<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31796526</id><updated>2011-12-29T18:15:55.780-08:00</updated><title type='text'>sembang kedai kopi</title><subtitle type='html'>...where constructive criticisms and intellectual discourse hold supreme...
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Khairy Jamaluddin is not a future Prime Minister. He is already the de facto Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is legally the fifth Prime Minister of Malaysia, having taken office in &lt;br /&gt;November 2003. However, even before he assumed office, it was quite clear that Abdullah Badawi &lt;br /&gt;was not his own man – that all his thoughts, actions and deeds were heavily influenced, if not &lt;br /&gt;directed by his then 28-year old son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin, and his coterie of friends. While &lt;br /&gt;some talked of the three Ks being the power behind Pak Lah, namely Khairy, Kalimullah (the Group &lt;br /&gt;Chief Editor of the New Straits Times) and Kak Endon (Datin Paduka Seri Endon Mahmood &lt;br /&gt;Ambak, wife of the Prime Minister), there is no doubt that the first K is the most powerful, having &lt;br /&gt;appointed the second K to his post and having married the third K’s daughter at a time when the &lt;br /&gt;third K was and is fighting breast cancer, an illness that has already claimed the third K’s twin sister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Many say that this is not unusual. After all Nixon had his Kissinger and the Tsar of Russia had &lt;br /&gt;Rasputin. There are similarities between these figures and Khairy. For one thing, all seem to act as &lt;br /&gt;puppet-masters, pulling the strings of the wooden characters who are the rulers of the country in &lt;br /&gt;name. All came from rather obscure backgrounds to emerge suddenly upon the national scene in a &lt;br /&gt;blaze of glory. Yet all had the fatal flaw of a congenital defect which led them to believe that they &lt;br /&gt;were immortal, invincible and all-knowing. In the end, all succumbed to the temptations of power. &lt;br /&gt;Will this also happen to Khairy? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The signs of discontent are quite clear. The person who perhaps is most wary of Khairy is former &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad. While Dr Mahathir himself at first warmed to Khairy and his &lt;br /&gt;friends, appointing for example Khairy’s bosom buddy from Oxford, Dr Vincent Lim Kian Teck, as &lt;br /&gt;his second Chinese political secretary, he eventually found Khairy an overbearing presence upon &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah. But at that time it was already too late. Mahathir had announced his retirement and &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi was the heir-designate. For whatever bad that Mahathir had done, he knew he &lt;br /&gt;could not afford to change his mind on the succession after the crippling failure of the removal of &lt;br /&gt;Anwar Ibrahim. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy was kept on in the Deputy Prime Minister’s office in spite of Mahathir’s misgivings. &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir turned red when Khairy Jamaluddin asked him in a Pemuda UMNO gathering whether he &lt;br /&gt;was really serious about stepping down. He thought it discourteous that Khairy insisted Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;send Abdullah for an overseas tete-a-tete meeting with the US President, even when Mahathir had &lt;br /&gt;dismissed the idea as “premature” and “unnecessary”. Mahathir rankled when his former political &lt;br /&gt;secretary, Matthias Chang, reported to him that Khairy had mentioned in an informal student &lt;br /&gt;gathering in London that both Mahathir and Daim deserved to go to jail after Abdullah Badawi takes &lt;br /&gt;over. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But like all of Khairy’s enemies, Mahathir underestimated “the boy”. He thought that as leader of the &lt;br /&gt;country for 22 years, and the most powerful man in the country, Khairy could be pushed off the &lt;br /&gt;scene as and when Mahathir likes even when he was no longer in charge. Mahathir trusted that his &lt;br /&gt;immensely strong iron grip on UMNO could be utilised behind the scenes to bend Khairy to the &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir whim. But it was not to be. Mahathir’s son, Mukhriz found himself humiliated when he &lt;br /&gt;tried to challenge Khairy for the deputy leadership of UMNO youth. In spite of Mahathir’s monetary &lt;br /&gt;support, several large gatherings to pep up the Youth voters and the far-reaching tentacles of &lt;br /&gt; - 3 - &lt;br /&gt;ANSARA (the former Mara students alumni group headed and funded by Mukhriz as a closet &lt;br /&gt;political tool), Mukhriz found that the rising son-in-law was more powerful than the fading son. He &lt;br /&gt;humiliatingly lost the UMNO Youth Head position in his father’s own constituency and got pitiful &lt;br /&gt;support for his national ambitions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir at last realised that he had stepped down in November 2003, the most powerful man in the &lt;br /&gt;country, only to be replaced by a 28-year-old. Khairy is now and for the near future the most &lt;br /&gt;powerful man in the country. Even more so than Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Najib Tun Razak or &lt;br /&gt;anyone in the UMNO Supreme Council who are mere tadpoles in Khairy’s big pond. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Here is how he influences decisions that affect you and me. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;First, Khairy is the main gatekeeper in Abdullah Badawi’s office. No letter, fax, proposal, document, &lt;br /&gt;appeal, communication, correspondence or presentation lands onto Abdullah’s desk without first &lt;br /&gt;going through the screening of aides Datuk Wan Farid and Zaki Zahid. Both Wan Farid and Zaki &lt;br /&gt;Zahid act as Khairy’s eyes and ears. When any proposal comes through to them, they immediately &lt;br /&gt;make copies for Khairy Jamaluddin. Copies are necessary because Khairy is no longer officially &lt;br /&gt;with Abdullah’s office. Yet, official or not, he is still the gatekeeper and needs to see all that comes &lt;br /&gt;to Abdullah’s office. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Wan Farid and Zaki Zahid together with Khairy also vets the appointment list to see Abdullah. In &lt;br /&gt;spite of the existence of the post of Chief Private Secretary held by Dato’ Thajudeen Abd Wahab (a &lt;br /&gt;long-time Abdullah Badawi loyalist and civil servant), those appointments made through Dato’ &lt;br /&gt;Thajudeen’s office inevitably get copied to Khairy and get vetted by him. Make no mistakes. &lt;br /&gt;Though Dato’ Thajudeen is annoyed by this unorthodox arrangement, his long-time friendship with &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is not strong enough to overrule his boss’ son-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course it is not cheap to get an appointment to see Abdullah. The gatekeepers also act as toll- &lt;br /&gt;collectors. And UMNO is rife with mutterings of dissatisfaction, due to the high price (some say up &lt;br /&gt;to RM50,000) exacted by people close to Abdullah merely to secure an appointment with the Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister. While this “custom” has always existed in varying degrees throughout the rule of all five &lt;br /&gt;Prime Ministers of Malaysia, it has never been so thorough and blatant as it is now. This is because &lt;br /&gt;payment of RM50,000 alone is not sufficient to secure an audience. There must also be promises of &lt;br /&gt;involving some of Khairy’s companies in eventual projects if such audiences are to be successful. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some may argue why this happens in spite of Abdullah Badawi’s image as Mr Clean. But that image &lt;br /&gt;is merely a perception. Compared to other ministers Abdullah is relatively clean, but this was not &lt;br /&gt;because of want of trying. Abdullah was in charge of ministries with little “opportunity” to exact &lt;br /&gt;“tributes” such as the Ministry of Youth and Sports and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and for &lt;br /&gt;many years he was out of the government. His political position as a former Tengku Razaleigh– &lt;br /&gt;Musa Hitam supporter was always very precarious and Abdullah Badawi was too fearful to drink &lt;br /&gt;from the poisoned chalice of corruption. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However the situation has now changed. Abdullah Badawi is all-powerful as Prime Minister and &lt;br /&gt;relies on Khairy to prop up that position. Khairy Jamaluddin knows that it is not long before Pak Lah &lt;br /&gt;will be challenged by Najib or anyone else backed by Dr Mahathir. Thus he must make hay while &lt;br /&gt;the sun shines. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The second method by which Abdullah is controlled by Khairy is through Khairy’s insistence on &lt;br /&gt;appointing key personnel at the decision-forming level within Abdullah’s office and also in other &lt;br /&gt; - 4 - &lt;br /&gt;powerful ministries. No less than ten of Khairy’s friends from his university days who are all in their &lt;br /&gt;late twenties or early thirties currently occupy posts equivalent to chief executive in many of the &lt;br /&gt;ministries (more will be detailed in later parts of this report). Abdullah Badawi cannot function if &lt;br /&gt;these figures do not function. In other words, he is completely reliant on their actions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For example, let us say that Abdullah goes for a foreign trip to Venezuela for a trade mission. The &lt;br /&gt;person who prepares the itinerary is a Khairy appointee (a fellow ex-student from the UK). He &lt;br /&gt;submits the paper to Khazanah’s Director of Investments (another Khairy appointee) for discussion. &lt;br /&gt;It is discussed with people from Ethos Consulting (a Khairy-related company) and finally gets &lt;br /&gt;approved by a meeting of Foreign Ministry civil servants which willy-nilly is often attended by &lt;br /&gt;Khairy himself in spite of him having no official position in government. When Abdullah comes &lt;br /&gt;back from Venezuela, discussions with President Hugo Chavez is discussed with the private office &lt;br /&gt;of the Prime Minister (headed and made up completely of Khairy’s appointees) and decisions are &lt;br /&gt;made by Abdullah Badawi after a night’s discussion at home with Khairy himself. Little wonder that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin has such an extensive control on Abdullah – and this was exactly how the &lt;br /&gt;Venezuelan trip of the Prime Minister took place! &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Thirdly, Khairy Jamaluddin controls Abdullah Badawi through his insistence on exerting his &lt;br /&gt;unofficial role as the Prime Minister’s closest advisor. An incident that took place in the foreign &lt;br /&gt;ministry shows it all. A meeting was called by Minister Syed Hamid Albar. It was a top-level &lt;br /&gt;meeting, a briefing to the Prime Minister in a closed session. In attendance were the Prime Minister, &lt;br /&gt;the Minister, the Deputy Ministers, the Secretary General of the ministry and his deputies – and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin, at that time neither in the Prime Minister’s office nor holding any official post. &lt;br /&gt;Syed Hamid insisted that the meeting be closed to Khairy. Abdullah demurred, partly out of fear that &lt;br /&gt;if Khairy was not in the room he would be ill-advised. So Khairy stayed. Such a situation shows not &lt;br /&gt;only how strong Khairy is, but how weak Abdullah can be. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Therein lies the danger of Khairy Jamaluddin. He is an unelected person within the government, yet &lt;br /&gt;his influence outweighs that of the whole cabinet; even that of the Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun &lt;br /&gt;Razak. As long as Abdullah is in power and Khairy is married to his daughter, Khairy Jamaluddin &lt;br /&gt;will continue to be the actual ruler of Malaysia. Whether knowingly or not, democracy in Malaysia &lt;br /&gt;has been reduced considerably since Khairy Jamaluddin came to the fore and there is no longer any &lt;br /&gt;check and balance within the government. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Surely the people of Malaysia should know about the phenomenon of Khairy Jamaluddin since their &lt;br /&gt;lives now so much depend on it. Malaysia Today will chronicle the rise of Khairy, how he influences &lt;br /&gt;UMNO and the government, name his allies and enemies and how he interacts with them. More &lt;br /&gt;importantly, Malaysia Today will try to lay bare the mystery of Khairy and identify the tentacles he &lt;br /&gt;uses to reach for power… &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 5 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 2: Out of the wormhole &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Before we delve into the heavy stuff, let us start with the basics. Where did this guy KJ &lt;br /&gt;come from? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Today, Khairy Jamaluddin has become the most powerful man in the country. Unlike most &lt;br /&gt;politicians whose origins can be easily traced and whose records are in the realm of public &lt;br /&gt;knowledge, Khairy is like a “dewa kayangan” (fairy godfather) who appeared from &lt;br /&gt;nowhere into the mainstream of Malaysian politics. Many began to wonder whether he &lt;br /&gt;was planted by certain sinister forces, such as the CIA or maybe the Singapore intelligence &lt;br /&gt;services. After all, no one can attain power so easily and so quickly unless they had some &lt;br /&gt;help, could they? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Certainly this is what Yahaya Ismail tried to hint at in his book. Dr. Mahathir was so &lt;br /&gt;worried about this that, at the end of his premiership, he commissioned the Special Branch &lt;br /&gt;to prepare a file on Khairy, which was also copied to Najib (another report was also &lt;br /&gt;prepared on Khairy’s bosom buddy, NST Group Managing Editor Kalimullah Masheerul &lt;br /&gt;Hassan – but that is another story for another time). But for all its promise to be “Mesra, &lt;br /&gt;Cepat dan Betul”, the officers in charge of the report did not want to risk rousing the anger &lt;br /&gt;of Khairy’s father-in-law and Prime Minister-designate Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. After all, &lt;br /&gt;at that time, he was only a few months away from power. So the report reported that there &lt;br /&gt;was nothing to report. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Though it is not unusual for members of the administration to be recruited as foreign spies &lt;br /&gt;(remember Mahathir’s former secretary, Siddiq Ghouse, who turned out to be a mole for &lt;br /&gt;the KGB), the truth about Khairy and his relationship to foreign intelligence services will &lt;br /&gt;not be publicly known for the simple fact that he is already too close to the seat of power. &lt;br /&gt;Unlike Siddiq Ghouse, Khairy is a member of the Badawi family and you cannot really say &lt;br /&gt;a member of the Prime Minister’s family is a spy, can you? But people still wonder: could &lt;br /&gt;he have gone so far without some “extra” help? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The truth is that Khairy did get “extra” help, though probably not from foreign agents. The &lt;br /&gt;time was quite ripe for the appearance of an eloquent, well qualified UMNO leader such as &lt;br /&gt;Khairy because twenty two years of Mahathir rule had made UMNO a party of dead &lt;br /&gt;zombies. There was simply no one else, as few had the courage to say anything remotely &lt;br /&gt;critical of the current (i.e. Mahathir’s) system. In the party of the yes-men and the corrupt, &lt;br /&gt;the slightly more intelligent fellow who can speak well is king. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy became the biggest worm in the giant wormhole that is UMNO. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Let’s start from the beginning. Khairy Jamaluddin was born 29 years ago to career &lt;br /&gt;diplomat Datuk Jamaluddin Abu Bakar (now deceased). Datuk Jamaluddin came from a &lt;br /&gt;little kampung in Rembau and is politically connected enough to be a relation of several &lt;br /&gt;Negeri Sembilan politicians. One of Datuk Jamaluddin’s nephews is Datuk Shahziman Abu &lt;br /&gt;Mansor, currently a deputy minister in Abdullah Badawi’s administration and MP for &lt;br /&gt;Tampin.  &lt;br /&gt; - 6 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The late Datuk Jamaluddin served in various diplomatic overseas posts but died during &lt;br /&gt;one of his postings there. It was this nomadic lifestyle which resulted in Khairy receiving &lt;br /&gt;an overseas education, including in Singapore and the United Kingdom. Suffice to say, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy never went to a local school and, for a very long time in his life, could hardly speak &lt;br /&gt;a word of his native language, being ill at ease with Malay and unable to converse with his &lt;br /&gt;own relatives. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;While he spent most of his time overseas, Datuk Jamaluddin did have one important &lt;br /&gt;posting locally. This was at the Ministry of Youth and Sports, during the time the late Tan &lt;br /&gt;Sri Samad Idris was Minister. It so happens that at that time the Director of Youth and later &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Secretary-General of the Ministry was a certain Abdullah Badawi. Fellow civil &lt;br /&gt;servants, the two shared some common interests including being part of the so-called &lt;br /&gt;“Malay ultra” group and when Abdullah left the civil service in 1974 to become MP for &lt;br /&gt;Kepala Batas (a seat previously held by his father, former PAS Youth Chief Ahmad Badawi &lt;br /&gt;Sheikh Abdullah Fahim), Jamaluddin kept in touch. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Jamaluddin died, Abdullah and his wife, Endon Mahmood Ambak, continued to &lt;br /&gt;keep in touch with Jamaluddin’s widow, a lady from Kedah. Frankly speaking, Datuk &lt;br /&gt;Jamaluddin’s reputation as a civil servant was lackluster. He was seen as aloof, pompous &lt;br /&gt;and arrogant. Often despised by his subordinates, he was a stickler for form rather than &lt;br /&gt;substance. A former subordinate of Datuk Jamaluddin once remarked that he valued a &lt;br /&gt;person more for “his ability to do a proper knot in his tie rather than the quality of his &lt;br /&gt;reports”. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a student Khairy was a fast learner, though a bit of a rebel. He was critical of &lt;br /&gt;government policies. In spite of his later pronouncements of admiration for Mahathir, he &lt;br /&gt;was not a Mahathir worshipper. Indeed, he was opposed to many of Mahathir’s actions – &lt;br /&gt;though only on the sly and never publicly. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a student at Oxford, expressing his doubts about Mahathir to fellow Malaysians &lt;br /&gt;overseas, he came to the attention of a certain Omar Ong.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Omar Ong, as can be seen from his rather peculiar name, is an ethnic Chinese. He is the son &lt;br /&gt;of Mustapha Ong, former Private Secretary to longtime Minister of Information Mohamad &lt;br /&gt;Rahmat and for some time in the diplomatic service in New York and Brazil. Currently &lt;br /&gt;living in New Zealand, Mustapha Ong became infamous during the Anwar Ibrahim trials &lt;br /&gt;when it was revealed he had tried to bribe a New York ethnic-Arab taxi driver called Jamal &lt;br /&gt;Amro to “confess” that he had procured boys and women for Anwar. Jamal Amro refused &lt;br /&gt;and instead made police reports accusing Mustapha Ong of trying to bribe him. Of course &lt;br /&gt;Mustapha Ong was shielded by Mahathir, even though his over-enthusiasm in trying to &lt;br /&gt;“fix” Anwar caused some embarrassment to the government, especially amongst the &lt;br /&gt;diplomatic community overseas. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Anyway, Omar Ong was a bit of a social climber and very ambitious. He tried to hitch his &lt;br /&gt;star to rising politicians as a means of fast-tracking his own ascent to power. He knocked &lt;br /&gt; - 7 - &lt;br /&gt;on the door of Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim through the good graces of some of &lt;br /&gt;his political secretaries. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This was partially successful, as Anwar was persuaded to receive Omar Ong and his group &lt;br /&gt;in a private audience. Several more meetings followed and Omar Ong was hopeful that &lt;br /&gt;Anwar would be his ticket to heaven. In spite of that, there was still some opposition from &lt;br /&gt;Anwaristas such as Suhaimi Ibrahim, Fuad Hassan and Zahid Hamidi, who really wanted &lt;br /&gt;to keep Anwar all to themselves. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But a chance meeting with Daim Zainuddin made Omar Ong soon realise that something &lt;br /&gt;was brewing in the very highest circles and Anwar was going to be hit by a runaway bus, &lt;br /&gt;so to speak. Quickly, while thanking his lucky stars, Omar Ong dropped “the Anwar &lt;br /&gt;project” like a hot potato and tried to go for Najib Tun Razak instead. This was around &lt;br /&gt;three months before Anwar was sacked by Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib, however, was a hard nut to crack. Omar Ong realised that Najib was surrounded by &lt;br /&gt;long time loyalists from his earlier days in government who screen newcomers to his circle &lt;br /&gt;with a parent’s protective eye. So it was decided that the next best thing would be &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin Hussein. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin Hussein was then just a junior UMNO politician. But he had a very big name &lt;br /&gt;behind him. There was no doubt that, after Hussein Onn died, Dr Mahathir felt that he &lt;br /&gt;owed a debt of gratitude to the former third Prime Minister and his family. Dr Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;began to put Hishamuddin on the fast track of politics, even over and above &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin’s superiors in the UMNO Youth movement such as Nazri Aziz and Zahid &lt;br /&gt;Hamidi. Hishamuddin got promoted several times within a year.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These fast promotions took its toll on Hisham. He was never a bright student or a sharp &lt;br /&gt;intellectual. Neither was he a good speaker nor a great orator. He had an unfriendly face &lt;br /&gt;and almost permanent crooked smile which reminded a fellow Minister of “the dead pope &lt;br /&gt;– after he had died”. Omar Ong set about helping Hishamuddin and his fellow student &lt;br /&gt;from Oxford, Khairy, came along as well. Soon, Hishamuddin began to rely more on &lt;br /&gt;Khairy than on Omar Ong. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To pay his debt, Hishamuddin introduced Omar Ong and his group to people close to Dr &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir such as his Political Secretary, Datuk Johari Baharom, and ISIS Director-General, &lt;br /&gt;Dr Noordin Sopiee.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A coincidence at the time was that Abdullah Badawi’s daughter had joined ISIS as a &lt;br /&gt;research assistant. And it was Noordin who introduced the two. Abdullah Badawi was &lt;br /&gt;then a Vice-President of UMNO and next inline should, for example, Anwar Ibrahim’s &lt;br /&gt;helicopter fall suddenly from the air. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s helicopter did fall (though he was not on it at that time) but Anwar himself was &lt;br /&gt;booted out in September 1998. Like most other Malaysians, Khairy did not believe some of &lt;br /&gt;the more bizarre accusations hurled against Anwar by Mahathir. But it was the best of &lt;br /&gt; - 8 - &lt;br /&gt;times, and the worst of times. There was opportunity and both Khairy and Omar took it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A myth developed after Anwar’s fall from grace that Khairy had always been sympathetic &lt;br /&gt;to Anwar’s “Reformasi” struggle. Rumours grew that a student who had publicly asked &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir to resign in a gathering in London was really Khairy. Another story was that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was the then boyfriend of Anwar’s daughter, Nurul Izzah, but they broke up when &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s wife, Dr Wan Azizah, refused to make Khairy her political secretary but instead &lt;br /&gt;appointed another young man by the name of Nik Affendi Jaafar (now Senior Public &lt;br /&gt;Relations Manager of the EPF). &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It seems all these rumours were created later by some hallucinating Anwar supporters who &lt;br /&gt;wanted so much for the young and powerful Khairy to be on their side, at least on the sly. &lt;br /&gt;But, in reality, Khairy saw a vacuum created by Anwar’s sudden “fall from paradise” (as &lt;br /&gt;Anwar himself described it) and he took the chance to catapult himself to the highest &lt;br /&gt;reaches of political power in the country. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At this time, Khairy tried to get close to the man in trouble at that time, Dr Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy used Noordin Sopiee to try and get a job in the Prime Minister’s office. In this he &lt;br /&gt;was backed by Hishamuddin. But when Mahathir rebuffed the offer, seeing through &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s ambitious moves, Khairy went for the next best person. No, not Abdullah - he &lt;br /&gt;went to Najib again. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib was then seen as the most likely candidate to succeed Anwar as Deputy Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister. In fact, Asiaweek went so far as to say that Najib was the man to watch when it &lt;br /&gt;came to that post. But Najib was careful not to include new people who may arouse the &lt;br /&gt;jealousy of his already tightly knit inner circle. Indeed, he had no reason to take on Khairy &lt;br /&gt;as he had strong confidence that Mahathir would choose him and no one else. This was a &lt;br /&gt;decision Najib was to regret bitterly. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Najib dreamed of was not to be. Mahathir thought he could better control the country &lt;br /&gt;by having Abdullah as his deputy. To Mahathir, Abdullah was a non-entity due to his &lt;br /&gt;onetime support for the Team B faction in UMNO (or more correctly to Tan Sri Musa &lt;br /&gt;Hitam). These types of people make better puppets. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Abdullah’s name was announced, Najib and his wife Rosmah wept outside the &lt;br /&gt;meeting room, desolate and disbelieving. At this stage, as the new Deputy Prime Minister, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah began to pack new people to fill in posts of which he had many to fill. For &lt;br /&gt;example, as Deputy Prime Minister, Abdullah would have two political secretaries instead &lt;br /&gt;of one, and eight Special Officers instead of two. One of these Special Officer positions &lt;br /&gt;went to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;How did he clinch it? It was a scratch-your-back-scratch-my-back situation. Abdullah had &lt;br /&gt;asked Noordin Sopiee in his capacity as the Prime Minister’s brain to suggest a few names &lt;br /&gt;of bright chaps who could fill posts in his office. Two names came out – Khairy’s and &lt;br /&gt;another ISIS researcher (now also ensconced in government). But the ISIS researcher failed &lt;br /&gt;the security check (his mother was a Reformasi supporter). And Abdullah’s lovesick &lt;br /&gt; - 9 - &lt;br /&gt;daughter Nori warmly and enthusiastically endorsed the first name. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So far, so good. The climb of Khairy Jamaluddin had begun. And he quickly paid his dues &lt;br /&gt;by ensuring that the person who put him on track to these successes got his rewards as &lt;br /&gt;well. Omar Ong was swiftly installed in Najib’s office as Special Officer in order to ensure &lt;br /&gt;that all went smoothly in the deep, dark wormhole that is UMNO politics…. &lt;br /&gt; - 10 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 3: The enemies within &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Most of Khairy Jamaluddin’s enemies within UMNO are made up of younger leaders who &lt;br /&gt;believe that he is an upstart. They do not acknowledge that he has substantial knowledge &lt;br /&gt;in government though having served in Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s office for the last four &lt;br /&gt;years. They think that he is put there merely because he married the daughter of the Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister. At the same time, they are disgusted by the way Khairy puts his cronies in charge &lt;br /&gt;of various branches of government ministries, ranging from the Communications Office of &lt;br /&gt;the Prime Minister’s Department to Khazanah Nasional. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This is not of course simply a matter of puerile jealousy. They believe that Khairy is a real &lt;br /&gt;threat and quite a significant one at that too, given his meteoric rise to power. They too &lt;br /&gt;have ambitions of their own to become Prime Minister. Indeed, some of them even feel the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister’s seat is their God-given right. So they try their best to parry Khairy’s every &lt;br /&gt;move and block it by hook or by crook. The normal UMNO method of poison pen letters, &lt;br /&gt;backstabbing SMSes, and secret alliances grafted in smoke-filled rooms are some of the &lt;br /&gt;normal methods employed to keep Khairy at bay. But Khairy is not the usual UMNO &lt;br /&gt;political enemy by far…. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Many of Khairy’s enemies are content to bide their time and wait for the day when &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi is kicked out of the office of UMNO president. They believe that, then, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy will lose his godfather and protector, laying himself bare and exposed to attacks &lt;br /&gt;from the grassroots. Khairy’s enemies hope that the seething anger at Khairy so openly &lt;br /&gt;displayed at the last UMNO General Assembly will reach boiling point and explode once &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is removed from office. Then Khairy will be led to the altar of sacrifice and his &lt;br /&gt;throat slit from ear to ear. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yet, Khairy understands this plus that he has to strike first. And the last two years since &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah became UMNO President has been spent precisely doing that. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy utilises two methods: neutralising what enemies that can be neutralised, and &lt;br /&gt;extinguishing the dangerous ones who cannot be mollified by titles and positions. There &lt;br /&gt;are many of the first category, such as Azimi Daim, Norza Zakaria and Aziz Sheikh Fadzir. &lt;br /&gt;All three used to be seen as potential challengers to Khairy’s position, especially in UMNO &lt;br /&gt;Youth.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, they could be easily bought as they are in politics merely to gain positions and &lt;br /&gt;make money. They fear ‘going the whole way’ and doing things that may risk their &lt;br /&gt;comfortable current positions. So Azimi was given the UMNO Youth Information Chief &lt;br /&gt;title as well as an EXCO position. Aziz was given a seat in the last general election. Norza &lt;br /&gt;not only got a post in the UMNO Supreme Council, but a license to ‘print money’ through &lt;br /&gt;the powerful ‘toll-keeper’ position he was awarded in the Second Finance Ministry. UMNO &lt;br /&gt;politicians such as these are not a real threat to Khairy because, whenever they rear their &lt;br /&gt;ugly horns, they could be led to the trough of patronage and fed to their fat stomach’s &lt;br /&gt;content. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 11 - &lt;br /&gt;The more dangerous threats come from the second category made up of established &lt;br /&gt;politicians who are scions of UMNO leadership even before Khairy appeared on the scene. &lt;br /&gt;One such personality is Khairy’s own boss, Hishamuddin Hussein, who was instrumental, &lt;br /&gt;prior to 1999, in bringing Khairy to the attention of then Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;Mohamad. Hishamuddin believes that it is his birthright to be a future Prime Minister of &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia given that, like Najib (his cousin – his mother Tun Suhailah being Najib’s mother &lt;br /&gt;Tun Rahah’s elder sister), his father had held that august office before being deposed by &lt;br /&gt;Dr. Mahathir.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At first Hishamuddin thought that Khairy would do like what he is doing - play the &lt;br /&gt;‘patience game’. Hishamuddin started out a strong supporter of Mahathir and his then &lt;br /&gt;heir-apparent Anwar Ibrahim. Through his constant brown-nosing of Anwar, &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin quickly found himself Deputy Minister of Finance and Minister of Youth &lt;br /&gt;and Sports, jumping over the head of his own boss, UMNO Youth Chief Mohd Zahid &lt;br /&gt;Hamidi. But Hishamuddin did this in his late thirties after years of legal practice and with &lt;br /&gt;at least the perception of patient unobtrusive building of his political career.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Khairy does not believe in such things. He wants what he wants fast and he wants &lt;br /&gt;them now. So he has become the youngest Vice Youth Chief of UMNO since Nazri Aziz. &lt;br /&gt;Though this was suggested by Hishamuddin himself to save his own position, &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin now realises Khairy is a bigger threat than Aziz Sheikh Fadzir or anyone else &lt;br /&gt;could be. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In addition, Hishamuddin is unhappy that Khairy set up his own network within the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth machinery, e.g. nominating Norza to the Supreme Council over and above &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin’s own choice. Khairy also set up an informal network of UMNO Vice Youth &lt;br /&gt;Division Chiefs throughout the country, a phenomenon unheard of when Hishamuddin &lt;br /&gt;himself held that post. Hishamuddin realises that he now holds office by the grace and &lt;br /&gt;favour of Khairy. When the latter is ready for the post of Youth Chief, the former must go.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;If the situation continues, Hishamuddin might find it is time to go to the only place where &lt;br /&gt;he can go, which is the position of UMNO Vice President. But the stage is already filled to &lt;br /&gt;the brim with aspirants to the leadership. Hishamuddin may well find that, in the next &lt;br /&gt;UMNO election, Khairy will win the post of UMNO Youth chief with ease while he will &lt;br /&gt;lose the battle for the UMNO Vice-Presidency. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin is stuck because Khairy has already laid a trap for him. He makes &lt;br /&gt;pronouncements that forces Hishamuddin to accept his view of national politics. &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin cannot play the Malay racial card because Khairy has played that first, &lt;br /&gt;especially in areas such as education, which comes under his own ministerial purview. &lt;br /&gt;More importantly, Khairy is opting in several of Hishamuddin’s ex-allies such as Dr. &lt;br /&gt;Adham Baba and Razali Ibrahim (the MP for Muar) to slowly begin accepting the duality &lt;br /&gt;of UMNO Youth, where Hishamuddin is just the nominal official chief, but Khairy runs the &lt;br /&gt;daily show. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This is how Khairy is ‘fixing’ Hishamuddin. He has already planted key allies within &lt;br /&gt; - 12 - &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin’s ministry. Some of Hishamuddin’s former loyalists have been given &lt;br /&gt;ministerial responsibilities and parliamentary seats, not to strengthen Hishamuddin &lt;br /&gt;himself but to distance his advisors from him and make them preoccupied with their own &lt;br /&gt;careers. This has created vacancies in Hishamuddin’s office and Khairy has filled them &lt;br /&gt;with his own allies, notably from the YPCS (Young Professionals Consultative Society), &lt;br /&gt;people of Khairy’s own batch, nominally loyal to Hishamuddin but in reality stooges of &lt;br /&gt;Khairy himself. Nothing goes by Hishamuddin's office that is not reported to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, Hishamuddin’s own Special Officers are the eyes and ears of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Removing Hishamuddin will be easy because Hishamuddin is not a ‘fighter’ – unlike, for &lt;br /&gt;example, another potential Youth Chief, Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo, the Menteri Besar of &lt;br /&gt;Selangor. Khir comes from a different background than Khairy though they share the first &lt;br /&gt;syllable of their names. While Khairy comes from a diplomat’s family with a high ranking &lt;br /&gt;in the civil service, Khir’s father, known locally as “Wak Joyo”, is of peasant stock and a &lt;br /&gt;former PAS member to boot. Khir built himself into national politics by his good-natured &lt;br /&gt;bonhomie with Mahathir’s children, notably Mokhzani and Mukhriz. It was Mokhzani, who &lt;br /&gt;was then UMNO Youth Treasurer, who recommended that Khir, then a one-term &lt;br /&gt;assemblyman and not even a division leader, succeed Abu Hassan Omar as Menteri Besar &lt;br /&gt;of Selangor after the shameful revelation of Abu Hassan’s incestuous sexual scandals. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Selangor was of course not happy that this young upstart was suddenly propelled &lt;br /&gt;to the leadership. And Khir had more ambitions to fulfil. At only 37, Khir is by far the most &lt;br /&gt;visible Youth leader in the country after Hishamuddin and Khairy. He would not want to &lt;br /&gt;stop merely at being an UMNO Supreme Council member. Indeed, if Hishamuddin had &lt;br /&gt;decided to leave the post of UMNO Youth Chief last time, Khir would have been the &lt;br /&gt;frontrunner to succeed him. With money in his pocket due to the extensive giving away of &lt;br /&gt;land to the Lebar Daun group and other key business allies, Khir is well suited to assume &lt;br /&gt;the leadership of the UMNO Youth Wing - except he has to contend with Khairy… &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had tried fixing Khir by exposing some mistakes he had made as Menteri Besar. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is in luck because Khir has been greedy and rapacious in making money out of his &lt;br /&gt;position as Menteri Besar. Khairy merely needed to exploit some of these corrupt practices. &lt;br /&gt;One of the methods he used was to expose Khir’s wrongdoings in the award of &lt;br /&gt;development land within the Bukit Cahaya Seri Alam nature reserve. Khir had granted &lt;br /&gt;substantial pieces of land to companies related to his family and the family of his wife. The &lt;br /&gt;head of news at TV3, Datuk Kamarul Zaman Zainal (an ex-officer of Abdullah Badawi’s &lt;br /&gt;office) had a meeting with Khairy in which the latter gave the go-ahead for TV3 to air these &lt;br /&gt;misdeeds. Datuk Kamarul Zaman had no love for Khir as he is an Abdullah loyalist and &lt;br /&gt;believes that, in doing so, he is helping Abdullah strengthen his position against residues of &lt;br /&gt;the Mahathir era. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Khir fought back and he had some powerful help. It was not only his related &lt;br /&gt;companies that had been given land in Bukit Cahaya Seri Alam but also companies &lt;br /&gt;associated with members of the Selangor royal family and other key political and business &lt;br /&gt;personalities close to Abdullah. When TV3 began airing the problems, they panicked and &lt;br /&gt;asked for help from Dato’ Thajudeen Abdul Wahab, Chief Private Secretary to the Prime &lt;br /&gt; - 13 - &lt;br /&gt;Minister. Dato’ Thajudeen used his authority to ask Datuk Kamarul Zaman to back off and &lt;br /&gt;stop the attacks. So it gradually subsided. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Then Khairy used another tack. He tried to show that Khir was an incompetent &lt;br /&gt;administrator. At a Selangor UMNO Liaison committee meeting in May 2005, through a &lt;br /&gt;whisper from Khairy, Abdullah Badawi questioned the logic of declaring Selangor as a &lt;br /&gt;‘developed’ state. His plan - which was hatched way back before Abdullah became PM - &lt;br /&gt;was to emphasise Selangor’s unique position as an economic powerhouse by declaring it a &lt;br /&gt;developed state on the 31st of August 2005. Admittedly, Khir had massaged the statistics &lt;br /&gt;and figures in order to make such a proclamation. However it is nothing unusual in the &lt;br /&gt;scheme of UMNO politics where even the former Prime Minister Mahathir had made &lt;br /&gt;unilateral declarations such as that Malaysia was an ‘Islamic state’.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah blasted Khir for making such a declaration during the closed-session meeting. In &lt;br /&gt;order to soften the blow, he emphasised that he had earlier criticised Kedah Menteri Besar &lt;br /&gt;Syed Razak Syed Zain for the impossible promise he made to make Kedah a ‘developed &lt;br /&gt;state’ by 2010. The real target of attack however was Khir. In Abdullah’s simple uncluttered &lt;br /&gt;mind, he was making a genuine criticism based on the lack of reasons for the declaration of &lt;br /&gt;a developed state. But, to Khairy, this carried a more valuable message, which was to show &lt;br /&gt;that Khir was a liar, incompetent and bumbling. After all, the aim to declare Selangor as a &lt;br /&gt;‘developed state’ was something that Khir had been working on since 2001, and he had &lt;br /&gt;announced it far and wide to everyone. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This is just the beginning of the attack on Khir. Of course Khir will go ahead and make the &lt;br /&gt;declaration in August. But he is wounded by the collective attack on all fronts, especially in &lt;br /&gt;the mass media against his administration. Nor is he supported (at least in the public eye) &lt;br /&gt;by the Prime Minister. The most Khir could gather was lukewarm support at a Selangor &lt;br /&gt;UMNO meeting by Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;By the time Khir announces that he is ready to go for the UMNO Youth leadership, many &lt;br /&gt;of his mistakes would have already been exposed by Khairy for public consumption. That &lt;br /&gt;is not to say that Khir is a less competent man than Khairy, but Khir does not control the &lt;br /&gt;media, whereas Khairy does. Either through his own plants such as Kalimullah Masheerul &lt;br /&gt;Hassan (the Group Chief Editor of the New Straits Times) and his breed of Singapore &lt;br /&gt;trained hired hacks such as Brendan Pereira, or the Heavenly Kings of The Star, or Datuk &lt;br /&gt;Kamarul Zaman in TV3, these will be the methods by which Khir is eventually destroyed. &lt;br /&gt;And Khir can scarcely fight back given his own past misdeeds and the fact that his press &lt;br /&gt;officer is a university dropout with not even an SPM credit in languages. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin and Khir are Khairy’s seniors, as far as ranking in UMNO is concerned. But &lt;br /&gt;Khairy also faces challenges from his peers in UMNO who are almost as close to Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;as he himself. He has not neglected these threats and, like the fratricides of the Middle &lt;br /&gt;Ages, Khairy has plans to strangle his own brothers… &lt;br /&gt; - 14 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 4: Strangling your own brothers &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was one thing for Khairy Jamaluddin to dispatch his challengers who openly stood in his &lt;br /&gt;way, but what was he to do with those young politicians who have Abdullah Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;Badawi’s confidence? Before Khairy came along, Abdullah did have some other young &lt;br /&gt;protégés who he had groomed. These were the dark horses who might challenge Khairy for &lt;br /&gt;the throne in a few years time. One who has already declared this intent in private &lt;br /&gt;gatherings is UMNO Perlis Deputy Liaison Chief, Datuk Zahidi Zainol Abidin, 41.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Back when Hishamuddin Hussein contested the UMNO Youth Vice-Chief post, Zahidi was &lt;br /&gt;one of the few who dared challenge him -- even though Hishamuddin was the son of a &lt;br /&gt;former Prime Minister and Zahidi was a ‘nobody’. The former Air Force pilot with a UiTM &lt;br /&gt;mature student degree stood against Hishamuddin knowing full well he would lose, given &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin’s popularity and backing from Dr Mahathir. Yet he still went head on &lt;br /&gt;against Hishamuddin. Why? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi is one of those strange people in UMNO. One cannot call him a man of principles, &lt;br /&gt;yet he did have over-riding beliefs. He has an unshakeable confidence in his own abilities &lt;br /&gt;and he has always been proud of calling himself the underdog candidate. Zahidi does not &lt;br /&gt;think that UMNO should always be led by the scions of established political families such &lt;br /&gt;as Hishamuddin Hussein. He believes in going against this bangsawan mentality. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Zahidi took up the cudgels against Hishamuddin. Though he lost heavily, he could &lt;br /&gt;always rely on a fallback ‘tilam’ as he had been a loyalist of Abdullah Badawi since his &lt;br /&gt;Team B days. Abdullah counted on Zahidi’s support throughout his wilderness years and &lt;br /&gt;even considered Zahidi an anak angkat. When Khairy appeared on Abdullah’s radars &lt;br /&gt;screen, Zahidi was annoyed. He felt that Abdullah was being led up the garden path by &lt;br /&gt;this young Oxford graduate with a smooth tongue. Zahidi wanted Abdullah to be more &lt;br /&gt;true to his Malay nationalistic background and not be swayed by Khairy’s new-age politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi tried his best to keep Abdullah on the straight and narrow. But of course he was no &lt;br /&gt;match for Khairy and his friends. Try as he might, he could not shake ‘the boy’ off -- and &lt;br /&gt;neither did Khairy succeed in turning Abdullah completely against Zahidi. Between the &lt;br /&gt;two, Abdullah struck an uneasy balance. Khairy stayed Abdullah’s closest and most &lt;br /&gt;influential advisor, but Abdullah still relied on Zahidi to give him an alternative view, &lt;br /&gt;though most times it did not matter as much as the opinion of his son-in-law. To soothe &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi’s wounded heart, Abdullah planned to make him the Perlis Menteri Besar during &lt;br /&gt;the last election if Shahidan Kassim failed to dent the PAS onslaught. To Zahidi’s chagrin, &lt;br /&gt;Shahidan pulled off a coup by defusing the PAS ‘green wave’ with the help of a few &lt;br /&gt;members of the Perlis royal family, thereby guaranteeing his stay in office. Nevertheless, &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi got promoted to Senior State EXCO Member. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Since then, he has openly announced his intention to challenge Khairy, ostensibly to teach &lt;br /&gt;these bangsawans a lesson. So Khairy planted a mole within Zahidi’s midst, in the form of &lt;br /&gt;a young and ambitious leader called Ben. Ben, or Rozabil Abdul Rahman, as his full name &lt;br /&gt;goes, is one of Khairy’s strongest supporters. In fact, since 1999, he has been a shareholder &lt;br /&gt; - 15 - &lt;br /&gt;of Khairy’s mother’s company based in Penang and Kedah that supplies goods to schools &lt;br /&gt;in that area. Ben has ambitions to make it big in national politics, but Khairy told him to &lt;br /&gt;first prove himself by ‘fixing’ Zahidi in Perlis.