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Reme Ahmad
Assistant Foreign Editor
Kelantan is shaken and stirred
November 23, 2009 Monday, 07:15 PM
Reme Ahmad discusses the woes within PAS in Kelantan and why Umno-BN is smiling.
THE stronghold of Malaysia's opposition parties has always been Kelantan, the Malay-majority state in the east coast. There are whispers of corruption, nepotism, back-stabbings and possible defections - albeit to another opposition party. - First, there was the scandal involving the appointment of the son-in-law of Datuk Nik Aziz as CEO of the Kelantan state investment agency, Abdul Ariffahmi Abdul Rahman. - Although seen as capable, Mr Ariffahmi has been accused of being pushy and brusque, and allegedly name-dropped his father-in-law's revered name too often to get things done his way. - And then there was an investigation by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission into the affairs of the investment agency, Kelantan Menteri Besar Incorporated. - Mr Ariffahmi did himself no favour by getting his father-in-law, Mr Nik Aziz, to recently terminate the employment of a close aide of a top Kelantan politician, Datuk Husam Musa. - The aide, Syed Azizi Syed Abdul Aziz, uncovered more worms in the state agency, thus putting pressure on Mr Nik Aziz to remove his son-in-law just two months into the appointment. - There were also questions why Mr Nik Aziz accepted sponsorhip of a RM65,000 ($27,000) haj package by a staunch supporter. The sponsor who is close to the Menteri Besar also has a timber concession in Kelantan, which raised questions over the propreity of the deal. - Mr Nik Aziz has since said that he will not perform haj this year, though he angrily retorted that there was nothing wrong with the matter only that mainstream media and new media had attacked him - And now, there are rumours that Mr Husam has asked to quit his post as the economic, financial planning and welfare minister (state ministerial posts are called Excos). Mr Nik Aziz has denied that his blue-eyed exco was quitting. And Mr Husam himself also denied the wild talk. In the halls of power in Kota Baru, the state capital, everyone knows that Mr Husam is Mr Nik Aziz's protege. - But on Sunday the spiritual leader went further, which would add to the intrigue in Kelantan. - Mr Nik Aziz heaped praises on Mr Husam. Perhaps too publicly. And certainly by too many words. - This was what he said, according to Malaysian media: "I had refrained from praising him all this while to avoid hurting the feelings of other exco members who have done equally well in their respective portfolios. That last praise: God created Mr Husam not just for the poor state but for all Malaysians, is being repeated and analysed by pro-PAS blogs - both by those who love him and those who don't. Tags: kelantan, malaysia, pas, politics, umno
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Can't we all just get along.
Singaporean writers should stop siding the opposition in M'sia, and also using the BN-led govt as a punchbag. Lets me sensitive to our neighbour's problem. Most well educated M'sian feel Nik Aziz is manipulating the religion for his political gain, and he is not smart at all. Common, Singaporean should be more educated.
Adding to Sabahan's comment, the clean persona of Nik Aziz is a big influencing factor. He is humble beyond believe. He is PAS.That also begs the question of succession.
You write a good spin. PAS in Kelantan is squeaky clean like Singapore, unlike BN or UMNO. Any hope of capturing Kelantan from PAS is wishful thinking. Non Malays support PAS because it is clean, they support UMNO because they are either paid or afraid of change.