logo
Climate doomsday awaits Malaysia

Climate doomsday awaits Malaysia

The Sun09-07-2025
WHAT is the level of governance efficiency in Malaysia? In a recent interview by theSun, young Malay voters expressed a strong preference for good governance and transparency, rejecting race-based policies. They emphasised the need to cut through bureaucratic red tape and believe that the work and performance of politicians are more important.
Young non-Malay voters ought to hold similar opinions so that Malaysia can experience a rebirth.
To assess governance efficiency, we must first define the purpose of governance. In its 1997 World Development Report, the World Bank listed the core functions of government as: providing public goods – especially health and education – protecting the environment, setting economic policies, redistributing wealth and coordinating private sector activities.
What level of governance efficiency is needed to ensure that key functions are properly carried out? Work performance hinges on qualification, experience and suitability. But are these factors valued in Malaysia's political system? Regrettably, the answer is no.
We practise adversarial politics, where one coalition is constantly seeking to overthrow the ruling coalition – either through general elections or by securing enough MPs to sign statutory declarations pledging support for the opposition.
Such a system lacks a common purpose, with no collective effort to find the best solutions to pressing issues. Beyond that, there is often little genuine concern for the people's well-being as politicians tend to prioritise party agendas above all else.
The main side-effect of adversarial politics is the sense of entitlement it creates. Parties in
a winning coalition are given cabinet positions as rewards rather than based on merit, experience, qualification and suitability for the job.
The Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (Ideas) has criticised this approach, saying that it sends a dangerous message – that public roles are political rewards rather than positions earned through merit and competence.
All appointments should be handed out on merit, integrity and professional experience.
The opposition coalition, primarily made up of PAS and Bersatu and in control of four northern Peninsular Malaysia states, should have taken the cue from Ideas. However, it
did not – reflecting a shared belief that political appointments are entitlements rather than roles earned through merit.
So it should come as no surprise that Malaysia, with its abundant natural resources, shows relatively poor governance compared with governments that select persons who have a record of service and competence.
A plantation is not a healthy ecosystem as it lacks natural competition. If left untended for even a year, a plantation or rice field will quickly be overtaken by other plants to provide competition for the crop.
Just as a crop loses its ability to thrive without competition, a group of people deprived of competition will remain perpetually weak.
In all natural ecosystems, scientists have detected an underlying framework of cooperation that enables the ecosystem to prosper in its diversity. But animals in direct food-chain relationships and individual animals compete to build resilience for survival.
A predator sharpens its hunting skills and in response, the prey sharpens its running skills. As the predator becomes faster, so does the prey.
The Road Transport Ministry offers a classic example of duplicity. Recently, it praised itself for the voluminous increase in peak-hour ridership on MRT and LRT lines, yet it completely overlooked the worsening traffic congestion and gridlock on roads in Kuala Lumpur and Petaling Jaya.
Five years ago, a coroner's court in London ruled – after reviewing extensive expert medical evidence – that a young girl living near Central London had died from pulmonary fibrosis, a lung disease caused by toxic PM2.5 particles emitted by petrol-powered vehicles.