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Ben is not even from Perlis. His father, Abdul Rahman Kader, an ex-trade union leader, is &lt;br /&gt;an Anwar loyalist, Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) national chairman, and one-time PKR &lt;br /&gt;Chief for Penang. From 1999 to 2004 Pak Rahman was the PKR State Assemblyman in the &lt;br /&gt;Permatang Pauh Parliamentary constituency. Pak Rahman hails from Perak while Ben &lt;br /&gt;himself is based mostly in Kuala Lumpur. But anything can happen in Khairy’s weird and &lt;br /&gt;wonderful world of politics. So Ben suddenly became a Perlis ‘native’ and winged his way &lt;br /&gt;there to serve Khairy’s wishes. One of these wishes is to make sure that Zahidi gets &lt;br /&gt;politically tarnished. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the last general election, Ben created a ruse on Khairy’s behalf. He arranged to meet with &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi on the pretext of seeking his support to win the post of UMNO Youth Chief in the &lt;br /&gt;Kangar Division. He promised Zahidi substantial ‘campaign funds’ to facilitate this task. &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi readily agreed, accepting RM300,000 as a first payment. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In fact, Ben was not doing this out of the goodness of his heart but to manufacture evidence &lt;br /&gt;that Zahidi was involved in money politics and therefore liable to be hauled before the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Disciplinary Committee. That was what happened next. Zahidi found himself the &lt;br /&gt;object of an investigation by Tengku Ahmad Rithaudeen’s committee. Letters accusing him &lt;br /&gt;of paying bribes appeared on the Tengku’s desk and an anonymous tape-recording of a &lt;br /&gt;telephone conversation in which Zahidi had asked Ben to make prompt payment of the &lt;br /&gt;campaign funds to his bank account found its way to the committee’s hands. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Zahidi was duly convicted of the crime of money politics and given a warning. The public &lt;br /&gt;was told his offence was of blocking certain people from being elected UMNO delegates by &lt;br /&gt;bad-mouthing them. Secretly though, Tengku Ahmad Rithaudeen had warned Zahidi not &lt;br /&gt;to ‘rock the UMNO boat’ if he did not want them to announce his other offences, which &lt;br /&gt;included payments of up to RM1,000 each to members in the Kangar division. Zahidi was &lt;br /&gt;informed during the hearings that he was not to repeat to the press what the committee &lt;br /&gt;had said to him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;He was told that he was lucky to get off with a warning because he was one of Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;blue-eyed boys. But if he dared challenge the ‘status quo’ of the bangsawan leadership &lt;br /&gt;again, the committee would find a way to ‘sembelih’ him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, no one expects Zahidi to take this lying down. But he has no doubt been made &lt;br /&gt;aware that challenging Khairy would not be a ‘clean’ and friendly battle like the &lt;br /&gt;Hishamuddin Hussein challenge some years back. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is another fellow like Zahidi, also a long time Abdullah loyalist and not a &lt;br /&gt;bangsawan. Reezal Merican Naina Merican is an Indian Muslim from Penang who had &lt;br /&gt;managed to bring himself to the attention of Abdullah Badawi three years before Khairy &lt;br /&gt;ever showed his face in the Jalan Bellamy house. &lt;br /&gt; - 16 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Reezal Merican (often called ‘Ustaz Reezal’) is an IIUM graduate with a penchant for high &lt;br /&gt;politics and beautiful women artistes. He was aghast when the years of relationship he had &lt;br /&gt;built with Abdullah prior to his being appointed Deputy Prime Minister was suddenly &lt;br /&gt;interrupted by the appearance of Khairy. When Abdullah ascended that high office, Reezal &lt;br /&gt;Merican thought that his time had come. His years of being the ‘lightning rod’ in IIUM -- &lt;br /&gt;attracting the ire of his fellow students who were mostly supporters of Anwar Ibrahim -- &lt;br /&gt;would finally pay off when Abdullah recognises his loyalty and perseverance in defending &lt;br /&gt;his image. Reezal had hoped that Abdullah would reward him with a suitably high post in &lt;br /&gt;government. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But when the call finally came and the appointment letter landed on his desk, Reezal found &lt;br /&gt;himself in the much less exalted office of Shahrizat Abdul Jalil, in charge of issues such as &lt;br /&gt;making sure that people hugged each other in the name of national unity. Khairy had &lt;br /&gt;blocked his way up by writing a memorandum to Abdullah Badawi containing the list of &lt;br /&gt;people who deserved to be promoted to the office of advisors to the new Deputy Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister and Reezal Merican’s name was not one of them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Reezal persevered. He tried to make himself out to be a more important part of Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;future government by showing that he had good ties with the student community in local &lt;br /&gt;universities. He promptly got himself elected head of the IIUM alumni and therefore a &lt;br /&gt;nominal head of quite a substantial group of the local student support base. Perhaps it was &lt;br /&gt;in view of this that Abdullah finally relented and, in November 2003, Reezal was made &lt;br /&gt;Political Secretary to the First Finance Minister. It was not as important as being Political &lt;br /&gt;Secretary to the Prime Minister himself, but as the two posts were conjoined in the same &lt;br /&gt;person, Reezal did not complain too much. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy did not take this lying down though. He shot off another official memo to &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah, informing him that the IIUM graduate did not deserve the post as he added no &lt;br /&gt;value to the effort to show Abdullah’s administration as being a professional team of bright &lt;br /&gt;young things. Khairy also accused Reezal of involvement with several young recording &lt;br /&gt;artists and newsreaders. The letter found itself on Abdullah’s desk, but not before chief &lt;br /&gt;private secretary Dato’ Thajudeen Abdul Wahab (no friend of Khairy’s) had made a copy &lt;br /&gt;and given it to Reezal. Seething with anger, Reezal swore to eliminate Khairy from the &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah circle. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;That promise was made in the white heat of anger. Eventually, Reezal realised that it was &lt;br /&gt;better to be seen to support Khairy, at least for the time being. He took a step back and &lt;br /&gt;allowed Khairy to go for the UMNO Youth Vice-Chief post while he himself contested as &lt;br /&gt;an ordinary EXCO member, though he had a longer relationship with the UMNO Youth &lt;br /&gt;delegates. In the meantime, he gathered his forces. While Khairy is largely supported by &lt;br /&gt;foreign graduates, non-Malays and the liberal Malay faction in UMNO, Reezal Merican is &lt;br /&gt;more popular with the under-30s from local universities. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A head-on clash was about to happen if not for one stroke of Khairy’s genius. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 17 - &lt;br /&gt;What could Khairy do to counter Ustaz Reezal’s influence? Khairy looked at it from a &lt;br /&gt;hierarchical point of view. If Khairy, as an Oxford graduate, was the highest chimp in the &lt;br /&gt;tree, Reezal, as an IIUM graduate, was the lower monkey. So, to topple the guy, Khairy &lt;br /&gt;needed an even lower ranking primate –- more aggressive, perhaps, but definitely a &lt;br /&gt;follower rather than a leader. This he found in the form of Datuk Abdul Azeez Rahim. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Azeez shared many of Reezal Merican’s attributes. A fellow mamak like Reezal, he &lt;br /&gt;had a weakness for beautiful women and both had married twice. More importantly, &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Azeez was a self-made businessman of a rather thuggish outlook and could counter &lt;br /&gt;Reezal’s influence among the locally educated UMNO Youth politicians. Khairy pushed &lt;br /&gt;through a new wing called Putera UMNO under Abdul Azeez’s stewardship that spread &lt;br /&gt;its tentacles to local universities and institutions of higher learning. Khairy understood that &lt;br /&gt;he himself lacked support from this political base and badly needed it. Abdul Azeez was &lt;br /&gt;tasked in getting this support while at the same time weakening Reezal’s influence. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Reezal became a neutered tomcat, surrounded by the well-oiled and well-financed &lt;br /&gt;Putera UMNO. If at any time in the future Reezal tries to shake Khairy’s throne, the trap &lt;br /&gt;would be set for him and he would find himself on the receiving end of Putera UMNO’s &lt;br /&gt;whack. Khairy no longer needs to fear that he would be seen as an arty-farty Oxford &lt;br /&gt;graduate without support from the lower middle classes. Abdul Azeez would now take &lt;br /&gt;care of that for him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The juggernaut rolls on. But Khairy cannot afford to confine himself only to dealing with &lt;br /&gt;potential threats from UMNO Youth. There was a bigger and more immediate threat to his &lt;br /&gt;plans to become PM of Malaysia by the age of 40. The most important fish for Khairy to fry &lt;br /&gt;is one called Najib… &lt;br /&gt; - 18 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 5: The heir and the pretender &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some time ago, a young UMNO politician began his meteoric rise to power. He was, to be &lt;br /&gt;very honest, young and inexperienced. But he had the distinction of coming from a &lt;br /&gt;powerful political family and it was on the back of this that he managed to secure positions &lt;br /&gt;in UMNO Youth at a very tender age.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Eventually, he rose to the highest rank of that wing. He became a minister and was always &lt;br /&gt;spoken of as a ‘sure bet’ for the exalted post of Prime Minister. With little political &lt;br /&gt;experience prior to joining UMNO, he built his reputation by playing off one group against &lt;br /&gt;another, even showing off the racial card, pronouncing his strong public support for &lt;br /&gt;‘Malay rights’, ‘Malay dominance’ and ‘Malay supremacy’, in spite of having quite &lt;br /&gt;opposite beliefs in the practice of his private life. An almost wholly overseas education had &lt;br /&gt;left him tongue-tied in his own native language. And a rather prominent spouse, with &lt;br /&gt;(lesser) political ambitions of her own, helped spur his climb to power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One may be forgiven for thinking that this is a description of Khairy Jamaluddin. In actual &lt;br /&gt;fact it is only what Khairy wants to be. It’s Khairy’s ‘wannabe’ dream - drawn on the back &lt;br /&gt;of an envelope as his plans for reaching the top political office in the country. But that trail &lt;br /&gt;had already been blazed by another man before Khairy – and his name is Najib Tun Razak. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and Najib share many similarities in their rise to power. Yet there is no love lost &lt;br /&gt;between them. Khairy knows that Najib will ‘kill him off’ as soon as Abdullah Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;Badawi leaves the political stage. Likewise, Najib is uneasy about Khairy’s influence on &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and is conscious that his chances of becoming Prime Minister would dramatically &lt;br /&gt;improve with Khairy out of the way. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The enmity between Khairy and Najib stems from Khairy’s impatient and open ambition to &lt;br /&gt;reach the highest office in UMNO before he reaches the age of 40. Najib is the opposite in &lt;br /&gt;his outlook. He is patient, almost to the point of being seen as slow and lethargic. But Najib &lt;br /&gt;has played a ‘careful’ game whereas Khairy is more ‘in your face’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Both understand that UMNO is too small a party for the two of them. At only 52, Najib is &lt;br /&gt;easily able to block Khairy for twenty-five years or more. If a week is a long time in politics, &lt;br /&gt;then twenty-five years would seem like an eternity. Even worse, Khairy thinks Najib will &lt;br /&gt;turn back the clock, abolish Abdullah’s (and therefore Khairy’s) reforms and return UMNO &lt;br /&gt;to the ‘bad old days’ of Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib is the most prominent protégé of former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad &lt;br /&gt;of his generation. His appointment as Deputy Prime Minister was part of a package &lt;br /&gt;arranged by Dr Mahathir prior to his abdication and was pre-conditional upon Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;prior to him assuming the office of UMNO President. Even after Dr Mahathir had received &lt;br /&gt;the tacit but private consent of Abdullah Badawi for Najib to be appointed as Deputy &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister, Mahathir tried to reinforce the future succession plans by putting very &lt;br /&gt;broad hints in the media that Najib was the most capable person to become Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;deputy. &lt;br /&gt; - 19 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir went so far as to instruct certain members of the cabinet to push hard and often &lt;br /&gt;for Najib to be appointed Deputy Prime Minister as soon as possible. Khalil Yaakob, then &lt;br /&gt;Information Minister, pushed Abdullah so often that Khairy became incensed. By the 2004 &lt;br /&gt;election, Khalil found himself packed off to his wife’s state of Melaka as governor. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At one point, Dr Mahathir even hinted that the Deputy Prime Minister should be &lt;br /&gt;appointed at the same time as Abdullah takes the oath of office as the fifth Prime Minister &lt;br /&gt;of Malaysia. Abdullah bit his lips and said nothing. The prize was too close for him to rock &lt;br /&gt;the boat now. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah did, however, try to play ‘chicken’ with Mahathir. He wanted the Deputy Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister to owe him that appointment and not be indebted to his predecessor. So he kept &lt;br /&gt;the nation waiting for awhile and gave an indication to people such as Muhyiddin Yassin &lt;br /&gt;that they were also potential candidates. Abdullah’s then political secretary, Ramzi Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Rahman (now Chairman of KESEDAR), was asked to inform Dr Shaharuddin Mohd Salleh &lt;br /&gt;that “Najib is in only as long as Mahathir is in”. On the back of this promise, Shaharuddin &lt;br /&gt;went to Muhyiddin telling him that they would soon be moving to new offices in &lt;br /&gt;Putrajaya. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the hints were never serious because Abdullah Badawi knew that if he did not appoint &lt;br /&gt;Najib as Deputy Prime Minister, Mahathir would ensure that Abdullah became the shortest &lt;br /&gt;ever serving Prime Minister of Malaysia… &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Knowing full well that his father-in-law had no choice but to appoint Najib, Khairy tried to &lt;br /&gt;place himself in Najib’s good books. First, he tried to convince Najib that, as the most &lt;br /&gt;powerful advisor to Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, he would be instrumental in influencing the &lt;br /&gt;decision to appoint the new Deputy Prime Minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy reassured Najib several times that Abdullah was really in favour of Najib, rather &lt;br /&gt;than Muhyiddin or any other candidate. He just needed a ‘little push’ – a sign to show that &lt;br /&gt;Najib would be absolutely loyal to Abdullah. Khairy even told Najib that he himself had &lt;br /&gt;dissuaded Abdullah from considering Muhyiddin because the latter was seen as being too &lt;br /&gt;close to Anwar. On the other hand, Najib was a ‘loyal party leader’ who gave his best to &lt;br /&gt;anyone who holds the office of UMNO President. Khairy told Najib that he had reassured &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah of Najib’s loyalty and competence. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At that point, when Najib was most apprehensive about his political future, Khairy took &lt;br /&gt;advantage of Najib’s weakness by putting several of his people in Najib’s office. Khairy &lt;br /&gt;knew that many of Najib’s officers were 110% loyal to Najib and served him selflessly. &lt;br /&gt;Amongst them was Najib’s key point-man and trusted advisor, Datuk Alies Anor. But &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was very wary of Alies Anor. Alies was close to ABIM (his wife is a famous ABIM &lt;br /&gt;activist) and therefore close to Anwar Ibrahim. Indeed, many of Najib’s junior officers were &lt;br /&gt;drawn from the pro-Anwar camp as Najib had served Anwar as his Vice Youth Chief in the &lt;br /&gt;1990s. As Anwar’s star rose, Najib wanted to please him so he sheltered several Anwar &lt;br /&gt;supporters in his office. &lt;br /&gt; - 20 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Other than Alies Anor, Najib had other advisors who were more cosmopolitan and &lt;br /&gt;therefore opposed to Alies’ worldview. Chief amongst them was Abdul Razak Baginda and &lt;br /&gt;a shadowy business figure called Rohana who controls Najib’s and his family’s estates &lt;br /&gt;overseas -- such as their flats in London and houses in Australia’s Melbourne and Gold &lt;br /&gt;Coast. Khairy approached these two figures and convinced them that the best person to &lt;br /&gt;advice Najib was a certain Omar Ong (see part 2 of the Khairy Chronicles). &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Omar Ong became Khairy’s point-man in Najib’s office. He installed himself in an office a &lt;br /&gt;few doors away from Najib’s own and was given a chauffeur-driven car as well as ranking &lt;br /&gt;in the civil service just one step below the Deputy Secretary-General of the ministry. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But even that was insufficient. Khairy was worried that Najib might stray from the narrow &lt;br /&gt;road set before him by Omar Ong. After all, Omar Ong was hardly the most charismatic of &lt;br /&gt;individuals and as a Chinese convert to Islam he could be deemed an ‘outsider’ by Najib &lt;br /&gt;supporters. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy then used another close friend called Dr Liew, his partner in his proxy company, &lt;br /&gt;Ethos Sdn Bhd, set up to dabble in government contracts. Khairy introduced Ethos to Najib &lt;br /&gt;and quickly hired personnel on large monthly retainers to advice Najib on several key &lt;br /&gt;Ministry of Defence jobs. Through their joint participation, Najib’s advisors and civil &lt;br /&gt;servants found their roles reduced and instead Liew and his officers began to take charge &lt;br /&gt;of sensitive decisions made in the Ministry of Defence. Closed tender contracts began to be &lt;br /&gt;awarded to companies associated to Omar Ong and Dr Liew. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s old advisors, in particular Alies Anor, found this situation extremely stifling. They &lt;br /&gt;realised they no longer had the undivided attention of Najib. Instead, Najib began to listen &lt;br /&gt;more to Khairy’s people who would also furnish Khairy reports on Najib’s daily &lt;br /&gt;movements. Further to that, they used their position to block several key Najib allies from &lt;br /&gt;seeing the Minister -- to such an extent that these people began to angrily distant &lt;br /&gt;themselves from Najib. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;They disrupted daily briefings made by Alies Anor and the old officers, causing severe rifts &lt;br /&gt;in Najib’s office. But Najib himself felt that this was a price worth paying. He knew Alies &lt;br /&gt;was absolute loyal to him, even if he was removed from office. Najib wanted the post of &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister and he was willing to pay any price, even kowtowing to Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;boys if necessary. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Eventually, Abdullah could not hold back the decision any longer and Najib found himself &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister as Dr Mahathir had planned. Khairy tried to take full credit with &lt;br /&gt;Najib, even arranging huge media coverage through Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan &lt;br /&gt;(Group Chief Editor of NST and a Khairy stooge). However, once safely in office, Najib &lt;br /&gt;began to wise up. He no longer felt he needed to pay as much attention to Khairy or his &lt;br /&gt;boys as he did before. In short, Najib began to fight back and loosen the chains that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and Omar Ong had placed around him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 21 - &lt;br /&gt;Najib began to develop parallel young talents in his office, in direct competition to Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;boys. He chose Khairil Annas Yusof, an IIUM and Oxford law graduate with an ABIM &lt;br /&gt;background (and therefore diametrically opposed to Khairy’s worldview) as an additional &lt;br /&gt;Special Officer. Najib also began to reduce Omar Ong’s role in writing his speeches and &lt;br /&gt;relied more and more on Khairil Annas. Khairil Annas also began to train Najib and help &lt;br /&gt;him improve his Malay speaking talents, including the use of rhetoric and gestures, &lt;br /&gt;something out of sync with Najib’s previous character. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Although Omar Ong is the son-in-law of Fatwa Council chairman Ismail Ibrahim, his &lt;br /&gt;talents in the religious department were severely lacking. Khairil Annas made up for these &lt;br /&gt;deficiencies and quickly became Najib’s most trusted blue-eyed boy. Khairy’s boys in Ethos &lt;br /&gt;also began to find that, since he became Deputy Prime Minister, Najib was listening less &lt;br /&gt;and less to them. Dr Liew, who was previously tasked with finding a solution to the Felda &lt;br /&gt;problem, found himself muscled out by a new appointee in charge of Felda affairs, a &lt;br /&gt;certain Ahmad Maslan, a Johor UMNO stalwart of Anwar Ibrahim and former political &lt;br /&gt;secretary to Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Mustapa Mohamad.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy instructed Dr Liew to propose that Felda dispose of its shares in several First Board &lt;br /&gt;publicly-listed companies, such as Maybank, to parties close to ECM Libra, a boutique &lt;br /&gt;investment bank owned by Kalimullah Masheerul Hassan that employed Khairy as its &lt;br /&gt;director of Corporate Advisory. Dr Liew thought he could easily push this matter through &lt;br /&gt;as it was more or less an ‘instruction’ from Khairy. Instead, Najib used Ahmad Maslan to &lt;br /&gt;block the deal while ordering a reassessment of the proposal based on its merits. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s most formidable opponent in the old Najib camp, Alies Anor, although now no &lt;br /&gt;longer in Najib’s office, began to be seen more and more in Najib’s unofficial inner circle. &lt;br /&gt;Instead of meeting at his office in Putrajaya, they often gathered together either in Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;private home in Taman Duta or at the Tun Rahah Foundation office in Pekan during &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s weekly constituency visits there. Decisions were now being made away from the &lt;br /&gt;official Deputy Prime Minister’s office and Khairy began to get less and less detailed &lt;br /&gt;reports of Najib’s movements. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib also cultivated an alternative to Khairy’s loyalists within UMNO Youth in Pahang. &lt;br /&gt;Najib created a group called the Pekan Youth Society that began to be seen as the rival to &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth there. Najib paid these people permanent salaries and the Pekan Youth &lt;br /&gt;Society began to realise that they were more influential in getting Najib’s attention than the &lt;br /&gt;official UMNO Youth channel. UMNO Youth in Pekan soon became aware they were no &lt;br /&gt;longer trusted by Najib as they were seen as an extension of Khairy’s political &lt;br /&gt;arrangements. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;With all these goings-on, Khairy found that his meticulous plan to control Najib was &lt;br /&gt;beginning to unravel. The final straw was when Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah received the &lt;br /&gt;nomination from the Gua Musang UMNO division for the post of UMNO President. But &lt;br /&gt;the same division also nominated Najib for UMNO Deputy. In other words, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;received one less nomination than his own deputy. Gua Musang was giving a signal that &lt;br /&gt;they liked Najib, but hated Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; - 22 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In several private meetings, Tengku Razaleigh said he wanted to contest the presidency to &lt;br /&gt;ensure that Najib eventually succeeds Abdullah Badawi as UMNO President and to ensure &lt;br /&gt;that Abdullah Badawi or his people would not play Najib for a fool. Tengku Razaleigh &lt;br /&gt;went so far as to have meetings with several key Mahathir allies such as Daim Zainuddin &lt;br /&gt;and Sanusi Junid to make known his reasons for challenging Abdullah. One week before &lt;br /&gt;Tengku Razaleigh announced his ‘stalking horse’ challenge for the presidency, both Daim &lt;br /&gt;and Sanusi were seen lunching with him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy now realised that Najib is a dangerous foe who could not be easily pushed around. &lt;br /&gt;It was natural that Najib believed Khairy to be an upstart who did not deserve his position &lt;br /&gt;and who lacked the political experience. Though both Khairy and Najib rose in politics at a &lt;br /&gt;young age, Najib had previously served in various apprenticeships in UMNO and &lt;br /&gt;government including as a Deputy Minister in the federal government and Menteri Besar &lt;br /&gt;of Pahang. Khairy, on the other hand, chose another route to power -– one deemed ‘more &lt;br /&gt;suspect’ by Najib’s supporters. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy is currently laying down plans on how to embarrass Najib and ensure that Najib &lt;br /&gt;falls, or at the very least to convince Najib that his long-term political survival depends on &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s grace and favour. In Khairy’s mind, there are three weapons he could use. One &lt;br /&gt;would be the ultimate weapon of using Abdullah to ‘chop Najib’s head off’. But that would &lt;br /&gt;be a far too risky move. While Najib is no Anwar Ibrahim who would fight kicking and &lt;br /&gt;screaming against the dying of the light, he would probably mount a challenge if Dr &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir announces his tacit support for a ‘change in leadership’. As such, removing Najib &lt;br /&gt;like how Dr Mahathir removed Anwar is out of the question. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The second way would be to use his extensive tentacles in the media. And here’s how he &lt;br /&gt;plans to do it... &lt;br /&gt; - 23 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 6: Khairy’s media playgrounds &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;History has laid testimony to that fact that there are as many ways to exterminate an &lt;br /&gt;UMNO politician as there are to skin a cat. Even powerful warlords can be easily sent into &lt;br /&gt;retirement; given the right combination of manufactured scandals and by using the correct &lt;br /&gt;medium to ‘spread the message’. Political assassinations can be easily achieved by use of &lt;br /&gt;the media. All one needs to do is to buy off a few hacks, journalists and political &lt;br /&gt;commentators. Nowadays, one need not even buy a proper journalist; an internet reporter &lt;br /&gt;will do. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The first prime minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, was destroyed by the medium of poison- &lt;br /&gt;pen letters that accused him of bias against the Malays, giving in to the Chinese, &lt;br /&gt;womanising, hard drinking and gambling. The second prime minister, Tun Razak, was &lt;br /&gt;‘saved’ by a premature death; or else he too would have been embarrassed by the same &lt;br /&gt;tactics engineered by then UMNO Youth Chief, Harun Idris, who accused the former of &lt;br /&gt;allowing Communist sympathisers to infiltrate his office. And, of course, everyone knows &lt;br /&gt;how Anwar Ibrahim was brought down. A combination of ‘revelations’ and ‘exposes’ &lt;br /&gt;through the official media as well as the infamous ‘50 Dalil’ by Khalid Jafri – only recently &lt;br /&gt;convicted of libel and slander – portrayed Anwar as a corrupt sodomist masquerading &lt;br /&gt;behind a mask of Muslim piety. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But these are ‘old’ tactics and Khairy Jamaluddin knows better than to rely merely on these &lt;br /&gt;outdated methods. Times have changed. If anything, the Reformasi movement has proven &lt;br /&gt;the effectiveness of the cyber-media as well as the foreign press in disseminating &lt;br /&gt;information to the increasingly sceptical Malaysian masses who no longer have faith in the &lt;br /&gt;mainstream media.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is no wonder, therefore, that the first attack initiated by Khairy against Deputy Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister Najib Tun Razak was made through the internet and through the use of the &lt;br /&gt;foreign media. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To be sure, Najib has never been perceived as a ‘clean’ politician. He has been implicated in &lt;br /&gt;all sorts of scandals ranging from the award of forest land to close relatives during his &lt;br /&gt;tenure as Pahang Menteri Besar in the early 1980s to being caught in flagrante delicto with a &lt;br /&gt;well-known artist in a motel bed in Port Dickson. Yet, none of these scandals stuck – partly &lt;br /&gt;because the public now accepts that UMNO politicians will be, to a greater or lesser extent, &lt;br /&gt;corrupt and indiscreet. And almost everyone acknowledges, to a ‘T’, that women are &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s particular weakness – and that he is not alone among UMNO leaders in having this &lt;br /&gt;fault. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, like in Anwar Ibrahim’s case, Najib’s ‘scandals’ had to be exaggerated, or even invented &lt;br /&gt;from scratch. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There have been at least two occasions when Khairy boasted that this would not be a &lt;br /&gt;difficult job to do. First was a few months ago, during a dinner attended by several &lt;br /&gt;business associates of UMNO Supreme Council member Datuk Norza Zakaria, when &lt;br /&gt; - 24 - &lt;br /&gt;Khairy declared to a certain 35 year old businessman that creating a scandal to topple Najib &lt;br /&gt;would be “like eating peanuts”. The said businessman, who wanted to curry favours with &lt;br /&gt;and impress his friends with ‘inside knowledge’ that Najib would in time be kicked off his &lt;br /&gt;perch, promptly repeated this information to them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The second occasion was in June 2004. Khairy was then in the running for the position of &lt;br /&gt;Chief Operating Officer of Khazanah Nasional and was confident he would be thus &lt;br /&gt;appointed by incoming Managing Director, Azman Mokhtar. Khairy had gathered a few &lt;br /&gt;friends from his old university days and was proclaiming his plans to “reform Khazanah”. &lt;br /&gt;A friend then asked what Najib felt about his new (and very powerful) anticipated &lt;br /&gt;appointment. Khairy retorted that if Najib did not like it, he would “put Najib in jail”. To &lt;br /&gt;the incredulous gathering, Khairy further explained that Najib would fall “like a deck a &lt;br /&gt;cards” if he ever chose to boot out the deputy prime minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Such arrogant and egotistical boasts are not without foundation. While they could easily be &lt;br /&gt;dismissed as the bravado of an overconfident Young Turk, Najib is a much easier opponent &lt;br /&gt;than many previous occupants of the post he currently holds. For one thing, Najib was not &lt;br /&gt;elected to the post in a free and open election but by voters cowed into nominating him; the &lt;br /&gt;sole candidate nominated for the post of UMNO Deputy President. Najib has never, &lt;br /&gt;throughout his political career, contested any post in which there was a real danger of &lt;br /&gt;anyone defeating him; nor has he ever been defeated in any contest he has entered. An &lt;br /&gt;indecisive man with a distinctly chicken-hearted political view, Najib will never risk a real &lt;br /&gt;contest nor face a real opponent. He has always secured high office by the whims of a &lt;br /&gt;higher power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Given the right conditions, to defeat such a person is not difficult. Khairy knows this full &lt;br /&gt;well and it is with this in mind that he welcomed Najib’s appointment as DPM. In spite of &lt;br /&gt;the UMNO members’ outward show of support for Najib, he is not a tried and tested &lt;br /&gt;leader. So, he is only the equal, if not the lesser, of Khairy himself. But, unlike Khairy, &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s deepest scandals are well-known to a public that for thirty years have become used &lt;br /&gt;to seeing his face. Najib’s blood runs thick with scandals and corruption, whereas, even if &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was equally corrupt, the public at large knows very little about it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Another reason for Khairy’s tremendous confidence in his strength as opposed to Najib is &lt;br /&gt;because of a ‘test’ he carried out soon after the conclusion of the Eleventh General Election &lt;br /&gt;where Najib ended up a victim of a scandal of Khairy’s own making. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In this episode, a certain independent news portal was used to help Khairy carry out his &lt;br /&gt;crafty scheme. A story about Barisan Nasional owing several small-time Malay printers &lt;br /&gt;and poster suppliers millions of Ringgit was leaked to this news portal. According to the &lt;br /&gt;suppliers, the purchase order to print hundreds of thousands of campaign material was &lt;br /&gt;issued by the Barisan Nasional headquarters with instructions to distribute them directly to &lt;br /&gt;the candidates. Unbeknownst to even the reporters of the scandal, the trail led to Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;people that included a certain Chinese-Muslim businessman Datuk who is closely &lt;br /&gt;associated to Najib and a known substantial donor to causes championed by Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;mother, Toh Puan Rahah, and wife, Rosmah Mansor. &lt;br /&gt; - 25 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What happened was simple yet cunning. Khairy had arranged for the BN Executive &lt;br /&gt;Secretary, Yaacob Muhammad, to ask the Chinese-Muslim businessman Datuk to issue &lt;br /&gt;several orders for election campaign material through a certain company (formed &lt;br /&gt;especially for this purpose). The company awarded the contract to small-time Malay &lt;br /&gt;printing shops. However, instead of delivering the items to the BN headquarters, they were &lt;br /&gt;delivered directly to the BN candidates using letters of instruction emanating from the &lt;br /&gt;Chinese-Muslim Datuk and using the letterhead of a certain foundation associated with &lt;br /&gt;Najib. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When the printers submitted claims for payments due to them, they were discreetly &lt;br /&gt;informed by Khairy’s people in the UMNO headquarters that these purchase orders had &lt;br /&gt;actually been issued by Najib through his Chinese-Muslim Datuk friend. It was Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;name that was besmirched and, to save his patron’s skin, the Chinese-Muslim Datuk &lt;br /&gt;businessman had to pay off much of the monies owed. He could not, of course, pay off &lt;br /&gt;everything, but at least for the moment the scandal was kept under control. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This was how Khairy sharpened his teeth. He used this ‘manufactured’ scandal as his first &lt;br /&gt;‘strength test’ against Najib. Khairy learnt a few valuable lessons from this episode – one &lt;br /&gt;which was that Najib had the (albeit limited) ability, given his wide range of businessmen &lt;br /&gt;friends, to nip the scandal in the bud by paying off the aggrieved parties. However, the &lt;br /&gt;problem was only a test and is a small-scale attempt to shake the Najib tree to see what falls &lt;br /&gt;out from it. And it was purposely ‘floated’ through an internet news portal rather than via &lt;br /&gt;the official or mainstream press where it might backfire and instead cause embarrassment &lt;br /&gt;to Abdullah himself. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The second test was to try and embarrass Najib through the foreign media. This &lt;br /&gt;opportunity cropped up when Malaysia and Indonesia fell into a tiff over the disputed oil &lt;br /&gt;fields between the coast of Sabah and Sulawesi. As Defence Minister, Najib was called &lt;br /&gt;upon to explain Malaysia’s stance. An Indonesia newsmagazine promptly published a &lt;br /&gt;report that Najib had ‘apologised’ for the behaviour of the Royal Malaysian Navy ships &lt;br /&gt;patrolling the disputed area. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib, of course, was embarrassed and quickly denied that he had ever done such a thing. &lt;br /&gt;But the Indonesian newspaper tarried awhile before printing a retraction. And the reason: &lt;br /&gt;the source of the story was a certain Nahdatul Ulama Youth leader closely associated with &lt;br /&gt;Khairy - who informed the reporter that it was Khairy who told him about the ‘apology’. It &lt;br /&gt;is not clear whether that NU leader was just a ‘patsy’ in this whole thing. But why should &lt;br /&gt;he doubt Khairy? Wasn’t Khairy the Malaysian prime minister’s trusted aide and son-in- &lt;br /&gt;law who had been sent, even when he was without a government or political party &lt;br /&gt;position, as a personal envoy to meet Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono? &lt;br /&gt;Whatever the intention of the newspaper, Najib could hardly fault them when the source &lt;br /&gt;was Khairy himself – nor could Najib take legal action against the publisher for fear of &lt;br /&gt;exposing Khairy and thereby angering Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s ‘mini tests’ were designed to just test the waters without pushing too far. He &lt;br /&gt; - 26 - &lt;br /&gt;understands that the effort to remove Najib must be done slowly, building up to a &lt;br /&gt;crescendo over a period of time. And the traps are being laid all over through Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;connections with the media. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Abdullah Badawi was named future Prime Minister, one of the first things he asked &lt;br /&gt;for from Dr Mahathir was control over the media. Abdullah had understood from the time &lt;br /&gt;Anwar Ibrahim was in power that the media in the hands of an heir-apparent would be the &lt;br /&gt;most effective insurance against removal from office. After all, Anwar had put in his own &lt;br /&gt;people in charge of the news section of various newspapers and TV stations in order to &lt;br /&gt;promote his future accession to the office of PM. It was the removal of these Anwar &lt;br /&gt;stalwarts which paved the way for his September 1998 sacking. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah had to ensure that the same ‘tragedy’ would not befall him and Mahathir also &lt;br /&gt;knew that surrendering media control to Abdullah was the only way he could convince the &lt;br /&gt;latter he was serious about choosing Abdullah as his latest anointed successor. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;reluctantly relented and, swiftly, Abdullah looked to Khairy for names to fill into the &lt;br /&gt;powerful media positions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s most prominent appointment was that of Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, a &lt;br /&gt;former Singaporean journalist closely associated with certain Chinese businessmen with &lt;br /&gt;whom he had built a successful business based on the Chinese doing the thinking and &lt;br /&gt;Kalimullah himself pulling the cables. ‘Kali’, as he calls himself, has visions of grandeur. &lt;br /&gt;Although a bad writer and an even worse editor, Kali knew that he could buy talent. It is &lt;br /&gt;an open secret that NST editorials published as Kali’s piece were ghost-written by both &lt;br /&gt;internal and outsourced hacks. Such was a man after Khairy’s own heart – who knew that &lt;br /&gt;being a figurehead was no bad thing, as one could always pick and choose one’s lackeys to &lt;br /&gt;finish the job. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, Kalimullah had a stain on his character. He is known to be exceptionally close to &lt;br /&gt;the Singapore government, in particular to Home Minister Wong Kan Seng, who is in &lt;br /&gt;charge of intelligence operations. Another close associate of Kalimullah had once blabbed &lt;br /&gt;to Dr Mahathir’s then political secretary, Matthias Chang, that the man was a ‘Singapore &lt;br /&gt;spy’, either deliberately or by inadvertently giving information to the Republic through his &lt;br /&gt;‘big mouth’. A few months before conceding power, Dr Mahathir commissioned the then &lt;br /&gt;Director of Military Intelligence to compile a report on Kali. The report, copied to Najib, &lt;br /&gt;concluded that Kali was not a proven spy - nor did the report absolve him completely &lt;br /&gt;either. The report concluded that enough doubts existed to question his appointment to the &lt;br /&gt;NST Group Chief Editorship. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the appointment was pushed through nevertheless - simply because the only other &lt;br /&gt;candidate for the position, close Abdullah associate Anuar Zaini, was already slated for &lt;br /&gt;Bernama, as a replacement to Mahathir ally, Kadir Jasin. Kalimullah, ensconced in office, &lt;br /&gt;quickly created a cabal of Singapore-trained hacks that would do Abdullah’s (and Khairy’s) &lt;br /&gt;biddings.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One such scion is Brendan Pereira. Brendan was a former journalist of the Singapore Straits &lt;br /&gt; - 27 - &lt;br /&gt;Times and a long-time friend of Khairy; having been introduced to him by Khairy’s former &lt;br /&gt;classmates in the United World College in Singapore. Brendan wrote long odes and paeans &lt;br /&gt;to Khairy in the Singapore Straits Times, to such an extent that he was known in &lt;br /&gt;journalistic circles as ‘Khairy’s Press Secretary’. Every piece Brendan wrote would quote &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and Khairy’s key ally, Norza Zakaria, even when both were only minor Youth &lt;br /&gt;EXCO members and relatively unknown to the Malaysian public. In fact, Khairy’s name &lt;br /&gt;‘exploded’ on the Singapore scene way before he even appeared big time in any Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;newspaper. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, Brendan’s only intention was to hitch a ride on Khairy’s rising star and &lt;br /&gt;eventually transplant himself to a higher position in the New Straits Times. Together with &lt;br /&gt;Brendan and several former Singapore Straits Times hacks, Khairy is assured of the &lt;br /&gt;subservience of the New Straits Times.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yet, it is not the NST that Khairy will be using against Najib – as that would indeed be too &lt;br /&gt;obvious. It is Kali and Brendan’s contacts across the Causeway that will instead be used to &lt;br /&gt;publish the first stories about Najib’s ‘scandals’. The plan is not yet ripe though – but don’t &lt;br /&gt;forget, when the time comes, you will read it here first! &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And, of course, let’s not forget Khairy’s connections with the internet media, in particular &lt;br /&gt;the Malay language internet newspaper, AgendaDaily, currently edited by Rosli Ismail, &lt;br /&gt;which Khairy and Norza Zakaria helped fund. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Originally, AgendaDaily was set up by a certain Rozaid Abdul Rahman, the elder brother &lt;br /&gt;of Rozabil Abdul Rahman (Khairy’s mother’s business partner mentioned in Part 4 of this &lt;br /&gt;series). Rozaid was a journalist-for-hire who started out in September 1998 writing books &lt;br /&gt;about Anwar Ibrahim and the Reformasi movement, which he then coerced Reformasi &lt;br /&gt;activists into buying in bulk to sell at their functions and ceramahs. When that source of &lt;br /&gt;funds began to dry up, Rozaid looked to former UMNO Vice President Muhammad &lt;br /&gt;Muhammad Taib to help fund AgendaDaily, intended as the Malay vernacular alternative &lt;br /&gt;to Malaysiakini. Muhammad came up with the first RM200,000 for the venture, which &lt;br /&gt;dried up in a few months in the face of the failure of AgendaDaily to attract paying readers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To recoup his losses, Rozaid began to ‘sell’ pieces to UMNO politicians – basically writing &lt;br /&gt;‘favourable news’ about them for a fee. In this capacity, his brother Rozabil, already a &lt;br /&gt;business associate of Khairy’s family, introduced Rozaid to both Khairy and Norza &lt;br /&gt;Zakaria. As Muhammad refused to further fund the failed venture, Norza stepped in. A &lt;br /&gt;week after Norza transferred RM100,000 to AgendaDaily’s bank account, a prominent &lt;br /&gt;piece on Khairy appeared – extolling the praises of this new ‘bright young thing’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The relationship continued even after Rozaid ‘officially’ left AgendaDaily to take up the &lt;br /&gt;position of Press Secretary to Entrepreneurial Development Minister, Khaled Nordin. The &lt;br /&gt;new editor, Rosli Ismail, continued to present favourable reports on Khairy that almost &lt;br /&gt;always comprised of unexplained denials by Khairy of the various rumours associated &lt;br /&gt;with him.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 28 - &lt;br /&gt;No one can deny that Khairy has adopted the right approach towards influencing the &lt;br /&gt;minds of the younger generation, media-savvy, better-educated Malaysians. In using the &lt;br /&gt;foreign media and the internet as his playground for publicity, Khairy has outdistanced &lt;br /&gt;himself from the older politicians such as Hishammuddin Hussein (who once chickened &lt;br /&gt;out of a column in Malaysiakini) and even Najib himself. