`


THERE IS NO GOD EXCEPT ALLAH
read:
MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

LOVE MALAYSIA!!!


Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Pua recalls open letter which continues to infuriate Mahathir

 


In the second part of his rebuttal of Dr Mahathir Mohamad's accusations, DAP lawmaker Tony Pua recalled an open letter he penned in October 2018 which angered the former premier.

The letter was addressed to the directors of MMC-Gamuda with regard to the MRT2 project. At the time, Pua was then finance minister Lim Guan Eng's political secretary.

“…when Mahathir read my open letter, he blew his top.

“The only reason why I was not fired as the political secretary to the finance minister, an appointment under the PM’s purview, is because Lim told him that I wrote the letter under his instructions (which was the truth),” he said.

Pua said he does not regret penning the open letter even if it continues to be a thorn in the former premier's flesh.

“It says a lot about the man when he chose not to record the RM8.82 billion savings for the rakyat for the MRT2 project under his premiership in his memoirs, but instead whine about an apparently irritating political secretary,” he added.

Yesterday, Pua, in Part 1 of his statement responded to an article that Mahathir, in his latest book titled ‘Capturing Hope: The Struggle Continues for a New Malaysia’, claimed he had to put a stop to one of Lim's advisers for overreaching his authority.

Although Mahathir did not name him, the Damansara MP was convinced he was the target and went on to claim that the easiest way to rile up Mahathir is to “hit his soft spot for some big business bosses being unfairly treated.”

The virtual launch for Mahathir's book yesterday came after Pua's statement and the former prime minister did not mince words in launching a scathing retort, this time naming his target.

Mahathir described the DAP man as “arrogant” and claimed that he was not liked by many.

“When you are not even a minister but just a political secretary – yet going around telling people what to do and threatening them and speaking the way you speak – you are arrogant and people will dislike you.

“Because of this person, a lot of people were against the (Pakatan Harapan) government as they felt that the government was not sympathetic to their cause,” he added.

Below is Pua's latest statement in full.


As highlighted in Part I of my statement yesterday, MalaysiaNow reported that former Pakatan Harapan prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad made public his “grouses” in his upcoming book with references clearly targeted against me, even though I was not specifically named. His additional remarks yesterday in response to my statement, however, confirmed that I was the intended target.

I have clarified yesterday that I have never threatened the developer referred to by Mahathir, Djoko Tjandra, because I have never met or spoken to him. All discussions and negotiations sanctioned by the then finance minister Lim Guan Eng were led by top ministry officials and I was never present on those occasions. I am disappointed that Mahathir continues to believe the words of a crooked Indonesian businessperson, who is now behind bars in Indonesia for fraud and corruption, instead of trusting his own members of Parliament.

Based on the excerpt from his book, Mahathir also claimed that “there were also occasions when this adviser spoke publicly on behalf of the government despite having no standing to do so.”

In this case, Mahathir would be referring to a specific statement, or “open letter” which I had issued on Oct 10, 2018, to the “directors of MMC-Gamuda” with regard to the MRT2 project.

I remember clearly that Mahathir was absolutely livid after the letter was published, summoning Lim to admonish him for my action. It was a letter that lived long in Mahathir's memory. Even late in 2019, more than a year after the letter was published and the matters involved were long resolved, Mahathir was still griping about it in his conversations with Lim.

The story

It was well known in the industry even prior to 2018 that MMC-Gamuda had the inside track with the Najib Abdul Razak administration to be awarded the Project Delivery Partner (PDP) of the extremely lucrative MRT projects via direct negotiation. The ministerial reply to me in Parliament then specifically confirmed that MMC-Gamuda was awarded the project because they were the first to propose it.

Given the size and scale of the MRT2 project, which will indebt the government by at least RM50 billion (inclusive of land acquisition costs and interest payments), Lim directed the ministry to carry out a study to determine if the cost of the project was a fair price and whether any significant savings could still be achieved, given that the project at that stage was already 40 percent completed.

One of the largest engineering consulting firms in the region was appointed to carry out the review. The study concluded that there were very significant savings to be achieved via a renegotiation, restructuring or a re-tender without sacrificing the functionality, viability and operations of the project. In fact, the study discovered that comparative figures with regional MRT or equivalent projects which purportedly showed that Malaysia’s MRT1 and MRT2 projects were among the lowest priced presented by the consulting engineers of the project were concocted.

To be absolutely certain, the Finance Ministry even secured written confirmations by other large-scale contractors that they were prepared to bid at a lower price in the event of a re-tender for the balance of the project.

Extensive negotiations took place with the top management of MMC-Gamuda. In the end, as stated in my open letter, the ministry accepted a 23 percent reduction of the cost of the MRT2 Above Ground works from RM22.64 billion to RM17.42 billion, saving the tax-payers RM5.22 billion.

However, MMC-Gamuda was not prepared to significantly reduce the cost of the MRT2 Underground (mainly tunneling) works. They made the final offer of an RM2.13 billion “discount” to the cost of RM16.71 billion.

The study by the consultants, however, estimated potential savings between RM4.2 billion to RM5.8 billion – after taking into consideration all penalties and potential financial settlement to MMC-Gamuda in the event of a termination per the terms of the contract. The question then was whether we were to give up an additional RM2 billion of savings.

The above was presented to the cabinet for a decision, and it was decided on Oct 8, 2018 that the MRT2 Underground contract with MMC-Gamuda will be terminated per the terms of the contract, and there will be an open tender issued to complete the remaining works.