Yet, the ministry has paid no attention to improving public bus services during peak hours and introducing electric buses to ply all routes.
Local councils often lack efficiency, partly because bureaucratic appointments are influenced by political considerations. One major indicator of local governance inefficiency is the poor maintenance culture. Maintenance is the backbone of any modern society, ensuring the safety, reliability and longevity of infrastructure and public services.
Road potholes are a major indicator of poor governance as they imperil lives. Repairs are often made only after untoward incidents occur or when new budget allocations are secured.
Between 2000 and 2011, a total of 65,000 road traffic deaths were recorded. Potholes caused 15.4% of the accidents, resulting in over 1,000 deaths. Motorcyclists will often swerve to avoid these craters, causing collisions with nearby vehicles.
This year, up to April, a total of 17,921 potholes were reported across all states. In April, a teenage motorcyclist lost his life after hitting a pothole on a rural road in Pahang.
In March, two secondary school students died when their motorcycle struck a pothole, causing them to skid and fall. In January last year, a pregnant woman driving a car was killed after crashing into an electrical panel box on Pasir Gudang Highway.
Even after potholes are repaired, council inspections to ensure quality work by contractors are often lacking.
Last March, two brothers lost their lives in an accident caused by a pothole along Jalan-Sengkang Felda Inas-Bandar Tenggara. The pothole had started as a small hole before gradually expanding.
Without strict monitoring and testing, roads can quickly become vulnerable to early damage. Too often, maintenance is reactive rather than proactive. There seems to be no preventive maintenance schedules.
Even in some housing estates, the asphalt road surfaces, road shoulders and back alleys are often poorly maintained. In Ipoh – famously known as a food paradise – the entire stretch of Jalan Kompleks Sukan, starting from Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah, is in a state of disrepair.
Good performance can be achieved by fostering healthy competition. Limit the
number of vacancies to 20% of the total number of candidates and create a competitive environment – only one in five will secure the job and they will compete accordingly.
Subsequently, release another 20% of the vacancies and once again ensure intense competition. Continue with the third and fourth rounds, each offering an additional 20%, maintaining the same competitive process throughout.
Open the final 20% of vacancies exclusively to non-Bumiputera candidates, maintaining the same level of competition. When jobs are treated as entitlements, underperformance in government is inevitable. To foster a culture
of merit-based performance, a significant presence of non-Bumiputera talent in the workforce is essential.
The government at all levels must be courageous in breaking the grip of near-total racial entitlement because diversity is always better than homogeneity.
How does a lack of governmental efficiency affect climate action? If a nation struggles to run 100m, how can it expect to run 1,000? Climate therapy – a term we will use moving forward – is like a 1,000m race.
Our lack of governmental efficiency and reluctance to embark on necessary reforms cause Malaysia to lose one more point in climate survival. Our final score is -10, which is rock bottom.
Climate doomsday awaits Malaysia when global warming exceeds the tipping point of 1.5°C and hits 2°C.
All Malaysians will perish except residents of Sabah and Sarawak, where the climate survival rating is notably higher.
The next article will take a fresh look at the various negative factors giving Malaysia a climate survival score of -10. It will suggest a 'therapy' to pull Malaysia out of the hole.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