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the media can only assist to a certain extent. The real onslaught against Najib needs a &lt;br /&gt;special and more powerful secret weapon. And Khairy has that. And this weapon is called &lt;br /&gt;Anwar... &lt;br /&gt; - 29 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 7: The beginning of a beautiful friendship &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hundreds of people thronged the double-storey suburban bungalow in Jalan Setiamurni. &lt;br /&gt;Word of Anwar Ibrahim’s unanticipated release from jail had spread far and wide, &lt;br /&gt;shocking the nation to the very core. As well as the hundreds of foreign pundits unsure of &lt;br /&gt;what to make of this sudden development, many of Anwar’s supporters had gathered in &lt;br /&gt;triumph to rejoice the return of the man who for six years had been kept hidden from &lt;br /&gt;public view by the government of Mahathir Mohamad and, for a short while, by the &lt;br /&gt;administration of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. There was no denying that the crowd was in a &lt;br /&gt;jubilant mood, savouring their victory and yet, almost to a man, unsure of what was to &lt;br /&gt;happen next. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Suddenly, a black Mercedes appeared at the crossroads, stopping a few metres away from &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s house. Out stepped a man whom the crowd immediately recognised as an Umno &lt;br /&gt;member of minor prominence. The crowd immediately turned hostile, mocking and jeering &lt;br /&gt;the man with the vehemence reserved for a common criminal. Some spitted on the ground. &lt;br /&gt;Others threw empty mineral water bottles, one hitting the man on the shoulder. A few &lt;br /&gt;shouted, cautioning the man not to take another step forward for the sake of his own &lt;br /&gt;safety. He was told in no uncertain terms that he was not welcome at the house. When the &lt;br /&gt;man protested that he merely wanted to bestow good wishes to Anwar Ibrahim, the &lt;br /&gt;heckling became so loud it alarmed the people inside the house. One, who was beginning &lt;br /&gt;to go berserk, even rolled up his sleeves, intending to bash the man in his face if he took &lt;br /&gt;one step further. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;While all of this brouhaha was going on and that Umno man, Ruslan Kassim, was suffering &lt;br /&gt;verbal abuse at the hands of the Reformasi supporters, another car quietly pulled up almost &lt;br /&gt;unnoticed at the end of the road and the occupant stepped out into the welcoming arms of &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s former political secretary, Ezam Mohd Nor. Khairy Jamaluddin was swiftly &lt;br /&gt;sneaked in through the back of Anwar Ibrahim’s house via the kitchen door, straight up to &lt;br /&gt;the second floor bedroom to meet the man so recently reviled by Umno and its leaders as a &lt;br /&gt;traitor. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the bedroom, the two men who would be Prime Ministers eyeballed each other at first &lt;br /&gt;warily, then warmly. Anwar extended his hand which was taken by Khairy and they &lt;br /&gt;swiftly got down to business. It was later publicly announced to the nation that Khairy was &lt;br /&gt;there only to extend the warm wishes of his father-in-law, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, and &lt;br /&gt;also to personally assure Anwar that all efforts to provide him an international passport for &lt;br /&gt;his medical trip to Munich would be done with utmost haste. Anwar remarked later that he &lt;br /&gt;had jibed Khairy about his sudden climb in Umno Youth and warned the younger man &lt;br /&gt;that it was a difficult task indeed which might end up in Khairy having to shed much tears. &lt;br /&gt;Both Anwar and Khairy later stated publicly that ‘nothing happened’ between the two of &lt;br /&gt;them and that no ‘serious discussion’ took place.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the nation found that explanation strangely irreconcilable. One or both of the men must &lt;br /&gt;have been lying. After all, Anwar was until very recently persona non grata in Umno circles. &lt;br /&gt;Even his name could be mentioned only in tones of disgust. Whereas Khairy was the young &lt;br /&gt; - 30 - &lt;br /&gt;up-and-coming leader anointed by his father-in-law as his closest advisor and most trusted &lt;br /&gt;confidante. Surely there must have been more to it than meets the eye. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Indeed there was. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Both Anwar and Khairy would eventually deny that there was any deal struck between &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi and Anwar Ibrahim for the former to withhold any process should the &lt;br /&gt;judiciary decide to finally do the right thing and release the latter from his six-year &lt;br /&gt;incarceration. The deal was actually hammered out many months before the last General &lt;br /&gt;Election and definitely after Abdullah had officially assumed office as the nation’s fifth &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister. Yet, few, including the upper echelons of both ruling and opposition &lt;br /&gt;parties, understood that the end game was being played out in its final moves. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The meeting that took place in Jalan Setiamurni was the sealing of a pact. Abdullah was of &lt;br /&gt;the opinion that the Anwar issue was left over baggage from the Mahathir days which he &lt;br /&gt;definitely had to unravel. Anwar was reaching the most critical period of his incarceration &lt;br /&gt;where he could no longer endure the excruciating pain afflicting his back and which was &lt;br /&gt;turning him into a semi-invalid. Khairy was the instrument that made it clear to Anwar &lt;br /&gt;that Abdullah gave his implicit approval to the deal, without himself appearing in public to &lt;br /&gt;endorse it and thereby provoking the ire of his predecessor, Dr Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Once safely in Munich, Anwar told several close allies that included former Berita Harian &lt;br /&gt;Editor Nazri Abdullah, former MRCB Managing Director Khalid Ahmad and former &lt;br /&gt;Guthrie CEO Khalid Ibrahim that Khairy had come to his house to deliver a letter from &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah. Khairy himself later told Norza Zakaria, a fellow member of the Umno Youth &lt;br /&gt;Council, that such a letter had been delivered into Anwar’s hands. More importantly, the &lt;br /&gt;letter was said by both parties to contain explicit instructions as to how the next few &lt;br /&gt;months would be played out. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Immediately after the meeting with Anwar, Khairy became the target of several ministers &lt;br /&gt;closely allied to former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Spearheaded by Samy Vellu, &lt;br /&gt;ministers such as Rafidah Aziz, Azmi Khalid and Aziz Shamsuddin openly questioned &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah about his motives in sending Khairy to see Anwar. When Abdullah explained &lt;br /&gt;that it was merely to facilitate his immigration needs, Samy Vellu laughed it off and told &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah in no uncertain terms, “Next time I need a passport you can send your son-in-law &lt;br /&gt;to see me.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Rafidah Aziz accused Khairy of embarrassing the Prime Minister, using the old Malay &lt;br /&gt;tactic of hitting the target indirectly. Aziz Shamsuddin, accused by Anwar Ibrahim as a &lt;br /&gt;conspirator responsible for his sudden downfall, angrily remarked that Anwar could have &lt;br /&gt;been met by a junior official of the immigration department instead of the son-in-law of the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister himself. Azmi Khalid felt that, if at all, Anwar should have gone to meet &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and not the other way around. Almost to a man the cabinet felt that Khairy was &lt;br /&gt;reckless and his move idiotic. Secretly, they all knew that Abdullah had agreed to it, but &lt;br /&gt;since Abdullah himself did not acknowledge that the move was under his specific &lt;br /&gt;instructions, the ministers took the line of attacking Khairy as a stupid young man, wet &lt;br /&gt; - 31 - &lt;br /&gt;behind the ears and untutored in the art of fine politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The disbelief of the ministers was compounded by the seething silence of Najib who knew &lt;br /&gt;that an Anwar unleashed is an Anwar unbound, and an Anwar unbound is a Najib &lt;br /&gt;insecure. His hold on power and his chances of becoming the future Prime Minister not &lt;br /&gt;only depended on the longevity of Abdullah Badawi’s rule, but was now further &lt;br /&gt;complicated by the presence of Anwar who was adding a new dimension to the established &lt;br /&gt;political scheme set by Mahathir in his legacy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Ministers allied to Mahathir were bitterly unhappy about Khairy’s visit. They felt &lt;br /&gt;something was afoot. They openly consulted Mahathir and reported to him the goings-on &lt;br /&gt;in the few cabinet meetings held after the release. Mahathir’s office in the Petronas Twin &lt;br /&gt;Towers suddenly became the site of a ‘shadow’ cabinet meeting, an extension of the regular &lt;br /&gt;cabinet meeting in Putrajaya. Ministers began to congregate at Mahathir’s office on &lt;br /&gt;Thursdays to voice out their displeasure at the threats posed by Anwar’s release and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s backroom deals with the once heir-apparent. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One visit was particularly damaging to Khairy. A certain Malay minister (whose name is &lt;br /&gt;not mentioned above) was so incensed by Khairy’s visit to Anwar that he initiated a list of &lt;br /&gt;all Umno Youth leaders in the various divisions, segmented into two columns labelled &lt;br /&gt;‘pro-Khairy’ and ‘anti-Khairy’. He showed the list to Dr Mahathir and encouraged the &lt;br /&gt;former Prime Minister to allow one of his sons to be put forward as a challenger to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt;The minister remarked that this was the time to do it as Khairy had yet to gather strength &lt;br /&gt;in the divisions and was still seen by most ordinary members as an elite outsider. The &lt;br /&gt;minister further reinforced the suggestion by saying that a challenge to Khairy would &lt;br /&gt;either result in a victory that removes him from the future leadership of Umno or a loss, &lt;br /&gt;but one that will finally shatter the myth of Khairy’s invincibility. Dr Mahathir demurred, &lt;br /&gt;no commitment was made, but plans are being laid for Khairy to be the target of a &lt;br /&gt;concerted attack. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was then that Mahathir began to realise that the young man he so dismissively &lt;br /&gt;discounted had now become the key instrument of a threat against his legacy. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;remarked to his secretary, Datuk Badriah, that Abdullah was digging his own grave by &lt;br /&gt;letting Anwar go. Mahathir remarked that he himself found Anwar difficult to handle and &lt;br /&gt;he had no confidence that Abdullah could do any better. In Mahathir’s eyes, Abdullah was &lt;br /&gt;an inept fool who miscalculated by releasing Anwar. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Mahathir did not know was that Abdullah did not really fully comprehend the &lt;br /&gt;ramifications of Anwar’s release. In fact, it was Khairy who reckoned that Anwar’s release &lt;br /&gt;would be beneficial to his own political career. Firstly, Khairy felt that Anwar would &lt;br /&gt;always be a useful tool against other Umno politicians who might threaten Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;throne; people such as Tengku Razaleigh and Najib. Secondly, Khairy felt releasing Anwar &lt;br /&gt;and meeting him openly would increase his popularity (and Abdullah’s). &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the first instance, Khairy proved to be right. In fact, Anwar became the best &lt;br /&gt;advertisement for Abdullah’s government and which helped enhance his reputation for &lt;br /&gt; - 32 - &lt;br /&gt;fair play. In the second instance, Khairy severely miscalculated the first damaging attack on &lt;br /&gt;his career. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s decision to meet Anwar was met with a severe backlash. In Khairy’s mind, Umno &lt;br /&gt;leaders would be glad to finally resolve the Anwar albatross. Instead, they felt that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and Abdullah had threatened Umno’s position by releasing its most feared critic. Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;former strong supporters such as Hishamuddin Hussein began to doubt the sincerity of &lt;br /&gt;this brash young man. For the first time, Hishamuddin tried to reach out to his bitter rival &lt;br /&gt;in family and in politics, Najib Tun Razak. The cousins became closer as a result of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;doings and they started to strengthen their collective resolve to ensure that Khairy would &lt;br /&gt;no longer take them for a ride. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, some Umno Youth leaders allied to Mahathir’s son and former Umno Youth &lt;br /&gt;Treasurer Mokhzani began to orchestrate attacks on Khairy, ranging from the release of &lt;br /&gt;poison-pen letters to SMSes accusing him of accommodating Anwar and of threatening the &lt;br /&gt;established succession of Najib. Meetings were held by core groups of Umno Youth &lt;br /&gt;members allied to the Mukhriz camp, notably in the Gopeng division, led by Aziz &lt;br /&gt;Shamsuddin. Meetings were also held under the umbrella of the Ex-MARA Students &lt;br /&gt;Association (ANSARA) led by Mukhriz.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was roundly booed by elements organised by Mokhzani and Mukhriz Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;and for a time the situation was worrying enough for Abdullah to send his wife to &lt;br /&gt;personally attend Umno Youth sessions so as to embarrass the jeerers into toning down &lt;br /&gt;their attacks. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For the first time in his political career, Khairy felt the brunt of open displeasure. Always &lt;br /&gt;sheltered by Abdullah, Khairy was not used to being at the receiving end of brickbats. He &lt;br /&gt;immediately changed tack and, while only a few weeks before he had praised Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;release as the realisation of a free and fair democracy, he now roundly criticised Anwar as a &lt;br /&gt;traitor to Umno’s cause and further stated that the doors to Umno are forever closed to &lt;br /&gt;him. He even went so far as to say that Anwar was finished, perhaps forgetting that &lt;br /&gt;however much he tried to convince the Umno delegates, few believed him as he had &lt;br /&gt;already done the unthinkable by visiting Anwar’s house and paying his respects to the &lt;br /&gt;former Deputy Prime Minister. As a party of interests, Umno was not willing to suddenly &lt;br /&gt;throw open its doors to a man who had for six whole years roundly denounced Umno as &lt;br /&gt;corrupt and incapable of self-reform. Most importantly, Hishamuddin did not believe him &lt;br /&gt;and Mukhriz did not believe him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s about-turn became the laughingstock of the Umno delegates. In the words of &lt;br /&gt;former Umno Deputy Youth Chief Nazri Aziz, “Those who sought to change Umno &lt;br /&gt;instead often find that it is Umno which changes them.” Khairy felt the wrath of an Umno &lt;br /&gt;whose anger had been roused and it dawned upon him that the party would only give him &lt;br /&gt;support if he toed the line -- and that it may even go so far as to punish him for acting &lt;br /&gt;independently and out of Umno’s character. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had become a prisoner of Umno’s whims. &lt;br /&gt; - 33 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s release could not have been achieved by the mere fiat of the judiciary. It was clear &lt;br /&gt;that the cowed Malaysian judiciary was a mere tool of the powers-that-be, and it was the &lt;br /&gt;tacit admission by Abdullah that he would not interfere in the due process of the law &lt;br /&gt;which allowed justice to finally prevail. But it is tainted justice that only presumes to act &lt;br /&gt;fairly when it is told to do so in no uncertain terms. And there is no doubt that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;played a very important role in influencing the court’s decision. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In a sense, Khairy lost some significant support from Umno circles. But it was a small price &lt;br /&gt;to pay for gaining the reputation as the person who finally managed to pull off the &lt;br /&gt;unthinkable, that is the release of Anwar Ibrahim from jail. Of course, the public at large, &lt;br /&gt;not being members of Umno, would identify Khairy as the sensible leader of that party &lt;br /&gt;who could be relied upon to ‘do the right thing’.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In Munich, Anwar’s officers kept in constant touch with Khairy. Khairy received almost &lt;br /&gt;daily updates of the goings-on at the Alpha Klinik, including the number of Umno Division &lt;br /&gt;Heads who visited Anwar in hospital. Anwar’s secretaries proudly showed visitors &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s SMSes, thereby proclaiming that Khairy’s sympathies lay with their cause. The &lt;br /&gt;clear implication of these happenings was that, firstly, there was a deal between Anwar &lt;br /&gt;and Abdullah which was heavily influenced by input by Khairy. Secondly, that Anwar was &lt;br /&gt;an equation in a political plan concocted by Khairy to secure Abdullah’s rule, plus for his &lt;br /&gt;own ascendancy to the highest office in the land. Thirdly, Anwar would not be an &lt;br /&gt;irrelevance in the great political scheme that is Malaysian politics, at least under the rule of &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The big question is, what are the steps being planned? &lt;br /&gt; - 34 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 8: Sunset, sunrise &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Several weeks ago, one of Anwar Ibrahim’s closest confidante and former Political &lt;br /&gt;Secretary, Azmin Ali, gave a rather revealing interview. In that interview he remarked &lt;br /&gt;quite casually, as if it was a matter of course, that since his release in September 2004, &lt;br /&gt;Anwar Ibrahim had spent quite a bit of time on telephone conversations with Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. Azmin was coy about the subjects of discussion &lt;br /&gt;though, referring to them as “general conversations” about current issues and government &lt;br /&gt;policies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In a sense, Azmin was hinting that Anwar was giving Abdullah advice on how to make his &lt;br /&gt;government perform better. Presumptuous though it may sound - considering the lofty &lt;br /&gt;nature of the office of the Malaysian Prime Minister – Azmin’s statement nevertheless &lt;br /&gt;reveals that while Anwar was persona non grata for six long years, he is now back in the &lt;br /&gt;thick of Malaysian politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Sceptics may be forgiven for thinking that what Azmin said was mere boast to counter the &lt;br /&gt;frustrations of many opposition supporters who feel that Anwar is currently spending too &lt;br /&gt;much time overseas. Perhaps Azmin was reflecting on the days when he played a role as &lt;br /&gt;the key ‘insider of insiders’ within the Anwar office to shape and mould the daily strategies &lt;br /&gt;for the powers-that-be. Yet, such open and casual remarks belie at least a glimmer of the &lt;br /&gt;truth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The fact is, within Anwar’s inner circle, where the walls are more porous than a sponge &lt;br /&gt;cake, such juicy titbits are rarely kept confidential. In fact, while Abdullah’s conversations &lt;br /&gt;may take place out of sight of other government leaders, on Anwar’s side, phone calls are &lt;br /&gt;often made through a mobile in front of visitors and other courtiers. Nowadays, Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;telephone conversations are often witnessed by sundry others such as visiting Islamic &lt;br /&gt;scholars, fellow opposition leaders, and certainly close aides who are never far from &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s person. No doubt, quite justifiably, Anwar’s aides take a certain pride in the fact &lt;br /&gt;that their leader is in frequent communication with the Prime Minister of the country. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Immediately upon his release, Anwar stated that he wanted to formally meet up with &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah, a request repeated from his hospital bed in Germany. However, his request for &lt;br /&gt;an appointment, submitted by Azmin, went unheeded. In the midst of immense fear by the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO leadership that Abdullah was about to re-accommodate a ‘traitor’ to the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;cause, Anwar took the initiative of meeting Abdullah in a public function during Hari Raya.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The gesture was meant to be an open signal to Abdullah that Anwar poses no danger to &lt;br /&gt;him, at least as far as threats to Abdullah’s tenure is concerned. In spite of UMNO’s fear &lt;br /&gt;that Anwar’s ghost will return to haunt those who reviled him during those six years, it &lt;br /&gt;appears that Anwar is no threat to the Prime Minister and President of UMNO himself. &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, Anwar has become a useful icon to project Abdullah’s image internationally as a &lt;br /&gt;fair leader who backed genuine reforms, while at home amongst the common people, the &lt;br /&gt;testimony of Abdullah giving tacit acknowledgement that judges should be free and &lt;br /&gt;independent to decide Anwar’s case would forever remain a mark of his integrity. In spite &lt;br /&gt; - 35 - &lt;br /&gt;of the view by UMNO leaders that Anwar should never be readmitted to the party, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah evidently holds a different personal view.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, this view may not appear obvious at this stage. Anwar’s release had provoked &lt;br /&gt;UMNO leaders into a frenzy of irrational attacks where they criticised ‘groups’ (read: &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and his inner circle) who might intend for Anwar to come back into UMNO. The &lt;br /&gt;fear by UMNO leaders such as Hishammuddin Hussein and Mahathir’s sons, Mukhriz and &lt;br /&gt;Mokhzani, was real. Few of the leadership can match Anwar’s charisma and, in a fair &lt;br /&gt;contest where Anwar is allowed to be on equal footing with other contenders, he might just &lt;br /&gt;win. Nevertheless, the brickbats against Abdullah and his son-in-law (who had &lt;br /&gt;presumptuously visited Anwar on the night of his release) was sufficient to make both &lt;br /&gt;back down from their apparent support of Anwar’s case in the early days of September &lt;br /&gt;2004. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, behind the scenes, both Abdullah and Khairy have continued to at least maintain &lt;br /&gt;some form of relationship with Anwar. Abdullah himself has said nothing about any &lt;br /&gt;telephone calls to or from Anwar. Khairy, on the other hand, has been very open to his &lt;br /&gt;inner circle about his constant communication and, indeed, about meetings with Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;stalwarts such as PKR Youth Leader Ezam Mohd Nor. Those in the know include Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;men who are obvious Anwar supporters; such as Zambry Abdul Kader as well as the usual &lt;br /&gt;suspects such as Norza Zakaria.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The reason for these different attitudes between Abdullah and Khairy is quite evident. &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is already Prime Minister and has little real and immediate needs for Anwar &lt;br /&gt;unless, for example, he is challenged by forces aligned to his predecessor, Mahathir, and &lt;br /&gt;perhaps led by his own deputy Najib Tun Razak. On the other hand, Khairy wants to be &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister but is not yet there, so he needs as many allies as possible given the great &lt;br /&gt;big battles that would most certainly come in future. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The relationship between Khairy and Anwar’s inner circle started in the early days of &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s appointment as the Deputy Prime Minister. At that time, both Anwar and &lt;br /&gt;Ezam were in jail - the former in Sungai Buloh Prison, the latter in the Kamunting &lt;br /&gt;Detention Centre followed by Kajang Prison. In an effort to pressure the government, Ezam &lt;br /&gt;had communicated with Abdullah’s son, Kamaluddin, through an intermediary within &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth, to solicit Abdullah’s help in exerting some influence in their particular &lt;br /&gt;cases. But Kamaluddin was a businessman with little interest in politics, and although &lt;br /&gt;several notes passed between Ezam and Kamaluddin, nothing happened until Kamaluddin &lt;br /&gt;one day remarked to his sister, Nori, that he had been in communication with Ezam. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Nori took some interest in the correspondence. She referred the matter to Abdullah and, &lt;br /&gt;according to Ezam, asked Abdullah to see what he can do about releasing the ISA &lt;br /&gt;detainees. Nori also informed Khairy who immediately realised that there might be some &lt;br /&gt;value in making some small concessions to Ezam, with a future view of assessing the &lt;br /&gt;situation once Abdullah finally becomes Prime Minister.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At first the trail went cold. Then, through former Keadilan Vice Youth Chief Hamdan Taha &lt;br /&gt; - 36 - &lt;br /&gt;who had left the party to rejoin UMNO, a message was passed to Khairy that the Anwar &lt;br /&gt;camp was open to negotiations.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hamdan Taha had spent many years as Ezam’s right-hand man. His re-entry into UMNO &lt;br /&gt;was never made officially, but quietly. Nevertheless, he found himself advising several key &lt;br /&gt;members of the UMNO Youth Exco, notably former Anwar supporter Zambry Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Kader. Zambry often invited Hamdan to attend some sessions of UMNO Youth meetings &lt;br /&gt;where he was introduced to the rising star Khairy Jamaluddin. After several meetings, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy realised that Hamdan was a useful source of info regarding happenings in the &lt;br /&gt;opposition parties, as Hamdan still maintained relationships with several key opposition &lt;br /&gt;leaders, including Ezam himself. Though he was now in UMNO, Hamdan often spoke to &lt;br /&gt;Ezam either by phones smuggled into the prison or through personal meetings during &lt;br /&gt;Ezam’s many court hearings. Indeed, Hamdan was Ezam’s closest friend. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;After a certain UMNO Youth Exco meeting, Hamdan took Khairy aside and told him of his &lt;br /&gt;‘solution’. According to Hamdan, Khairy could play off Anwar against anyone threatening &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s position. Hamdan remarked that Mahathir’s deputies had an unfortunate trait &lt;br /&gt;of falling by the wayside before becoming Prime Minister. While Keadilan had originally &lt;br /&gt;attacked Abdullah’s appointment as Deputy Prime Minister, they could be easily &lt;br /&gt;persuaded to change tack and instead focus their vitriol only on Mahathir, but not &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah. In return, the cases of Anwar and the ISA detainees should be viewed &lt;br /&gt;favourably by Abdullah (then Home Minister) even if he could not openly interfere. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The idea intrigued Khairy enough to cause him to begin sending Ezam feelers through &lt;br /&gt;Hamdan.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These feelers did not result in any immediate relief for either Anwar or Ezam. Khairy was &lt;br /&gt;being very cautious, as he was being intensely watched by both the Mahathir camp and his &lt;br /&gt;enemies within Abdullah’s office. Some of Abdullah’s supporters such as the late Fawzi &lt;br /&gt;Basri and Dr. Nordin Kardi were intense enemies of Anwar since the 1970s when they took &lt;br /&gt;up the ultra-nationalist position against Anwar’s liberal Islamic view. Indeed, Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;inner circle included such personalities as Aziz Shamsuddin who had openly celebrated &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s sacking in September 1998 with a kenduri. If Khairy was to play the role of &lt;br /&gt;communicating with the Anwar camp, he had to do it in a way so as not to rock the boat &lt;br /&gt;that was very fragile indeed. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At this point, Ezam stepped up his moves. He instructed Keadilan supporters to attack &lt;br /&gt;Khairy through the Internet. He also made sure that Khairy was criticised, especially in &lt;br /&gt;student gatherings which at that time were heavily infiltrated by both PAS and Keadilan &lt;br /&gt;supporters. The message eventually got to Khairy that he should accommodate Ezam or &lt;br /&gt;face enemies not only within UMNO but amongst the opposition as well. While a battle on &lt;br /&gt;two fronts is not unusual, it would make Khairy’s life simpler by only facing the enemy &lt;br /&gt;within who can be easily controlled by the power of the name of his father-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy sent Ezam a message that he was open to negotiations. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 37 - &lt;br /&gt;From then on, things went smoothly. Khairy began to acquire knowledge of what Ezam &lt;br /&gt;wanted, namely that Anwar should be released by whatever means, even if it did not fully &lt;br /&gt;clear his name. The most important thing was that Anwar should no longer be in jail - even &lt;br /&gt;exile was preferable. All sorts of permutations were discussed. These included the idea of &lt;br /&gt;sending Anwar overseas for medical treatment and remaining there for at least some time. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy even sent a note during a meeting in the United States to Ezam confidante Adlan &lt;br /&gt;Benan, a fellow Oxbridge graduate, on whether it was possible for Anwar to consider &lt;br /&gt;rejoining UMNO. The message was duly passed through the lines to Ezam and the answer &lt;br /&gt;given back to Khairy. Ezam’s contacts in Selangor UMNO communicated with his &lt;br /&gt;strongman, SD Johari, that Khairy was very positive about cooperating with Ezam. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At all times, Anwar was kept informed of the negotiations. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The situation became clearer once Ezam was released by the Shah Alam High Court. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy now held open meetings with Ezam who came accompanied by one or two of his &lt;br /&gt;supporters. At this point of time, the Keadilan leadership was frantic because Anwar was &lt;br /&gt;getting seriously ill and all efforts were geared towards his release. Khairy was one of &lt;br /&gt;many UMNO leaders believed close to Abdullah who was approached by Anwar’s inner &lt;br /&gt;circle. Other UMNO leaders such as Aziz Shamsuddin and Mahathir’s political secretary &lt;br /&gt;(but really an Abdullah man) Johari Baharom were also approached. Yet none were as &lt;br /&gt;receptive as Khairy. The others felt that Anwar was historical baggage. Khairy had a &lt;br /&gt;different view. Anwar had a place in his future universe, where Khairy was the brightest &lt;br /&gt;sun. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was at this time that Khairy began to think of future threats to Abdullah’s rule. When it &lt;br /&gt;was clear that Abdullah was indeed going to succeed Mahathir and that his appointment as &lt;br /&gt;successor was not a mere ruse, Khairy began to think of how to secure his long-term &lt;br /&gt;political future. It had been an easy rise as son-in-law of the leader of the country, but what &lt;br /&gt;if your father-in-law was no longer the leader? What if Abdullah’s tenure was shortened? &lt;br /&gt;Relying on Najib Tun Razak would be useless as he saw Abdullah as a rival and would &lt;br /&gt;never entertain putting Khairy in a prominent position within his own government. Setting &lt;br /&gt;up a rival to Najib within UMNO was also impossible given Najib’s seniority and apparent &lt;br /&gt;support from forces aligned to the Mahathir camp. The only alternative was to put a &lt;br /&gt;constant threat to Najib in the form of a man more likely to beat him in an open and fair &lt;br /&gt;contest. Such a man was Anwar Ibrahim, and Khairy understood that for at least the first &lt;br /&gt;term, if not throughout Abdullah’s tenure, Anwar could play this role. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was a role that Anwar and his inner circle were willing to play. After Anwar’s release, &lt;br /&gt;Ezam continued to meet up with Khairy. While Khairy was secretive about the subject of &lt;br /&gt;discussion, it was a one-sided secret. Ezam told many of his followers about his meetings. &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, he often remarked that Khairy gave him information regarding the goings-on in &lt;br /&gt;UMNO far before such information became public. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Recently, Ezam had a meeting with both Khairy and Reezal Merican Naina Merican - &lt;br /&gt;where Khairy apparently told Ezam that UMNO Vice-President Isa Samad would be &lt;br /&gt;handed down a six-year suspension for money politics and other corruption offences. &lt;br /&gt; - 38 - &lt;br /&gt;Ezam told the same to some of his closest friends, including allies of Isa himself. The &lt;br /&gt;information itself was not unusual but for the fact that the meeting allegedly happened six &lt;br /&gt;days before Isa was called up to face the judgement of the UMNO Disciplinary Committee. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The trust shared between the two is more likely the trust of political allies rather than &lt;br /&gt;friends. While both share the traits of rising young to the inner circles of power in &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia, both are also very ambitious men, skilled in the art of political deception. It &lt;br /&gt;remains to be seen whether the friendship between Khairy and Ezam is a genuine one, or &lt;br /&gt;merely a marriage of convenience. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the meantime, Anwar Ibrahim continues to make his long-distance calls to Abdullah. As &lt;br /&gt;Anwar himself has said, he should not be written off. No one has done that, definitely not &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and Khairy. Should the scenario change and the attacks by Mahathir upon &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s administration grow stronger, there will be no doubt that the setting sun may &lt;br /&gt;rise again to illuminate Abdullah’s rule. Together with Anwar, Khairy believes he can &lt;br /&gt;defeat any UMNO leader who tries to challenge him, including the people who are backed &lt;br /&gt;by Mahathir himself. While waiting for the time to come, Khairy prepares another &lt;br /&gt;important weapon always necessary for any big battle within UMNO – the weapon called &lt;br /&gt;money… &lt;br /&gt; - 39 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 9: Birth of a salesman &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is a sad but true fact that in Malaysia money is the lifeblood of politics. Corruption is &lt;br /&gt;endemic within political parties and money is the grease that smoothens one’s climb up the &lt;br /&gt;slippery pole of power. It is useful not only to reward the voters and supporters but also to &lt;br /&gt;make other people fear challenging your position. The more money you have, the more &lt;br /&gt;able you are to defend your position simply for the fact that other people who look at your &lt;br /&gt;immense wealth get cold feet from being a potential challenger. A person who is not &lt;br /&gt;capable yet but backed by hundreds of millions would triumph over a much more capable &lt;br /&gt;person who has nothing to show in terms of wealth except his own intelligence, track &lt;br /&gt;record and hard work. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin fully realises this. The history of UMNO Youth is laden with such &lt;br /&gt;examples and it is clear that, at least since the 1990s, UMNO Youth has chosen money &lt;br /&gt;instead of ability. This is a reflection of the main party, but UMNO Youth’s preoccupation &lt;br /&gt;with wealth was emphasised by the rule of Zahid Hamidi who used the immense millions &lt;br /&gt;he gathered as Bank Simpanan Nasional chairman to steamroll his way into politics while a &lt;br /&gt;still relatively unknown in terms of political quality. All other challengers such as Rahim &lt;br /&gt;Thamby Chik and Isa Samad then realised that a person like Zahid could only be matched &lt;br /&gt;with an equal if not better power at patronage. Money politics was born in the heady days &lt;br /&gt;of the 1990s when UMNO lost its conscience and went headlong to worship at the feet of &lt;br /&gt;Mammon. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaludin did not start out immensely rich, although his family was well off due to &lt;br /&gt;the position of his father as a prominent member of the diplomatic community. The family &lt;br /&gt;could not equal other notable scions of UMNO Youth such as Hishamuddin Hussein - &lt;br /&gt;Najib Tun Razak clan who are descended from the first Malay billionaire, Tan Sri Noah, or &lt;br /&gt;the Sheikh Fadzir family, comprising of Kadir, Aziz, Musa and Haidar whose palatial &lt;br /&gt;Kulim mansion dwarfed even the National Palace in Kuala Lumpur. So Khairy realised he &lt;br /&gt;had to build up his wealth fairly quickly especially since, by Malaysian standards, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi was a rather poor fellow. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy laid the ground for his political treasury by setting a base from which his &lt;br /&gt;supporters could spread their tentacles. Unlike other UMNO politicians who relied almost &lt;br /&gt;entirely on government contracts to enrich themselves, this was but a small part of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;own tactics. That is not to say that Khairy doesn’t engage himself in getting government &lt;br /&gt;contracts for some of his political cronies. Rozabil Abdul Rahman is one of the major &lt;br /&gt;recipients of government largesse and in many countries through which he has gained &lt;br /&gt;government contracts, indirect shareholdings are gained by members of Khairy’s family. &lt;br /&gt;Contracts which have been awarded to Rozabil (and therefore Khairy) include such diverse &lt;br /&gt;projects as the provision of clean drinking water to the hundreds of schools in East &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia to the provision of pipes in government offices in Kedah. As time grew by, &lt;br /&gt;UMNO politicians trying to curry favour with Khairy gave contracts to people who they &lt;br /&gt;thought were aligned to him. For this reason, Kedah Menteri Besar Syed Razak Syed Zain &lt;br /&gt;appointed Khairy’s mother, Datin Rahmah, to 'advisory positions' within the state &lt;br /&gt;economic and financial structure. &lt;br /&gt; - 40 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, many already know by now that the AP King, Haniff Aziz, is a first cousin to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. Fingers point towards Khairy’s family relationship as the reason for Haniff, a &lt;br /&gt;former MITI official, being given tens of thousands of APs without any proper &lt;br /&gt;qualification. The APs are being granted in spite of the lack of showrooms and are &lt;br /&gt;immediately sold off to other car importers who are not able to exert the same influence on &lt;br /&gt;the minister in charge. But herein lies the real reason for Haniff’s success. Being a cousin to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is of course useful but not key to him succeeding to the throne of AP King. It was &lt;br /&gt;his ability to woo the Queen, Rafidah Aziz, since at least for some five years Haniff Aziz &lt;br /&gt;has been an important part of Rafidah’s life. His intimate relationship with Rafidah was the &lt;br /&gt;door opener to his hundreds of millions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But while these contracts are certainly significant, they are peanuts compared to the &lt;br /&gt;stripping of national assets that happened, for example, at the hands of people such as &lt;br /&gt;Daim Zainuddin, Rafidah Aziz and Zahid Hamidi. Indeed, it does not gather for Khairy &lt;br /&gt;more than a few million dollars, which pale in comparison to the amount of money needed &lt;br /&gt;to pay your way to the top of the UMNO hierarchy. They also are blatantly illegal and &lt;br /&gt;therefore a political minefield for the future of any politicians in an era where the Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister has openly announced his so-called war on corruption. So Khairy had to think of &lt;br /&gt;bigger plans by which money could be obtained, firstly in large quantities, and secondly in &lt;br /&gt;ways which do not appear too illegal. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The first vehicle which Khairy exploited to lay a base for acquiring his wealth is, again, &lt;br /&gt;through Ethos Consulting. There are two main reasons for Khairy wanting to plant Ethos &lt;br /&gt;Consulting in Najib’s office. The key reason of politics has already been explained in the &lt;br /&gt;earlier series of these chronicles. And the second reason, of course, is economic. Najib Tun &lt;br /&gt;Razak is a cash cow because of his control over large amounts of defence spending. Further &lt;br /&gt;to that, his connection with Mahathir and the support he receives from the former Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister allows him a greater access to opportunities in the national asset system. Ethos &lt;br /&gt;Consulting was placed there to provide a stepping stone for Khairy to tap into some of &lt;br /&gt;these resources. The head of Ethos Consulting, Dr Liew, was officially given the task of &lt;br /&gt;providing ideas to revamp defence spending and procurement procedures (in spite of him &lt;br /&gt;having extremely close ties to politically sensitive Singaporeans). In actual fact, Dr Liew &lt;br /&gt;provided Khairy with information on the many avenues where his cronies could be &lt;br /&gt;brought in to secure important contracts at jacked-up prices, as is the norm in the Defence &lt;br /&gt;Ministry for many decades. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The other source of money within Najib’s purview is Felda. Mahathir had previously given &lt;br /&gt;the task of looking into Felda to Second Finance Minister Jamaludin Jarjis, a known Najib &lt;br /&gt;supporter. Abdullah had demoted Jamaludin, but because much of the work done by &lt;br /&gt;Jamaludin to implement 'changes' in Felda had reached penultimate stages of planning, as &lt;br /&gt;a compromise it was then put under the overlordship of Najib. By putting Felda under &lt;br /&gt;Najib, Abdullah hoped that Jamaludin would not be too disappointed and Najib would be &lt;br /&gt;placated that this huge cash cow would not be totally out of his grasp. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, though Felda may be under Najib, key decisions regarding the agency are being &lt;br /&gt; - 41 - &lt;br /&gt;heavily influenced by Khairy and Ethos Consulting. Initially, the task of restructuring &lt;br /&gt;FELDA and managing the sale of its assets was given to Jamaludin’s favorite vehicle, &lt;br /&gt;Avenue Assets. Avenue was supposed to identify areas where Felda could be privatised, &lt;br /&gt;whereby plump assets would then be sold off to key Jamaludin cronies. Jamaludin, the &lt;br /&gt;second Finance Minister who acted as if he was first Finance Minister, had placed people &lt;br /&gt;loyal to him and (therefore loyal to Najib) in key positions in the restructuring project. &lt;br /&gt;When Abdullah became Prime Minister and Jamaludin was removed from this &lt;br /&gt;responsibility, Ethos Consulting was brought in to replace Avenue. Jamaludin’s people &lt;br /&gt;were booted out and Khairy’s came in. One of the first recommendations by Ethos &lt;br /&gt;Consulting was the divestment of non-core assets, for example, in the banking and service &lt;br /&gt;industry. Ethos immediately suggested that people associated to Khairy be appointed as &lt;br /&gt;advisors to the deal, therefore making a huge percentage on the sell off. This nets Khairy &lt;br /&gt;commissions in terms of millions which are ostensibly perfectly legal. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;While Felda continues to be a 'non-decision', Ethos Consulting, on behalf of Khairy, is &lt;br /&gt;slowly trawling through the assets list. The so-called revamp of government, economic and &lt;br /&gt;asset interests heavily disguises the more sophisticated ways in which Khairy makes his &lt;br /&gt;money. The common voters believe that politicians get rich by getting government &lt;br /&gt;contracts, patronage and other perks. In reality, this has long been discarded by the &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah government in favour of providing commissions through financial advisory roles &lt;br /&gt;to people associated with the Prime Minister and his son-in-law’s team. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is in this capacity that Khairy serves as Director of Corporate Advisory in ECM Libra. It &lt;br /&gt;was not his first choice, quite obviously. When the rumours flew that Abdullah had no &lt;br /&gt;brain and Khairy ran the show in almost everything in the Prime Minister’s office, Khairy &lt;br /&gt;started looking for a new way out that would put him in an equally powerful position as &lt;br /&gt;being inside the PM’s office. In fact, he wanted a position powerful enough to build a &lt;br /&gt;treasure trove that would scare his enemies from the 'old guard' within Abdullah's office &lt;br /&gt;and shut their mouths once and for all. So he used the restructuring of GLCs as the avenue &lt;br /&gt;to success. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The restructuring of Khazanah was the first opportunity. It was based on the usage of Key &lt;br /&gt;Performance Indices (KPIs), an idea mooted to the government of Malaysia by Ethos &lt;br /&gt;Consulting as a so-called original idea, where in actual fact, copied almost whole from the &lt;br /&gt;government of Singapore’s policy on Temasek Holdings, a well-known government &lt;br /&gt;investment vehicle. In restructuring Khazanah, Khairy hoped that he would be appointed &lt;br /&gt;to the most important position there, namely the position of Chief Executive Officer. But &lt;br /&gt;the people within Khazanah were mainly civil servants of long tenure and career &lt;br /&gt;experience who were hostile to the idea of a 28-year old CEO. In addition, Khairy had &lt;br /&gt;absolutely no business or economic background, having never worked for any such entity &lt;br /&gt;in his entire life. The only position Khairy had ever held outside of government was that of &lt;br /&gt;a part-time journalist in a foreign newspaper - and even that only for a few short months. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So the pressure within Khazanah to refuse Khairy’s demands grew. High-ranking civil &lt;br /&gt;servants got on their side several top accountants and corporate leaders who told Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;in quiet whispers that such a move would be fatal to his political career so early on in his &lt;br /&gt; - 42 - &lt;br /&gt;premiership. They argued that if Abdullah really wanted a young, vibrant heading &lt;br /&gt;Khazanah, they could instead be chosen from the many consultants and restructuring &lt;br /&gt;experts that grew out of the 1997 crisis. So Azman Mokhtar was chosen instead. