KUALA LUMPUR: The Federal Cabinet has proven to be a disaster, a popular blogger and Umno critic has declared.
In his latest blog entry, Shahbudin Husin notes that Prime Minister
Najib Abdul Razak has had to order holidaying ministers to return
immediately to take part in handling the crisis brought on by heavy
flooding in the East Coast.
They should have been sensitive enough to cut short their overseas
vacation at the first sign of a crisis and without having to be told, he
says.
“That they need to be summoned back like ducks that have forgotten
their nests is as much a disaster as the floods and the loss of flights
MH370 and MH17,” he writes.
He says the ministers, some of whom he names, apparently do not care
that Najib needs them not only to assist in managing the flood crisis,
but also to help improve the battered image of his administration.
“Only by dismissing at least half of the ministers and replacing them
with trustworthy new faces will it be even possible for Najib to bring
back a little shine to himself, Umno and BN so that they can maintain
their power,” he says.
“If he’s still reluctant to throw them out, he, together with these useless ministers, should prepare to pack up and go.”
He says it is disastrous that Malaysia is saddled with ministers who
do not seem to understand that their primary task is to serve the
people.
He notes that it was only on the second day of his return that Najib
directed the ministers to cut short their holidays “in London,
Australia, New Zealand, Dubai and China”. This was probably after he
realised that only a handful of ministers were in the country, he adds.
Shahbudin says the errant ministers include those eyeing the Prime
Minister’s position, such as Umno vice presidents Zahid Hamidi, Shafie
Abdal and Hishammuddin Hussein.
“Similarly,” he adds, “Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin, who is
considered by some to be the second echelon candidate for the Prime
Minister’s position, has also disappeared without a trace to the extent
that posters proclaiming his absence are strewn across social media.”
He says there are only a handful of ministers in the country and it’s
the same faces who are struggling to help flood victims in the various
states.
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