Stunned by the news, MMC-Gamuda immediately launched a massive public relations and social media campaign with the hashtags #pray4MRT2 and #save20kjobs. This was to gain public sympathy over the termination, in an attempt to reverse the cabinet decision. In the process, it demonised the government as cold, heartless, irresponsible, reckless and perhaps even vindictive.

Perhaps under the old BN crony-friendly regime, such a campaign would have immediately caused capitulation and ultimately a U-turn on the decision. However, this wasn't a BN government and the additional billions of savings for the Malaysian taxpayers is well worth fighting for. The finance minister refused to take the public affront lying down and instructed that I refute the public allegations, which I duly did with the open letter to the MMC-Gamuda directors.

The public support for my open letter was overwhelming. MMC-Gamuda responded immediately, halting their own campaign, to seek re-opening of negotiations with the Finance Ministry.

To cut a long story short, we successfully reduced the cost of the MRT2 Underground contract by an additional RM1.47 billion and reinstated MMC-Gamuda to complete the project.

Overall, the MRT2 review exercise saved taxpayers a massive RM8.82 billion, excluding savings on interest cost. It must be emphasised that this was achieved without sacrificing functionality, viability and operations of the project, or caused any job losses for the workers. The project has since proceeded smoothly and is due for completion by January 2023, after some Covid-19 enforced delays.

It proved beyond doubt the excesses of the past under the Umno-BN crony-capitalism regime. The billions saved could now be spent on even more projects creating even more benefits and jobs for Malaysians, boosting the economy further.

Appeasing Mahathir

The entire review exercise was completed in a little more than three months. (Yes, you can be assured that the then newly appointed finance minister worked his team really, really hard – and this obviously wasn’t the only project we were working on concurrently).

However, things were not smooth behind the scenes. As was only to be expected, the directors of MMC-Gamuda had direct access to the prime minister. Throughout the entire negotiation process with the Finance Ministry, the directors made countless trips to lobby Mahathir. Mahathir was fed with many half-truths to justify the project cost. And each time, the PM would demand answers from Lim.

This is where I must give full credit to Lim. Each time, the team would scramble to prepare the immediate formal and detailed response for the minister to bring to the PM. Each time, Lim would patiently and diligently explain these issues to Mahathir, even when some of the issues raised have already been previously (repeatedly) explained. It was a thankless task. It would have been so easy for the minister to just give up and move on. After all, whether we save “only” RM1 billion or we save RM8 billion, the rakyat would be none the wiser.

As tedious and as frustrating as it was - this was obviously not the only issue Lim had to appeal or explain to the PM (eg, The Exchange 106 project), he persevered and he was determined to achieve the maximum possible savings for Malaysians. To do so would help reduce the country's debt and to have more funds for more projects and social programmes for the people. I was genuinely “relieved” that I wasn't in the minister's shoes, and I had the much “easier” task of being his assistant to gather all the relevant facts and information for the cause.

Ultimately, the finance minister succeeded in convincing the PM (perhaps, reluctantly), and subsequently the cabinet, that the best course of action was to terminate and re-tender the MRT2 Underground contract.

However, when Mahathir read my open letter, he blew his top. The only reason why I was not fired as the political secretary to the finance minister, an appointment under the PM’s purview, is because Lim told him that I wrote the letter under his instructions (which was the truth).

After MMC-Gamuda sought to reopen negotiations, Mahathir had advised Lim not to press too hard. He even told Lim how much is “enough”. Lim led the final negotiation with MMC-Gamuda himself and the final “discount” arrived relatively quickly and amicably to the satisfaction of all parties. The directors even assured the minister that despite the significant cuts to the cost, the project is still profitable.

More than a year later, late in 2019, Mahathir still griped about the open letter to Lim. If I don't recall wrongly, it was part of their conversation about being a “business-friendly government”. He took offence at the fact that I used the word “hell” in my statement, although he couldn't remember the context in which the word was used.

Even I couldn’t remember using the word when Lim relayed the conversation to me. I checked, and this was what I wrote, “RM2 billion is a hell of a lot of money when I see my Finance Ministry colleagues who are struggling and scrimping to find RM50 million savings here, and RM80 million cuts there for the upcoming budget.” I am pretty convinced that the term “hell” here is more than justified.

I have no regrets writing the open letter, even if Mahathir is still pissed about it (so much so that he actually included it in his memoirs – insert roll-eyes emoji here). It says a lot about the man when he chose not to record the RM8.82 billion savings for the rakyat for the MRT2 project under his premiership in his memoirs but instead whine about an apparently irritating political secretary.

On the other hand, I am extremely proud to be part of the team that brought these mega-multi-billion ringgit savings to the people, all within a very short 20-month stint at the Ministry of Finance.

Even if it wasn't instructed by the minister, I see nothing wrong with a political secretary or even a backbencher MP defending and explaining the policies of the government. Isn't that precisely our role?

In my personal view, if there was a particular weakness in Pakatan Harapan's time in government, there were too few leaders who were willing to stand up and be counted in times of controversy, for fear of rocking the boat.

But Mahathir would have none of it. Instead, he claimed that I “spoke publicly on behalf of the government despite having no standing to do so.” It is really odd, and admittedly very disheartening, that defending the cabinet decision is deemed an offence. Perhaps it is so if his circle of business friends was at the end of the stick.

Stay tuned for Part III? - Mkini

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.