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Khairy did not give up. Azman’s appointment carried an implicit condition that while &lt;br /&gt;Azman was the CEO with the responsibility of deciding Khazanah policies, a Chief &lt;br /&gt;Operating Officer (COO) would be appointed to run Khazanah's day-to-day affairs. Azman &lt;br /&gt;was called in by Second Finance Minister, Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yackop, to officially &lt;br /&gt;announce the offer and it was hinted to him that Khairy should be appointed the COO. &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, Nor told Azman that Abdullah had already given instructions to prepare a letter &lt;br /&gt;appointing Khairy to that position. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Azman said nothing. After settling in, he summoned Khairy to his office. Khairy thought &lt;br /&gt;Azman wanted to tell him when he could start work as the COO. Khairy confidently &lt;br /&gt;strutted into Azman’s office and plonked himself in the seat opposite Azman. Azman &lt;br /&gt;casually started by saying that there was a position in Khazanah which he was supposed to &lt;br /&gt;fill. Khairy replied that he knew. Azman then said that Khairy’s name had been mentioned &lt;br /&gt;for that office. Khairy then again smugly replied that he knew that too. Azman said that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy seemed eminently suited for that position and to confirm his initial finding, he &lt;br /&gt;would appreciate Khairy sending him a CV so that he could check Khairy’s credentials. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was crestfallen and left the interview in a huff. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Subsequently, Khairy realised that Azman was politely saying to him that he was not &lt;br /&gt;suited for that position and that he was being too greedy. It was clear that Azman was &lt;br /&gt;hinting at Khairy’s lack of economic and financial experience. While Khairy was initially &lt;br /&gt;angry at Azman, he also realised that Azman had saved him from a potential political &lt;br /&gt;minefield. So he set about aiming to be a future CEO of Khazanah instead of a current &lt;br /&gt;COO. To do that he needed to gain at least some perception of experience. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy went to see his old stooge Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan. Kali was the &lt;br /&gt;'relationship partner' of the troika of two Chinese and one Indian who had successfully &lt;br /&gt;built ECM Libra into a powerful financial group from scratch. Kali, from his own &lt;br /&gt;experience, realised that Khairy would be at sea and lost in a real financial job. As a young &lt;br /&gt;go-getter and impatient politician, Khairy was not suited to make discounted cash-flows &lt;br /&gt;and read spreadsheets. So Kali suggested instead that Khairy join the corporate advisory &lt;br /&gt;team of ECM Libra as a relationship person. In other words, Khairy would use his contacts &lt;br /&gt;rather than his brains to make ECM Libra richer. The common people who are not well- &lt;br /&gt;versed in finance matters would be forgiven to think that Khairy’s position as director of &lt;br /&gt;corporate advisory means that he is responsible for financial decisions. Despite having the &lt;br /&gt;title of 'Director of Corporate Advisory', Khairy is not a real director in the sense of being a &lt;br /&gt;company director. A director of ECM Libra simply means that he is a bigshot but does not &lt;br /&gt;entail that he is an actual management board member. Corporate Advisory is a cover-all &lt;br /&gt;term which looks financial but in reality only means that the people in this position are &lt;br /&gt;glorified salesmen that bring business in for the company. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The poor, innocent, common and ordinary UMNO Youth member would not know that in &lt;br /&gt; - 43 - &lt;br /&gt;actual fact their Vice Youth Chief is a mere salesman, albeit with a grander title. And yet &lt;br /&gt;that grand title is not mere glory. Khairy, unlike other salesman, has access to some &lt;br /&gt;powerful money-making opportunities. Khazanah is the first of many government &lt;br /&gt;institutions he would sink his teeth into... &lt;br /&gt; - 44 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 10 : The National Auctioneer &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Azman Mokhtar’s rejection of Khairy Jamaluddin’s demands to be the Chief Operating &lt;br /&gt;Officer (COO) of Khazanah was a massive blow to his ego. Khairy had hoped his &lt;br /&gt;appointment to Khazanah would be a mere formality. Instead, he found himself politely &lt;br /&gt;turned away and in no uncertain terms labelled as young and inexperienced. It was the &lt;br /&gt;same reason that saw him catapulted out of the Prime Minister’s Office after successfully &lt;br /&gt;planning Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s historical victory in the 11th General Election. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As the main campaign officer of the General Election, Khairy not only devised the image &lt;br /&gt;which projected Abdullah as a kinder, gentler man than Mahathir, but he was also &lt;br /&gt;instrumental in selecting the Barisan Nasional candidates. A three-man committee &lt;br /&gt;comprised of Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, Barisan Nasional Executive &lt;br /&gt;Secretary Yaacob Muhammad and Khairy himself were given an almost completely &lt;br /&gt;freehand in picking and choosing the ‘lucky ones’ who would be given the watikah &lt;br /&gt;(authority letter) to become candidates. But the other two members of the committee were &lt;br /&gt;left without doubts that it was Khairy who was the eyes and ears of the Prime Minister and &lt;br /&gt;had the most sway in making decisions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the aftermath of the General Election, Khairy could not help but preen and boast about &lt;br /&gt;his role in masterminding the glorious victory that was secured by the BN. This angered &lt;br /&gt;not only Najib but other officers in Abdullah’s circle who had been in service longer. Led &lt;br /&gt;by Chief Private Secretary Thajudeen Abdul Wahab, they mounted enough pressure to call &lt;br /&gt;upon Abdullah to cease the unnecessary brickbats that he attracted through Khairy. By &lt;br /&gt;removing the young man from his immediate official circle, Thajudeen told Abdullah that &lt;br /&gt;he could still rely on Khairy as a family member, but it would be wrong to continue having &lt;br /&gt;him as an official advisor. Fawzi Basri, another Abdullah confidante, suggested that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;be given a role in another ministry. It was then that Khairy ally, Ahmad Zaki Zahid, who &lt;br /&gt;was also an officer in the PM’s Department, suggested that Khairy be made Chief Executive &lt;br /&gt;Officer of Khazanah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah discussed the matter with second Minister of Finance Nor Mohamed Yakcop. &lt;br /&gt;Both agreed that the then CEO, Anuwar Aji, was incompetent and bumbling. Nevertheless, &lt;br /&gt;Nor Mohamed thought that a 28-year old CEO was ridiculous given Khairy’s absolute lack &lt;br /&gt;of experience in running a business. In fact, other than being a Special Officer to the Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister, Khairy had absolutely no other working experience except as a trainee journalist &lt;br /&gt;in the print and electronic media. Nor suggested instead that Khairy be made the Chief &lt;br /&gt;Operating Officer, only one step below the hierachy. In that capacity, Khairy would be &lt;br /&gt;responsible for the day-to-day running of Khazanah, while the CEO concentrated on major &lt;br /&gt;policy decisions. It was in fact very much the job that Khairy had been doing in Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;office. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Nor Mohamed Yakcop came to power on the back of advising former Prime Minister &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad in imposing capital controls and a Ringgit peg as a cure to the Asian &lt;br /&gt;financial crisis of 1997. Previously allied to Anwar Ibrahim protégé Wan Hasni as advisor &lt;br /&gt;to the Abrar group of companies, Nor Mohamed had also worked as a Bank Negara officer, &lt;br /&gt; - 45 - &lt;br /&gt;a role where he lost RM15 billion on bad foreign currency trading bets. It was said that Nor &lt;br /&gt;Mohamed made so much money from the foreign exchange foray that he bought a &lt;br /&gt;racehorse for the Melbourne Cup race and named it after Bank Negara. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In his stint as Special Advisor to the PM, Nor Mohamed had brought in some bright young &lt;br /&gt;things, mostly graduates from Oxford and Cambridge (but not all). These thirty- &lt;br /&gt;somethings were either accountants or lawyers who had worked in various capacities as &lt;br /&gt;restructuring experts. It was one of them, Azman Mokhtar of Binafikir, who Nor Mohamed &lt;br /&gt;chose as CEO of Khazanah. Nor Mohamed had thought that being from this group, Azman &lt;br /&gt;would be amenable to having fellow Oxford graduate Khairy as his effective deputy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Azman was never enthusiastic about Khairy. In the first place, he did not like someone &lt;br /&gt;watching his every move. He could have made much more money as a Binafikir Managing &lt;br /&gt;Partner than doing ‘national service’ in Khazanah. In order to perform his Khazanah &lt;br /&gt;duties, he wanted a free rein. Having assets of over RM60 billion through 11 subsidiaries, &lt;br /&gt;16 associate companies and hundreds of other minority investments, both in Malaysia and &lt;br /&gt;overseas, Khazanah was also too rich a plum for one like Khairy who would be so easily &lt;br /&gt;tempted. But the most important reason for Azman rejecting Khairy’s immediate move to &lt;br /&gt;Khazanah was that Azman had his own bunch of bright young things who were in no way &lt;br /&gt;sympathetic to Khairy. Equally educated with first class degrees from the top universities &lt;br /&gt;of the world, these young man in their late 20s and early 30s were swiftly put in various &lt;br /&gt;positions in Khazanah, ranging from Personal Assistants to Directors of Investments, &lt;br /&gt;Equities and Corporate Finance, where they were expected to concentrate on the job. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These young men did not like Khairy because Khairy represented the scheming face of &lt;br /&gt;politics. They knew that Khairy’s presence would force them to compromise business &lt;br /&gt;principles in favour of political expediencies. Khairy would bring in cronies and involve &lt;br /&gt;them in Khazanah deals. More importantly, Khairy would be a negative influence on the &lt;br /&gt;professionals as he would demand every bit of information to be directed to him. It was &lt;br /&gt;this group of Azman’s boys who sighed the loudest when they heard that Khairy was &lt;br /&gt;going to be made COO, and it was the same group who felt greatly relieved when Azman &lt;br /&gt;tore up the appointment letter which had been prepared by Nor Mohamed Yackop’s &lt;br /&gt;Political Secretary, Norza Zakaria, waiting only to be signed by Khazanah Chairman and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s father-in-law, Abdullah Badawi. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy knew that the young things in Khazanah were not in the same boat as his own &lt;br /&gt;Oxbridge supporters in Ethos Consulting and other commercial arms used by him as &lt;br /&gt;political vehicles. Whereas the latter could be expected to bend and bow to Khairy’s every &lt;br /&gt;wish, the former often made fun of Khairy, even if only behind his back. They laughed at &lt;br /&gt;his inability to understand basic business procedures, including the reading of &lt;br /&gt;spreadsheets and business plans. Khairy was not a complete idiot in such matters, but the &lt;br /&gt;six months he spent as a compere for a TV show was hardly the experience needed to &lt;br /&gt;understand corporate finance. In spite of that, Kalimullah Hassan had appointed Khairy to &lt;br /&gt;a Corporate Finance position in ECM Libra on the basis that he himself (Kalimullah) had &lt;br /&gt;no such experience but could just rely on his networking to get deals for his partnership. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 46 - &lt;br /&gt;Khairy realised he could not leave Khazanah totally in the hands of these young people &lt;br /&gt;who were so indifferent to his political ambitions. When Azman rebuffed him, he used &lt;br /&gt;another tactic to put his tentacles within the Khazanah system. The swift appointment of &lt;br /&gt;Azman meant that many of the old brooms within Khazanah also had to be replaced. &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah was persuaded by Khairy to get rid of long-time civil servants and replace them &lt;br /&gt;with so-called professionals. Azman nominated the majority of these, but there were some &lt;br /&gt;who managed to squeak through by the grace and favour of Khairy. Khairy wanted to use &lt;br /&gt;them in the same way that Omar Ong was being used in Najib’s office. They were his spies &lt;br /&gt;and they were also responsible for giving him the inside details of the most juicy of &lt;br /&gt;Khazanah’s pick of business deals. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Foremost amongst these was a friend of Khairy’s from the Ethos Consulting circle called &lt;br /&gt;Gianendra Sarvananthan. Sarvananthan had studied with Khairy in England and had been &lt;br /&gt;an active participant in his study circles. When Khairy ascended to Abdullah’s office, &lt;br /&gt;Sarvananthan was his main advisor on business and economic matters. At that time, &lt;br /&gt;Sarvananthan worked as a corporate advisor to a Singapore-based bank. In this capacity, &lt;br /&gt;he introduced Khairy to various Singapore business interests, including the key investment &lt;br /&gt;officers of Singapore government-owned Temasek Holdings and DBS Bank (more about &lt;br /&gt;this later). When Khairy failed to get appointed to Khazanah, he decided that the next best &lt;br /&gt;thing was to have Sarvananthan there in his place. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Sarvananthan was quickly made Director of Investments in Khazanah. At the age of 29, &lt;br /&gt;Sarvananthan, who had no business experience at all in Malaysia, was put in charge of &lt;br /&gt;restructuring Khazanah’s businesses and most importantly its equity investments. In spite &lt;br /&gt;of his apparent qualifications, Sarvananthan knew nothing about Khazanah’s agenda, nor &lt;br /&gt;was he knowledgeable about the Malaysian financial and business environments. This &lt;br /&gt;seemed no obstacle though as he was made the most important decision-maker in the so- &lt;br /&gt;called Khazanah revamp.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Through Sarvananthan, Khairy put in many of his proposals to Khazanah. The modus &lt;br /&gt;operandi is simple. Khairy would identify business deals where he or ECM Libra could &lt;br /&gt;have a role. He would then inform Sarvananthan who would go to Azman with the same &lt;br /&gt;proposal as if it had been his (Sarvananthan’s) own suggestion. When Khazanah made a &lt;br /&gt;decision to execute the deal, Khairy (or his people) would be chosen by the counter-party &lt;br /&gt;as their advisors. A percentage of commission would be given to Khairy for managing the &lt;br /&gt;deal. While commissions are fairly small in other business circles, Khairy’s was massive &lt;br /&gt;due to the huge size of Khazanah’s deal. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One example was Temasek’s entry into TM (previously known as Telekom Malaysia). &lt;br /&gt;Temasek had bought 5% of TM for a price of RM1.6 billion in the early days of Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;administration. It was supposed to be a signal of the major cross-strait thaw in the &lt;br /&gt;relationship. As everyone knows, Temasek is also a substantial shareholder of SingTel, run &lt;br /&gt;by Lee Hsien Yang, the youngest son of Singapore founder Lee Kuan Yew. It was a &lt;br /&gt;massively important political and business deal. What the public did not know was that &lt;br /&gt;Temasek had made payments to Khairy through a Singapore based company closely &lt;br /&gt;associated to Khairy proxy and UMNO Supreme Council member, Norza Zakaria. The &lt;br /&gt; - 47 - &lt;br /&gt;company had its registered address in the Singapore Land Tower at 50 Raffles Place. &lt;br /&gt;Seemingly, payments were made to the company for ‘consultancy services’, but in effect it &lt;br /&gt;was nothing more than kickbacks. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The deal was made known to the highest levels of the UMNO leadership. Mustapa &lt;br /&gt;Mohamad told former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad at his office in the Petronas &lt;br /&gt;Twin Towers. Mahathir was outraged. While Mahathir himself was never free from blame &lt;br /&gt;in his political and business deals, he always ‘kept it in the family’, i.e. within Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;business circles. Never would he countenance selling anything to arch-enemy Singapore. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mustapa was entrusted to gather a number of ministers to express through them that the &lt;br /&gt;Temasek sale was not a wise move. In almost every country, telecommunications is &lt;br /&gt;considered a strategic industry which is jealously guarded due to potential internal security &lt;br /&gt;implications. Abdullah was informed that many of the engineers at SingTel (a Temasek &lt;br /&gt;company) were experts trained by countries such as Israel, which had also provided input &lt;br /&gt;for SingTel’s sophisticated satellite system. Gilat, an Israeli-owned satellite equipment &lt;br /&gt;specialist, were technical advisors not only to SingTel but to the Singapore government. &lt;br /&gt;Ministers such as Aziz Samsudin and Azmi Khalid said to Abdullah that opening up &lt;br /&gt;strategic industries to Singapore could be dangerous especially since Singapore had &lt;br /&gt;already been given footholds in other strategic concerns such as banking, insurance, &lt;br /&gt;construction materials and the print media. Singapore’s agents such as Kalimullah Hassan &lt;br /&gt;were installed in major positions and there was always the problem that the investments &lt;br /&gt;made by Singapore could hardly be reciprocated by the poorer Malaysians. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The troika of Mustapa, Azmi and Aziz were powerful ministers because they were &lt;br /&gt;remnants from Mahathir’s era and were known to be honest with Abdullah. Abdullah had &lt;br /&gt;no choice but to agree to listen to their objections. However, Khairy persisted in his &lt;br /&gt;attempts to get more money out of the Singapore-made deals. Almost all his business &lt;br /&gt;connections were with Singapore. Norza Zakaria, his proxy, had Singapore-based interests. &lt;br /&gt;ECM Libra, his employer, had a Singapore sister company whose main task was to marry &lt;br /&gt;Singapore money to Malaysian assets. Kalimullah Hassan, his stooge, was a Singapore &lt;br /&gt;apologist who built his career on delivering good press reports in Malaysia on behalf of &lt;br /&gt;Singapore. Sarvananthan, his economic advisor, was Singapore trained and beholden to the &lt;br /&gt;interest of Temasek. It was no wonder that Khairy is known in Singapore press circles as &lt;br /&gt;‘The Quiet Singaporean’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No major foreign investor would ever want to be in a minority position for too long. So &lt;br /&gt;Temasek pushed hard to increase their holdings in TM by another 5%. Given current &lt;br /&gt;market capitalisation, this would mean a purchase of almost RM1.7 billion. Khairy would &lt;br /&gt;normally attract a commission of 1% to 2% to be shared amongst his associates – that &lt;br /&gt;would come to approximately RM17 million to RM34 million Ringgit. In addition to the 16 &lt;br /&gt;million Ringgit received for the previous transaction, it was a lucrative business by any &lt;br /&gt;means, as the only exertion on Khairy’s behalf would be to persuade Abdullah to agree to &lt;br /&gt;the deal. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Since March this year, Abdullah has been persuading the cabinet to accept an increase in &lt;br /&gt; - 48 - &lt;br /&gt;Temasek’s share of TM. But each time he has faced opposition from some of the ministers &lt;br /&gt;who have been prepared and briefed by allies of Mahathir. In addition, Najib Tun Razak &lt;br /&gt;has kept studiously silent on the move. In post-cabinet meetings, Najib has been consulting &lt;br /&gt;with Mahathir and even former Finance Minister Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah on what to do &lt;br /&gt;next. The advice has been the same, i.e., to delay it for as long as possible, if not, to outright &lt;br /&gt;block the deal. If Temasek was allowed to gain further shares, Malaysia’s interests might be &lt;br /&gt;compromised. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To break this scenario, Khairy had a discussion with Sarvananthan. They came up with the &lt;br /&gt;idea of emphasising Malaysia’s increasing prominence in Singapore. Both hoped that if &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian companies were seen to be buying bigger shares of Singapore entities, the &lt;br /&gt;opposition to Singapore’s purchase of TM would be significantly compromised. &lt;br /&gt;Sarvananthan suggested to Khazanah and TM CEO Abdul Wahid Omar that they increase &lt;br /&gt;their shares in M1, the third major telecommunications provider in Singapore. However, &lt;br /&gt;the deal came at a much higher price than it was really worth. Singapore would not sell &lt;br /&gt;their assets cheap and Malaysia had to pay a massive premium for it. The effect of this is &lt;br /&gt;that TM shares dived on the back of investor concerns that the move was unwise and &lt;br /&gt;expensive. An immediate result of TM’s dip is that a purchase by Temasek of a new block &lt;br /&gt;of shares would of course then be much cheaper. Such is the intelligence of Khairy’s boys &lt;br /&gt;in Khazanah. Singapore: 2; Malaysia: 0. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At the current moment, Khairy is still hopeful that the deal will go through. But even if it &lt;br /&gt;doesn’t, there are many more deals he could broker for Singapore. One such deal is the &lt;br /&gt;restructuring of Felda’s assets. Felda is mainly concerned with plantations. But unknown to &lt;br /&gt;many, it also has minority investments in major Malaysian banks such as Maybank. These &lt;br /&gt;minority investments come to billions in real terms and are ripe picking for a foreign &lt;br /&gt;investor if Felda were ever to decide that it would concentrate only on its core business of &lt;br /&gt;plantations and divest its non-core holdings. Using ECM Libra, Khairy made a presentation &lt;br /&gt;to Felda and Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak for these non-core assets to be sold to &lt;br /&gt;Singapore interests. Khairy lined up both Temasek and DBS Bank to prepare for the sale of &lt;br /&gt;these assets. Commission to Khairy? Somewhere in the range of RM30 million to RM50 &lt;br /&gt;million.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The problem with Felda is that the restructuring was not planned by Khairy. It was in fact &lt;br /&gt;the idea of former Second Finance Minister Jamaludin Jarjis. Jamaludin had appointed his &lt;br /&gt;nephew to prepare a plan through the Avenue Capital group. But when Abdullah took &lt;br /&gt;office, the plan was shelved in favour of another proposed by Ethos Consulting, the Khairy &lt;br /&gt;business arm. Abdullah thought that it would be easy to get Najib to agree to Ethos’ plan. &lt;br /&gt;But Najib countermanded Ethos by placing Felda under a new officer, an ex-Mustapa &lt;br /&gt;Mohamad ally named Ahmad Maslan. So the situation is at a deadlock. But both parties are &lt;br /&gt;lobbying hard to get their hands on the juicy bits of Felda. What started out as Tun Razak’s &lt;br /&gt;NEP initiative to help rural Malays has now become the pot of gold at the end of the &lt;br /&gt;proverbial rainbow. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So far, Khairy has only taken commissions from these major deals. However, there is one &lt;br /&gt;major government asset worth around RM1.7 billion which is about to become Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt; - 49 - &lt;br /&gt;road to the Forbes’ Billionaires List. The planning has taken some time due to the &lt;br /&gt;complexity of the transactions. But Khariy and Norza Zakaria have now managed a &lt;br /&gt;breakthrough. In the next few months, the plan will come to fruition... &lt;br /&gt; - 50 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 11: Khairy and his Money Factory &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It’s not that difficult to be a millionaire in Malaysia. In fact, it’s not difficult even to be a &lt;br /&gt;multi-millionaire - if you have the right connections. Almost always, having the right &lt;br /&gt;connections means having a patron in UMNO, whether you are Malay, Indian or Chinese. &lt;br /&gt;A godfather in UMNO will give you access to various money-making opportunities for &lt;br /&gt;which you may not even need to lift a finger. Take, for example, Haniff Aziz, Khairy &lt;br /&gt;Jamaluddin’s first cousin and one of the three ‘Heavenly Kings’ of APs.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a former civil servant, Haniff would have made no more than RM100,000 per year. &lt;br /&gt;Minus all his debts and living expenses, that would give him a saving of around RM30,000 &lt;br /&gt;per year, if he is frugal. Definitely, the amount is not enough to build a showroom for &lt;br /&gt;imported cars. And yet, today, merely by having APs for two years, Haniff Aziz is worth &lt;br /&gt;more than RM300 million. This obscene amount he obtained is not only a reflection of &lt;br /&gt;Rafidah Aziz’s increasing disregard for honesty in government, but also a symbol of how &lt;br /&gt;people close to Khairy are now becoming the New Untouchables of Malaysian business. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, like other UMNO warlords of the past, protects his friends even when they are &lt;br /&gt;involved in blatant corruption. In Haniff’s case, he has so far escaped any action because &lt;br /&gt;Khairy does not want a person who shared the same grandfather as him to be tarnished by &lt;br /&gt;scandal, which will of course reflect badly on Khairy himself. So the distributors of Wald &lt;br /&gt;automobiles have been first to take the brunt of the government’s reaction to Dr Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;outburst over the misuse of APs. Wald was deemed responsible for rousing the anger of Dr &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir because they were importing the same cars as Dr Mahathir’s son but under- &lt;br /&gt;declared them by RM50,000-100,000 below the prices that were sold by Dr Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;family business. Khairy hopes that by taking action on Wald, at least for the time being, &lt;br /&gt;Haniff will escape being the target of public anger. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Perhaps, to politicians, loyalty is the most prized of values. Certainly, Khairy is loyal to his &lt;br /&gt;circle of friends who now help him to amass great wealth. One of his Oxford &lt;br /&gt;contemporaries managed to use Khairy’s name to escape paying a RM5 million overdue &lt;br /&gt;loan to asset restructuring company Danaharta. The man’s father, a failed property &lt;br /&gt;developer from Negeri Sembilan, went strutting up to see Danaharta’s officers and merely &lt;br /&gt;proclaimed that they could not go after him ‘as his son is a friend of Khairy’s’. The end &lt;br /&gt;result was that Danaharta grew scared and the man was allowed more time to repay his &lt;br /&gt;loan. The mere use of Khairy’s name is now as useful as getting a passage straight to the &lt;br /&gt;inner reaches of the gardens of wealth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy cannot be accused of being the only person in Abdullah’s administration who is &lt;br /&gt;corrupt. Far from it, there are other figures in Abdullah’s circle who are also involved in &lt;br /&gt;giving contracts, licenses, permits and commissions to selected supporters. No big fish has &lt;br /&gt;ever found himself in trouble with Abdullah unless he is seen by Abdullah and his circle as &lt;br /&gt;a Mahathir loyalist. That is the only criteria for being hauled up to face the judges. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The last billionaires in Malaysia created by government corruption were the allies of &lt;br /&gt;former Finance Ministers Daim Zainuddin and Anwar Ibrahim. Khairy intends to regain &lt;br /&gt; - 51 - &lt;br /&gt;that title for himself. However, unlike them, he shuns the glamour of being a tycoon. &lt;br /&gt;Instead, his long-term view is to make money through proxies, while he himself plays the &lt;br /&gt;role of budding politician, perceived free from the taint of business. The reality of the &lt;br /&gt;situation is that the group making money for Khairy acts almost always under his tutelage &lt;br /&gt;and moves only when he says so. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The biggest coup that is being planned is a potential sale of residual assets of Danaharta, &lt;br /&gt;currently being brokered by Khairy proxy Norza Zakaria through his allies in Singapore. &lt;br /&gt;Norza’s company in Singapore is a joint venture with a certain Mr S who is a Singaporean &lt;br /&gt;ex-classmate of Khairy in the United World College (UWC). Mr S, ostensibly, is a corporate &lt;br /&gt;finance specialist with interests in real-estate and multimedia. He meets up with Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and his Khazanah cronies to discuss various ways in which to strip the assets of Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;GLCs and make a percentage commission on them. One of the advisors to Khairy is a &lt;br /&gt;shareholder of Ethos Consulting who currently works with Deutsche Bank in Kuala &lt;br /&gt;Lumpur. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Why Danaharta? The reason is quite simple. Danaharta was set up as a reaction to the &lt;br /&gt;Asian financial crisis. It acquired, with the help of government funds, non-performing &lt;br /&gt;loans from various Malaysian banks. In other words, it was a purchaser of debt at a &lt;br /&gt;discount. Since its inception, Danaharta has successfully paid of RM11 billion in monies &lt;br /&gt;borrowed from the government. However, it still has some RM1.7 billion in assets yet to be &lt;br /&gt;sold. Danaharta, however, has a finite life. By the end of the year, it will close down and all &lt;br /&gt;the assets must be sold. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, Norza, Mr S and the Deutsche Bank friend are planning to buy up all the assets &lt;br /&gt;from Danaharta at massive discounts. Each will play his role. The Deutsche Bank friend has &lt;br /&gt;been preparing a proposal to Danaharta Managing Director Zukri Abdul Samad to &lt;br /&gt;purchase all of the assets. In this role, Deutsche Bank would act as a fronting bank, whereas &lt;br /&gt;the monies to purchase the assets will come from a fund created by Khairy and Norza. &lt;br /&gt;Currently, the proposal is being considered. Deutsche Bank is asking for a discount of &lt;br /&gt;around 70% to the market price of the remaining assets, thus making a profit of around &lt;br /&gt;RM1.2 billion. Danaharta is reluctant to lose so much to Deutsche Bank, given that many of &lt;br /&gt;the assets have the potential of at least 80% recovery value. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Danaharta is faced with a dilemma. Firstly, the decision to sell is not theirs to make. &lt;br /&gt;Instead, it really is up to the Ministry of Finance, a ministry answerable directly to Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;father-in-law, Abdullah Badawi. Even though Abdullah is not personally involved in &lt;br /&gt;making such decisions, relying instead on 2nd Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop, the &lt;br /&gt;decision will be heavily influenced by three allies of Khairy in the ministry. In making such &lt;br /&gt;decisions, Nor Mohamed will refer to two Special Officers to the Minister of Finance, who &lt;br /&gt;are both Oxbridge cronies of Khairy and in fact appointed to their post by Khairy’s own &lt;br /&gt;recommendations. The third ‘advisor’ is Norza himself, who is Political Secretary to Nor &lt;br /&gt;Mohamed. No prizes for guessing what they would recommend… &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As corporate advisory director in ECM Libra, Khairy will lobby for the plan to be accepted. &lt;br /&gt;Deutsche Bank will come in as the apparent buyer. In actual fact, the main beneficiary will &lt;br /&gt; - 52 - &lt;br /&gt;be the Khairy and Norza fund, which needs only around RM500 million to acquire the &lt;br /&gt;billion Ringgit profit. Of course, neither Khairy nor Norza has enough cash at the moment &lt;br /&gt;to fulfil this plan. But if they cannot come up with the cash, a bank guarantee will suffice &lt;br /&gt;until they successfully sell off the assets at a higher price than what they paid during the &lt;br /&gt;purchase. The key point here is that anyone can make quick bucks as a middleman, but &lt;br /&gt;only one middleman, Khairy, has the clout to influence such important decisions without &lt;br /&gt;having to face the prospect of a rival offer. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No one believes that the assets will be valued properly. Khairy has planted many people in &lt;br /&gt;the Ministry of Finance, Bank Negara and other such financial institutions who answer &lt;br /&gt;directly to him. Most of them were his contemporaries in Singapore and the United &lt;br /&gt;Kingdom. While they do not aspire to get half as rich as Khairy, in performing their &lt;br /&gt;services to Khairy, they are rewarded by a fast-track career and side perks of being &lt;br /&gt;involved in lucrative insider dealing projects. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy gets a copy of the minutes of Ministry of Finance, Bank Negara, Khazanah and &lt;br /&gt;Danaharta’s meetings as soon they are printed. Norza and the other Special Assistants to &lt;br /&gt;the Ministers of Finance make sure that Khairy gets to see the choicest deals. The other &lt;br /&gt;young Khairy allies in these institutions report to Khairy on any potential rivals. They also &lt;br /&gt;use various tactics to thwart other businessmen from securing deals which have been &lt;br /&gt;identified by Khairy as his to take. When a purchaser, for example, of a Khazanah asset &lt;br /&gt;gives a proposal to that organisation, the information goes through two channels – the &lt;br /&gt;official Azman Mokhtar route and the unofficial Khairy route. If Khairy objects to the deal, &lt;br /&gt;it will be blocked. Usually no reply is given to the proposal except that it is ‘being &lt;br /&gt;considered’. But it never reaches execution because not long afterwards a ‘more acceptable’ &lt;br /&gt;proposal from one of Khairy’s contacts appears. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In such a way are the national assets stripped. &lt;br /&gt; - 53 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 12: Ringing in the cash till &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is certainly an element of dishonesty in the government-owned economic and &lt;br /&gt;financial institutions. Norza Zakaria has openly admitted to fellow UMNO Youth Exco &lt;br /&gt;Members that he reads important minutes even before it reaches the table of Second &lt;br /&gt;Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop. Of course, there are a few honest souls in these &lt;br /&gt;organisations who are disgusted by what Khairy Jamaluddin is doing. But they are a very &lt;br /&gt;small minority. As young men in their 30s who are just starting out in life, they are hopeful &lt;br /&gt;that one day they can reach the heights of their contemporaries who are close to Khairy and &lt;br /&gt;therefore now leading the management of the many GLCs under Khazanah. So, most of &lt;br /&gt;them grumble only in private. None dare take up the issue with the top, knowing full well &lt;br /&gt;that their bosses are also on Khairy’s payroll. One recent employee of a government &lt;br /&gt;financial institution who reported a case to the Anti-Corruption Agency found, instead, &lt;br /&gt;himself the subject of an internal investigation. The ACA dropped the case like a hot potato &lt;br /&gt;when they discovered that the real purchaser of the asset was a Special Purpose Vehicle &lt;br /&gt;(SPV) owned by Mr S, Khairy’s and Norza’s proxy. It was the honest employee who found &lt;br /&gt;himself transferred to a desk job in Bank Negara.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s ‘consultants’ far outnumber these honest souls. Many were brought in during the &lt;br /&gt;heady days of 1998 and 1999 when Malaysia fawned on the young Oxbridge graduates &lt;br /&gt;who were seen as saviours of the country. Take, for example, the case of Azman Yahaya, &lt;br /&gt;the bright young administrator from the London School of Economics who was a deft and &lt;br /&gt;able steward in the days immediately following the 1997 Asian Economic Crisis. Azman &lt;br /&gt;was rewarded by being given business interests in Scomi as well as awarded a contract to &lt;br /&gt;his own company, Symphony, which did nothing more than take over the job of &lt;br /&gt;distributing shareholder circulars previously carried out by a government department. In a &lt;br /&gt;sense, Azman was being rewarded for doing a good job. But it was a way of removing him &lt;br /&gt;from being in the thick of what was to happen next. Many of the boys in the CDRC &lt;br /&gt;(Corporate Debt Restructuring Committee), Ministry of Finance and Danaharta that he &lt;br /&gt;trained are now Khairy loyalists who do his bidding in the hope of being another Azman &lt;br /&gt;Yahaya. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy knows that all this is happening and yet he does nothing to stop it. The natural &lt;br /&gt;presumption is that Khairy is building his own empire. But since most of his cronies are &lt;br /&gt;relative unknowns to the general public, the goings-on behind closed doors never attract &lt;br /&gt;the public condemnation it deserves. The opposition parties in Malaysia are so out of touch &lt;br /&gt;that they still focus their attacks on the corruption of Mahathir’s days instead of dealing &lt;br /&gt;with current reality. They do not know that far from getting better, the power of patronage &lt;br /&gt;in Malaysian political life has been greatly enhanced by the new circle of Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi’s Young Turks. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The only murmurings against Khairy’s stripping of national assets have come from some &lt;br /&gt;dissenting voices in UMNO allied to former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad. In &lt;br /&gt;June this year, some BN Members of Parliament tried to ask questions related to the abuse &lt;br /&gt;of GLC, Khazanah and Danaharta funds. One of them actually posed a question to Second &lt;br /&gt;Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop, questioning the logic of giving away such &lt;br /&gt; - 54 - &lt;br /&gt;important assignments on a commission basis to untrained and inexperienced companies &lt;br /&gt;such as ECM Libra, Ethos Consulting and Binafikir. The hidden agenda of the question was &lt;br /&gt;supposed to be an attack on Khairy’s malignant role in the government’s economic &lt;br /&gt;activities. When that Member of Parliament put his question on paper, the message was &lt;br /&gt;swiftly relayed to Khairy by a woman senator. Khairy promptly called Abdullah’s office, &lt;br /&gt;who arranged a private session with that Member of Parliament. In no uncertain terms, he &lt;br /&gt;was told that such questions were ‘unhelpful’. No more was heard of the question and &lt;br /&gt;probably in the next few years no more will be heard of that Member of Parliament either. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Not forgetting that Khairy is one of the three who make the penultimate decision on who &lt;br /&gt;becomes a Barisan Nasional election candidate, the government backbenchers are muted &lt;br /&gt;and dare only raise questions on issues that are connected to the former administration of &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad. No smell except that of mountain roses comes out whenever they &lt;br /&gt;speak of the administration of Abdullah Badawi. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is, of course, the seething discontent. But as long as Abdullah Badawi is Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister, Khairy and his cronies would be free to enrich themselves. The examples of the &lt;br /&gt;previous administration are not lost on these bright young things from Oxford and &lt;br /&gt;Cambridge, who have found a legal way to make corruption and patronage work for them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is free to propose his money-making deals to the government’s many agencies &lt;br /&gt;because there are people who would be left free to cream some other deals in return for &lt;br /&gt;cooperation and silence. For example, in Khanzah, Azman Mokhtar himself is seen as &lt;br /&gt;relatively clean. However, his former company, Binafikir, now headed by his ally Mohd &lt;br /&gt;Rashdan Yusof, another Cambridge graduate, is desperately bidding for a multi-million &lt;br /&gt;dollar deal that can catapult itself to the highest reaches of Malaysian financial life. To that &lt;br /&gt;end, Mohd Rashdan has been lobbying Khairy to allow him to take over Aseambankers on &lt;br /&gt;the back of Binafikir’s alleged successes in restructuring government companies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In reality, Binafikir is no more than a collection of fresh Cambridge graduates led by &lt;br /&gt;several accountants who got lucky in 1998 by being tapped by Nor Mohamed Yakcop to &lt;br /&gt;split MAS into an asset holding as well as operations companies. Since then, Binafikir has &lt;br /&gt;done little business worthy of mention. But Mohd Rashdan feels that by acquiring &lt;br /&gt;Aseambankers the deal-flow will be automatic. Aseambankers has a reservoir of ready- &lt;br /&gt;made clients, whereas Mohd Rashdan considers Binafikir a reservoir of talent. This view is &lt;br /&gt;not shared by veteran bankers and other industry players who deem Binafikir a company &lt;br /&gt;with no tangible assets and definitely without the track record it boasts of. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Nevertheless, the deal will go through on the back of Rashdan’s relationship with the &lt;br /&gt;Oxbridge mafia led by Khairy. The recent failure of MAS to emerge with flying colours &lt;br /&gt;from the crisis of 1997 has served to show that many of the so-called successes of the &lt;br /&gt;Khairy allies are no more than hot air. Yet, no one stops the rolling juggernaut because few &lt;br /&gt;amongst the people understand what goes on behind the Malaysian government’s very &lt;br /&gt;tightly closed doors. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy makes his money not only through the Khazanah deals, but also by making other &lt;br /&gt; - 55 - &lt;br /&gt;side deals through his connections in the Finance Ministry headed by his father-in-law. &lt;br /&gt;Two such examples are the award of Bumiputra shares in public-listed companies which &lt;br /&gt;have foreign majority ownership. Again, Khairy relies on Norza to give him information on &lt;br /&gt;such deals. In these particular cases, Khairy promised to allocate the shares to two potential &lt;br /&gt;allies. The first company will see its shares allocated to members of a certain royal family &lt;br /&gt;closely allied to Khairy. The other, which is also being targeted by one of Najib Tun Razak’s &lt;br /&gt;brothers, will see around 19% of its shares given away to a Bumiputra nominee of an &lt;br /&gt;existing Chinese billionaire who has often been seen accompanying Abdullah during his &lt;br /&gt;many trips to the United States to visit ailing First Lady, Endon Mahmood. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What is the net income for Khairy in these two deals? The first transaction will involve &lt;br /&gt;shares worth RM526 million. Commission to Khairy would be around RM15 million. On &lt;br /&gt;the second transaction, the sum involved is much bigger, i.e. RM883 million. Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;expected to make at least RM20 million on this transaction alone. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, since March, a rough calculation of Khairy’s received and potential income would be as &lt;br /&gt;follows: &lt;br /&gt;1. Commission from sale of 5% of TM to Temasek Holdings, Singapore – RM16 million. &lt;br /&gt;2. Commission from the purchase of M1 shares by Khazanah and TM – RM6 million. &lt;br /&gt;3. Expected commission from further sale of 5% of TM to Temasek Holdings, Singapore – &lt;br /&gt;RM17 million. &lt;br /&gt;4. Expected commission from sale of Danaharta assets – RM85 million. &lt;br /&gt;5. Expected commission from sale of Felda non-core assets to Temasek Holdings and DBS &lt;br /&gt;Bank – RM30 million. &lt;br /&gt;6. Expected commission from allocation of Bumiputra shares in foreign-owned company 1 &lt;br /&gt;– RM15 million. &lt;br /&gt;7. Expected commission from allocation of Bumiputra shares in foreign-owned company 2 &lt;br /&gt;– RM20 million. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The total amount? A cool RM189 million. And that’s only the ones that have been in the &lt;br /&gt;public eye. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Why is Khairy able to engineer these deals with very little opposition? Firstly, the &lt;br /&gt;opposition in Malaysia is extremely fragmented and unable to bring itself together against &lt;br /&gt;the hugely popular government of Abdullah Badawi. DAP couches its objections in an &lt;br /&gt;academic language that is not easily understood by the majority of the voters. PAS has no &lt;br /&gt;economist worth its salt. And PKR is more interested in attacking Mahathir than criticizing &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah, the man they credit for releasing Anwar Ibrahim. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Secondly, potential opponents of Khairy within UMNO are tainted by their own cases &lt;br /&gt;stemming from the long administration of Mahathir Mohamad. Mahathir’s children, for &lt;br /&gt;example, can hardly criticize Khairy for getting the economic benefits of being an insider &lt;br /&gt;when they themselves benefited from national assets such as Petronas to the tune of &lt;br /&gt;hundreds of millions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 56 - &lt;br /&gt;Thirdly, the young professionals who were brought in over the last few years are too &lt;br /&gt;worried about their long-term careers to raise objections. They consider Khairy one of their &lt;br /&gt;own and hope to share in his achievements on the way to the top. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Fourthly, many of the administrators of the affected organisations have been bought by &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, Norza and their allies to the extent that they are themselves involved in the &lt;br /&gt;deception of the public. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy is well on the way to becoming a billionaire by the end of this year. Who knows, &lt;br /&gt;like Thai Prime Minister Thaksin, Khairy may yet be the first billionaire to be appointed &lt;br /&gt;prime minister of Malaysia. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, the most important reason is that Khairy is a member of the First Family of &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia. His marriage to Nori Abdullah gave him the same opportunities that were taken &lt;br /&gt;by other Asian luminaries such as General Prabowo (the son-in-law of Suharto), Taufik &lt;br /&gt;Kiemas (husband of Megawati Sukarnoputri) and Mike Arroyo (husband of Gloria &lt;br /&gt;Macapagal Arroyo). &lt;br /&gt; - 57 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 13: He loves me, he loves me not &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;After the rumblings of 1998, many Malaysians began to care less about the personal lives of &lt;br /&gt;politicians. It was deemed that politicians should be judged by the merits of their work, &lt;br /&gt;integrity and ability rather than by the goings-on in their bedrooms. When former Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad used Anwar Ibrahim’s alleged homosexuality as an excuse &lt;br /&gt;for the latter’s sacking, the reaction was more sympathy towards Anwar. Maybe the tide &lt;br /&gt;has turned and, in Malaysia’s new political culture, the private lives of politicians should &lt;br /&gt;not be of concern unless it also encroaches on their public work. