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Friday, February 22, 2019

SINGAPORE’S INFLUENTIAL AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE MAKES SHOCK COMMENT: PAKATAN IS ‘FALLING APART’, MAHATHIR ‘UNDOUBTEDLY A FACTOR’ IN DREDGING OUT & KEEPING ALIVE OLD SPATS

POLITICAL instability in the ruling Pakatan Harapan coalition and its failure to capture Malay support are aggravating relations between Malaysia and Singapore, said a former Singaporean diplomat.
Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan said after Barisan Nasional was replaced by PH in the 14th general election last year “old bilateral issues almost immediately resurfaced”.
He was referring to recent disputes on maritime boundaries and joint airspace control, as well as ongoing negotiations into the price of water Malaysia sells to Singapore.
“These issues are not new and they cannot be resolved,” Bilahari said at a public lecture in the National University of Singapore.
“It would be wrong to place too much emphasis on the personality of (Prime Minister) Dr Mahathir (Mohamad) although that was undoubtedly a factor,” he told more than 200 attendees.
“More importantly, the new Pakatan Harapan government is fundamentally incoherent.  
“It’s falling apart,” said Bilahari.
He cited a Merdeka Centre research last year which found a three-way split of Malay votes for PH, Umno and Islamist party PAS, meaning that the support of Malaysia’s largest ethnic group looks to be fiercely contested by the three groups.
The results, said Bilahari, reveals the instability of the ruling pact, which will grow further as it desperately tries to rally greater Malay support if it hopes to retain power in the next general election.
“Using Singapore as a bogeyman or whipping boy to rally the Malay ground is a time-tested tactic,” he said.
“Dr Mahathir used it when he led Umno, he uses it now that he is head of Bersatu.
“This is not just a matter of personality or historical baggage.”
In his lecture, Bilahari also said he expects Malaysia’s political scenario to remain in a flux for some time because of infighting within PH and the growing threat of Islamic fundamentalism.
Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan says at a lecture on Wednesday Malaysia cannot accept the multiracial meritocracy across the Causeway, leading it to acts of provocation. – The Malaysian Insight pic, February 22, 2019.
Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan says at a lecture on Wednesday Malaysia cannot accept the multiracial meritocracy across the Causeway, leading it to acts of provocation. – The Malaysian Insight pic, February 22, 2019.
Show of might
The former policy adviser to Singapore’s ministry of foreign affairs urged the republic’s incoming new leadership to maintain the country’s military capabilities, saying that a show of might is crucial in its dealings with Malaysia.
This is because Malaysian leaders will always seek to undermine and subjugate the city-state.
“Even though Singapore is now accepted as a sovereign state, it is not a situation which Malaysia is entirely comfortable with,” Bilahari said at the lecture titled Singapore’s relations with Indonesia and Malaysia.
“Today, the governments of our neighbours deal with Singapore as a sovereign nation only because we have developed capabilities that have given them no other choice.
“It is not their preferred way of dealing with a small, ethnic Chinese-majority city-state.  
“They would prefer us to accept a subordinate role as do their own Chinese populations,” he said.
Singapore’s new leaders must, therefore, continue to “establish red lines” which send a clear message to Putrajaya that the country is equipped and ready to use its military might in the event it is forced to a corner.
“The threat of use of force is as much part of diplomacy as negotiations. Diplomacy is not just about being nice.
“It is essential to establish red lines because it is only when red lines are clearly understood that mutual relations can be conducted on the basis of mutual respect.”
Bilahari said the fundamental reason for Malaysia’s continued provocative acts towards Singapore is because of the republic’s system of a multiracial meritocracy, which greatly contrasted from the former’s race-based policies.
“The basic and enduring issue is not what we do, but what we are – a multiracial, meritocratic small city state that performs better than they do and we must always perform better.
“The very existence of our dramatically very different system, too close to be ignored or disregarded, that does better than their system, poses an implicit criticism of their system to their own people.”
THE MALAYSIAN INSIGHT

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