It's getting awkward as Awesome TV sues comedian trio over unpaid debts claim
It's getting awkward as Awesome TV sues comedian trio over unpaid debts claim

Focus Malaysia

time3 hours ago

  • Focus Malaysia

It's getting awkward as Awesome TV sues comedian trio over unpaid debts claim

IT gets messy after Awesome TV has responded to claims by three well-known comedians over unpaid appearance fees by suing them for defamation. In a media statement, the TV station claimed that monies owing to Amirullah Azmi who is better known as Amir Raja Lawak, Ikhtiarudin Naina Mohamad (Mamak Puteh) and Abu Musarrif Abu Bakar (Abu Mamu) were the responsibility of external production houses. To further compound matters, the issue was highlighted in the Dewan Rakyat by Bukit Bendera MP Syerleena Abdul Rashid who demanded greater protection for the creative industry. The DAP legislator argued that artistes were still being forced to plead for what should be rightfully theirs. On this note, Awesome TV has slammed the former Penang Island City councillor for making unverified remarks in the Parliament which cast the broadcaster in a bad light. Adding to the human drama, Amirullah is said to be seeking RM18,000 in overdue payments to fund his father's cancer treatment. Editor's Note: Awesome TV had previously been embroiled in negative publicity for its news reportage during the 15th General Election (GE15). Its reportage had come under fire as racist when it urged Malay voters to turn out at polls to avoid the Chinese from being kingmakers. It was not the only time Awesome TV has been in the firing line as its news reports also seemed designed to stoke racial tensions by highlighting economic disparity between ethnic communities. That the Awesome TV's retaliatory media statement which was shared on Facebook forum Meanwhile in Malaysia (MIM) has garnered 3.4K likes, 1.1K comments and 235 shares at the time of writing is an indication that this spat had captured the public's attention. For starters, Meanwhile in Malaysia's admin had kindly translated the media statement from Bahasa Malaysia to what can be roughly said to be a rojak mix of Hokkien and Manglish (Malaysian colloquial English) which elicited much hilarity from readers. One commenter queried why wasn't there a suit for defamation when the matter went viral a few months back. Why wait till it was highlighted in the Dewan Rakyat before taking legal action? The lack of details led to much conjecture with one commenter wondering if it was case of Awesome TV not paying the production houses who then failed to reimburse the artistes. The lack of clarity is also reflected in commenters' reactions. One insinuated the suit was a means to avoid paying the debt. However, other commenters took the view that the payments were NOT Awesome TV's problem. It was for the external production houses to settle those dues. Some suggested there was more than meets the eye. If indeed the payments were the purview of external production houses, why delay in declaring this piece of information? The delay in responding was also highlighted. Why the long delay? That this whole unsavoury episode has tarnished Awesome TV's reputation is undisputed, judging from some of the comments. Wouldn't it have been better to sit down and trash out the issue without involving lawyers and MPs? But then again, it probably got messy because a compromise or agreement could not be reached. In the meantime, the issue drags on. Will the truth prevail? – Aug 8, 2025 Main image credit: Sinar Harian

Malacca Johore Diocese News Update #233
Malacca Johore Diocese News Update #233

Herald Malaysia

time3 hours ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Malacca Johore Diocese News Update #233