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the tide has not completely turned. Accusations of sexual misdeeds continue to dog &lt;br /&gt;many politicians. Some of these accusations do have elements of truth in them, but they are &lt;br /&gt;often exaggerated to create lustful ogres out of the targeted individuals. For example, while &lt;br /&gt;it is true some ministers have dalliances with artistes, models and other such ilk, hardly &lt;br /&gt;any had ever been caught in flagrante delicto, except in the minds of their enemies. The &lt;br /&gt;accusations of sexual misconduct are used mainly by opponents within the same party, as &lt;br /&gt;well as by opposition figures. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is ludicrous that, after 1998, the opposition parties in Malaysia, while criticising the &lt;br /&gt;behaviour of UMNO politicians who described Anwar Ibrahim’s alleged trysts in graphic &lt;br /&gt;detail, also conjured up many other fictitious accusations such as naming them as &lt;br /&gt;mistresses to Mahathir and saying that they knew a person who knew a person who had &lt;br /&gt;allegedly caught Najib Tun Razak in bed with a famous singer in a Port Dickson hotel &lt;br /&gt;room. Perhaps the most unbelievable account yet was one related by a PKR Youth &lt;br /&gt;Information Chief who accused Abdullah Ahmad Badawi of carrying out an affair with an &lt;br /&gt;alleged (non-existent) female police escort. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin too has not escaped these accusations. In 2002, a high-ranking civil &lt;br /&gt;servant made a remark to Dr Mahathir’s then Political Secretary, Aziz Samsudin, that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, then Special Officer to Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi, had been an &lt;br /&gt;active homosexual during his university days. Khairy had apparently been involved with &lt;br /&gt;several members of the gay community of Oxford University, including a certain &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian-Chinese undergraduate. Such juicy stories were too good to be kept silent and it &lt;br /&gt;wound its way up to the very top. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some of Mahathir’s aides made some enquiries to ascertain the truth of these allegations. &lt;br /&gt;They concluded that the stories were indeed true and they reported it to their boss. &lt;br /&gt;However, Mahathir did not take it up as he felt that Khairy was a non-entity and would &lt;br /&gt;remain so at least for the foreseeable future. Mahathir was right about Khairy not being &lt;br /&gt;gay, but he was obviously wrong about the rapid propulsion of this Young Turk. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Unknown to Aziz Samsudin as well as to Mahathir’s other aides, the story about Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;alleged homosexuality was planted by Anwar Ibrahim’s men. A certain former deputy &lt;br /&gt;minister who had been a close Anwar supporter (and therefore dropped by Mahathir in the &lt;br /&gt;1999 General Election) had been used to bring the rumour to Aziz’s attention through his &lt;br /&gt;civil service friend. The rumour itself was created by then PKR Youth Leader Ezam Mohd &lt;br /&gt; - 58 - &lt;br /&gt;Nor who had allegedly ‘heard about the rumour’ from a senior civil servant who was a &lt;br /&gt;reformasi sympathiser and who had a child in the same school as Khairy. It was completely &lt;br /&gt;untrue. The idea that Khairy is gay is a figment of the imagination of the PKR leaders who &lt;br /&gt;desperately wanted to tar Abdullah Badawi whom they felt, at that time, was less &lt;br /&gt;sympathetic to the plight of their boss; having been his mortal enemy in UMNO for more &lt;br /&gt;than one and a half decades. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the rumour took on a life of its own. From merely being gay, Khairy was now said to &lt;br /&gt;have even served as a rent-boy to the wives of ministers visiting London during his &lt;br /&gt;university days. At one time, the rumours became so flagrant that it even reached the ears &lt;br /&gt;of Anwar Ibrahim, then serving his prison sentence. Anwar enthusiastically asked his &lt;br /&gt;lawyers to verify the details of Khairy’s alleged homosexuality. It was a tool that would &lt;br /&gt;have been useful to the opposition, if only it had been true. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;On the contrary, Khairy is not attracted to men. He had once been propositioned by a &lt;br /&gt;certain homosexual Malaysian newspaper columnist during a party at his house in Jalan U &lt;br /&gt;Thant. The columnist fell head over heels with Khairy. This is not unusual. After all, Greg &lt;br /&gt;Sheridan, one of the most worthless and sycophantic political hacks ever produced from &lt;br /&gt;Down Under, had once started a whole chapter on Malaysian politics by describing how &lt;br /&gt;enamoured he was with Khairy’s Hindustani movie-star looks. It was no wonder that the &lt;br /&gt;columnist fell for the then TV compere. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This columnist usually invited sets of young men to his house, which he shared with his &lt;br /&gt;life partner. These soirees were occasions where the columnist promised the world to the &lt;br /&gt;young men in return for being their ‘special friend’. While many fell for it and found &lt;br /&gt;themselves propelled to the inner circle of politics through this highly influential &lt;br /&gt;columnist’s efforts, Khairy himself rebuffed the columnist’s advances. While they remained &lt;br /&gt;friends, it was soon made clear to the columnist that Khairy would have his own way of &lt;br /&gt;reaching the pinnacles of power and it would be he who would be called Master and the &lt;br /&gt;columnist who would be the Servant. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;That is not to say that Khairy did not use his looks to achieve his ambitions. Amongst the &lt;br /&gt;circle of young Oxford and Cambridge men who circulated around UMNO Youth in the &lt;br /&gt;years following the outbreak of reformasi, Khairy was deemed the most likely person to be &lt;br /&gt;able to use his marriage bed as a catapult to success. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was one of his friends, Vincent Lim Kian Teck, now Chinese Political Secretary to the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister, who introduced Khairy to Nori Abdullah, then a part-time researcher at &lt;br /&gt;the Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS). Khairy did not need to try so &lt;br /&gt;hard. Nori fell almost instantly for the young and articulate Oxford graduate who was at &lt;br /&gt;least her intellectual equal. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Many do not know that Nori Abdullah is perhaps the most intelligent of all the children of &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian Prime Ministers. A precocious child, Nori often asked for books from &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s many foreign trips when he was Minister for Foreign Affairs. While the &lt;br /&gt;children of other ministers clamoured for jewellery and expensive high-tech gadgets, Nori &lt;br /&gt; - 59 - &lt;br /&gt;always settled for the more intellectual gifts that her father could provide. She is one of the &lt;br /&gt;most well-read persons of her age group and is no shrinking violet when it comes to &lt;br /&gt;arguing intellectually with other prominent thinkers.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So it is odd indeed that Nori chose to be the wind beneath Khairy’s wings. She could have &lt;br /&gt;been more upfront in herself making a political name. But as the couple’s aim is to reach &lt;br /&gt;the highest peak of politics, it was unlikely that both could reach there. So, by all means, let &lt;br /&gt;Khairy be there as Prime Minister and Nori will exercise the function of a thinking First &lt;br /&gt;Lady. Indeed, were the couple able to achieve their aims, they would be the most learned &lt;br /&gt;First Couple in Malaysia’s history, even surpassing Dr Mahathir and his wife Dr Siti &lt;br /&gt;Hasmah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But we are thinking too much of the future. Khairy definitely realised full well that being &lt;br /&gt;married to Nori was like getting an express ticket to his targeted destination. He might not &lt;br /&gt;have felt as strongly as Nori who has Khairy’s picture in her handbag, as her computer &lt;br /&gt;wallpaper at the office, and even on the coffee mug from which she drank. But he played &lt;br /&gt;the game well and though there may not be love, there is certainly affection. Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;collection of international girlfriends which he had amassed in Singapore, Oxford and &lt;br /&gt;London were now chucked aside for the Japanese doll that is Nori. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What about the rumours of Khairy’s alleged infidelities? Again, these are often exaggerated &lt;br /&gt;by Khairy’s enemies. Take, for example, the so-called khalwat incident. In that story, widely &lt;br /&gt;circulated in the opposition press, Khairy was said to have been caught in the act with a &lt;br /&gt;Burmese girl (some say Filipino). According to the story, Nori and one of her other fellow &lt;br /&gt;Puteri UMNO Exco Members suspected Khairy of two-timing and had arranged for JAWI &lt;br /&gt;officers to spy on and catch the lovebirds. When they did so at Khairy and Nori’s &lt;br /&gt;apartment in Pantai, Khairy and Nori were allegedly summoned by Abdullah Badawi who &lt;br /&gt;gave the couple a dressing-down. Abdullah had been so angry -- so the story goes -- that he &lt;br /&gt;even slapped Khairy in the face. The couple were told in no uncertain terms that for &lt;br /&gt;political reasons they must stay together and be seen to still be totally in love. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some say that the slapping incident took place at Putrajaya, in the Prime Minister’s Office. &lt;br /&gt;Others allege that this happened in Abdullah’s family home in Kepala Batas -- and they &lt;br /&gt;even pointed out that Abdullah suddenly re-routed his return from a Kedah UMNO &lt;br /&gt;meeting to make a short and unexplained private visit to his Kepala Batas home. Still &lt;br /&gt;others insist that Khairy and Nori were hauled up not only in front of Abdullah but also in &lt;br /&gt;attendance were Abdullah’s brother, Ibrahim, and Nori’s elder brother, Kamaluddin. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The truth of this story is far less juicy. In Khairy’s office at the Prime Minister’s Department &lt;br /&gt;is a former female colleague. The story was made up after the lady was seen in Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;company during a certain official function. But it was nothing so sinister. Khairy had &lt;br /&gt;offered to chaperone the lady when her other boss, Special Officer to the Prime Minister, &lt;br /&gt;Ahmad Zaki Zahid, was not able to accompany her to the meeting. So, as a gentleman, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had stepped in as he was also due to attend the same meeting. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What is interesting is who made up this story. Several chains of narration, including &lt;br /&gt; - 60 - &lt;br /&gt;amongst them Wanita UMNO Chief Rafidah Aziz, newly-married Minister for Home &lt;br /&gt;Affairs Azmi Khalid, and even Deputy Internal Security Minister Noh Omar, eventually &lt;br /&gt;were traced to Najib Tun Razak’s circle. The story was concocted by several of Najib’s inner &lt;br /&gt;circle of advisors in the hope that it would shake the image of Khairy’s loyalty to Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt;Of course, leaks were planted to the opposition through the intermediary of a senior &lt;br /&gt;journalist who worked freelance and often writes for international newspapers. In reality, &lt;br /&gt;there was not a shred of truth in the story. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Funny enough, the idea of the so-called JAWI raid stems from Najib’s own brush with the &lt;br /&gt;religious police. While many say that he was caught in a hotel room in Port Dickson by the &lt;br /&gt;JAWI counterpart in Negeri Sembilan, JAINS, Najib eventually countered the allegation by &lt;br /&gt;producing the report book of JAINS’ raids. Nowhere in the book is Najib mentioned, nor of &lt;br /&gt;any raid in the alleged hotel in Port Dickson around the date alleged by his enemies. In &lt;br /&gt;fact, the JAINS rumour was a smokescreen. Najib had indeed been caught with that actress, &lt;br /&gt;but not in Port Dickson but in a hotel in Kuala Lumpur. Najib’s special Branch officers had &lt;br /&gt;inserted the story of it being in Port Dickson in order to lay the ground for his alibi. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Contrary to the views of opposition leaders, Khairy is neither a homosexual nor an &lt;br /&gt;adulterer. But he is not an angel either. His closeness to Islamic norms is only the result of &lt;br /&gt;his being married into Abdullah’s family, but he is not the debauched, narrow that is &lt;br /&gt;painted by his enemies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy realises that his fortune, at least while Abdullah is in power, is the result of Nori’s &lt;br /&gt;unbending love for him. The devotion that Nori showers upon Khairy is the backbone of &lt;br /&gt;his strength in Abdullah’s circle. In spite of many Abdullah’s close friends and even &lt;br /&gt;relatives accusing Khairy of using his marital bed as security for keeping power, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;will do nothing to hurt Nori -- and he knows the way to hurt Nori is to accept that the &lt;br /&gt;criticism levelled against her husband is true. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The American ambassador to Malaysia, when attending the reception for Khairy's and &lt;br /&gt;Nori’s wedding, gave the Freudian comment that Khairy ‘is a very lucky man’. It was &lt;br /&gt;funny that the same was not said for Nori. But all is fair in love and politics, and it is that &lt;br /&gt;love that makes Khairy invincible. &lt;br /&gt; - 61 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 14: Crowning the king &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia’s first Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, once joked that he was too happy &lt;br /&gt;doing his job as Prime Minister he did not wish to let go too soon. In fact, he remarked &lt;br /&gt;lightheartedly, his deputy, Tun Razak, was ‘too young’ to succeed him. Of course, the &lt;br /&gt;Tunku meant it all in the jocular mood for which he is famous. But that incident remained &lt;br /&gt;long in the mind of Tun Razak to such an extent that he began to seethe with anger. It was &lt;br /&gt;not many years later that the Tunku found himself on the receiving end of Tun Razak’s &lt;br /&gt;discontentment and swiftly found his throne seized from him in the aftermath of the May &lt;br /&gt;13 melee. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Such is the way with crown princes. Though near to the throne, they are often very much &lt;br /&gt;aware of the instability of their position. Unless and until they ascend the throne and &lt;br /&gt;become kings in their own right, their position continues to be insecure for they are always &lt;br /&gt;the egg at the end of the buffalo’s horn. The king holds powers of life and death over their &lt;br /&gt;crown princes and woe betide any man who faces either a strong king or one who is made &lt;br /&gt;mad by his years in power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At the present moment, though the premiership of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is but a &lt;br /&gt;couple of years old, it is already showing the signs of a weary and tired reign. The king is &lt;br /&gt;weak and uninspiring. The crown princes, on the other hand, are eager to get their chance &lt;br /&gt;at playing that role. Let there be no mistake about it, although Najib Tun Razak is the heir &lt;br /&gt;and Anwar Ibrahim the pretender, the real successor to Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s &lt;br /&gt;leadership is his son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin. At the young age of 30, Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;become the undisputed Man of the Future. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy fully realises his position is precarious. Though ensured through his marriage, he &lt;br /&gt;cannot rely on being long in a safe position due to the inability of Abdullah Badawi to &lt;br /&gt;steward a steady ship of state. Khairy must quickly become king himself or replace his own &lt;br /&gt;father-in-law with a new ruler indebted to him. Since the last few days, this need has &lt;br /&gt;become more urgent. Instability has come creeping into Abdullah’s government as &lt;br /&gt;Malaysians wake up to the realisation that the man they overwhelmingly backed in the last &lt;br /&gt;General Election has been unable to deliver on his promises. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In November 2003, when Abdullah first became Prime Minister, Khairy was cocky enough &lt;br /&gt;to remark to his friends that he would soon put former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir in jail, &lt;br /&gt;together with his bosom buddy Daim Zainuddin and other luminaries of that bygone era. &lt;br /&gt;Two years on, it is Mahathir who has proven himself still king of Malaysian politics by his &lt;br /&gt;deft remote control tactics exercised in the style that is so uniquely his. Mahathir quite &lt;br /&gt;openly challenged Abdullah’s authority by bringing up the AP issue and making &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s government look more corrupt than his own. In other matters too, Mahathir has &lt;br /&gt;shown he is no pushover. Abdullah is fully aware that he cannot make any move, even &lt;br /&gt;within UMNO, without considering the opinion of Dr Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Take, for example, the appointment of Mahadzir Khalid as Acting Menteri Besar of Kedah. &lt;br /&gt;Everyone is aware that the current Menteri Besar, Syed Razak, is an invalid and has been so &lt;br /&gt; - 62 - &lt;br /&gt;for several months. Yet, Abdullah took his time in appointing a surrogate Menteri Besar, &lt;br /&gt;not for lack of candidates, but as he himself admitted to a delegation of Kedah UMNO &lt;br /&gt;deputy ministers and Exco members, Syed Razak cannot be removed because he is &lt;br /&gt;‘Mahathir’s man’. Such is the weakness of Abdullah Badawi -- he has been thwarted in &lt;br /&gt;appointing his own man as Menteri Besar in Perlis, Kedah, Selangor, Johor and Sabah. &lt;br /&gt;Only in Negeri Sembilan has Abdullah been able to put his nominee as the local boss. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The fear that Abdullah has of Mahathir’s power is very real. Abdullah knows Mahathir will &lt;br /&gt;not tolerate any attack on his legacies. Even worse, Mahathir is now fully awake to the &lt;br /&gt;potential disaster on his legacy that can be wrought by Khairy and his friends. So Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;lies in his Putrajaya office, half-dozing, half-shaking, unaware of Mahathir’s moves yet &lt;br /&gt;fully conscious of the threats they may bring. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib Tun Razak has been nothing but a disappointment. While paying lip-service to &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s call for reform, Najib has been tepid in his support for Abdullah’s policies. &lt;br /&gt;Even in the AP issue, Najib, who is no friend of Rafidah, played the role of spokesman, as if &lt;br /&gt;he was in a second-rate school play. Najib plays the careful game, not willing to put his &lt;br /&gt;neck out for the boss, because he knows once that neck is slit, it will be him who becomes &lt;br /&gt;king. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy lies awake at night, seeing his plans, conjured two years ago, come only partly to &lt;br /&gt;fruition. Threats remain to his ascension to the ultimate prize of being Malaysia’s youngest &lt;br /&gt;ever Prime Minister. He hopes that Anwar’s popularity may help him once he finds a way &lt;br /&gt;for Abdullah to readmit Anwar into UMNO. But Anwar is also fast losing his lustre. &lt;br /&gt;Spending too much time overseas, Anwar has distanced his closest supporters by playing &lt;br /&gt;favourites that was his hallmark when previously in power. More importantly, Anwar has &lt;br /&gt;failed to fulfil his promise of leading the opposition or deliver the much-needed funds as a &lt;br /&gt;result of his sojourn in distant lands which he had promised. His failure to win over DAP &lt;br /&gt;to accommodate PAS, which was his main contribution to the 1999 General Election, is a &lt;br /&gt;taint on his abilities.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The PAS leadership is increasingly distrustful of Anwar and his lieutenants, fully aware &lt;br /&gt;that Anwar is toying with Khairy in the hope of again being a part of UMNO’s leadership. &lt;br /&gt;While the two leaders at the very top, that is PAS President Abdul Hadi Awang and &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan Chief Minister Nik Aziz Nik Mat, continue to honour Anwar whenever he deigns &lt;br /&gt;to visit their territories, other senior PAS leaders including the so-called ‘professional’ &lt;br /&gt;group have been holding secret strategy meetings to discuss their response in the event &lt;br /&gt;that Anwar pulls a surprise and leaves the opposition for UMNO’s greener shores. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One PAS Vice President has even gone so far as to discuss the issue with Khairy himself, &lt;br /&gt;meeting him two months ago in a room in the Crown Princess Hotel in Kuala Lumpur. The &lt;br /&gt;meeting was casual but two messages were exchanged. The PAS leader told Khairy that &lt;br /&gt;Anwar would not be able to bring PAS back into the Barisan Nasional fold -- a move in &lt;br /&gt;which Abdullah Badawi was a key player during the early days of Tun Razak’s &lt;br /&gt;government. Secondly, Khairy told the PAS leader that Anwar is acceptable to UMNO but &lt;br /&gt;not his party, PKR, which must be dissolved before Anwar would be allowed in. &lt;br /&gt; - 63 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Though he denies this in public, Anwar could not resist telling the crowds that UMNO has &lt;br /&gt;begun sending messages for him to consider rejoining the party. A few days ago in Kota &lt;br /&gt;Bharu, Anwar remarked that a former Menteri Besar and division leaders of UMNO had &lt;br /&gt;invited him to return to reform their party. The audience would have been less impressed &lt;br /&gt;if Anwar had been more candid and named those people. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The former Menteri Besar is Osman Aroff, a Kedah politician synonymous with the most &lt;br /&gt;extreme degrees of corruption and is currently almost a complete non-entity within the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO leadership. Osman Aroff was Anwar’s bag-boy in Kedah, playing the role of &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s proxy in the battle to subdue Mahathir’s inept, bumbling and almost insane &lt;br /&gt;nominee, Sanusi Junid. But Osman Aroff had lost big time and is no longer a force to be &lt;br /&gt;reckoned with. The division leaders whom Anwar coyly did not name include Afifudin &lt;br /&gt;Omar, another Anwar loyalist who tried to play the same role with Abdullah but got &lt;br /&gt;fooled into accepting a mere State Assembly seat in exchange for the cabinet post he &lt;br /&gt;ardently begged for. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;All these people came to see Anwar because no one else would see them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Since Khairy’s departure from the Prime Minister’s office, Abdullah has begun receiving &lt;br /&gt;Special Branch briefings in the comfort of his home rather than at the office. The reason? So &lt;br /&gt;that in the middle of these briefings, Khairy can casually enter the room as if by &lt;br /&gt;coincidence and plonk himself in the nearest chair to also absorb the information being &lt;br /&gt;dispensed. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the matter of Anwar Ibrahim’s goings on, it is Khairy that is entrusted in gauging their &lt;br /&gt;value and to produce the next strategy for Abdullah. Abdullah knows that Anwar is more &lt;br /&gt;valuable to Khairy than to himself. After all, bringing Anwar back into UMNO’s fold &lt;br /&gt;would help Khairy’s credentials as a young but fair politician of the future. Also, Anwar &lt;br /&gt;would help prop Khairy up in the face of a Najib onslaught. But as for Abdullah himself, &lt;br /&gt;bringing Anwar back can only mean pitting himself for a head-to-head confrontation with &lt;br /&gt;the pincer movements of both Mahathir Mohamad and Najib Tun Razak. So, bringing &lt;br /&gt;Anwar in is Khairy’s way of transforming himself in the long term from a mere crown &lt;br /&gt;prince to a king with real powers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Strangely enough, Anwar never mentions the dealings he has with Khairy in his public &lt;br /&gt;addresses. Yet, in private, Anwar admires Khairy almost to the point of envy. Regardless of &lt;br /&gt;whatever faults Khairy may have, in Anwar’s eyes, he is the key to him returning to power. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is also Anwar’s key to retribution for Mahathir Mohamad. Ludicrous though it may &lt;br /&gt;sound, the very closest of Anwar’s circle has been instructed not only to treat Khairy with &lt;br /&gt;respect and to try to establish a relationship with him, but also to begin cozying up to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s trusted advisors such as Omar Ong and Ahmad Zaki Zahid.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But the tide of politics is a strange phenomenon. Its ebb and flow cannot be determined &lt;br /&gt;with exact accuracy. In the next few weeks, the game will be played out to its climax. &lt;br /&gt;Moves are being made on Khairy’s side as well as that of all the other dramatis personae to &lt;br /&gt; - 64 - &lt;br /&gt;an endgame that will change the face of Malaysian politics. Khairy is about to face the &lt;br /&gt;biggest test of his short but meteoric career... &lt;br /&gt; - 65 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 15: The game of high stakes &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Politics is a game of high risk. The ebb and tide cannot be estimated and often those who &lt;br /&gt;ride the surf, even after many years, find that the great big ocean swallows them up the &lt;br /&gt;moment they make the smallest slip. It is not a game for the faint-hearted, as a fall often &lt;br /&gt;breaks or even completely kills off one’s career. When a politician falls, he is often shamed &lt;br /&gt;as well. The price of such a collapse is much too high for the majority of us and yet people &lt;br /&gt;line up for their fifteen minutes of power in order to taste what is so often described as the &lt;br /&gt;headiest thing a person can experience – the power to lord over your fellow human beings. &lt;br /&gt;The gamble of politics produces an adrenalin rush which, as Henry Kissinger said, is the &lt;br /&gt;most powerful aphrodisiac. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For Khairy Jamaluddin, power has come quick and fast. He has risen far in a short period &lt;br /&gt;of time at an age when most people would only be thinking of where to find their next rent &lt;br /&gt;or car instalment. More powerful than most politicians thirty years his senior, Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;had a taste of power which the majority of us will never experience, even up to our dying &lt;br /&gt;days. He sits within the ranks of those whose actions can, if they so wish, determine the &lt;br /&gt;confluence of our own lives. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yet Khairy has reached there by playing a game of low risk. He is not much of a gambler &lt;br /&gt;and his rise to power has been relatively easy. Instead of relying on the roll of the dice and &lt;br /&gt;the decisions of Fate, Khairy has instead opportunistically weaved his way to the top on &lt;br /&gt;the back of others. His accession, for example, to the second topmost post in UMNO Youth &lt;br /&gt;was more an anointment rather than an election. Acclaimed by the cowed and &lt;br /&gt;dumbfounded UMNO Youth Members, Khairy would not have got where he is today if not &lt;br /&gt;for the grace of his father-in-law. Admittedly, he is far more intelligent than most UMNO &lt;br /&gt;leaders, even those who have been in this game for a few decades. However, there have &lt;br /&gt;been many UMNO leaders with more promising intelligence, abilities and charisma who &lt;br /&gt;have fallen by the wayside, simply because the majority of UMNO leaders are not selected &lt;br /&gt;for their talents but for their connections and, nowadays, their ability to dispense &lt;br /&gt;patronage. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s politics has never been tested. While the sycophantic journalists of foreign &lt;br /&gt;newspapers and Brenda Pereira’s coterie of spin-stringers in Jalan Riong constantly &lt;br /&gt;attribute Khairy to many of the so-called successes of present-day UMNO, the claims are &lt;br /&gt;largely hollow. For example, Khairy cannot be credited for diffusing the Suqiu affair for the &lt;br /&gt;simple reason that Suqiu had already backed down under pressure from the UMNO thugs &lt;br /&gt;led by Aziz Sheikh Fadzir. Khairy’s contribution to the stunning success of the Barisan &lt;br /&gt;Nasional in the last General Election was limited to selecting the motto ‘Cemerlang, &lt;br /&gt;Gemilang, Terbilang’ (together with the quote-machine Kalimullah Masheerul Hassan), &lt;br /&gt;selecting candidates (who would have been selected anyway on the Barisan Nasional &lt;br /&gt;onslaught if they had been cows instead of humans) and promoting a more presidential &lt;br /&gt;image for the lacklustre and uninspiring Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. For Khairy to be &lt;br /&gt;credited with actually snatching victory from the jaws of defeat is to give a lie to the signs &lt;br /&gt;that were shown many months before the election. Malaysians, tired of the Anwar affair &lt;br /&gt;and pushed to the brink by the hard fist of Mahathir Mohamad, simply welcomed the &lt;br /&gt; - 66 - &lt;br /&gt;kinder, gentler government that Abdullah promised, including the soon-to-be-broken &lt;br /&gt;pledges of eradicating the choking corruption of the last 22 years. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Brendan Pereira, Phar Kim Beng, Reme Ahmad, Zainuddin Affendi, Leslie Lau, Rosli &lt;br /&gt;Ismail and other journalists of that ilk knew full well when they praised Khairy that they &lt;br /&gt;were exaggerating the circumstances. Yet those news reports allowed them access to the &lt;br /&gt;inner circle of Khairy’s politics and, more importantly, direct access to the man himself. To &lt;br /&gt;a certain extent, it is advance payment for services rendered in the future. They know that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is the current ‘rent-a-quote’ and they needed to have good relations with a man so &lt;br /&gt;eager to show the world how markedly different and superbly intelligent he is compared to &lt;br /&gt;the previous generation of doddering UMNO fools. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Can Khairy play this game endlessly? Already there are rumours of the impending &lt;br /&gt;instability of Abdullah’s government caused by intense pressure from all sides. Abdullah is &lt;br /&gt;facing political enemies within UMNO from amongst the allies of his predecessor as well as &lt;br /&gt;his potential successor, Najib Tun Razak. The economy is extremely bad and the &lt;br /&gt;government presented a hopeless budget which in its detail shows that there is no way the &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian deficit problem can be addressed anytime before the end of the next parliament &lt;br /&gt;to be elected sometime in 2008. Inflation is rife, running at 9 to 10% and only slightly lower &lt;br /&gt;elsewhere. The crushing inability of the GLCs to produce quick solutions to Malaysia’s &lt;br /&gt;cashflow problems is compounded by the extreme reliance on the Oxbridge circle, &lt;br /&gt;regardless of their moral and corporate governance issues. UMNO resists almost to a man &lt;br /&gt;efforts to transform it from a corrupt, scandal-ridden and patronage-infested clan of self- &lt;br /&gt;interested individuals to a more responsible political party in the real sense of the word. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s solution is to use the spirit of the time to bring in reforms that will benefit &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s image as well as his future. Yet these reforms are increasingly seen by the &lt;br /&gt;public to be obviously catered towards Khairy’s own survival. He brushes aside these &lt;br /&gt;concerns at his peril, because together with openness comes open criticism and Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;sorely untested when it comes to that. Khairy has never faced anything but praise from &lt;br /&gt;within his party. Nor has he been challenged by an effective opposition leader of his &lt;br /&gt;stature. The best PAS can produce is Husam Musa who early on had compromised his &lt;br /&gt;principles by making a deal with Khairy on the court challenges that each party had &lt;br /&gt;initiated regarding seats in Kelantan and Terengganu. Charismatic politicians in PKR have &lt;br /&gt;been killed off by the implicit instructions of Anwar Ibrahim not to criticise Abdullah and &lt;br /&gt;other members of the current government such as Khairy. Ezam Mohd Nor is a leader lost &lt;br /&gt;in his own dreams, not realising that he is treated as a joke in Khairy’s circle due to his &lt;br /&gt;incessant demands to be given a Deputy Minister’s post when he returns to UMNO. The &lt;br /&gt;DAP is still in transition, Lim Guan Eng being the future yet in many ways already a man &lt;br /&gt;of the past, too closely tied to his father’s politics to make a major impact against the &lt;br /&gt;charisma of Khairy Jamaluddin. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And so Khairy plots his imminent rise, almost unchallenged. The only dangers are if his &lt;br /&gt;gambles become bigger and riskier, later failing to deliver. For example, Khairy had &lt;br /&gt;recently arranged a meeting in London between Anwar and Abdullah. Ostensibly, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah was on a roadshow to showcase the potential of Malaysian investment. It was a &lt;br /&gt; - 67 - &lt;br /&gt;disaster as far as the economy was concerned for the simple reason that Abdullah has not &lt;br /&gt;shown any innovative approaches to the Malaysian economy. The two questions he could &lt;br /&gt;not answer were why his policies were borrowed almost wholesale from the guidelines of &lt;br /&gt;Temasek Holdings in Singapore and, secondly, why he was harping on sectors such as &lt;br /&gt;agriculture and biotechnology which, worldwide, contribute to a miniscule proportion of &lt;br /&gt;the world economic engine. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, Abdullah could not answer those questions for the simple reason that his mind &lt;br /&gt;was on other things. The RM2.3 million visit was important, yet not as important as the &lt;br /&gt;visitor he received in an anteroom of the hotel where the meetings were held. Too bad for &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah, he was unable to keep it secret as a certain Menteri Besar accidentally walked &lt;br /&gt;into the room during the four-eyes meeting. But that did not matter. Anwar and his boys &lt;br /&gt;would have leaked news about the meeting anyway…. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;According to Zunar, former cartoonist and current editor of Suara Rakyat, the exchanges &lt;br /&gt;between Anwar and Abdullah were mainly concerned with Abdullah expressing his &lt;br /&gt;frustrations with the counter-reactionary forces of Mahathir and Najib. Zunar may have &lt;br /&gt;exaggerated the whining of Abdullah, yet the message he wanted to put across was &lt;br /&gt;obvious. Abdullah is a man under strain and he needed an ally in the form of Anwar. &lt;br /&gt;Secretly, Khairy tells his friends that Anwar’s popularity amongst the common people, if &lt;br /&gt;combined with Abdullah’s, would make his own future politics much more assured and &lt;br /&gt;less risky.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, Zunar is merely a propagandist. He is paid to make Anwar seem like a god. His &lt;br /&gt;livelihood depends on Anwar believing that he has done a good job in making Anwar &lt;br /&gt;seem like the infallible political genius that any thinking person knows he is not. Zunar, &lt;br /&gt;therefore, plants stories that any spin-doctor worth his salt knows in his heart of hearts is &lt;br /&gt;only 10% accurate. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;People like Zunar want the world to think that, without Anwar Ibrahim, Khairy would die &lt;br /&gt;the moment Abdullah leaves office. Of course, as a cartoonist, Zunar’s politics is based on &lt;br /&gt;satire and parody which is almost always an exaggeration of the truth. Yet, there is no &lt;br /&gt;denying that several key Khairy allies have made implied comments receptive to Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;return to UMNO. Khairy wants to gamble on this but he is slowly playing to the gallery, &lt;br /&gt;trying to feel out the reactions of the public before he rolls the dice. According to Zunar, the &lt;br /&gt;entry of Anwar into UMNO has often been discussed in his meeting, telephone &lt;br /&gt;conversations and discussions with Abdullah. However, to preserve the dignity of both top &lt;br /&gt;players, it is Khairy and Anwar’s protégé, Ezam Mohd Nor, who are planning the actual &lt;br /&gt;details. More meetings over the coming months are being arranged between Abdullah and &lt;br /&gt;Anwar. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In spite of Anwar’s public pronouncements against rejoining UMNO, the truth is both &lt;br /&gt;Anwar and Khairy are testing the waters before the actual gamble is made. Khairy needs to &lt;br /&gt;test UMNO members’ reaction to the re-entry of Anwar by denying the ease with which &lt;br /&gt;Anwar hopes he could re-enter UMNO. Anwar, on the other hand, needs to test his &lt;br /&gt;followers’ perception of his leadership before actually telling them that that choice has been &lt;br /&gt; - 68 - &lt;br /&gt;opened up for him. He could not afford to alienate too many of his former Reformasi &lt;br /&gt;supporters. Though Anwar knows some will fall away in disgust at his opportunism, yet &lt;br /&gt;many others will remain simply for the fact that seven years is too long for most of them to &lt;br /&gt;be without any political power at all. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Anwar’s risks are lesser than Khairy’s. Anwar has had the biggest fall of all the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;politicians, being beaten almost to death on the instructions of a man who until the very &lt;br /&gt;last moment was still described by Anwar as a father figure. There is nothing more in the &lt;br /&gt;world that can be used to test his mettle for he and his family have gone through it all. On &lt;br /&gt;the other hand, Khairy has always been cushioned by his proximity to Abdullah Badawi. If &lt;br /&gt;he were to fail in this gamble, not only he but Abdullah would be swept away by the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO members and raged by the machinations that would destroy their comfortable &lt;br /&gt;world of ill-gotten gains and wealth by patronage. Khairy is testing the waters because this &lt;br /&gt;gamble is of much too high a stake. It may secure his position in the long term, yet it may &lt;br /&gt;also fail and plunge both he and Abdullah into the abyss in which Anwar was thrown not &lt;br /&gt;so many years ago... &lt;br /&gt; - 69 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 16: The walls that talk &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The plan hatched by Khairy Jamaluddin to bring back Anwar Ibrahim into UMNO as a &lt;br /&gt;counterbalance to the powers of the designated heir to the UMNO Presidency, Najib Tun &lt;br /&gt;Razak, and to shore up his own long-term political future within the party, has reached a &lt;br /&gt;defining point through the meeting held between Anwar and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Although both sides are coy about the details discussed at that rendezvous, there have &lt;br /&gt;been many reports that indicate the main items as being laying the ground for Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;eventual return to UMNO. The stumbling blocks remain: Anwar refuses to apply for a &lt;br /&gt;pardon (though he would not be able to turn down one if it was ‘offered’) and prefers &lt;br /&gt;merely to be readmitted on the basis that the Federal Court has proven his innocence. On &lt;br /&gt;the other hand, both Abdullah and Khairy want Anwar readmitted only if it is clearly seen &lt;br /&gt;to be a prerogative of the UMNO President -- thereby making Anwar indebted to &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s signal efforts in bringing him back. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, these stumbling blocks become less a hindrance as the day passes. Anwar &lt;br /&gt;realises that his own party, PKR, is bogged down by factional strife and unable to rouse the &lt;br /&gt;interest of the majority of the voters, at least in the very near future. Any effort to &lt;br /&gt;strengthen PKR would only be successful in the long run, and Anwar does not want to &lt;br /&gt;wait too long. His other partners in the opposition coalition are unable to drive a cross- &lt;br /&gt;ethnic force of sufficient strength to place him in a position of power. There remains, &lt;br /&gt;therefore, only UMNO. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For Khairy, the screws are tightening too. Day by day, Abdullah seems less able to fulfill &lt;br /&gt;the promises he had so stridently made prior to the last General Election. Mahathir’s forces &lt;br /&gt;have created reactionary ripples which Abdullah is unable to effectively counter. The ‘feel- &lt;br /&gt;good factor’ is gone and the early successes in convincing the people of the seriousness of &lt;br /&gt;the anti-corruption drive have dissipated. More importantly, Najib is fast aligning forces to &lt;br /&gt;ensure that his team wins the groundwork of the next UMNO party election.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Bearing in mind that most current UMNO Division leaders had served under Najib during &lt;br /&gt;his tenure as UMNO Youth Leader in the 1980s, he has a ground support which Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;does not and which Khairy is yet to build. At the same time, Najib can rely on his cousin to &lt;br /&gt;ensure that UMNO Youth does not stray too much in the direction of Khairy. He is also &lt;br /&gt;helped by Mahathir’s children who are active in creating a fifth column within UMNO &lt;br /&gt;Youth to act as a vanguard against Khairy’s ambitions. These are the guardians of &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s legacy and their success is measured by the fact that, in recent months, Khairy &lt;br /&gt;has been foolish enough to think that Najib and his officers have made serious efforts to &lt;br /&gt;align themselves to Abdullah’s agenda. It took nothing more than a few SMSes in praise of &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s speech at the UMNO Youth Assembly to create the impression he is finally getting &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s pat on his back. Yet Najib is the consummate politician of years of training whereas &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is the young politician trying to brush off the disappointing catcalls made by &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth members just last year. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Khairy’s effort in imposing this coup-de-grace is hampered by the walls that talk. For &lt;br /&gt; - 70 - &lt;br /&gt;their own peculiar reasons, Khairy’s friends and enemies both find it necessary to leak &lt;br /&gt;information about Khairy’s impending deal with Anwar. It creates a problem for Khairy &lt;br /&gt;because, unlike other efforts in the past, he has little control over the leaks. Khairy cannot &lt;br /&gt;shut them up for the simple reason that most of the leaks would not or could not be &lt;br /&gt;controlled by either Khairy or his father-in-law. These continuous information breaches &lt;br /&gt;have made Khairy’s life one almost completely occupied with fire-fighting. Khairy has to &lt;br /&gt;fend off the suspicions of his fellow UMNO politicians. Najib does not trust him and, to a &lt;br /&gt;lesser extent, even his own boss in UMNO Youth, Hishamuddin Hussein, finds it difficult &lt;br /&gt;to rely completely on Khairy’s protestations of loyalty. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;More importantly, UMNO leaders are not sure of Khairy’s future leanings. Isa Samad’s &lt;br /&gt;present predicament, due to Khairy’s machinations, has caused both Ali Rustam and &lt;br /&gt;Muhyiddin Yassin to fall into cautious silence. Yet, they and other important UMNO &lt;br /&gt;luminaries such as Khir Toyo are fully aware that should Anwar be brought back into &lt;br /&gt;UMNO, only Khairy will benefit whereas most of the others will have to fend off the &lt;br /&gt;knowing glances of Anwar supporters who have been blackballed in the last seven years. &lt;br /&gt;They would no doubt look at Anwar’s re-entry as the opportunity to avenge themselves at &lt;br /&gt;the expense of the leaders who had risen in the wilderness years to fill the vacuum. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And, of course, Khairy would support them. Removing Khir Toyo means strengthening his &lt;br /&gt;position in UMNO Youth. Ali Rustam’s ouster would lead to the creation of two new &lt;br /&gt;vacant high positions which can be filled by Khairy’s allies. Already Ali Rustam’s deputy &lt;br /&gt;in the 4B movement, Noh Omar, is eyeing the seat in an effort to consolidate his own long- &lt;br /&gt;term ascension to power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The allies of former PM Dr Mahathir Mohamad have long awakened to the fact that this &lt;br /&gt;‘budak hinguih’ (as Mahathir once called him) spells trouble for their long-term political &lt;br /&gt;success. More importantly, Mahathir’s children realise that the rise of Khairy means the &lt;br /&gt;wiping out of their father’s 22-year old legacy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The Anwar camp of course talks like chattering sparrows. They need to show that Anwar is &lt;br /&gt;still relevant. To that end, every single meeting held between Khairy and Anwar confidante &lt;br /&gt;Ezam Mohd Nor is immediately broadcast to the Keadilan leadership -- partly to make &lt;br /&gt;Ezam feel important and partly to portray Anwar’s continued political value. The fact that &lt;br /&gt;Ezam and another Anwar confidante, PKR Vice-President Azmin Ali, are currently in a &lt;br /&gt;catfight and competing against each other for their boss’ favour means that they also &lt;br /&gt;compete in showing of their closeness to Khairy and their discussions regarding Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;future political career. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Whether Khairy realises it or not, most of the stories circulating around town regarding his &lt;br /&gt;efforts to allow Anwar an easy passage back into UMNO come from sources that are in &lt;br /&gt;direct communication with him. While officially denying that Anwar will rejoin UMNO, in &lt;br /&gt;private, nothing else is as important. Ezam and Azmin have for some time been dropping &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s name as their source of inside information within UMNO. They have gone so far &lt;br /&gt;as to even suggest that Khairy is the main conduit for discussions between Abdullah and &lt;br /&gt;Anwar. They say that Khairy is helpful where other officers such as Thajudeen Abdul &lt;br /&gt; - 71 - &lt;br /&gt;Wahab are not. