crime
because it belittles our efforts to eradicate graft and punish the
wrongdoer.
A royal pardon will make Najib very happy, his party
will be ecstatic, and he can probably resume where he left off - to
continue being party leader, have another jab at being prime minister,
and continue to plunder the rakyat's money. His enemies will fume and
realise how powerless they are.
In 1MDB, Najib successfully
āstoleā from the rakyat, but if he had a second go at taxpayers' money,
he and his inner circle will be better equipped. He knows which pitfalls
to avoid, which bits he must keep ultra-secret, which people to trust,
and the precautions needed to prevent exposure. 1MDB and the trials were
the test run.
Many people will wonder what will happen to his
criminal past, in particular his charge sheet of corrupt undertakings.
Is it wiped clean? Or is it stored somewhere safe, shrouded in secrecy?
Will the history books portray him as a wronged man, who fought hard to
prove his innocence? Or a conniving master-criminal?
The other
group of people to breathe a sigh of relief will be corrupt politicians
and civil servants, especially those whose crimes have not yet been
exposed.
If it can be done once, then it can be done again and
again. Najib's cronies, or any political crony, will also be happy. If
the world's worst kleptocrat can pull off a royal pardon, surely other
corrupt people can do the same. There must be a simple formula that Najib can share with them.
Time
is money, and crooked businessmen, who are hampered by delays in
obtaining relevant approvals for their businesses, will be delighted.
Delays will eat into their profits, and if a palm can be greased to
speed things up, they will do it. However, bosses of companies who
diligently stick to the rules can only feel despair.
Najibās revenge
Revenge
is a dish best served cold. The freed and pardoned Najib will find that
it is more satisfying to take his time when punishing those who
betrayed him and whose evidence helped convict him.
The judiciary
must also be prepared for a backlash. When corrupt politicians are not
sent to prison immediately after being sentenced, it makes people
mistrust the judiciary and the authorities. They lose confidence in the
legal system.
People go to work to earn a decent wage, but corrupt
politicians who steal taxpayers' money will do much harm to society.
There should be no delay in punishing the corrupt.
As a result of a pardon, the MACC should be disbanded.
What's the point of an anti-corruption body if the guilty are then set
free? The rakyat will also wonder why they bother to obey the law.
They
will be furious at the waste of resources - hundreds of millions of
ringgits spent on building a case against Najib, and thousands of
man-hours on research for the trials, the lawyers and the court's time.
If
the politician who steals is not made accountable, then who is? Are the
people who set Najib free the ones who should be held accountable?
It
is not just the reputation of the country which is at stake. There are
no points for guessing why a distinct, select group of people may find
that their futures might be irrevocably altered.