The Pilgrim Cross moves from the Church of St Andrew, Muar to the Church of Christ the King, Kulai from August 2 till the 23. Aug 08, 2025 Welcome dear friends,The Pilgrim Cross moves from the Church of St Andrew, Muar to the Church of Christ the King, Kulai from August 2 till the pilgrims and non-Catholics turned up in droves at Alor Gajah and Pamol Estate chapels for the Feast of St Anne and a blessed 25th Sacerdotal Anniversary to Fr Simon Yong SJ and Fr Joseph Heng. Rising Concerns! Sales tax went up. Surging rentals, logistics charges and rising wage demands are hiking up the prices of meals. Relief is here. The government intervenes: SARA cash, cheaper fuel and toll hike freeze. The government launches Sejahtera Madani to eradicate hardcore poverty. Minimum wage RM1700 order is to be fully enforced on August PM is grateful to all Malaysians for their continued support and patience of the government's reform agenda. The PM brokered a ceasefire between Thailand and 'Turun Anwar' rally fizzled out, with low turnout. The government says that Malaysia needs more homegrown technology and innovation. A real relief or a 'feel good' relief or an illusory one. Dark Times! Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: Your 'yes' to God requires your 'no' to all injustice, to all evil, to all lies, to all oppression and violation of the weak and poor'. Brazil's President Lula said Trump was 'not elected to be emperor of the world.' Richard Rohr describes periods of darkness, confusion, and struggle as necessary for our transformation and growth: Experiences of darkness are good and necessary teachers. They are not to be avoided, denied, run from, or explained away. There's a darkness where we are led by our own stupidity, our own sin (the illusion of separation), our own selfishness, by living out of the false or separate have to work our way back out of this kind of darkness with brutal honesty, confession, surrender, forgiveness, apology, and restitution. It may feel simultaneously like dying and being liberated. But there's another darkness that we're led into by God, grace, and the nature of life itself. It really feels like the total absence of light, and thus the saints and mystics called it 'the dark night.'Yet even while we may feel alone and abandoned by God, we can also sense that we have been led here intentionally but it is the darkness of being held closely by God without our awareness. This is where transformation happens. Regardless of the cause, the dark night is an opportunity to look for and find God — in new forms and ways. A Thought For The Week: Bicycle Repair A man was working in a bicycle shop. A cyclist had come for repair and after repairing the man cleaned up the bicycle and it looked like a new one. All other workers were making fun of him for doing redundant work. Next day when the owner came for the bicycle, he was very happy and offered the mechanic a and extra work is never useless. Something's Happening Near You: 1. Malacca Vicariate Pastoral Council on August 13 at the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe. 2. Deacons' Study Day and Commissioning on August 16 at the Church of St Joseph, Plentong. QnQ! Q asks: Any difference between 'being victimised 'and 'being a victim'?'Suffering is universal. But victimhood is optional. There is a difference between victimisation and victimhood. We are all likely to be victimised in some way in the course of our some point we will suffer some kind of affliction or calamity or abuse, caused by circumstances or people or institutions over which we have little or no control. This is life. And this is victimisation. It comes from outside. It's the neighbourhood bully, the boss who rages, the spouse who hits, the lover who cheats, the discriminatory law, the accident that lands you in the hospital. In contrast, victimhood comes from the inside. No one can make you a victim but you. We become victims not because of what happens to us but when we choose to hold on to our victimisation. We develop a victim's mind, a way of thinking and being that is rigid, blaming, pessimistic, stuck in the past, unforgiving and punitive. We become our own jailors when we choose the confines of the victim's mind.' Edit Eger. Holy Spirit@work: 'The spiritual life does not remove us from the world but leads us deeper into it' -- Nouwen Henri J. M. Something to tickle you: 'The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do.' -- Walter Bagehot Bishop Bernard Paul