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Lackeys such as PKR party organ editor and propagandist Zunar have gone a step further &lt;br /&gt;by repeating these leaks not only to Keadilan leaders but also to PAS figures to whom he &lt;br /&gt;claims to be close -- having been a former staff of the PAS organ, Harakah. In turn, these &lt;br /&gt;stories create an atmosphere of distrust amongst some of the top leadership of PAS &lt;br /&gt;regarding Anwar’s future intentions. PAS has its own way of checking these stories -- some &lt;br /&gt;of their younger leaders have direct ties with Khairy and converse with him by telephone &lt;br /&gt;on a regular basis. Khairy could not deny for too long his discussions with the PKR &lt;br /&gt;leadership because, sooner or later, the truth would come out and he cannot afford, at this &lt;br /&gt;stage, to be seen too much as a lying schemer. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is no denying that for people like Zunar there is a bittersweet feeling in leaking these &lt;br /&gt;information. He revels in getting in the good books of senior PAS and PKR politicians by &lt;br /&gt;being an important source of information to them. On the other hand, as head honcho of &lt;br /&gt;the official party propaganda machinery, he cannot be seen as being too favourable to &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s eventual re-entry to UMNO. As such, his pronouncements on this matter have &lt;br /&gt;been chaotic to the extent that PKR’s political bureau recently met to discuss Zunar’s leaks. &lt;br /&gt;The bureau felt that he had given too much prominence to the so-called discussion between &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and Anwar that the PKR leaders became confused and the UMNO leaders, on &lt;br /&gt;the other hand, became angry at the so-called revelations, some of which Zunar had &lt;br /&gt;intended to publish in the party newspaper. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Indeed, these leaks are often deliberate efforts in which some individuals believe that they &lt;br /&gt;are world-class experts. In fact, they are not so and have often blundered, giving the wrong &lt;br /&gt;information to their supporters and enemies alike. The party information machinery is out &lt;br /&gt;of control and relies more on unofficial sources whispered via the grapevine than the &lt;br /&gt;official media nominally responsible for distributing the correct information to the public. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But not all the leaks come from Anwar’s side. There are also people close to Khairy who &lt;br /&gt;have been doing the same. These are mostly his closest confidantes in the Ethos Consulting &lt;br /&gt;circle who move within the more Western-educated liberal young professional network. To &lt;br /&gt;them, Anwar’s sacking and humiliation by Dr Mahathir Mohamad was a travesty of justice &lt;br /&gt;and, in spite of their lack of open opposition to that cruel episode, they continue to &lt;br /&gt;pronounce that it was a black period in Malaysian politics. Khairy’s friends defend his &lt;br /&gt;record by openly espousing that, in his personal capacity, Khairy is sympathetic to &lt;br /&gt;Anwar’s plight. In fact, time and time again, these groups are reminded of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;magnanimous visit to Anwar’s house the night of the latter’s release from incarceration. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s circle of friends comprise some young lawyers, bankers and political aspirants &lt;br /&gt;who believe that Anwar’s rehabilitation is a giant step in the effort to rid UMNO of the &lt;br /&gt;dregs of the Mahathir years. They tell themselves that Anwar would bring back UMNO’s &lt;br /&gt;lost popularity amongst the Malay heartland and revive Abdullah’s credentials as a liberal &lt;br /&gt;reformer. Therefore, in their discussions, they often leak Khairy’s efforts to reinstate Anwar &lt;br /&gt;within UMNO in order to portray Khairy as the voice of the future. In other words, to the &lt;br /&gt;more liberal groups who comprise the backbone of Khairy’s support, the discussions with &lt;br /&gt; - 72 - &lt;br /&gt;Anwar is no bad thing. On the other hand, it is the undisputed proof that Khairy is serious &lt;br /&gt;about reforms and is not a politician shaped by UMNO’s older mould. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Leaks from Khairy’s circle usually comprise of two groups. The first group, those who are &lt;br /&gt;in immediate contact with Khairy such as Omar Ong, Ahmad Zaki Zahid, Norza Zakaria, &lt;br /&gt;Lim Kian Teck, Rozabil Abdul Rahman and others of that calibre, do not usually discuss &lt;br /&gt;these issues in public. However, some are forced to do so. For example, Omar Ong is &lt;br /&gt;nominally responsible to Najib Tun Razak as his Special Officer. He is often provoked by &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s other officers into giving them bits of information about Khairy’s movements and &lt;br /&gt;political planning. In other words, information is often squeezed out of Omar Ong as if he &lt;br /&gt;was a tube of toothpaste. Of course, in the end, the news gets back to Najib and in separate &lt;br /&gt;meetings with his more trusted advisors this information is sifted, analysed and examined &lt;br /&gt;more thoroughly. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The second group of Khairy leaks comprises those who were brought in by the first group &lt;br /&gt;as their support technocrats. These include the younger members of Ethos Consulting, &lt;br /&gt;YPCS and other such groups associated with Khairy. While they are known to Khairy, they &lt;br /&gt;are definitely not his bosom buddies. Nevertheless, whatever information they heard about &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s movements is quickly disseminated for the simple fact that each and every one of &lt;br /&gt;these young and eager aspirants want to be seen by others as Khairy’s trusted lieutenants. &lt;br /&gt;Often, their unguarded and exaggerated claims are passed on to other friends who in turn &lt;br /&gt;make their own conclusions to the detriment of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, not all the leaks come from Khairy’s enemies. In fact, the majority of the sources of &lt;br /&gt;information about Khairy’s movements are collected from those who are his so-called &lt;br /&gt;friends and allies. The problem about being so young in politics is that Khairy’s circle of &lt;br /&gt;friends are also young and inexperienced. They do not have the political kicks of the older &lt;br /&gt;and more experienced group of politicians who can twist and turn every word to their &lt;br /&gt;favour. This lack of experience in Khairy’s circle also creates a lack of probity. Too much &lt;br /&gt;ambition causes them to want too much for themselves. As a result, they also talk too much &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy often finds that people’s negative perceptions about him originate from his &lt;br /&gt;own circle of friends. Such is the unfortunate result of Khairy surrounding himself with the &lt;br /&gt;young and ambitious. There is no escaping that, amongst these, there will be at least some &lt;br /&gt;who are also greedy and foolish. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And then, of course, there are those who are high enough to get the information and use it &lt;br /&gt;for their own purposes to destroy Khairy... &lt;br /&gt; - 73 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 17: The comforting branch breaks &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In spite of the reassurances that accompanied the return of Datin Paduka Seri Endon &lt;br /&gt;Mahmood from the United States recently, the very closest of political circles had known &lt;br /&gt;for quite a while that her passing would just be a matter of time. Newspaper editors and &lt;br /&gt;those in charge of the electronic media have been put on standby since the first day of her &lt;br /&gt;return. Senior writers were put to work writing Endon’s obituary about ten days ago. It &lt;br /&gt;was expected that her situation had reached a point of no return when even the highest &lt;br /&gt;ranking ministers of the Abdullah Ahmad Badawi government were not allowed to visit &lt;br /&gt;her at the Putrajaya hospital. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Two days prior to her death, Abdullah’s closest friends had congregated for daily Yaasin &lt;br /&gt;readings at the official residence of the Prime Minister. The public was given an implicit &lt;br /&gt;signal of the worsening condition of the Prime Minister’s wife through a statement which &lt;br /&gt;urged them not to impose on Abdullah as he had to spend “quality time” with Endon. A &lt;br /&gt;further indication of the increasing concern of Abdullah’s family regarding Endon’s health &lt;br /&gt;was evident by several sudden cancellations of public functions to be attended by Khairy &lt;br /&gt;Jamaluddin and Nori Abdullah in the days preceding Endon’s demise. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is no doubt that Endon Mahmood is a far more popular politician’s wife than many &lt;br /&gt;others of that ilk. Certainly, she is comparable to Tun Siti Hasmah in her ability to play a &lt;br /&gt;soothing influence on those who have been wounded by her husband’s actions. Both come &lt;br /&gt;from similar backgrounds, being career women who abandoned their individual ambitions &lt;br /&gt;to support their husbands’ foray into politics. Both Hasmah and Endon are Selangor-born &lt;br /&gt;children of high level civil servants whose families have either produced or been related to &lt;br /&gt;many of the Malay ruling and administrative elite of the first half of the 20th century. No &lt;br /&gt;one mistakes Hasmah’s and Endon’s mannerism for those of the shrew-like behaviour of &lt;br /&gt;many other political wives. They carry themselves with the grace that complements their &lt;br /&gt;husbands’ necessary more abrupt style.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No one, for example, criticised Endon for being an unduly bad influence on Abdullah in &lt;br /&gt;the way that Rosmah Mansor is often deemed to be for her husband, Najib Tun Razak. &lt;br /&gt;More importantly, either by choice or because of her long debilitating illness, Endon did &lt;br /&gt;not play the role of gatekeeper to Abdullah like Rosmah does for Najib. It is a well-known &lt;br /&gt;fact that Najib could easily be influenced through Rosmah’s appeals on behalf of various &lt;br /&gt;interested politicians and hopeful businessmen. But Endon did not really play that role -- &lt;br /&gt;although in the short period following Abdullah’s ascension to the premiership, her sisters, &lt;br /&gt;nephews and nieces (the Mahmood Ambak family) received many favours. Mahmood &lt;br /&gt;Ambak’s children and grandchildren quickly found themselves in control of various &lt;br /&gt;government projects ranging from the supply of software to schools under the Ministry of &lt;br /&gt;Education’s RM100 million programme to the brokerage of products between OIC member &lt;br /&gt;countries engineered by the Malaysian presidency of that organisation. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yet it is doubtful Endon herself played a role in securing these contracts for her family. She &lt;br /&gt;was, after all, far from the maddening hive of activity that surrounded the early days of &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s tenure in office. Instead, she spent her time largely in overseas hospitals and &lt;br /&gt; - 74 - &lt;br /&gt;local recuperating clinics. If the awards to Mahmood Ambak’s family were at all influenced &lt;br /&gt;by anyone, it was through the good graces of Khairy Jamaluddin on behalf of his wife, &lt;br /&gt;Nori. In addition, one cannot forget that many of the awards were given by sycophantic &lt;br /&gt;ministers eager to curry favour and brown-nose the new government of Abdullah Badawi. &lt;br /&gt;Within the high ranks of politics, it is known that Abdullah Badawi’s own family had little &lt;br /&gt;favours given to them by Abdullah himself. On the other hand, they received their largesse &lt;br /&gt;from Mahathir in the dying days of his premiership. It was Mahmood Ambak’s family that &lt;br /&gt;eagerly sought after government contracts and were generously rewarded for their &lt;br /&gt;persistence. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Endon’s role was therefore not dissimilar to that of Dr Siti Hasmah whose relatives too &lt;br /&gt;benefited at the expense of Mahathir’s own kin. Yet, with the passing of Endon Mahmood &lt;br /&gt;from the scene, it is unlikely that her siblings and relatives of similar age would continue to &lt;br /&gt;get the favourable treatment they received in the last one and a half years. More likely, &lt;br /&gt;attention will now shift to those who are of the same generation as Endon’s own two &lt;br /&gt;children. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Endon’s role in Khairy Jamaluddin’s life was relatively benign. She did not object to Nori’s &lt;br /&gt;head-over-heels and sometimes irrational obsession with Khairy during their courtship. &lt;br /&gt;She had remarked with bemusement when Nori used one of Khairy’s portraits as the &lt;br /&gt;wallpaper to her computer at ISIS. However, one of the main reasons for Endon’s reception &lt;br /&gt;of Khairy was the close ties she had with Khairy’s mother, Datin Rahmah Abdul Hamid. &lt;br /&gt;Their friendship went back to the old days, even prior to their respective marriages to two &lt;br /&gt;men who ended up working as senior civil servants in the same ministry some time in the &lt;br /&gt;middle of the 1970s. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Khairy was a budding politician and only recently ensconced to the role of &lt;br /&gt;chaperone extraordinary to Nori Abdullah, Endon placed Rahmah in a key position within &lt;br /&gt;a newly-favoured setup called the Muslim Women’s Action Association (PERTIWI). In that &lt;br /&gt;capacity, PERTIWI played a role of generating ground support for Khairy from amongst &lt;br /&gt;the ‘Mak Datins’ and other similar middle-aged women who are wives or widows of &lt;br /&gt;former high-ranking civil servants. When Khairy came under criticism for his lack of &lt;br /&gt;experience in what seemed to some an obscene meteoric rise to power, it was PERTIWI &lt;br /&gt;which led letter campaigns in the New Straits Times, The Star and Utusan Malaysia to &lt;br /&gt;describe Khairy as an ‘able, competent and highly-educated’ young man. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;PERTIWI and others of that ilk were used by Khairy in order to generate debate in his &lt;br /&gt;favour. This was often started off by a planted piece written by Khairy’s unofficial Press &lt;br /&gt;Secretary Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan and other paid journalist of that &lt;br /&gt;persuasion. PERTIWI would then be free to write letters in support of these articles, &lt;br /&gt;painting a favourable picture for Khairy. Of course, letters to the contrary were also &lt;br /&gt;received but they were never published. This concerted effort seems hardly necessary now &lt;br /&gt;that Khairy is so high up the political hierarchy of the nation. But in the early days, when &lt;br /&gt;his hold on office was tenuous and shaky, it assisted him to give the public a perception of &lt;br /&gt;grassroots support. In actual fact, the old aunties who wrote these letters were bored and &lt;br /&gt;desperate housewives who hoped to gain favour with Endon and Datin Rahmah. &lt;br /&gt; - 75 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Endon herself looked upon Khairy as a genuine pillar of support for Abdullah. She was, in &lt;br /&gt;fact, quite grateful that Khairy was able to assist Abdullah and did not demand too much &lt;br /&gt;attention from Nori, who herself had to carry the role her mother was unable to play. &lt;br /&gt;Endon was not someone who put pressure on Khairy’s marriage, even when she &lt;br /&gt;sometimes expressed her disappointment of the slowness of the Khairy-Nori couple in &lt;br /&gt;starting a family. But she was comforted by the fact that she already had grandchildren &lt;br /&gt;from her other child, Kamaluddin, and resigned herself to the fact that Khairy had a far &lt;br /&gt;more important role to play in assisting the political life of her husband. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Instead, Endon reserved her opprobrium for those whom she felt were encroaching on &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and her own status as the senior-most woman in public life. One such person &lt;br /&gt;was Najib’s wife, Rosmah Mansor, for whom Endon often gave the coolest of receptions. &lt;br /&gt;According to a close advisor of Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, Rosmah was often &lt;br /&gt;reduced to a nervous wreck whenever she had to confront Endon. Usually, Rosmah can &lt;br /&gt;just push her way through with people. She was in the Mahani Daim league; a pushy, &lt;br /&gt;contemptuous and temperamental woman with an exaggerated sense of dignity. She often &lt;br /&gt;made disparaging remarks about Najib in front of other people, lacking the good sense to &lt;br /&gt;reserve such comments to the confines of the bedroom.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yet, with Endon, Rosmah couldn’t get her own way. Endon was a gentle lady with a soft &lt;br /&gt;approach to conversation. But, when challenged, she could be fiery and whenever Rosmah &lt;br /&gt;raised her voice, Endon would swiftly put it down with a cutting ‘sindiran’ or ‘perli’. This, &lt;br /&gt;Rosmah could not stand. Rosmah felt, as a far more educated woman, she should be given &lt;br /&gt;more prominence than Endon. Yet Endon is a far more politically experienced consort &lt;br /&gt;compared to Rosmah and won public plaudits where Rosmah had none. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Rosmah expects, now that Endon is gone from the scene, she could play a more important &lt;br /&gt;role, being the senior-most wife of a minister. On the morning of Endon’s funeral, the &lt;br /&gt;atmosphere in Najib’s house in Taman Duta was like a Ramadhan bazaar. Hundreds paid &lt;br /&gt;court to Rosmah -- something which she no doubt enjoyed. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But this will not be the case. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;With the passing of Endon, another lady called Nori will now play a more important &lt;br /&gt;political advisory role to Abdullah. While Abdullah’s daughter-in-law, Azrene, will &lt;br /&gt;probably play host to social functions on behalf of her father-in-law, Nori, who shares &lt;br /&gt;many of her mother’s populist traits, will become the main solace for Abdullah. In that &lt;br /&gt;sense, Khairy’s position will strengthen and as long as he keeps on the straight and narrow, &lt;br /&gt;not straying too far from his marital bed and giving due deference to his role as only half a &lt;br /&gt;member of Abdullah’s family, he should be protected from the attacks of those eager to &lt;br /&gt;influence Abdullah against him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A few days before Endon’s death, some very close friends of Abdullah, who had been with &lt;br /&gt;him through thick and thin from the early days of his foray into the realm of politics, &lt;br /&gt;remarked that things weren’t going the way they had predicted. Previously, they thought &lt;br /&gt; - 76 - &lt;br /&gt;that with Endon gone from the scene, Abdullah would go back to the old circle of friends &lt;br /&gt;who have been the most tried and tested of his most loyal of followers. Instead, they found &lt;br /&gt;that, in the dying days of Endons’ life, Abdullah had begun to cling more tightly to Nori &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy’s younger set of advisors. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Their position looks unassailable. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No woman can replace Endon in Abdullah’s life. Their partnership was far closer than that &lt;br /&gt;of politician and wife. That is often the case in Malaysian politics. Malaysian Prime &lt;br /&gt;Ministers are often fiercely devoted to their spouses, such as proven in the case of the &lt;br /&gt;strictly monogamous Razak-Rahah and Mahathir-Hasmah duopoly. Abdullah is unlucky &lt;br /&gt;in having that relationship terminated so early on in his tenure. But he has comfort that &lt;br /&gt;unlike, for example, the Najib-Rosmah relationship, his was one of genuine affection and &lt;br /&gt;not merely a mutual alliance of ambition and interest. Such a partnership would be difficult &lt;br /&gt;to replicate even if someone else comes along to reduce Abdullah’s loneliness. For the time &lt;br /&gt;being, the passing of Endon Mahmood creates a vacuum in Abdullah’s life that is filled by &lt;br /&gt;Nori and her husband. They are the shoots that have replaced the comforting branch that &lt;br /&gt;was broken off by death last Thursday morning... &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 17 is a special analysis on the passing of the late Datin Paduka Seri Endon &lt;br /&gt;Mahmood. Part 18 will now be the article “Cannons to the right and left” as announced &lt;br /&gt;before. &lt;br /&gt; - 77 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 18: Cannons behind his back &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Does Khairy Jamaludin really know who his friends are? Sure, he surrounds himself with &lt;br /&gt;the young and bright, but have they become a liability to him? Is Khairy so naïve, thinking &lt;br /&gt;that these people could be trusted to not leak details about his plans and activities to his &lt;br /&gt;enemies? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One of the privileges of being young is that one can afford the luxury of a carefree and &lt;br /&gt;devil-may-care life. Being young also means one can afford to be naïve and can be allowed &lt;br /&gt;to make mistakes in one’s long journey to maturity. But Khairy cannot enjoy such luxury. &lt;br /&gt;His fast rise in politics has resulted in him being caught in the middle of a situation where &lt;br /&gt;every one of his actions are closely scrutinised by his political enemies as well as the public &lt;br /&gt;at large. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy lives life under a microscope and the fascination people have about him means he is &lt;br /&gt;unable to make the slightest move without somebody, somewhere, reading into it and &lt;br /&gt;making an interpretation about it. Often these interpretations are helpful but sometimes &lt;br /&gt;they could be very detrimental and negative to his image. Even the most innocent praise &lt;br /&gt;heaped upon him by his admirers could be seen to have ulterior motives, which in turn &lt;br /&gt;generate nausea among the general public. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy cannot pretend to be innocent in the roller coaster world of Umno politics. That is a &lt;br /&gt;poor excuse few will tolerate. They believe that given his Oxbridge background he should &lt;br /&gt;have the ability, acumen and intelligence to anticipate the consequences that his actions &lt;br /&gt;will bring. Sometimes, however, people forget that Khairy is merely a naïve 30-year old &lt;br /&gt;who rose in politics much faster than many of his peers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;He has been cushioned from major attacks by Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and has so far had &lt;br /&gt;a smooth ride. So have his friends who have been given the fast track to the higher reaches &lt;br /&gt;of government, politics and the corporate world. When they stumble, they stumble hard &lt;br /&gt;and they pick themselves up very slowly for the simple reason they do not know what to &lt;br /&gt;do. They are leaders of an opportunistic band which tolerates little mistakes but are &lt;br /&gt;extremely critical of big ones. They are vicious when assessing their leader and one who &lt;br /&gt;doesn’t perform will be devoured quickly and thrown aside. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some of Khairy’s friends have been useful in giving him advice on how to spin an image, &lt;br /&gt;yet they themselves have had little experience in addressing the problem of how to &lt;br /&gt;maintain their image in the face of evidence to the contrary. Take, for example, Kalimullah &lt;br /&gt;Hassan Masheerul Hassan, the Singapore Special Branch-trained NST group editor. &lt;br /&gt;Kalimullah fancies himself as Khairy’s mentor. He often tries to 'sell' Khairy even when it is &lt;br /&gt;not necessary to do so. Almost inevitably, in every meeting with foreign journalists and &lt;br /&gt;government leaders, he mentions Khairy before mentioning the actual boss, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi. Kalimullah is prouder of his association with Khairy than Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a result, people believe, rightly or wrongly, that Khairy, and not Abdullah, runs the &lt;br /&gt;government. Kalimullah does not help by putting more Singapore Special Branch-trained &lt;br /&gt; - 78 - &lt;br /&gt;sycophants in charge of NST and Berita Harian. In their previous incarnation of PAP hacks, &lt;br /&gt;their job was to build up the image of Lee Hsein Loong as the undoubtedly superior heir &lt;br /&gt;apparent for Singapore and perhaps the most intelligent man ever to walk the face of this &lt;br /&gt;earth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And this is what they are now doing to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But they forgot that in Lee Hsien Loong’s case there was no other heir apparent other than &lt;br /&gt;Lee Jr. However, in Malaysian politics, there are many others who count themselves as heir &lt;br /&gt;to Abdullah or even to Dr Mahathir Mohamad. By overselling their 'product', Kalimullah &lt;br /&gt;and his bunch of Singapore-trained journalists are hurting Khairy’s image far more than it &lt;br /&gt;is helping him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s friends in Umno Youth have not been very helpful either. Take, for example, &lt;br /&gt;Norza Zakaria. This non-entity from Negeri Sembilan somehow made his way up the &lt;br /&gt;ladder to become the Youth Chief of Wangsa Maju. Norza would not have gone anywhere &lt;br /&gt;if he had not been plucked by Khairy as his right-hand man. But, in being that, Norza has &lt;br /&gt;become intoxicated. Firstly, he uses his position in order to portray himself as the most &lt;br /&gt;likely candidate to lead Umno Youth if Khairy, by a stroke of luck, falls by the wayside. He &lt;br /&gt;has even gone so far as to have discussions with webmasters where he denies that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;was instrumental in putting him where he is today. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Norza denies that he is ‘Khairy’s man’ and instead credits his success to his own &lt;br /&gt;intelligence and abilities. He tries to out-boss the boss and be seen as the mature alternative &lt;br /&gt;to Khairy. When confronted with the notion that he is nothing more than a Khairy front &lt;br /&gt;man, he ferociously denies this and claims that he is just putting on a charade and playing &lt;br /&gt;along to ensure that Khairy does not target him for assassination in the event the truth was &lt;br /&gt;to surface. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Secondly, Norza talks too much. He will talk about Khairy to any banker, businessman, &lt;br /&gt;journalist, contractor or civil servant who walks into his Treasury office in Putrajaya. Norza &lt;br /&gt;tells them that Khairy wants this done or Khairy wants that project to happen, at times &lt;br /&gt;without any reference to Khairy. As a result, people get the impression that Tan Sri Nor &lt;br /&gt;Mohamed Yakcop and the officials who run the Ministry of Finance are powerless puppets &lt;br /&gt;and that Norza is the one running the show on behalf of Khairy. Maybe this is only half &lt;br /&gt;true, because for all the intelligence Khairy may have, Nor Mohamed Yakcop is still a &lt;br /&gt;hands-on man. But the image that it gives to the public is that the Minister of Finance II is a &lt;br /&gt;puppet of Norza who in turn is the puppet of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Thirdly, Norza has business interests, which gets its way by dropping Khairy’s name. &lt;br /&gt;Norza’s boys play up the fact that their chief is a close Khairy confidante in order to get &lt;br /&gt;their way from the smallest of contracts from the Federal Territory Ministry to the biggest &lt;br /&gt;banking jobs in KL. This can only hurt Khairy’s image; but does Norza care?  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Even Khairy’s friends whom he has slotted in key government and political positions have &lt;br /&gt;been a major source of leaks. Take, for example, Khairy’s boys in the Deputy Prime &lt;br /&gt; - 79 - &lt;br /&gt;Minister’s office. In front of Khairy they give the impression that they are providing him &lt;br /&gt;with valuable information regarding Najib’s movements. On the other hand, being the &lt;br /&gt;young, naïve, ambitious people that they are, they are actually playing a double game. &lt;br /&gt;While they keep Khairy informed, they also leak information about Khairy to Najib. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a consummate politician, Najib knows how to handle them and uses them to find out &lt;br /&gt;about the latest moves Khairy is making against him. Khairy does not realise this, but the &lt;br /&gt;boys he has placed in Najib’s office are his biggest critics. Whenever they speak to Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;people they give the impression that they do not agree with Khairy’s moves. At first this &lt;br /&gt;starts out as a lie, but slowly, as the lie becomes bigger, they have to insert a few home &lt;br /&gt;truths in it. These are quickly seized upon as Khairy’s evil plans to dethrone their heir &lt;br /&gt;apparent. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some of Khairy’s allies have quite obviously turned against him. In the last Umno party &lt;br /&gt;election, Hishammuddin Hussein pushed very hard for Khairy to be installed as his &lt;br /&gt;Deputy. Hishammuddin personally called other challengers to Khairy’s position and even &lt;br /&gt;telephoned Muhkriz Mahathir to ensure that Khairy’s ascension was given a smooth ride. &lt;br /&gt;But just mention Khairy’s name in front of Hishammuddin now and one can feel the &lt;br /&gt;burning vitriol. Hishammuddin is angry with Khairy and he is angry enough to say it in &lt;br /&gt;public to other members of Umno Youth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is being used by Hishammuddin’s opponents to get their way. Whenever &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin refuses to do something they want him to do, they quote Khairy’s name in &lt;br /&gt;his face. Hishammuddin just hates that, and quite rightly so. He is angered by Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;blatant moves to meet up with Umno Youth members behind his back. He believes that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is committing a ‘derhaka’ and should be put in his place. Slowly, Hishammuddin &lt;br /&gt;drifts away from Khairy’s circle. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Those who work for Hishammuddin have noticed how paranoid their boss has become of &lt;br /&gt;late. Hishammuddin is always looking over his shoulders, fearing the knife that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;wants to plant in his back. Hishammuddin knows that some of his officers are loyal to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and he has been extremely careful to exclude them from his discussions. He does &lt;br /&gt;not do so blatantly, but they are being phased out. Preparations are being made for the &lt;br /&gt;great showdown where Hishammuddin will take sides against Khairy with the people who &lt;br /&gt;want to secure the post-Abdullah succession.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Sycophantic letters to the press written by Mustapha Ong, PERTIWI, Sisters in Islam and &lt;br /&gt;Phar Kim Beng have also not been helpful to Khairy. People can immediately see through &lt;br /&gt;them and Khairy has been foolish enough to think that the connection is not visible. The &lt;br /&gt;world has become much more porous and transparent. These connections are there for all &lt;br /&gt;to see. Even in groups that are ostensibly seen by the unknowing public as being &lt;br /&gt;supportive of Khairy, subtle distinctions can be made which show them to actually be &lt;br /&gt;agents for Khairy’s enemies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One example is the many so-called youth and professional groups that exist today. Many &lt;br /&gt;are badly-run self-serving fronts for ambitious Young Turks who imagine themselves too &lt;br /&gt; - 80 - &lt;br /&gt;good for direct involvement in Umno. Some create this façade of supporting Khairy and his &lt;br /&gt;ideals but in reality pressure him to do what he cannot afford at this stage of his political &lt;br /&gt;life. They try and give the lie to his promises to eradicate corruption and money politics. &lt;br /&gt;Instead of supporting Khairy, they are trying to kill him softly. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some of Khairy’s trusted lieutenants have been important sources of information. For &lt;br /&gt;example, Khairy’s movements during the last days of Endon Mahmood were reported to &lt;br /&gt;this website by no other than those within the Seri Perdana residential complex. Ostensibly, &lt;br /&gt;they should be Khairy supporters, but given the choice between Abdullah and Khairy, they &lt;br /&gt;would not plump for the young pretender. Instead, their loyalty lies with the big boss who &lt;br /&gt;faced up and down with them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Khairy went missing for long periods of time during Endon’s last days, it was the &lt;br /&gt;Seri Perdana sources who talked. Soon, top Umno leaders who came to read Yaasin were &lt;br /&gt;made fully aware that Khairy’s whereabouts had become a major source of concern. It was &lt;br /&gt;the talk of the Umno circles, especially those who are of Abdullah’s age and immediately &lt;br /&gt;below. They felt that this had become too much and that Khairy should be more respectful &lt;br /&gt;to the man who made him into what he is today. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One of Khairy’s traits is to favour foreign journalists against Malaysian ones. Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;more comfortable in addressing the Singaporean, American and Australian journalists who &lt;br /&gt;in the past have been full of praise for him. To them, Khairy spills more beans. Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;journalists have bosses who report directly to Khairy and can therefore be controlled by &lt;br /&gt;him. Foreign journalists, on the other hand, do not have such problems. They are free &lt;br /&gt;agents, even mercenaries, and what they say about Khairy to other Umno politicians and &lt;br /&gt;opposition figures in Malaysia have made Khairy’s life difficult. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A favourite of foreign journalists is the former Finance Minister, Tengku Razaleigh &lt;br /&gt;Hamzah, who is probably the most well-informed Umno politician today. Almost every &lt;br /&gt;move Khairy makes is reported by these foreign journalists to those who can best exploit &lt;br /&gt;the information. In Khairy’s naïve world where foreigners should respect him for his &lt;br /&gt;Oxford background, Khairy often finds himself the most important source for all the leaks &lt;br /&gt;about his life, plans, plots and movements. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Khairy does not understand is that he surrounds himself with loose cannons. But &lt;br /&gt;those loose canons do not aim at random figures. Instead, they swivel towards him and, &lt;br /&gt;sooner or later, the cannonballs will begin hitting him hard. Khairy’s worst enemies are &lt;br /&gt;actually the people closest to his circle. He has reached the stage often felt by a politician in &lt;br /&gt;high power; loneliness at the top. Even his friends cannot be trusted anymore... &lt;br /&gt; - 81 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 19: A republic of fear &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some leaders command respect from their followers. Others are loved and cherished, &lt;br /&gt;maybe even revered or idolised. However, according to that great political theorist &lt;br /&gt;Machiavelli, the mark of a successful leader is one who rules by fear. Fear prompts a &lt;br /&gt;person to do more than he usually would, to go that extra mile for the sake of self- &lt;br /&gt;preservation. Fear is an effective weapon by which following and loyalty can be procured. &lt;br /&gt;A person who manages to make others fear him can very quickly rise from being the school &lt;br /&gt;bully to the leader of a huge nation. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Those close to Khairy Jamaluddin say that he is a studious aspirant of the Machiavellian &lt;br /&gt;mould. Though at this stage of his political career Khairy needs to nurture popularity, he &lt;br /&gt;believes that in the long run, in order to remain the most potent political force in Malaysia, &lt;br /&gt;he has to make people fear him. Slowly, that is beginning to take shape. Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;elevated himself above his peers to the extent they now have to acknowledge that they live &lt;br /&gt;and die by his will. Their future advancement, be it in the field of politics, industry, or even &lt;br /&gt;the media, is dependent on their ability to toe Khairy’s line of thinking. Those who &lt;br /&gt;overstep the boundary and believe themselves equal to Khairy (or even worse, better than &lt;br /&gt;him) quickly find themselves out in the cold. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Even the most senior of UMNO leaders have to pay their respects to the son-in-law of the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister. Menteris Besar such as Abdul Ghani Othman of Johor and Adnan Yaakob &lt;br /&gt;of Pahang even go so far as to make sure that they are present at the tarmac when Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;plane touches the ground during his visits to their home states. Those such as Taib &lt;br /&gt;Mahmud of Sarawak and Khir Toyo of Selangor who refuse to give Khairy the due respect &lt;br /&gt;find themselves quickly out of favour. Khairy whispers into the ears of Abdullah Badawi &lt;br /&gt;that people such as these should be next on the list of traitors to be hauled to the chopping &lt;br /&gt;block. No doubt, Taib and Khir are two of the most corrupt state leaders currently in &lt;br /&gt;power. But are they any more corrupt than, for example, Ali Rustam of Melaka? Yet, Ali &lt;br /&gt;Rustam escapes assassination for the simple reason he pays his dues to Khairy and &lt;br /&gt;kowtows to the hand he cannot bite. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In actual fact, Abdullah Badawi’s so-called war against corruption is but a selective and &lt;br /&gt;self-interest vendetta. Hardly any within Khairy’s favoured circle get hauled up to face the &lt;br /&gt;wrath of the enforcers, even if they are more blatant and open about their corrupt acts. In &lt;br /&gt;politics, UMNO Youth Heads who bow to Khairy rarely get punished for paying for votes. &lt;br /&gt;In the GLCs, corrupt CEOs get away with tens of millions through countless scams and &lt;br /&gt;scandals because they pay court to Khairy. A good example is the recent losses in MAS, &lt;br /&gt;where those who were installed to clean up Tajudin Ramli’s mess have been proven &lt;br /&gt;incapable of doing the job in spite of their Oxbridge qualifications. Yet they are promoted, &lt;br /&gt;not punished, for the simple reason they are Khairy’s poster boys. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s main role in Abdullah Badawi’s administration is as a spin-doctor. He builds up &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s image. But there is no substance in that image. Now the cracks are beginning to &lt;br /&gt;show but it is a little too late for the damage to be repaired. Khairy persuades analysts in &lt;br /&gt;the foreign banks (many who swoon over the opportunity to have tea with him) to write &lt;br /&gt; - 82 - &lt;br /&gt;‘analyses’ saying that Abdullah’s reforms have to be given time to bear fruit. This is mere &lt;br /&gt;hogwash. Many of Khairy’s apologists such as Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, &lt;br /&gt;Brenda Pereira and Phar Kim Beng are masters of spin who owe their lives and careers to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. One can scarcely hope for them to be genuinely critical in their assessments. They &lt;br /&gt;are servants of the master propagandist – no more, no less. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One of the most recent victims of Khairy’s republic of fear is the Federal Territory UMNO &lt;br /&gt;Youth Chief, Datuk Norza Zakaria. Norza started out in UMNO Youth before Khairy &lt;br /&gt;appeared on the scene. It could therefore be said that Norza is Khairy’s senior in politics. &lt;br /&gt;But Norza’s promotion as the Federal Territory UMNO Youth Chief and his sudden &lt;br /&gt;elevation to the UMNO Supreme Council, coupled with his lucrative position as Political &lt;br /&gt;Secretary to Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop, were all the result of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;grace and favour. Norza has only average intelligence, which of course puts him way &lt;br /&gt;ahead of ordinary UMNO Youth Exco Members. Nevertheless, without Khairy, Norza’s &lt;br /&gt;name would have been quickly forgotten. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When the Khairy Chronicles first hit the Internet, Norza was one of those who panicked &lt;br /&gt;upon the revelation of the millions he has thus far gained through his friendship with &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. Several attempts were made to contact this website in order to persuade Malaysia &lt;br /&gt;Today to reduce its expose on Norza’s activities. When this proved unsuccessful, Norza &lt;br /&gt;went to see a certain ‘Reformasi’ activist who conveyed the message to this website that &lt;br /&gt;Norza wanted to tell his side of the story. According to Norza, he was never close to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. In fact, Norza openly remarked, his rise in UMNO Youth had all to do with his &lt;br /&gt;own abilities and not because of favourable treatment from Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Norza’s big mistake was to repeat this same line of argument to several of Khairy’s boys in &lt;br /&gt;the Finance Ministry. Word quickly got back to Khairy that the dog was trying to disown &lt;br /&gt;its master. Khairy promptly gave Norza the silent treatment and for awhile Norza went &lt;br /&gt;into a state of depression. All he wanted to do was cover up the scandals he had been &lt;br /&gt;cooking in the Finance Ministry by distancing himself from Khairy and denying his role as &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s bag-carrier. Instead, Norza found himself at the receiving end of Khairy’s anger &lt;br /&gt;and even as you read this article he is still frantically trying to repair the damage done. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, we already know what is going to happen. Norza will crawl to Khairy with his &lt;br /&gt;tail between his legs and, like Amon Goeth in Schindler’s List, Khairy will ‘forgive’ Norza. &lt;br /&gt;That is his prerogative as the boss. Hands will be kissed and all will be honky dory again. &lt;br /&gt;Norza will now forever remember never to cross Khairy’s path again. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The self-preservation attitude of most UMNO Youth members is what makes Khairy &lt;br /&gt;unassailable in the ranks of that organisation. To be honest, Hishammuddin Hussein is &lt;br /&gt;only the temporary head of UMNO Youth, the seat-warmer for when Khairy feels he is in &lt;br /&gt;the best position and ready to take over. Any loyalty given to Hishammuddin is transient &lt;br /&gt;and at least two of Hishammuddin’s nominees as ‘Yang Berhormats’ in his home state of &lt;br /&gt;Johor have now switched sides to Khairy’s camp. After Khairy’s visit to the Batu Pahat &lt;br /&gt;division a few months ago, these two, whose seats had been the personal gifts of &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin, met with Khairy in a hotel room in Johor Baru and spilled the beans. They &lt;br /&gt; - 83 - &lt;br /&gt;told Khairy in minute detail how Hishammuddin reports Khairy’s every move to his &lt;br /&gt;cousin and Deputy Prime Minister, Najib Tun Razak, while at the same time pretending to &lt;br /&gt;agree with his deputy’s actions. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In actual fact, Hishammuddin is disgusted with Khairy’s self-seeking pronouncements, in &lt;br /&gt;particular his unilateral decision to form a club comprised solely of UMNO Division Youth &lt;br /&gt;Vice-Chiefs throughout the country and his unbalanced speeches during the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;General Assembly, supporting Hishammuddin’s stance on the NEP in one speech only to &lt;br /&gt;refute them in another speech a mere two days later. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin knows that time is running out for him and the journey to the top (i.e. the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Vice-Presidency) is a road fraught with difficulties. But he has little choice in the &lt;br /&gt;matter. He is trapped by his own misguided belief that Khairy was a raw and untalented &lt;br /&gt;young man in a hurry who could be easily checked by Hishammuddin’s vast experience in &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth over the last decade. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The Permatang Pauh UMNO Youth Head, Mohd Zaidi Said, says that Khairy has now &lt;br /&gt;become the most feared UMNO politician. His wealth accumulated over the short space of &lt;br /&gt;two-and-a-half years has allowed him to be transformed into one of the most successful &lt;br /&gt;patrons of young UMNO politicians. According to Mohd Zaidi, UMNO Youth leaders are &lt;br /&gt;falling over each other to swear their loyalty to Khairy and enjoy a piece of the pie. They &lt;br /&gt;are making hay while the sun shines and they believe that hitching a ride on the Khairy &lt;br /&gt;bandwagon will at the very least give them some money to live well. And if things go &lt;br /&gt;smoothly, when Khairy finally ascends the highest position within UMNO, he will drag &lt;br /&gt;some of them along on his coat-tails. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Take, for example, the current situation in Pengkalan Pasir. All the potential candidates &lt;br /&gt;from UMNO only pay lip-service to the Kelantan State Liaison Chief, Annuar Musa. When &lt;br /&gt;it comes to getting blessings for their efforts to be named the official candidate of Barisan &lt;br /&gt;Nasional, the names of Annuar Musa, Mustapa Mohamad, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, &lt;br /&gt;Zaid Ibrahim, Awang Adek, or any of the Kelantan UMNO stalwarts do not matter a jot. &lt;br /&gt;Nor do they make a beeline to see the UMNO Management Committee Chairman, Najib &lt;br /&gt;Tun Razak. It is Khairy’s blessing that they seek.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The very day after the death of PAS assemblyman Wan Aziz, both Hanafi Mamat and Che &lt;br /&gt;Johan Che Pa, the Deputy and Vice-Heads of UMNO’s Pasir Mas Division, sent at least &lt;br /&gt;three messages each to Khairy asking for an appointment. Not only that, they also trawled &lt;br /&gt;through their phone books to search for the names of Khairy’s friends who could put in a &lt;br /&gt;good word for them with the Boss of Bosses. One of the potential candidates tried to butter &lt;br /&gt;up UMNO Information Chief Muhammad Muhammad Taib only to find that &lt;br /&gt;Muhammad’s advice to him was to “talk to Khairy”. Another potential candidate, after &lt;br /&gt;finding out that Khairy was attending the Executive Committee meeting of the Football &lt;br /&gt;Association of Malaysia (FAM) last week, even tried to get himself appointed as Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;representative to the meeting in order to “get closer” to the man. