21 Mac 2013
Is the Lahad Datu incident a planned disturbance to allow Najib to declare a temporary state of emergency to enable him to clamp down on the opposition leaders?
Umno
was caught off guard when the people punished it in the 12th general
election. The disastrous results of the 2008 general election alarmed
former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
The
2008 results showed that the opposition may be able to unseat the
Umno-led government in the 13th general election, propelled by people’s
power.
This reality is playing itself out in the latest political developments engulfing Najib.
In
Sabah, the people there are very dissatisfied with the federal
government policies, especially on the issue of large numbers of
foreigners being given instant Malaysian ICs.
Even with the instant ICs, there is no assurance that these foreigners would vote for Umno-Barisan Nasional in the coming polls.
In
which case the much vaunted BN fixed-deposits of Sabah voters – locals
and Filipinos – alike are now ready to punish Prime Minister Najib Tun
Razak and his Umno.
In
Sarawak, with Taib Mahmud still at the helm, the political scenario
could turn fluid where the BN component parties would adopt a
wait-and-see approach, depending on the outcome of the election.
The
Chinese voters are ever ready to punish Najib and Taib by voting out
Sarawak United People’s Party (SUPP). The natives may jump on the
bandwagon to vote in Pakatan Rakyat in a number of constituencies.
In Peninsular Malaysia, the BN component parties, especially Gerakan and MCA, are as good as dead.
Within Umno there are two factions trying to outdo one another.
Planned disturbances?
Come election time, there would be acts of sabotage and counter-sabotage against candidates of both factions.
The Chinese, Indian and Malay voters are ready to punish Najib, Umno, Mahathir and his Perkasa.
Najib, as such, is being engulfed by uncertainties and threats of people’s punishment.
He
has to prepare a contingency plan that will empower him to clip the
opposition’s wings. This will probably be carried out in between the
dissolution of Parliament and the election dates.
Once
the dates are announced many believe Najib may deploy the false flag
tactic by creating superficial controlled disturbances in certain parts
of the country and blame them on the opposition.
This
is just an excuse to declare a temporary state of emergency to enable
him to clamp down on the opposition leaders and subsequently lift it.
These
Najib-hatched “incidents” would give him an excuse to declare a state
of emergency later – thereby suspending polling temporarily – accuse and
consequently arrest the Pakatan leaders.
Because
Najib is now so hard-pressed, he may choose the general election date
with a two-pronged strategy: remind the Malays to stay united under Umno
or lose political power; and scare the other communities of race riots
unless they support the BN.
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