- Strengthening Integrity: Combating Corruption, Abuse Of Power And Leakages In Public Service
- Strengthening Integrity: Combating Corruption, Abuse Of Power And Leakages In Public Service

Barnama

time8 hours ago

  • Barnama

- Strengthening Integrity: Combating Corruption, Abuse Of Power And Leakages In Public Service

Opinions on topical issues from thought leaders, columnists and editors. When public servants act with honesty and uphold the law, public funds are directed toward meaningful development, and trust in government institutions is reinforced. A clean and trustworthy public service is the backbone of any nation's progress. Integrity and transparency are essential for effective governance because they ensure the country's administration functions effectively. Public servants driven by values of justice and impartiality make decisions that benefit the people rather than personal interests. This commitment improves the quality of public services across sectors, from education and healthcare to security and infrastructure. To ensure efficient policy implementation and protect public resources, integrity must be embedded at all levels of governance. A transparent administration safeguards public welfare, strengthens national security, and helps prevent criminal activities. The government's top priority must be to eliminate corruption and abuse of power, the two destructive forces that can weaken national stability and economic performance. Corruption not only misuses public funds but also results in poor service delivery, social injustice, and a decline in public confidence. A major concern for any administration, especially for a new government formed after a general election, is how to earn and maintain public trust. Citizens expect transparency, fairness, and accountability from leaders and civil servants alike. Only a leadership team with strong ethical foundations can command lasting public support. When civil servants carry out their duties with integrity, they gain respect from the public. This builds public confidence and encourages greater civic engagement in national development efforts. Leaders with integrity must prioritise the public good and base all decisions on principles of fairness and equity. Development initiatives must aim to eradicate poverty, enhance living standards and promote unity among diverse communities. However, despite reforms and policy initiatives by the country's leadership, concerns about misconduct in public service still persist. If not addressed decisively, these issues will erode the governance ecosystem and disrupt service delivery. It is therefore critical to implement continuous and comprehensive measures to root out corruption and abuse of power at all levels and in all government agencies. A look at the numbers According to the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC or SPRM in Malay), from January to October 2024, a total of 1,257 individuals were arrested in corruption-related cases. Of these, 545 (43.4%) were public servants while the remaining 712 individuals (56.6%) were from the private sector and the general public. The statement added that nearly 70% of complaints received involved public procurement, including abuse of power, bribery and fraudulent claims. MACC Chief Commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki has openly acknowledged the troubling levels of public servant involvement in corruption. Such misconduct damages Malaysia's global reputation and deters foreign investment. Beyond enforcement, he emphasised the need for holistic reforms and a unified effort involving all sectors of society. Resolving the issue of integrity cannot be done in isolation. It must be resolved with a comprehensive and coordinated approach by all stakeholders including government agencies, civil societies, NGOs, and the private sector. MACC's mandate and the duty of public servants It is true that more needs to be done to clean up the public sector. While the government has enacted policies and laws to strengthen governance, enforcement alone is not enough. The MACC, as an independent agency empowered by the MACC Act 2009, plays a vital role in investigations. It has all the powers needed without having to rely on referrals from other parties. Yet public servants themselves are the stewards of integrity. They must lead by example and uphold the trust placed in them by the public. National Anti-Corruption Strategy 2024-2028 To address ongoing integrity challenges, the government has launched the National Anti-Corruption Strategy (NACS) 2024-2028, building on the foundation of the National Anti-Corruption Plan (NACP) introduced in 2019. As a comprehensive blueprint to tackle governance, integrity and corruption issues, the NACP saw notable progress, helping Malaysia rise in the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) from 61st place in 2018 to 51st in 2019. By the end of 2023, eighty-five of 111 initiatives under NACP were successfully implemented, a 77% completion rate. NACS aims to continue this momentum, aligning with the Malaysia MADANI vision to enhance citizen well-being. However, achieving real progress will require collective commitment from political leaders, public institutions, the private sector and non-governmental organisations. Only through united effort can the public service achieve excellence marked by clean, ethical governance, free from corruption and abuse of power. Expanding partnerships for a corruption-free future As the key agency in fighting corruption, MACC has been expanding its strategic partnerships with both local and international bodies to enhance professionalism and expertise in law enforcement. One notable international collaboration was the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed in January 2025 with the Special International Risk and Advance Security (SIRAS) Academy, Europe's largest security training centre based in Denmark. This partnership provides MACC officers with access to global best practices in protection and security training. Domestically, MACC collaborates closely with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Academy (MACA) and institutions like the Enforcement, Leadership and Management University (ELMU), a university specialising in law enforcement education. The MACC–ELMU collaboration was formalised through an MoU between Yayasan Prihatin SPRM and ELMU Foundation, aiming to further professionalise MACC officers and enhance public service delivery. ELMU's Chief Executive Officer and Vice-Chancellor, Prof Datuk Dr Kassim Noor Mohamed, affirmed the institution's commitment to advancing capacity building, continuous learning and leadership training for enforcement professionals. The opening of a MACA representative office at ELMU further marks a significant step in shaping a more ethical, knowledgeable and resilient public service, as well as strengthening ties and expanding cooperation with enforcement agencies in areas of governance, leadership and education. ELMU's presence in the integrity and law enforcement education ecosystem is highly welcomed. With its headquarters in Bandar Enstek, Nilai, Negeri Sembilan, ELMU began operations in February last year and welcomed its first intake in October. The university offers 11 academic programmes across various levels ranging from Foundation, Diploma, Bachelor's, Master's to PhD levels, with specialisations in areas such as criminology, forensic investigation, fraud, and crisis management. Towards a future of integrity and accountability The partnership between MACC and ELMU, under the leadership of Tan Sri Azam Baki and Prof Datuk Dr Kassim Noor Mohamed, represents a united front in Malaysia's fight against corruption, abuse of power, and financial leakages in public service. A corruption-free administration is the key to upholding national sovereignty, safeguarding the nation's global reputation, and restoring the people's trust in their government. -- BERNAMA Mohamad Letfee Ahmad, a former BERNAMA TV Programme Manager, currently serves as a Media Consultant at the Marketing and Communications Department of ELMU University.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store