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When UMNO finally announces its candidate, there will be no doubt that that person will &lt;br /&gt; - 84 - &lt;br /&gt;be Khairy’s choice. The charade that Annuar Musa is playing, saying that he has the &lt;br /&gt;authority to decide on the candidate subject to the final blessing of Abdullah Badawi, is the &lt;br /&gt;perfect example of the master ‘dalang’ playing his ‘wayang kulit’. Annuar Musa is adept at &lt;br /&gt;playing that role and the ‘dalang’ always plays the story he is paid to play. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The fatal miscalculation for any UMNO politician now would be to cross Khairy’s path. &lt;br /&gt;That is the kiss of death. From Perlis to Sabah, every UMNO politician knows, though &lt;br /&gt;Khairy may not be the king, he is definitely the kingmaker. But fear can sometimes trigger &lt;br /&gt;a revolution that sweeps out the dictator... &lt;br /&gt; - 85 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 20: Does UMNO really want to win?  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A Special Report on Khairy Jamaluddin’s role before and during the Pengkalan Pasir by- &lt;br /&gt;election &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is 8.00 am. Khairy Jamaluddin is stuck in the usual Monday morning traffic jam &lt;br /&gt;synonymous with Kuala Lumpur. He is running 15 minutes late for a meeting with some &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth leaders who had insisted on an early morning breakfast to discuss the latest &lt;br /&gt;power struggle in their division. Khairy had taken the precaution of sitting in the shotgun &lt;br /&gt;seat of his car. He often does that to avoid the impression of arrogance. The chauffeur &lt;br /&gt;swerves sharply along the meandering route to the Crown Princess Hotel where the &lt;br /&gt;meeting is to take place. Khairy quickly checks his wallet. He does not know what the boys &lt;br /&gt;want to discuss, but he is sure of one thing: whatever it is they had to say, he would be the &lt;br /&gt;one paying the bill that morning. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The special shirt that Khairy wore had extra pockets for the three handphones that he &lt;br /&gt;carries around. The First Handphone is the Maxis 012 that is his public number. Everyone &lt;br /&gt;knows what it is because Khairy puts it on all his name cards as well as the Pemuda &lt;br /&gt;UMNO website. Khairy uses it to send SMSes and the phone is always kept on silent mode &lt;br /&gt;because it rings every other minute. Everyone feels that Khairy owes them an audience and &lt;br /&gt;they range from the lowest member of UMNO Youth and part-time Internet buff who had &lt;br /&gt;come across the number in the old UMNO Youth website, to a Chinese towkay trying his &lt;br /&gt;luck with the man Singapore businessmen are already dubbing ‘Mr 20%’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s Second Phone carries a 019 number that he gives out only to important contacts. &lt;br /&gt;The editors of the mainstream newspapers both in Malaysia and Singapore have this &lt;br /&gt;number, as do two of the most prominent young opposition politicians in the country, &lt;br /&gt;Husam Musa and Ezam Mohd Nor. The number is also available to ministers who &lt;br /&gt;nowadays feel it necessary to call Khairy once in a while just to touch base and shoot the &lt;br /&gt;breeze. He never uses this phone except for the closest of acquaintances and he knows that &lt;br /&gt;when it rings he should not pick it up in full view of the general public. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was this handphone that suddenly beeped. An SMS had come through. The time was &lt;br /&gt;8.05 am. The news was brief and necessarily succinct. It read: “Wan Aziz, ADUN &lt;br /&gt;Pengkalan Pasir, dies at 6.05 am this morning”. Khairy knew immediately what this meant. &lt;br /&gt;For three months, both UMNO and PAS had been on a bedside vigil, waiting for Wan Aziz &lt;br /&gt;to pass away. The state assembly member for Pengkalan Pasir, a small but significant state &lt;br /&gt;seat in the Parliamentary constituency of Pasir Mas, had been suffering from liver cancer &lt;br /&gt;and his condition had been deteriorating rapidly. So all knew that it was a matter of time &lt;br /&gt;before UMNO and PAS would have a real fight on their hands. Khairy also knew that the &lt;br /&gt;giant of Pasir Mas, Dato’ Ibrahim Ali, would be a factor in this race and had to be &lt;br /&gt;extinguished once and for all. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy instinctively picked up the Third Handphone. This is an iPAQ, the number which is &lt;br /&gt;pre-programmed with his codename and known only to the Prime Minister, his immediate &lt;br /&gt;family, and their security detail. This is also the number that Abdullah Ahmad Badawi &lt;br /&gt; - 86 - &lt;br /&gt;would use to speak to his son-in-law. Abdullah Badawi himself has only one phone which &lt;br /&gt;is almost always carried by the Private Secretary following him at any given function. &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s number is on a secure line, unlisted and cannot appear in any phone because it &lt;br /&gt;has been pre-programmed as such by a security expert. It even has the ability to send out &lt;br /&gt;SMSes and other messages through an anonymous router so that the number does not &lt;br /&gt;appear at all. Khairy thought that he should call Abdullah’s number and inform him of &lt;br /&gt;Wan Aziz’s death. But then Abdullah would probably have known about it first and it was &lt;br /&gt;no use telling him something he already knew. In any case, Khairy remembered that an &lt;br /&gt;incident in March 2004 had turned Abdullah off Kelantan politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Back then, Abdullah was heavily dependent on Khairy to devise his election victory. &lt;br /&gt;Though the image-building and spin-doctoring had been a success, Abdullah still felt that &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan was out of reach for UMNO. If Abdullah was now being sold as an ulama, then &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan Menteri Besar Nik Aziz is the father of all ulamas. His leadership of the state &lt;br /&gt;looked unassailable because of the high respect accorded his straight attitude by the local &lt;br /&gt;Malays. Admittedly, he was prone to gaffes, but then so was Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah had sent an emissary to see Nik Aziz to offer a compromise where UMNO would &lt;br /&gt;give PAS an easy passage in certain seats. Of course, UMNO would not shirk from fielding &lt;br /&gt;a candidate there as well, but it would conduct a half-hearted campaign in these selected &lt;br /&gt;seats where it had no chance of winning. Nik Aziz was agreeable to the idea but the plan &lt;br /&gt;was shot down by other PAS leaders, in particular the Young Turks in Kelantan. So &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah had to go back to the drawing board and together with Khairy devise a new &lt;br /&gt;strategy of putting professional faces as candidates in Kelantan.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy presented the candidates' list to Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak who was &lt;br /&gt;chairing the committee tasked with the job of selecting BN candidates for the General &lt;br /&gt;Election. Najib was highly disturbed. The Kelantan list excluded almost every man who &lt;br /&gt;had previously been an ally of Najib. Instead, these figures who had served with Najib in &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth had been replaced by ‘outsiders’ – i.e. fresh blood from Kuala Lumpur. &lt;br /&gt;These new lawyers, accountants, businessmen and former civil servants were Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;choice to change the face of Kelantan UMNO. It also matched the new image of the &lt;br /&gt;leadership of Kelantan UMNO Liaison Chief, Mustapa Mohamad, who is seen as &lt;br /&gt;uncharismatic, wooden and boring, though a genius at economics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib did not say a word to Khairy. But he immediately asked his Political Secretary, Datuk &lt;br /&gt;Fatmi (the former UMNO Youth Head of Kota Baru), to fax a copy of the list to Najib’s &lt;br /&gt;allies in Kelantan. They were understandably upset, angry and demoralised. To them, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s list represented the end of their political careers. Though they knew they could &lt;br /&gt;not say anything now, they would devise a plan to humiliate Khairy later on. The young &lt;br /&gt;man went to sleep unaware that at least 20 UMNO leaders in Kelantan were sharpening &lt;br /&gt;their knives and had now suddenly become his sworn enemies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A few days before Nomination Day, the list drawn up by Khairy and approved by &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah was sent by messenger to Kota Baru. UMNO Kelantan was supposed to keep the &lt;br /&gt;list in a safe so that the surat watikahs can be prepared for Nomination Day. At least that &lt;br /&gt; - 87 - &lt;br /&gt;was the plan. Unfortunately, Khairy did not count for the wily behaviour of his Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;party colleagues. When flight MH1388 touched down at the Sultan Ismail Petra airport in &lt;br /&gt;Pengkalan Chepa, the UMNO messenger was immediately met by 10 burly figures in &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth uniforms. Thinking that they were his minders, he quickly got into one of &lt;br /&gt;the cars on standby for him. However, instead of heading for the UMNO headquarters, the &lt;br /&gt;car made a detour and the bag carrying the list was quickly snatched away. The messenger &lt;br /&gt;was detained in a safe-house in Jalan Long Yunus and ‘advised’ to stay there until the &lt;br /&gt;‘bosses’ had done their work. What happened next was like a bedroom farce. All those &lt;br /&gt;UMNO leaders whom Khairy had dropped; some whom were qualified lawyers and many &lt;br /&gt;of them former members of the state government of the 1980s; were put back into the list to &lt;br /&gt;replace the names of all those whom Khairy had picked. This new list was then deposited &lt;br /&gt;as the proper list to be used for the 2004 General Election. It was just a matter of hours &lt;br /&gt;before the press conference by the Kelantan UMNO State Liaison Committee to announce &lt;br /&gt;their line-up for the coming polls. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, the messenger’s silence was procured through a suitable bribe. Nevertheless, the &lt;br /&gt;secret could not be kept for long. People like Dato’ Nordin Razak, who had been tipped to &lt;br /&gt;contest the Kota Baru parliamentary seat and had told his friends accordingly, suddenly &lt;br /&gt;found themselves dropped from the list. Others like Dato’ Mustapa Taib saw their names &lt;br /&gt;appearing elsewhere. Parliamentary and state candidates were switched around, including &lt;br /&gt;Hanafi Mamat who had been slated for a parliamentary seat rather than the state &lt;br /&gt;constituency of Pengkalan Pasir which he ended up contesting. Those who were dropped &lt;br /&gt;or switched around swiftly called up Abdullah’s office to complain. But it was too late in &lt;br /&gt;the day. Abdullah was too busy to entertain them as he had to face other problems such as &lt;br /&gt;the appearance of a so-called ‘Mahathir list’ and the Sultan of Johor’s rejection of &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s candidate for Menteri Besar. Instead of finding a firm offer from Abdullah to &lt;br /&gt;reinstate his son-in-law’s list, the decision was made that the doctored list would now &lt;br /&gt;become the official one. Abdullah did not want a scandal so early in his premiership, so he &lt;br /&gt;shrugged it off as irrelevant because UMNO probably had little chance of winning &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan anyway. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Surprisingly, things turned out very differently. PAS managed to hold onto the Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;State Assembly by the narrowest of margin and quickly found themselves under pressure &lt;br /&gt;to hang onto their last bastion. It was then that Khairy committed his second Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;blunder. He received a call from Husam Musa to explore the idea of both parties holding a &lt;br /&gt;ceasefire in their election petitions against each other. Khairy began negotiations and &lt;br /&gt;concluded them with Husam without even referring to the state leadership. He of course &lt;br /&gt;called up Mustapa Mohamad but neglected to discuss it with other top UMNO leaders in &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan, many of whom would not be told of the decision because they were not on &lt;br /&gt;speaking terms with Mustapa.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The decision to ‘make a deal’ with Husam resulted in Khairy losing the support of some of &lt;br /&gt;the Kelantan UMNO Young Turks eager to seize the day and depose PAS from Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;once and for all. They did not want PAS to have even an inch of opportunity in recovering &lt;br /&gt;from the setback they had suffered at the General Election. Many of them also felt they had &lt;br /&gt;good cause to challenge some of the narrow PAS victories, especially in seats where votes &lt;br /&gt; - 88 - &lt;br /&gt;had been counted twice or where ballot papers had disappeared or had been wrongly &lt;br /&gt;distributed between candidates. Even some of the older UMNO leaders like Hashim Safin &lt;br /&gt;openly opposed Khairy’s decision to make a deal with Husam on their behalf. One thing &lt;br /&gt;the Kelantanese UMNO leaders hate more than PAS is any UMNO leader from outside &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan who makes decisions on their behalf. Fiercely independent, they resented the &lt;br /&gt;brash, young Oxford graduate whom they felt had been easily tricked by Husam; who is at &lt;br /&gt;least ten years Khairy’s senior and much more experienced in local politics and therefore &lt;br /&gt;seen as wilier in local politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, in spite of the mass media saying that Khairy is a popular leader with Kelantan UMNO, &lt;br /&gt;he had a fair share of enemies from the state. He may not realise it, but even if he had &lt;br /&gt;meant well in making a deal with PAS, it would have been better if someone else rather &lt;br /&gt;than he make that decision. The resentment he caused seethed down to the divisions and &lt;br /&gt;seriously affected Kelantan UMNO, which will now have a major impact on the Pengkalan &lt;br /&gt;Pasir by-election. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A few hours after Wan Aziz’s death, Khairy received a phone call from Dato’ Rahim, the &lt;br /&gt;Pasir Mas UMNO division head. Dato’ Rahim told Khairy what he already knew, namely &lt;br /&gt;that Wan Aziz was dead. Dato’ Rahim said nothing else other than whoever was chosen to &lt;br /&gt;contest the by-election would get his full support. Of course, this was not what Dato’ &lt;br /&gt;Rahim really wanted. He had been eyeing the seat for several months. Though he was a &lt;br /&gt;Parliamentary candidate in the last general election, Dato’ Rahim was desperate to prove &lt;br /&gt;that the weakness of Pasir Mas UMNO was not a result of his ineffective handling of the &lt;br /&gt;antics of his sacked predecessor, Dato’ Ibrahim Ali, but a result of ‘other people’s &lt;br /&gt;incompetence’. More importantly, Dato’ Rahim had the money to pump into the by- &lt;br /&gt;election and would more willingly spend it on his own candidacy rather than someone &lt;br /&gt;else’s. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy did not see it that way though. To him, Dato’ Rahim is a big name who had failed to &lt;br /&gt;deliver. In any case, he was too old, and Dato’ Rahim must have realised from the tone of &lt;br /&gt;his voice that Khairy did not want him to fill in Wan Aziz’s shoes.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Instead, Khairy was more amenable to a younger candidate. There were two: Hanafi &lt;br /&gt;Mamat, who as a 51-year old businessman was not overly old yet nor too young to be &lt;br /&gt;described as a Khairy puppet. Then there was Che Johan Che Pa, an Arts graduate from the &lt;br /&gt;University of Malaya who had made good as a lawyer with his second degree from the UK. &lt;br /&gt;Both called up Khairy and told him that, like Dato’ Rahim, they too would give their &lt;br /&gt;support to whoever was chosen as the candidate. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;At first, Che Johan had the upper hand. Khairy felt that Che Johan was more presentable &lt;br /&gt;than Hanafi. Che Johan also had an impeccable student activism record, something which &lt;br /&gt;Khairy himself sorely lacks. Khairy was persuaded by Che Johan’s friends who sent him &lt;br /&gt;countless SMSes to extol the lawyer’s candidacy. More importantly, the Special Branch had &lt;br /&gt;reported that Che Johan had successfully infiltrated PAS circles by putting ‘pretend’ PAS &lt;br /&gt;Youth members in their midst. Some had even been chosen as members of the Pasir Mas &lt;br /&gt;PAS election strategy team. The sneakiness of Che Johan’s work commended himself to &lt;br /&gt; - 89 - &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s mistake, however, was in revealing his preference too soon. Amongst others, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy ‘checked’ Che Johan’s name with other local UMNO leaders including Dato’ Rahim. &lt;br /&gt;Though they tried their best to bite their lips and fake their agreement, secretly they &lt;br /&gt;planned to bring Che Johan down. Dato’ Rahim’s strategy was simple. He would lull Che &lt;br /&gt;Johan into thinking that his candidacy was assured because he had the blessing of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt;Dato’ Rahim planned for Che Johan to accompany visiting UMNO dignitaries such as &lt;br /&gt;Secretary-General Dato’ Radzi Sheikh Ahmad and Information Chief Tan Sri Muhammad &lt;br /&gt;Muhammad Taib in their visits to the constituency. Che Johan believed the nomination was &lt;br /&gt;his for the taking. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Dato’ Rahim then started a whispering campaign to oust Khairy from running the election. &lt;br /&gt;In the beginning, Khairy had been nominated as the man responsible for the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;campaign in Pengkalan Pasir. In preparation for this, Khairy began appearing in &lt;br /&gt;newspapers in the act of greeting villagers and shaking hands with elderly folk. At first, the &lt;br /&gt;strategy worked. Newspapers showed Khairy in the guise of a pious mendicant, sporting a &lt;br /&gt;watch bearing signs of the kiblat and wearing something on his wrist which even Jeff Ooi &lt;br /&gt;was fooled into saying in his blog were ‘prayer beads’ or tasbih. Khairy was portrayed as a &lt;br /&gt;man for all seasons, someone who was equally comfortable with kings as well as paupers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Then Dato’ Rahim struck. Early on in the pre-campaign period, Khairy had briefed all the &lt;br /&gt;major newspaper editors not to carry any news regarding Dato’ Ibrahim Ali, the &lt;br /&gt;independent candidate who was a would-be spoiler in the race. A vote for Ibrahim Ali &lt;br /&gt;would probably have come from UMNO partisans, and therefore an advantage to PAS. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s idea was to shut out Ibrahim Ali completely and make him ‘disappear’ from the &lt;br /&gt;radar screens. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The plan backfired badly. Word soon leaked to Dato’ Ibrahim Ali that Khairy had given the &lt;br /&gt;gagging instruction. Ibrahim Ali however had a trump card up his sleeve. In the run-up to &lt;br /&gt;Nomination Day, UMNO began to panic. Efforts were made to coax Ibrahim Ali into &lt;br /&gt;changing his plan. A meeting was held between UMNO Secretary-General Radzi Sheikh &lt;br /&gt;Ahmad and Ibrahim Ali to ‘negotiate’ his withdrawal from the race. Unknown to Khairy &lt;br /&gt;though, Ibrahim Ali had agreed to withdraw only if he was given back his UMNO Pasir &lt;br /&gt;Mas division head post and replaced Annuar Musa as the Kelantan UMNO Liaison Chief. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But that in itself was not the trump card. There was another person in that meeting who &lt;br /&gt;was representing the UMNO President. Strangely enough, this was none other than SPR &lt;br /&gt;Chairman Tan Sri Abdul Rashid Abdul Rahman. The purpose of his attendance was to &lt;br /&gt;convince Ibrahim Ali that he could garner no more than 700 votes whereas he had achieved &lt;br /&gt;double that in the election before this. Tan Sri Rashid showed Ibrahim Ali the calculations &lt;br /&gt;regarding the ten voting channels or UPU of which, according to Tan Sri Rashid, UMNO &lt;br /&gt;had a clear majority in at least seven of them, including several previously considered &lt;br /&gt;Ibrahim Ali ‘possibles’. Only Kubang Bemban, Jalan Pasir Pekan and central Pengkalan &lt;br /&gt;Pasir seemed to be slightly favourable to PAS. It was all a bluff of course. Tan Sri Rashid &lt;br /&gt;had culled his report from a certain Major entailed to make preliminary enquiries – in any &lt;br /&gt; - 90 - &lt;br /&gt;case highly inaccurate. But Ibrahim Ali now threatened to make public the fact that Tan Sri &lt;br /&gt;Rashid, a supposedly neutral election commissioner, had really been quite openly acting &lt;br /&gt;for UMNO and indifferent to public opinion if not for the coverage by the local media. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Ibrahim Ali’s intention is not to win the by-election but to garner enough votes and stay &lt;br /&gt;relevant in Kelantan politics. If Ibrahim Ali can get more than 1,500 votes, this in itself &lt;br /&gt;would be a tight slap on the face of the UMNO leaders, Khairy included, who had &lt;br /&gt;sidelined him from the state leadership years ago. Ibrahim Ali knows the state assembly &lt;br /&gt;seat means nothing to either party if he wins it. But it matters both to UMNO and PAS that &lt;br /&gt;they themselves get it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Dato’ Rahim is blaming Ibrahim Ali’s move on Khairy. So Khairy was ‘persuaded’ to lay &lt;br /&gt;off Pasir Mas for awhile and leave things to the locals to handle. Instead, Khairy was given &lt;br /&gt;the task of coordinating efforts in KL and to mobilise campaigners from outside Kelantan &lt;br /&gt;to get Pengkalan Pasir voters in Kuala Lumpur to go back to vote on 6th December. In the &lt;br /&gt;meantime, in Khairy’s absence, Dato’ Rahim outmanoeuvred Che Johan. He arranged for &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to ‘receive’ a poison-pen letter with certain &lt;br /&gt;documents proving that Che Johan had been involved in forging the cheques of an UMNO &lt;br /&gt;foundation called Yayasan Pasir Mas to the tune of RM200,000. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib panicked and immediately summoned Che Johan who stammered and explained &lt;br /&gt;that he signed the cheques on the instructions of the then foundation chairman, namely &lt;br /&gt;Dato’ Ibrahim Ali. Najib refused to listen and swiftly deleted Che Johan’s name as the &lt;br /&gt;candidate for the Pengkalan Pasir by-election. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was too late for Khairy to do anything about it. By that time Dato’ Rahim had played his &lt;br /&gt;second card. He immediately announced that he himself did not want to be the candidate &lt;br /&gt;and left the door open to Hanafi Mamat, who of course is now not expected to challenge &lt;br /&gt;Dato’ Rahim in the next UMNO divisional election. Che Johan had no choice but to give &lt;br /&gt;grudging support to Hanafi. But he did not lie still, bemoaning his bad luck. Instead, Che &lt;br /&gt;Johan began to block his supporters from attending campaign meetings conducted by &lt;br /&gt;UMNO. Their numbers began to dwindle and became starkly evident whenever top &lt;br /&gt;UMNO leaders including Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and UMNO Youth &lt;br /&gt;Leader Hishamuddin Hussein came to visit.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Che Johan now knew he had no chance against the united alliance of Dato’ Rahim and &lt;br /&gt;Hanafi Mamat. The only way he could remain relevant in future Kelantan politics is to &lt;br /&gt;have a godfather bigger than the two of them combined. His immediate thoughts went to &lt;br /&gt;getting Khairy on his side. Though he might have lost his chance now, backing Khairy &lt;br /&gt;would ensure that, at least in the long term, he would be carried as baggage on Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;coattails. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So it was important that Khairy came back to Pengkalan Pasir. The UMNO leadership was &lt;br /&gt;now crippled by the Pasir Mas civil war and the incompetence of the top state leaders. It &lt;br /&gt;was also noted that, whereas other UMNO leaders came only to give grand speeches in &lt;br /&gt;orchestrated public ceremonies, Khairy had a knack for going down to dirty his hands with &lt;br /&gt; - 91 - &lt;br /&gt;the common people. The arrival of Anwar Ibrahim on the evening of Nomination Day &lt;br /&gt;convinced UMNO that they too needed a hard-hitter who could not be so easily dismissed &lt;br /&gt;as another UMNO stereotype. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Khairy’s return to Pengkalan Pasir is not universally welcomed. Many top UMNO &lt;br /&gt;leaders are unhappy that he is drawing too much attention to himself and drawing away &lt;br /&gt;publicity from their own appearances. Wanita UMNO Head, Rafidah Aziz, seethed with &lt;br /&gt;anger when she discovered that only RTM followed her around during her brief sojourn in &lt;br /&gt;Pengkalan Pasir, while all the other news stations and print media went tailing Khairy to a &lt;br /&gt;surau-painting exercise. According to an RTM reporter, Rafidah sarcastically remarked that &lt;br /&gt;she was merely an old ‘makcik’ and ‘they should follow that young man around instead of &lt;br /&gt;her’. In addition, several UMNO leaders from outside Kelantan now began to carry some &lt;br /&gt;unsavoury material to share with their friends. This included a 25-page poison pen letter &lt;br /&gt;detailing Khairy’s financial scandals which had previously been circulated in Kedah during &lt;br /&gt;the tussle between Menteri Besar Syed Razak and his heir-apparent Mahadzir Khalid. &lt;br /&gt;Because other states had not received such letters, some of the Kedah boys made it a point &lt;br /&gt;to make several copies and share them with their fellow party members from outside. One &lt;br /&gt;copy found its way into the hands of Adnan Yaakob and a certain Menteri Besar from the &lt;br /&gt;south asked his secretary to make a copy for each division head in his state – of course, &lt;br /&gt;‘only for information purposes’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;More importantly, Khairy’s re-emergence in Pengkalan Pasir has made UMNO Youth &lt;br /&gt;leader Hishamuddin Hussein even more suspicious of Khairy’s future plans. Already &lt;br /&gt;angry that Khairy divided Pengkalan Pasir into east and west between the two of them, as &lt;br /&gt;if they are equals, Hishamuddin lacks the ‘star quality’ that Khairy exudes. Hishamuddin &lt;br /&gt;knows that a victory in Pengkalan Pasir would not be attributed to him as he is scarcely &lt;br /&gt;there, even in the five voting channels he is slated to be in charge of. Hishamuddin’s &lt;br /&gt;runner, Akhbar Khan, had to beg a reporter from The Star to cover Hishamuddin’s badly &lt;br /&gt;attended functions rather than cover Khairy’s more popular ceramah. All the newspapers &lt;br /&gt;have dubbed the Pengkalan Pasir by-election as ‘Khairy’s election’ and it will be Khairy &lt;br /&gt;who gets the kudos if BN wins. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So a PAS victory in Pengkalan Pasir will be a disappointment to only certain UMNO &lt;br /&gt;leaders. Abdullah Badawi himself could not care less what happens because with a sizeable &lt;br /&gt;four-fifths majority in Parliament he is nominally the most powerful Prime Minister ever. &lt;br /&gt;But to Najib and Hishamuddin, a BN victory is Khairy’s victory and a sure sign that their &lt;br /&gt;days are numbered. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;On the other hand, a PAS victory in Pengkalan Pasir will only further dent Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;invincible image. He cannot afford to be seen by his fellow UMNO members as having &lt;br /&gt;failed to deliver. If he plays his cards wrong, Pengkalan Pasir may be Khairy’s Pearl &lt;br /&gt;Harbour, the beginning of when people start to realise that Khairy is not the giant that the &lt;br /&gt;NST and TV3 paints him out to be. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is trying hard to make sure that BN wins in Pengkalan Pasir. All out efforts are &lt;br /&gt;being made to bring back nearly three thousand voters who live outside the constituency, &lt;br /&gt; - 92 - &lt;br /&gt;either in other areas in Kelantan, in Kuala Lumpur, or even as far away as Singapore. The &lt;br /&gt;SPR has been told to hold off efforts by PAS and Dato’ Ibrahim Ali to get information &lt;br /&gt;regarding the 'immigrant' voters. At the same time, money is pouring into Pengkalan Pasir &lt;br /&gt;as if this was an election for the whole state of Kelantan. While the newspapers have been &lt;br /&gt;downplaying BN’s inroads in the constituency, this is merely to stave off PAS voters from &lt;br /&gt;turning out in large numbers on Polling Day. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For all intents and purposes, Pengkalan Pasir is no longer just a by-election in a small town &lt;br /&gt;that no one knew existed until a couple of weeks ago. Pengkalan Pasir is a proxy war. It is &lt;br /&gt;also a war being fought on many fronts. It is a war between the Ibrahim Ali faction, that &lt;br /&gt;wishes to prove he is still relevant to Kelantan politics, and the current Kelantan UMNO &lt;br /&gt;leadership, that wishes to retire him for good. It is a war between UMNO and PAS to &lt;br /&gt;determine who would probably form the state government come the next general election &lt;br /&gt;in 2007 or 2008. It is a war between Khairy, who wants to prove his prowess, and those &lt;br /&gt;who would like to bring him down and deny him the Prime Ministership in 2015 or so. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Never before has so many political futures rested on a mere by-election. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy knows that in the current situation, where the ratings are 50:50, UMNO will still &lt;br /&gt;squeak through with a majority of around 500 votes. A small ‘skewing’ of votes will not be &lt;br /&gt;that suspicious. But if PAS ever finds an issue that swings the voters on the ground to more &lt;br /&gt;than 60% support for the Islamic party, then Khairy might have to kiss Pengkalan Pasir &lt;br /&gt;goodbye. And PAS seems to have found such an issue; the issue being the Kelantan UMNO &lt;br /&gt;state chief himself. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy realises that the infighting in Kelantan UMNO is even fiercer than that between it &lt;br /&gt;and PAS. The greatest liability to UMNO is its state chief, Annuar Musa. The Chinese &lt;br /&gt;despise him for his ‘China baruah’ retort in the Kelantan State Assembly that has been &lt;br /&gt;reproduced into a VCD and is being circulated amongst the Chinese voters. The other &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan UMNO leaders despise him and want Pengkalan Pasir to fall to PAS just so that &lt;br /&gt;Annuar Musa can be brought down. With Annuar Musa heading the by-election, UMNO &lt;br /&gt;might as well pack its bags and allow PAS a walkover. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Then the uphill battle would begin, not for Kelantan UMNO, but for Khairy Jamaluddin as &lt;br /&gt;the UMNO politician. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is now playing his last card. He has just sacked Annuar Musa and replaced him &lt;br /&gt;with Muhammad Muhammad Taib. Mat Taib is supposed to be the saviour, the man who &lt;br /&gt;will turn UMNO’s fortunes in Pengkalan Pasir around. But Kelantan politics, just like its &lt;br /&gt;land laws, is unique. Even Malays cannot buy land in Kelantan unless they were born there &lt;br /&gt;or, in the event they are a ‘foreigner’ Malay from another state in Malaysia, have lived there &lt;br /&gt;for three generations. Putting Mat Taib, a non-Kelantanese, as the election chief is only &lt;br /&gt;slightly better than asking the MCA President, Ong Kah Ting, to manage the by-election. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Is this eleventh hour move by Khairy his biggest blunder yet in Kelantan? In three days' &lt;br /&gt;time we will know. Khairy will either emerge from the aftermath of Pengkalan Pasir as the &lt;br /&gt; - 93 - &lt;br /&gt;undisputed political guru, or he will be seen as a bumbling fool. This is going to be the &lt;br /&gt;turning point for Khairy’s political career, one way or another... &lt;br /&gt; - 94 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 21: The Aftermath: Whose little victory? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The morning of the Pengkalan Pasir by-election, the Barisan Nasional election machinery &lt;br /&gt;was confident of an 800-vote majority win. Hanafi Mamat, the candidate for Barsian &lt;br /&gt;Nasional, predicted that he would capture around 8,000 votes, giving a comfortable lead &lt;br /&gt;over his rival from PAS. On the other side of the fence, the PAS operations room was still &lt;br /&gt;hopeful for a victory but predicted that the numbers, whatever they may be, would be &lt;br /&gt;wafer-thin. In the end, both camps got it right. BN got their victory, and PAS correctly &lt;br /&gt;predicted that the victor would obtain a minute majority, almost a blip amongst the 83% &lt;br /&gt;turnout. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No doubt BN secured their predicted victory, but tongues were soon a wagging about &lt;br /&gt;whether Khairy Jamaluddin had delivered what he promised. Early on in the campaign, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had gone into Pengkalan Pasir in a blaze of glory. He had muscled in a massive &lt;br /&gt;publicity trail on the back of his down-to-earth approach, where he made personal appeals &lt;br /&gt;directly to the voters by attending to their individual needs. Khairy was seen painting &lt;br /&gt;houses, repairing toilets and cleaning up the streets as if that was the natural thing for a &lt;br /&gt;director of financial giant ECM Libra to do. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Somehow or other, Khairy had confidently announced he would be able to capture almost &lt;br /&gt;all the 2,000 young voters of Pengkalan Pasir. Given that in the last General Election PAS &lt;br /&gt;had won by only a 53-vote majority, this would translate into a 1,600-vote jump in the BN &lt;br /&gt;vote and a very comfortable 1,000-vote majority. Khairy had also promised that UMNO &lt;br /&gt;would be able to shake PAS to the core by obtaining the whole-hearted support of the &lt;br /&gt;1,000-strong non-Malay community of the area. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Nevertheless, this promise did not come true. The victory Barisan Nasional ‘bought’ was &lt;br /&gt;derisory and difficult to justify in the face of the millions that had been poured into the area &lt;br /&gt;by both Barisan Nasional and the government. Based on the allocation given to Hanafi &lt;br /&gt;Mamat alone, each vote he garnered was worth at least RM11,500. It was a costly and &lt;br /&gt;ridiculously extravagant affair by Barisan Nasional for a seat that only produced a whisper &lt;br /&gt;instead of the storm of change they had expected in Kelantan politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Why did Khairy fail to deliver on his promise this time around? What happened to the &lt;br /&gt;genius that managed to score Barisan Nasional’s massive four-fifths landslide victory in the &lt;br /&gt;11th General Election? Did Khairy’s magic turn out to be no more than a conjuring trick, a &lt;br /&gt;flash in the pan unable to sustain itself when it came down to real politics, instead of the &lt;br /&gt;spin doctoring that marked his earlier phase in politics? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s failure was predicated on several reasons, some of which were his own doing. The &lt;br /&gt;first failure was the result of his ‘in-your-face’ style of campaigning which would have &lt;br /&gt;worked if he himself had been the candidate, but unfortunately distracted the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;machinery into an internal dispute. Khairy hogged the limelight and ruffled the feathers of &lt;br /&gt;the senior UMNO leadership in Kelantan. He had thought that the power of his superstar &lt;br /&gt;status would have made him a magnet to the voters. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 95 - &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was half-right. Many had come to observe out of curiosity the little ‘wunderkind’ &lt;br /&gt;from Kuala Lumpur who had been described by many as ‘the next Prime Minister but one’. &lt;br /&gt;But the voters of Pengkalan Pasir, the ones who really counted, did not flock to Khairy like &lt;br /&gt;the many groupies from other parts of the country that did so. To them, Khairy, like Anwar &lt;br /&gt;Ibrahim, was a curiosity – a freak that entertained them while the circus was in town. &lt;br /&gt;Anwar Ibrahim, too, had drawn many onlookers during his brief sojourn in Pengkalan &lt;br /&gt;Pasir. Tens of thousands had flocked to see him speak. But the majority of these did not &lt;br /&gt;have a vote in Pengkalan Pasir. Pengkalan Pasir was merely the circus and the spectators &lt;br /&gt;all came from outside. So, like Anwar, Khairy drew the crowds who in the end mattered &lt;br /&gt;least. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The voters of Pengkalan Pasir realised that, in the end, Khairy would go back to Kuala &lt;br /&gt;Lumpur and their hovels would still be rundown, their toilets dirty and their roads &lt;br /&gt;blotched. It was of no consequence to them that Khairy, for a few brief days, became the &lt;br /&gt;centre of attention in their tiny town. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So the media-hungry attitude of Khairy actually caused little effect on the voting pattern of &lt;br /&gt;Kelantan. It was a hard sell that did not work. On the other hand, it managed to rouse the &lt;br /&gt;anger of other UMNO leaders, notably Hishammuddin Hussein, Khairy’s ostensible boss, &lt;br /&gt;who was heard to grumble that his events were badly-attended due to the Pemuda &lt;br /&gt;machinery being commandeered by Khairy to follow in his tow, rather than serve the &lt;br /&gt;needs of Hishamuddin. The distrust between Hishammuddin’s camp in Pemuda UMNO &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy’s bunch of Young Turks has now reached boiling point. Hishamuddin took no &lt;br /&gt;credit for the victory or otherwise of BN in Pengkalan Pasir, knowing that it was Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;intention to rub the shine on himself. For the time being, Hisham grits his teeth but the &lt;br /&gt;water is coming to a boil and will soon result in one of the two killing off the other. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Hishammuddin is only a tentacle of the man who has now become Khairy’s real &lt;br /&gt;political rival. This man is heir-apparent Najib Tun Razak. In the past, Khairy’s friends who &lt;br /&gt;were close to Najib tried to build a consensus between the two camps. Najib also went to &lt;br /&gt;great pains to pander to Khairy’s whims and fancies -- such as bowing to his choice of &lt;br /&gt;officers in the Deputy Prime Minister’s Department. However, Pengkalan Pasir was the &lt;br /&gt;turning point in that relationship. It is now obvious to Najib that Khairy intends to rush &lt;br /&gt;headlong into UMNO politics instead of patiently awaiting his turn. At risk is Najib’s own &lt;br /&gt;tenure as the future Prime Minister and the position of his allies, including that of his &lt;br /&gt;cousin Hishammuddin. The self-seeking publicity Khairy sought in Pengkalan Pasir made &lt;br /&gt;it patently obvious to Najib’s camp that this young man was too much in a hurry and was &lt;br /&gt;willing to bulldoze his way through. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s insistence, for example, that his preferred choice of Che Johan Che Pa as the &lt;br /&gt;candidate for Pengkalan Pasir was a challenge to Najib’s power. It is known in UMNO &lt;br /&gt;circles that Hanafi Mamat, having served as a former Youth Chief of Pasir Mas division &lt;br /&gt;during Najib’s tenure as UMNO Youth Head, was closer to and more trusted by the &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister. Khairy’s dogged attempt to sell Che Johan as the more &lt;br /&gt;professional, youthful and forward-looking candidate irked Najib to no end. Finally, Najib &lt;br /&gt;exercised his prerogative by shooting down Che Johan over a corruption scandal involving &lt;br /&gt; - 96 - &lt;br /&gt;a few hundred thousand ringgit. In actual fact, Najib was shooting down Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, the Najib camp also did its best to discredit Khairy in Pengkalan Pasir. &lt;br /&gt;Accusations of Khairy’s misdeeds as the son-in-law of the Prime Minister were circulated &lt;br /&gt;not only by the PAS camp, but more by Najib supporters who used Pengkalan Pasir as an &lt;br /&gt;excuse to trade poison-pen letters about Khairy. Originally, supporters of outgoing Kedah &lt;br /&gt;Menteri Besar Syed Razak Syed Zain (no fan of Khairy) distributed details of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;devilish behaviour to visiting UMNO division leaders, and they were soon joined by &lt;br /&gt;people who were doing the same on behalf of potential UMNO Youth Head and Selangor &lt;br /&gt;Menteri Besar Khir Toyo. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Details that emerged showed quite clearly that forces within the government and UMNO &lt;br /&gt;were out to expose Khairy by using the opposition as a front. It was a proxy war which saw &lt;br /&gt;Khairy being attacked on a scale so personal and unprecedented since the time Anwar &lt;br /&gt;Ibrahim used the Reformasi movement to bash Dr Mahathir Mohamad. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, of course, could contain the damage due to his control of the media. But the media &lt;br /&gt;has also become a Pandora’s Box. Khairy’s people in the media sniffed the air of freedom in &lt;br /&gt;the early days of Abdullah’s ascent to power and now felt that they had a little more guts &lt;br /&gt;than during Mahathir’s time. So, while they still toed the line, they have not been &lt;br /&gt;completely obedient to Khairy’s instruction to kill off all stories touching his personality. It &lt;br /&gt;became an issue in Pengkalan Pasir and voters were gleefully regaled with attacks on &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, as if he was the Prime Minister himself. No one bothered about deadpan, &lt;br /&gt;uninspiring, lethargic and tired Abdullah Badawi. Instead, they attacked what certain &lt;br /&gt;bloggers described as the Czar’s Rasputin. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;All this made Khairy’s attempt to turn Pengkalan Pasir into a personal triumph a complete &lt;br /&gt;disaster. For the first time, UMNO members realised that Khairy was not a demigod but &lt;br /&gt;flesh and blood. They also knew for the first time that he could become a liability to the &lt;br /&gt;long-term survival of UMNO. Khairy’s unpopular attempts to replace the rank of UMNO &lt;br /&gt;leadership with his own cabal struck fear into the hearts of the veterans who are now &lt;br /&gt;beginning to realise to their chagrin that Abdullah Badawi could not be trusted to protect &lt;br /&gt;their careers against his rising son-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;More importantly, Khairy’s narrow power-base within Pemuda UMNO are now waking &lt;br /&gt;up to the reality that there will be times when Khairy cannot deliver his promises. He failed &lt;br /&gt;to put in their preferred candidate. He did not manage to secure the support of the young &lt;br /&gt;men and women of Pengkalan Pasir. He is a potential source of rift between the leaders of &lt;br /&gt;Pemuda UMNO. And, most glaringly, Khairy was unable to shirk off the image that he is &lt;br /&gt;an opportunist who exploits the fact he is married to the Prime Minister’s daughter to &lt;br /&gt;make his way in the world. The most disappointed of all the UMNO machinery was the &lt;br /&gt;Pemuda ranks from whom Khairy hoped to launch his groundswell of support. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When a demigod becomes mere human, he also becomes prone to mortality. Pengkalan &lt;br /&gt;Pasir was the first salvo of a concerted attempt by forces opposed to Khairy to gather their &lt;br /&gt;collective strength and finish the boy wonder off. Let there be no mistake, even in the &lt;br /&gt; - 97 - &lt;br /&gt;opposition there are people who are allied to Khairy’s cause, for example PAS Vice- &lt;br /&gt;President Husam Musa. Husam had built his reputation after the last General Election &lt;br /&gt;upon good relations with Khairy. His deal with Khairy to mutually withdraw both parties’ &lt;br /&gt;election petitions against each other and his reliance on Khairy to deliver monetary support &lt;br /&gt;to the ailing Kelantan government backfired badly. It looks like Husam is finished as the &lt;br /&gt;future Menteri Besar of Kelantan. He is no longer a trusted man amongst the members of &lt;br /&gt;the elite of PAS. Though he may still be the right-hand man of Menteri Besar Nik Aziz Nik &lt;br /&gt;Mat, he pulled his punches too often and will face an uphill struggle to regain credibility. &lt;br /&gt;In any case, Nik Aziz is living out his last days as Kelantan Menteri Besar. As Khairy’s star &lt;br /&gt;dims, Husam’s too will fade away. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s enemies both within UMNO and the opposition will find common cause in &lt;br /&gt;defeating him. It would be easier for the senior UMNO leaders to openly back Najib Tun &lt;br /&gt;Razak against Khairy, as it will be Najib who is credited with the BN victory in Pengkalan &lt;br /&gt;Pasir. Najib’s choice of candidate, his personal attention to the ground machinery, his use &lt;br /&gt;of the established network in the Special Branch as well as the Election Commission, and &lt;br /&gt;his knack for building a consensus amongst the UMNO leadership was far more successful &lt;br /&gt;than Khairy’s abrasive steam-rolling. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib made friends in Pengkalan Pasir, whereas Khairy only created more enemies. The &lt;br /&gt;situation now is not an easy one for Abdullah Badawi. He is placed in a similar position as &lt;br /&gt;Dr Mahathir Mohamad was in 1998 where the heir-apparent had become a threatening &lt;br /&gt;figure to his legacy. Uneasy days lie ahead for both Najib and Khairy. But it is a turning &lt;br /&gt;point for both men. Najib has salvaged his reputation as the sitting duck, waiting for &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s rifle to shoot him down. On the other hand, Khairy faces the first of his many &lt;br /&gt;internal challenges within UMNO. Whereas Khairy has risen effortlessly through the ranks &lt;br /&gt;thus far, the next steps in his climb up the pole of UMNO politics will be met with the &lt;br /&gt;bristle of thorns. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Armageddon comes soon for many in Malaysian politics. Within UMNO and within PAS, &lt;br /&gt;the post-mortem of Pengkalan Pasir will be followed by the drawing of daggers. Some will &lt;br /&gt;stab and some will be stabbed. The dirty rush of Malaysian politics will again lead to an &lt;br /&gt;interesting time for the people and other observers alike. &lt;br /&gt; - 98 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 22: A fatal miscalculation &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;All politicians are concerned with their legacy. How they are remembered matters more to &lt;br /&gt;them than anything else. To start with, a politician usually has an ego that moves him to &lt;br /&gt;look at the world in a very narrow form. In the mind of a politician, every event that &lt;br /&gt;happens revolves around himself. They have what some have described as a ‘genetic &lt;br /&gt;disorder’ of extreme belief in the ability of oneself to do almost anything in the world. Only &lt;br /&gt;very rarely do we come across politicians who are able to transcend that vicious trait and &lt;br /&gt;think more of others than they do of themselves. For most, the legacy they leave behind is &lt;br /&gt;the end-all and be-all of everything that they do. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As a young man in a hurry, Khairy Jamaluddin has gone beyond the norm in trying to &lt;br /&gt;secure his legacy. A few days ago, Khairy participated in a forum organized by UMNO &lt;br /&gt;Youth in collaboration with their sympathisers in the Universiti Sains Malaysia campus in &lt;br /&gt;Penang. Perhaps unusual for a university, the forum was openly in support of UMNO, and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy made no qualms to hide the fact that UMNO drove the event in order to inculcate &lt;br /&gt;its dogma in the minds of the participants. Khairy likes to start them young and it therefore &lt;br /&gt;comes as no surprise that the participants were all young people. What may be surprising, &lt;br /&gt;though, is that all the participants are still in Forms One and Two of the secondary schools &lt;br /&gt;and therefore, strictly speaking, still children. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Therein lies the fatal flaw of Khairy. He started out and still professes that he is in favour of &lt;br /&gt;reform. In fact, he presents himself as the candidate of change against the lethargy of past &lt;br /&gt;regimes. Khairy is the Renaissance Man who would like to teach Malaysians how to &lt;br /&gt;appreciate Shakespeare and drag them kicking and screaming into the 21st Century. But &lt;br /&gt;like all UMNO politicians (and yes, even many in the opposition too), Khairy has missed &lt;br /&gt;the woods for the trees.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Even when he fights to proclaim his image as a morally superior reformer, Khairy goes on &lt;br /&gt;and on to break the rules. He sees nothing wrong about dragging politics into campuses in &lt;br /&gt;contravention of Malaysian law, especially the Universities and University Colleges Act &lt;br /&gt;which was introduced with the help of his father-in-law (then a ranking senior civil &lt;br /&gt;servant). Khairy sees nothing wrong with influencing children with UMNO propaganda, &lt;br /&gt;while at the same time criticising PAS for building their own nurseries and schools. Khairy, &lt;br /&gt;in fact, sees nothing wrong with whatever he does in the face of the unarguable fact that, as &lt;br /&gt;one of the most brilliant young men in the country, he is more than qualified to exercise &lt;br /&gt;exceptions to the rule. The law that applies to the common people, or even other &lt;br /&gt;politicians, do not apply to him. They are dumb, stupid and backward, and unable to &lt;br /&gt;match his Oxbridge intellect. Because he is far cleverer than the rest, the rules do not apply &lt;br /&gt;to him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Khairy enjoys from such events is the ability to show off to people far less intellectual &lt;br /&gt;than him that he is a man to look up to. Yet, slowly, some are beginning to notice that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy never dares to be with others who are equally intelligent, or perhaps even cleverer &lt;br /&gt;than him. He plays to the galleries only when the galleries are made up of people who are &lt;br /&gt;either too scared to speak up or unable to do so; because they are bewildered by the jargon &lt;br /&gt; - 99 - &lt;br /&gt;that Khairy uses. Khairy’s ability to sustain himself in politics is purely based on the fact &lt;br /&gt;that he has not allowed himself to be made a fool by another who is equally able as him. &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi in his closeted life thinks that Khairy is the best thing since sliced bread &lt;br /&gt;because he has never met anyone else equal to Khairy. But Khairy is responsible from &lt;br /&gt;preventing these people from having access to Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Unlike Mahathir, Abdullah Badawi does not have a wide circle of intellectuals that he can &lt;br /&gt;rely upon. Most in his circle is made up of people who have shared his BTN background. &lt;br /&gt;Other than that, there are a few academics who have made their living by instilling an &lt;br /&gt;ultra-Malay culture in their outlook. Abdullah has no intellectual friends. If you exclude &lt;br /&gt;the few journalists who write toadying articles about his so-called political tribulations, &lt;br /&gt;even within the circle of civil servants that he likes to surround himself with, Abdullah is &lt;br /&gt;never considered the brightest of the lot. It was, in fact, Abdullah’s lack of intelligence that &lt;br /&gt;commended him to Mahathir, because the latter thought that a man with so little intellect &lt;br /&gt;would be more likely to follow the policies set before him and not question them.  &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The flaw that Khairy has developed since his ascension as Vice Youth Chief of UMNO is &lt;br /&gt;that he no longer tolerates criticism. In the first place, he has never had a valid circle of &lt;br /&gt;friends. His closest companions are foreigners, mainly Singaporeans or Malaysians who &lt;br /&gt;have never been schooled in Malaysia. Like him, they are the elite who rarely touch ground &lt;br /&gt;with the common people. Khairy tried to transcend this disability by acquiring new friends &lt;br /&gt;within UMNO Youth whom he felt was more in touch with the grassroots. Unfortunately, &lt;br /&gt;most UMNO Youth leaders turn out to be people who use their alliance with Khairy either &lt;br /&gt;to threaten other political rivals or enrich themselves at the expense of genuine &lt;br /&gt;businessmen. Khairy, in fact, has no real friends within UMNO, and the few that he has &lt;br /&gt;outside it have been rewarded with high posts that they are now afraid to lose. So they &lt;br /&gt;have all stopped speaking the truth to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;All leaders face this problem: it is lonely at the top. But Khairy has reached this stage far &lt;br /&gt;too soon. Even before he could assume his unabashed objective of becoming Malaysia’s &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister before the age of forty, he has already reached this groupie mentality. Yes, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s circle is now only made up of groupies. Anyone who dares to say anything &lt;br /&gt;against him soon finds himself being boycotted by the other groupies. Slowly they fade &lt;br /&gt;away as the others tighten the circle around Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad realised too late that this was the case with him in 1998. He no longer &lt;br /&gt;had people who could speak up without fear or favour. In that sense, he comes only as the &lt;br /&gt;latest in a long run of UMNO leaders. Tunku Abdul Rahman had the same problem in 1969 &lt;br /&gt;when he refused to listen to the Young Turks (which included Mahathir and Musa Hitam) &lt;br /&gt;and relied only on his closest advisors like Khir Johari, Sardon Jubir and Senu Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Rahman. Tun Razak would have been destroyed by the insipid influence of Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Ahmad had he not died before his time. Hussein Onn, too, failed to read the writings on &lt;br /&gt;the wall and by the time he ceased to rely on Ghazali Shafie, it was too late for him to &lt;br /&gt;salvage his leadership. Abdullah Badawi too will fall in the exact same way. He is already &lt;br /&gt;beginning his slow tumble downwards from the heights of power. Abdullah’s inability to &lt;br /&gt;judge people correctly and his obsessive reliance on Khairy will cause him to anger those &lt;br /&gt; - 100 - &lt;br /&gt;very UMNO leaders upon whom he should rely on for support. Abdullah will be kicked &lt;br /&gt;out of office for the same reason that others before him have found themselves flat on their &lt;br /&gt;face. It is always the advisors that kill off their own leader. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s fatal flaw of being unable to judge between enemies and genuine critics has been &lt;br /&gt;exacerbated by his rolling-stone-like ability to gather powerful enemies. Khairy’s enemies &lt;br /&gt;can be classified into several key groups. The most powerful group is made up of &lt;br /&gt;supporters of former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. These people feel that Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;an overrated brat who is a theorist out of touch with reality. They think that Khairy will &lt;br /&gt;lead the nation up the garden path and fool the people into a long and intolerable &lt;br /&gt;dictatorship led by himself and fuelled by his cronies of young Oxbridge graduates. Time &lt;br /&gt;and time again, members of this group, including serving and former cabinet ministers, &lt;br /&gt;have tried to bridge an alliance of UMNO veterans and current leadership to check &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s rise to power. Their most hopeful scenario is for Abdullah Badawi to be removed &lt;br /&gt;from office either by force or subtle pressure and have a new leader, probably Najib Tun &lt;br /&gt;Razak, who will then decapitate Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Does Mahathir Mohamad himself support this group? In a sense, Mahathir is already &lt;br /&gt;giving them the best support anyone can give by undermining many of Abdullah’s new &lt;br /&gt;policies. As a conservative Malay politician, Mahathir is a genius at causing people to &lt;br /&gt;question Abdullah’s ability merely by uttering a few indirect comments which seem an &lt;br /&gt;attack on others, but in reality is a veiled stab at Abdullah himself. No one expects &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir to go further than that, but by doing so, Mahathir provides an avenue where &lt;br /&gt;those dissatisfied with Abdullah and Khairy can gather and plot. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s other enemies are those young leaders of UMNO who are afraid of his &lt;br /&gt;connections with Anwar Ibrahim. Khairy does have some sympathy for Anwar, but it is &lt;br /&gt;fair to say that Anwar loves Khairy more than Khairy loves Anwar. In fact, Anwar is &lt;br /&gt;besotted with Khairy, seeing in him a mirror image of his own fabled meteoric rise to &lt;br /&gt;power. Anwar thinks that Khairy models himself after him and tries to play the father &lt;br /&gt;figure by giving Khairy unsolicited advice on how to manoeuvre within UMNO Youth. &lt;br /&gt;Anwar thinks that Khairy is a genuine article, in the mould of a charismatic leader, the only &lt;br /&gt;type that Anwar respects. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;By being close to Anwar, Khairy has formed an alliance seen by many in UMNO as a pact &lt;br /&gt;with the devil himself. Certainly the old guard is fearful of Anwar, but the young leaders &lt;br /&gt;too are worried that Anwar will come back in and bring along his own cadres, thereby &lt;br /&gt;displacing them, especially those who made their careers after 1998 by brown-nosing &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir. In reality, Khairy’s attempt to use Anwar for his own popularity has back-fired. &lt;br /&gt;The visit to Anwar’s house on 2 September 2004 is the one thing UMNO leaders remember &lt;br /&gt;about Khairy and it will mark him with the brand of Brutus for many years to come. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s enemies are not all politicians. Some of them are businessmen who feel that they &lt;br /&gt;have been cut out by ECM Libra and other Khairy ‘investment vehicles’. A certain Tan Sri &lt;br /&gt;from Penang recently remarked to his friend that it is almost impossible for him to have &lt;br /&gt;any business with the Penang government because all the contracts have been taken up &lt;br /&gt; - 101 - &lt;br /&gt;young Chinese cronies of Khairy Jamaluddin. He pointed to several key construction &lt;br /&gt;projects which involve Khairy’s nominees. The allegations are not all true of course. Some &lt;br /&gt;of the nominees are not Khairy’s but those of the late Endon Mahmood’s family and of &lt;br /&gt;Kamaluddin Abdullah Badawi. But since Khairy is the most visible member of the Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister’s family, he is automatically seen as the deal-maker. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;No matter that the accusations are only partly true. Even those that are makes Khairy seem &lt;br /&gt;like a greedy young man out to earn hundreds of millions at the expense of far more &lt;br /&gt;established businessmen. The perception is that Khairy influences business decisions made &lt;br /&gt;by the government. For example, those involved in the DRB shares sale think that Khairy &lt;br /&gt;had instructed Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, his Singapore Special Branch buddy, &lt;br /&gt;to jump the gun and tie the government’s hands by announcing that Tan Sri S.M. &lt;br /&gt;Nasimuddin had won the bid for the late Yahaya Ahmad’s shares. News spread that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had leaked the information to the NST, knowing full well that others in the &lt;br /&gt;government were in favour of Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar’s bid. But Khairy wanted to push the &lt;br /&gt;decision in his favour so he took the unprecedented step of using the press as a method to &lt;br /&gt;influence the decision. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Those who dislike Khairy comprise some of the richest Malay and Chinese businessmen. &lt;br /&gt;The Malays hate him for creating a new circle of young Malay businessmen allied to &lt;br /&gt;himself; those such as Rozabil Abdul Rahman, the Perlis Youth Chief, and others of that &lt;br /&gt;persuasion. The Chinese businessmen hate him for selling major business opportunities to &lt;br /&gt;his Singaporean friends. The fact that Khazanah now deals only with the big players from &lt;br /&gt;Singapore and Indonesia means that many locals are excluded. All this is deemed to be &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s fault and all lead to the same conclusion: that business is bad because of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Perception is everything in politics, therefore whether the accusations levelled against &lt;br /&gt;Khairy are true or not, people in politics and business who each have their own interest &lt;br /&gt;will always take the side of the story that favours their own line of thinking. Therein lies &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s own problems. Because of his eager (some say too eager) efforts to aggrandise and &lt;br /&gt;self-publicise, he has become the main target for the elites’ dissatisfaction. The people know &lt;br /&gt;too little about Khairy at the moment for them to have a negative opinion on him. But those &lt;br /&gt;who move and shake the country, who make a living by wheeling and dealing, who thirst &lt;br /&gt;at the opportunity of power-broking, who feel that it is their birthright to secure politics’ &lt;br /&gt;highest offices, and who spend their days thinking of what’s the best alliances to make, &lt;br /&gt;these people have all formed their opinions about Khairy and it is too late for him to &lt;br /&gt;change them. It is time for the battle to begin. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;During Khairy’s monologue at USM, he was at his most self-indulgent best. He gave a &lt;br /&gt;press conference which extolled all the efforts he is doing to create a morally upright group &lt;br /&gt;of young citizens. But away in a corner where the press conference was held, a group of &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth leaders were gathering. All shared the same feeling: they were sick of &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. One suggested that the time was now right for them to push forward an equally &lt;br /&gt;potent rival within UMNO Youth, someone who can match Khairy’s intellect. A state &lt;br /&gt;Youth leader proposed several names and the small gathering broke off after agreeing to &lt;br /&gt;shortlist the names mentioned. Khairy will not have an easy year ahead... &lt;br /&gt; - 102 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 23: Faster, Higher, Stronger &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin is involved in only one sports organisation, the Football Association of &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia (FAM). The Sultan of Pahang, who in his infinite wisdom wanted to be close to &lt;br /&gt;the boy who would be Prime Minister, offered him a seat on the Exco; even though Khairy &lt;br /&gt;never played a day of soccer in his entire life. Another proponent of his entry into FAM is &lt;br /&gt;Raduan Sheikh Ahmad, brother of UMNO Secretary-General Radzi Sheikh Ahmad, who is &lt;br /&gt;more interested in Khairy’s money and how he could allocate that to causes related to &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian football. Khairy doesn’t mind this. In a ‘scratch your back, scratch my back’ &lt;br /&gt;world, any alliance is an advantage; especially since public support for Abdullah Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;Badawi is getting thinner and the patience of UMNO members with the Abdullah family’s &lt;br /&gt;greedy ways has grown into seething discontent. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The only game that matters to Khairy is the 100 metre dash. Early on in his political career, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy decided not to be a marathon man, pacing himself with the older generation and &lt;br /&gt;waiting patiently for his turn. Khairy wants to kick the opposition to pieces and shatter the &lt;br /&gt;glass ceiling, making himself the youngest ever Prime Minister. He is well on his way to &lt;br /&gt;that. But a few obstacles remain, and Khairy wants to wish them away. In the coming year, &lt;br /&gt;he will try his best to remove these obstacles and smoothen his path to power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Already he has had to move quicker than planned. The intense attacks through poison-pen &lt;br /&gt;letters by his rivals in UMNO, such as Khir Toyo and Hishammuddin Hussein, have &lt;br /&gt;caused Khairy to lose the goodwill of many of the rank-and-file. The Pengkalan Pasir by- &lt;br /&gt;election showed UMNO Youth members that Khairy was not the magic elixir that could &lt;br /&gt;produce massive support. Khairy’s claim that he was the leading light of a new generation &lt;br /&gt;which had the support of the majority of young people in the country proved to be a &lt;br /&gt;hollow boast. The 2,000 young voters he promised to deliver in Pengkalan Pasir failed to &lt;br /&gt;materialise and the ones that actually gave him support were attracted to his money rather &lt;br /&gt;than his charisma. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In his dream of dreams, Khairy wants 2006 to be the year he becomes a mainstream player. &lt;br /&gt;To that end, he has laid the ground for several changes. Khairy’s wish list for 2006 is as &lt;br /&gt;follows: &lt;br /&gt;1. Influence the Cabinet reshuffle &lt;br /&gt;A cabinet reshuffle is long overdue. The Abdullah Badawi XXL cabinet created after the &lt;br /&gt;last general election has proven to be weak and uninspiring. Abdullah’s choice of ministers &lt;br /&gt;at that time was dictated by the ghost of Mahathir and the need to reward several &lt;br /&gt;unsavoury characters who had helped him sustain his slow ascent to the Premiership. &lt;br /&gt;However, he failed to deliver on the promises made and it has regressed into a Third &lt;br /&gt;World Cabinet with Third World mentalities. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is eager to stamp his mark. He wants to kick out or at least reduce the power of &lt;br /&gt;several senior ministers who have been disrespectful of his powers -- Samy Vellu, Lim &lt;br /&gt;Keng Yaik and Rafidah Aziz have been too long in the teeth and do not kowtow to Khairy &lt;br /&gt; - 103 - &lt;br /&gt;as he thinks they should. These ministers will be running their last laps in irrelevant &lt;br /&gt;ministries or find themselves with understudies eager to play the top billing. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy also wants to promote his cronies. He wants to secure higher positions for Noh &lt;br /&gt;Omar, Shaziman Abu Mansor, Adham Baba and promote to the cabinet people such as &lt;br /&gt;Ahmad Shabery Cheek. To do so, some older leaders must be kicked out and these Young &lt;br /&gt;Turks rewarded with positions of responsibility. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The cabinet reshuffle, which is due anytime between now and the Sarawak state election, is &lt;br /&gt;also a useful tool to scare some potential rivals. Khairy has been telling people that &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin Hussein, for example, has not ‘performed’ as Minister of Education. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy has planted the seed of doubt by accusing Hishammuddin of being mired in &lt;br /&gt;appointing too many Special Officers in his ministry. Indeed, Hishammuddin has 15 such &lt;br /&gt;officers, double the number that of the Prime Minister himself. Khairy wants &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin to know that if he were to be allowed to continue holding powerful &lt;br /&gt;portfolios, it would only be by the grace and favour of the all-powerful son-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;2. Remove Khir Toyo &lt;br /&gt;Khir Toyo continues to be the most apparent challenger to Khairy’s throne. Whether as a &lt;br /&gt;future UMNO Youth Head or even as a stalking-horse to the post of Vice Youth Head, Khir &lt;br /&gt;Toyo commands the support of rank-and-file UMNO members even though he inspires &lt;br /&gt;mostly disgust amongst non-UMNO citizens. The magic of Khir Toyo comes from the fact &lt;br /&gt;that, unlike Khairy, the fruits of his corruption are shared with other leaders. For example, &lt;br /&gt;Khir Toyo never forgets to give cash payments in the hundreds of thousands to all the &lt;br /&gt;divisions of Selangor UMNO for them to trickle down the largesse to ordinary members. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy does not do that and he only rewards his closest friends and those within his circle. &lt;br /&gt;As a result, though both are intrinsically corrupt, Khir is an immensely popular politician. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s deal with TV3 News and Current Affairs Director, Dato’ Kamarulzaman Zainal, &lt;br /&gt;boils down to attacking Khir Toyo on almost all the wrongs happening in Selangor. To &lt;br /&gt;some extent this has been successful. But Khir is not as stupid as he looks. He hides behind &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and uses his links to Mahathir’s son, Mokhzani, to &lt;br /&gt;maintain his position. He has very cleverly deflected threats from Abdullah loyalists in &lt;br /&gt;Selangor by giving them tasks they could not possibly perform and allocating them &lt;br /&gt;problematic portfolios. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;2006 will show Khairy trying very hard through the media to tar Khir Toyo and bring him &lt;br /&gt;crashing to the ground. At the moment, Khairy is planning an expose through an English &lt;br /&gt;newspaper about Khir’s role in personally approving projects in certain areas to relatives of &lt;br /&gt;his wife, Zaharah Kecik, and other such cronies. The stories will begin as an environmental &lt;br /&gt;scandal and end up questioning the probity of the Menteri Besar himself. By such means, &lt;br /&gt;and with the aid of TV3, Khairy hopes that Khir will finally leave the scene blemished and &lt;br /&gt;unelectable. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;3. Promote Wan Farid to a higher position &lt;br /&gt; - 104 - &lt;br /&gt;Wan Mohd Farid Wan Salleh is Khairy’s new ally in the PM’s office. As Political Secretary &lt;br /&gt;to the Prime Minister, Wan Farid has taken on the role of Khairy’s unofficial gatekeeper in &lt;br /&gt;that office. Whereas Khairy himself used to play this role, he is now too busy to do so and &lt;br /&gt;trusts Wan Farid, the 42-year old politician from Terengganu, to be the toll-collector from &lt;br /&gt;businessmen who seek the Prime Minister’s stamp of authority for their projects. Wan &lt;br /&gt;Farid has been so successful at this that he is soon to be made a Senator, and if word on the &lt;br /&gt;ground is correct, he will soon ascend to the office of Minister, where he is then expected to &lt;br /&gt;be totally indebted to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Already Wan Farid has been instrumental in securing a large chunk of Terengganu oil &lt;br /&gt;royalties for a pet project of one of Khairy’s businessmen friends, Patrick Lim. The &lt;br /&gt;businessman, who flies Khairy around in his private jet, recently obtained RM89 million &lt;br /&gt;from the Terengganu Special Fund, without having to refer to the Menteri Besar, Idris &lt;br /&gt;Jusoh, or the State Exco. It was Wan Farid who did the deal and ensured that Khairy got his &lt;br /&gt;appropriate cut. The money was supposed to be allocated towards development projects &lt;br /&gt;for the poor, but has instead gone towards building a tourist complex, shopping mall and &lt;br /&gt;condominiums. Inflated by over 40%, the Chinese businessman has allocated a sizeable &lt;br /&gt;portion of the profit to Wan Farid and Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One of the major movers and shakers of 2006 will be Wan Farid. Khairy is now &lt;br /&gt;contemplating whether he should be more prominent and be made a minister, or continue &lt;br /&gt;to play a background role, thereby ensuring lack of public knowledge over the secret &lt;br /&gt;goings-on in Abdullah’s office. Either way, both men will become richer by the millions in &lt;br /&gt;this New Year. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;4. Crush Reezal Merican &lt;br /&gt;There are some who are stupid enough to think that because Reezal Merican and Khairy &lt;br /&gt;used to work in the same office and are both UMNO Youth Exco members, they should &lt;br /&gt;then be bosom buddies. In fact, the reverse is true. Reezal Merican hated Khairy the &lt;br /&gt;moment that young upstart walked into the corridors of power. The feeling was mutual -- &lt;br /&gt;Khairy too felt that Reezal Merican was an IIUM graduate who was decidedly stupid, &lt;br /&gt;backward and good for nothing more than reciting a few doas. As Khairy became more and &lt;br /&gt;more powerful, Reezal had tried to be more accommodative, but Khairy continues to &lt;br /&gt;regard Reezal with contempt. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The blunder caused by Reezal’s over-enthusiastic challenge to Anwar ally Suhaimi Ibrahim &lt;br /&gt;in GPMS is the perfect opportunity for Khairy to tarnish Reezal further. Already Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;circulated copies of Reezal’s irregular claims upon the Finance Ministry coffers. As Political &lt;br /&gt;Secretary to the First Minister of Finance, Reezal gets certain out-of-pocket expenses for his &lt;br /&gt;official duties. But Reezal has also charged many other expenses to this account, including &lt;br /&gt;political lunches, IIUM Alumni Association Dinners and GPMS meetings. Another source &lt;br /&gt;of Khairy’s anger with Reezal is that the latter has openly canvassed support for him &lt;br /&gt;challenging Khairy in the UMNO Youth leadership elections to come. Reezal uses a &lt;br /&gt;network of IIUM alumni who are now working as Special Officers to certain ministers to &lt;br /&gt;canvass their support. So Khairy has decided that 2006 will be the year that Reezal Merican &lt;br /&gt; - 105 - &lt;br /&gt;gets his just desserts. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;5. Clip Najib’s wings &lt;br /&gt;Khairy has been counting on Najib Tun Razak’s timidity to ensure that no challenges &lt;br /&gt;would be forthcoming from that scion of ‘wait-and-see’. After all, Najib has all the time in &lt;br /&gt;the world to wait and the Khairy camp has lulled Najib into thinking that Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;warming up to him. Khairy has even gone so far as to say that Najib has proven himself &lt;br /&gt;time and time again as the most loyal and genuine of all the ministers in the current &lt;br /&gt;cabinet. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Famous last words! Khairy has never ceased planning Najib’s downfall. The only reason &lt;br /&gt;why Khairy has not acted thus far is because he is not strong enough to override the &lt;br /&gt;support given to Najib by Mahathir’s former supporters and other UMNO leaders fearful &lt;br /&gt;that Khairy is trying to bring back that old bugbear, Anwar Ibrahim, into UMNO. Another &lt;br /&gt;reason why Khairy has so far failed to act is because Najib is able to rally far more support &lt;br /&gt;from rank-and-file leaders than Abdullah and Khairy can. Dissatisfaction amongst &lt;br /&gt;ordinary UMNO members against weak, tepid and irresolute Abdullah who is seen to be &lt;br /&gt;totally under the control of a greedy, conniving Khairy cannot be underestimated. Since the &lt;br /&gt;last UMNO elections, the focus of discontent have settled on Khairy’s shoulders and, in a &lt;br /&gt;showdown between Abdullah and Najib, Abdullah will lose hands down. So Khairy &lt;br /&gt;cannot act now without devising a foolproof plan on how to remove Najib. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Najib’s wings will be clipped. Khairy intends to:  &lt;br /&gt;I. Remove Najib’s supporters from the Cabinet &lt;br /&gt;II. Defeat Najib’s candidates in the Divisional and Youth elections &lt;br /&gt;III. Destroy Najib’s credibility through the media &lt;br /&gt;In addition to that, Najib’s economic strength is to be severely compromised. The rise and &lt;br /&gt;rise of CIMB, led by Najib’s sibling, Nazir Razak, is less the target, given that there is less &lt;br /&gt;opportunity to create a scandal in such a public company. Furthermore, Nazir is a &lt;br /&gt;scrupulously straightforward businessman. However, Najib’s other brothers have been &lt;br /&gt;involved in behind-the-scene deals with potential Khairy enemies in the business world, &lt;br /&gt;including a few top Malay and Chinese businessmen. These siblings, notably Nizam and &lt;br /&gt;Johari Razak, are the main targets for Khairy. In the next year, some of their more secret &lt;br /&gt;deals will be made public by Khairy’s friends in the media to try and paint Najib as a &lt;br /&gt;politician mired in cronyism, much in the mould of Mahathir Mohamad. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;6. Destroy Mahathir’s legacy &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s biggest enemy is not the up-and-coming politicians of UMNO, but that great has- &lt;br /&gt;been, Dr Mahathir Mohamad. Mahathir continues to be the main critic of the government &lt;br /&gt;of Abdullah Badawi. The public knows that Mahathir is not happy with many of the moves &lt;br /&gt;initiated by Abdullah, not because he thinks these policies run contrary to his legacy, but &lt;br /&gt;because Mahathir sincerely believes that many of these policies were concocted by Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and his cronies in Ethos Consulting and ECM Libra in order to enrich themselves. &lt;br /&gt; - 106 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Although some may say that Mahathir had done the same thing for his own cronies, &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir believes that his plan also produced many successful Malay tycoons whom he &lt;br /&gt;had hoped would be able to engineer a wealthier Malay business class. In Mahathir’s eyes, &lt;br /&gt;what Khairy is doing is just for the sake of his own pocket. Mahathir also believes that &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is immensely stupid and totally out-of-touch with the purposes of national &lt;br /&gt;development. Mahathir thinks that the Abdullah government has now become too &lt;br /&gt;dangerous to be allowed to survive much longer. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s intention for 2006 is to further expose what he feels are mistakes made by &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and also use these criticisms to level a veiled attack on Khairy. While Khairy can &lt;br /&gt;quickly answer the attacks of other UMNO leaders, Mahathir is a different kettle of fish. &lt;br /&gt;Khairy cannot be brash and disrespectful towards Mahathir as he is with Najib, Ali &lt;br /&gt;Rustam, Muhyiddin, Khir Toyo and others of that persuasion. Mahathir is indeed Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;biggest PR problem. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But perhaps 2006 may yet see Khairy winning over Mahathir. After all, Mahathir is now 81 &lt;br /&gt;years old and has just recently survived a minor heart attack, disguised as a ‘routine check- &lt;br /&gt;up’. It cannot be expected that Mahathir is healthy enough to launch a strong challenge &lt;br /&gt;against Khairy. When Mahathir backs down due to ill-health, won’t Najib also do the same &lt;br /&gt;-- knowing that his biggest supporter will not be around him to weather the whole attack? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;7. Make another RM300 million &lt;br /&gt;Khairy understands the first rule of UMNO politics is to make enough money to buy the &lt;br /&gt;votes. So far, Khairy has done very well from selling government-linked stocks to certain &lt;br /&gt;parties, including foreign government investment companies. Khairy has built up a &lt;br /&gt;treasure chest far bigger than that of Hishammuddin Hussein and has been lucky that the &lt;br /&gt;opposition does not attack him as much as they do other UMNO leaders. PAS does not &lt;br /&gt;understand Khairy’s complex ways of raising secret funds through corporate exercises for &lt;br /&gt;the simple reason that the best economists in PAS such as Dr Rosli Yaakob, Husam Musa &lt;br /&gt;and Dr Dzulkifli Ahmad are second-rate businessmen, more in tune with the inner &lt;br /&gt;workings of goat’s milk pills rather than high finance. DAP, too, is too far removed from &lt;br /&gt;the world of GLCs to understand the intricacies of Khairy’s deals. Anwar Ibrahim’s group &lt;br /&gt;does not know very much about what is going on as well; other than the few things which &lt;br /&gt;should be kept hidden in case Khairy proves a valuable ally in the efforts to bring Anwar &lt;br /&gt;back into UMNO’s fold. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Meanwhile, while the political opposition continues to sleep soundly, Khairy has been &lt;br /&gt;making more deals. The recent purchase of 3% of ECM Libra is in preparation towards the &lt;br /&gt;company acquiring more and more deals to sell off other government ‘non-core assets’. It &lt;br /&gt;would be difficult to explain payments made to Khairy (which are enormous) if he was &lt;br /&gt;merely an employee rather than a shareholder of ECM Libra. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One thing for sure, 2006 will see the beginning of the process to remove some financial &lt;br /&gt;tools that Khairy needed before to give a perception of reform but are now only obstacles &lt;br /&gt; - 107 - &lt;br /&gt;to his future success. The end of 2006 will see Binafikir founder and Khazanah Managing &lt;br /&gt;Director Azman Mokhtar’s final contract year. Soon he will not be needed anymore and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy would either assume that role himself or appoint one of his chosen boys currently &lt;br /&gt;on the second level of the Khazanah management to be the seat warmer while he strips that &lt;br /&gt;institution of its crown jewels. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Likewise, Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop has gone past his sell-by date. &lt;br /&gt;The smooth-talking castrati, with an appetite for tear-jerking poetry has served his purpose &lt;br /&gt;in securing the image of transparency and good corporate governance in major &lt;br /&gt;government-owned businesses. Now Khairy feels the country is more prepared to let a &lt;br /&gt;younger man take that role -- obviously a younger man who is pliant to Khairy. Nor &lt;br /&gt;Mohamed will be removed as Second Finance Minister no later than the end of 2006. &lt;br /&gt;Whatever happens in 2006, it will be Khairy’s year to make sure that his dream becomes a &lt;br /&gt;reality. The short-term objectives as stated above are the prelude to Khairy securing a &lt;br /&gt;parliamentary seat, probably in a by-election sometime in 2007, and entering the cabinet &lt;br /&gt;almost immediately after the 12th General Election. The countdown to Khairy assuming &lt;br /&gt;the Prime Ministership of the country, which began only around four years ago, has now &lt;br /&gt;less than a decade to run. Khairy is not wasting any time and neither should his enemies. &lt;br /&gt;At the moment, the odds are on Khairy making the cut while his opponents seem headed &lt;br /&gt;towards having themselves sacrificed upon his political altar... &lt;br /&gt; - 108 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 24: Khairy Chronicles in review &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Raja Petra Kamarudin &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;You may have noticed that the last episode of The Khairy Chronicles, part 23, came out about &lt;br /&gt;three weeks ago on 2 January 2006. Well, the long gap is unavoidable and due to a cat-and- &lt;br /&gt;mouse game I am playing with certain parties. You see, about 10 days or so ago, these &lt;br /&gt;‘certain parties’ met to discuss how to close down Malaysia Today and end The Khairy &lt;br /&gt;Chronicles once and for all. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It seems Khairy Jamaluddin is not happy with The Khairy Chronicles. And when Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;not happy, he must be made happy. These ‘certain parties’ do not work for Khairy. They, in &lt;br /&gt;fact, answer to the government. Indirectly, they are responsible to the people. Their job is to &lt;br /&gt;uphold the law and punish the law-breakers, not to serve certain political interests. Their &lt;br /&gt;function is to defend our constitutional rights, including freedom of expression and the &lt;br /&gt;independence of the media. But that is only a pipedream. In reality, they bow to the will of &lt;br /&gt;the powers-that-be. In this case, they bow to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy has no position in the government of the day. He is officially only a ‘corporate &lt;br /&gt;advisor’. No doubt he is deputy head of UMNO Youth, but that role too is not one that &lt;br /&gt;allows him to run the country as he wishes. Nevertheless, he does. For some time now, &lt;br /&gt;these ‘certain parties’ have been feeding him reports (as well as to his father-in-law), &lt;br /&gt;including the results of their snooping on opposition politicians and functions. Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;no right to these reports, but he receives them anyway -- because the ministers and deputy &lt;br /&gt;ministers in charge are too afraid to raise their objections. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What makes Khairy uncomfortable with The Khairy Chronicles is the fact that it has pre- &lt;br /&gt;empted many of his moves since the middle of last year -- and now that he is beginning to &lt;br /&gt;make these moves we can turn round and say, “I told you so.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The problem faced by these ‘certain parties’ is how to directly link The Khairy Chronicles to &lt;br /&gt;me. No doubt my name does appear in Malaysia Today, but if they charge me in court, they &lt;br /&gt;have to prove I wrote The Khairy Chronicles (the ‘maker of the document’ in legal jargon). &lt;br /&gt;And the way they were going to do this was to wait for the next episode to come out, part &lt;br /&gt;24, then, on that day, they would raid my house, confiscate my computer, and arrest me. &lt;br /&gt;From my computer they would then be able to prove I wrote part 24. The evidence could &lt;br /&gt;then be used to press charges against me. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The thing is, what they do not seem to realise, one can always write online. In that case, &lt;br /&gt;how would the evidence be in your PC? And have they not heard of these software &lt;br /&gt;programmes which cost a couple of hundred Ringgit, exceeds US military and intelligence &lt;br /&gt;agency specifications, and can wipe off all your tracks without a trace? No doubt, the Bukit &lt;br /&gt;Aman and Mimos boys may have been trained six months at Langley some years back, but &lt;br /&gt;technology changes very fast and every day there are new things on the market. (Of course, &lt;br /&gt;there is more than this that I am doing, but I am not telling all). &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 109 - &lt;br /&gt;In light of the present developments -- the death of Dr Liew Boon Horng, the managing &lt;br /&gt;consultant of Ethos Consulting, Khairy buying into ECM Libra, the merger between ECM &lt;br /&gt;Libra and Avenue Capital Resources, the impending cabinet reshuffle, the rumoured arrest &lt;br /&gt;of the Putera Umno Chief in a vice raid, and so on -- there is certainly much more that The &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Chronicles will reveal in the weeks to come, if we are given the chance to do so... &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Anyway, let us review the first 23 episodes of The Khairy Chronicles and recap what we said &lt;br /&gt;then: &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 1 - SYNOPSIS: The most powerful man in Malaysia &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is legally the fifth Prime Minister of Malaysia, having taken &lt;br /&gt;office in November 2003. However, even before he assumed office, it was quite clear that &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi was not his own man -- that all his thoughts, actions and deeds were &lt;br /&gt;heavily influenced, if not directed, by his then 28-year old son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin &lt;br /&gt;and his coterie of friends. While some talked of the three Ks being the power behind Pak &lt;br /&gt;Lah; namely Khairy, Kalimullah (the Group Chief Editor of the New Straits Times) and Kak &lt;br /&gt;Endon (Datin Paduka Seri Endon Mahmood Ambak, wife of the Prime Minister); there is &lt;br /&gt;no doubt that the first K is the most powerful, having appointed the second K to his post &lt;br /&gt;and having married the third K’s daughter at a time when the third K was and is fighting &lt;br /&gt;breast cancer, an illness that has already claimed the third K’s twin sister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 2 - Out of the wormhole &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Today, Khairy Jamaluddin has become the most powerful man in the country. Unlike most &lt;br /&gt;politicians whose origins can be easily traced and whose records are in the realm of public &lt;br /&gt;knowledge, Khairy is like a ‘dewa kayangan’ (fairy godfather) who appeared from nowhere &lt;br /&gt;into the mainstream of Malaysian politics. Many began to wonder whether he was planted &lt;br /&gt;by certain sinister forces, such as the CIA or maybe the Singapore intelligence services. &lt;br /&gt;After all, no one can attain power so easily and so quickly unless they had some help, could &lt;br /&gt;they? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 3 - The enemies within &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In addition, Hishammuddin is unhappy that Khairy set up his own network within the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth machinery, e.g. nominating Norza Zakaria to the Supreme Council over and &lt;br /&gt;above Hishammuddin’s own choice. Khairy also set up an informal network of UMNO &lt;br /&gt;Vice Youth Division Chiefs throughout the country, a phenomenon unheard of when &lt;br /&gt;Hishammuddin himself held that post. Hishammuddin realises that he now holds office by &lt;br /&gt;the grace and favour of Khairy. When the latter is ready for the post of Youth Chief, the &lt;br /&gt;former must go. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 4 - Strangling your own brothers &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Azeez shared many of Reezal Merican’s attributes. A fellow Mamak like Reezal, he &lt;br /&gt;had a weakness for beautiful women and both had married twice. More importantly, &lt;br /&gt; - 110 - &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Azeez was a self-made businessman of a rather thuggish outlook and could counter &lt;br /&gt;Reezal’s influence among the locally educated UMNO Youth politicians. Khairy pushed &lt;br /&gt;through a new wing called Putera UMNO under Abdul Azeez’s stewardship that spread &lt;br /&gt;its tentacles to local universities and institutions of higher learning. Khairy understood that &lt;br /&gt;he himself lacked support from this political base and badly needed it. Abdul Azeez was &lt;br /&gt;tasked in getting this support while at the same time weakening Reezal’s influence. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 5 - The heir and the pretender &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and Najib share many similarities in their rise to power. Yet there is no love lost &lt;br /&gt;between them. Khairy knows that Najib will ‘kill him off’ as soon as Abdullah Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;Badawi leaves the political stage. Likewise, Najib is uneasy about Khairy’s influence on &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and is conscious that his chances of becoming Prime Minister would dramatically &lt;br /&gt;improve with Khairy out of the way. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The enmity between Khairy and Najib stems from Khairy’s impatience and open ambition &lt;br /&gt;to reach the highest office in UMNO before he reaches the age of 40. Najib is the opposite in &lt;br /&gt;his outlook. He is patient, almost to the point of being seen as slow and lethargic. But Najib &lt;br /&gt;has played a ‘careful’ game whereas Khairy is more ‘in your face’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Both understand that UMNO is too small a party for the two of them. At only 52, Najib is &lt;br /&gt;easily able to block Khairy for twenty-five years or more. If a week is a long time in politics, &lt;br /&gt;then twenty-five years would seem like an eternity. Even worse, Khairy thinks Najib will &lt;br /&gt;turn back the clock, abolish Abdullah’s (and therefore Khairy’s) reforms and return UMNO &lt;br /&gt;to the ‘bad old days’ of Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 6 - Khairy’s media playgrounds &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s most prominent appointment was that of Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, a &lt;br /&gt;former Singaporean journalist closely associated with certain Chinese businessmen with &lt;br /&gt;whom he had built a successful business based on the Chinese doing the thinking and &lt;br /&gt;Kalimullah himself pulling the cables. ‘Kali’, as he calls himself, has visions of grandeur. &lt;br /&gt;Although a bad writer and an even worse editor, Kali knew that he could buy talent. It is &lt;br /&gt;an open secret that NST editorials published as Kali’s piece were ghost-written by both &lt;br /&gt;internal and outsourced hacks. Such was a man after Khairy’s own heart -- who knew that &lt;br /&gt;being a figurehead was no bad thing, as one could always pick and choose one’s lackeys to &lt;br /&gt;finish the job. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 7 - The beginning of a beautiful friendship &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was then that Mahathir began to realise that the young man he so dismissively &lt;br /&gt;discounted had now become the key instrument of a threat against his legacy. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;remarked to his secretary, Datuk Badriah, that Abdullah was digging his own grave by &lt;br /&gt;letting Anwar go. Mahathir remarked that he himself found Anwar difficult to handle and &lt;br /&gt;he had no confidence that Abdullah could do any better. In Mahathir’s eyes, Abdullah was &lt;br /&gt;an inept fool who miscalculated by releasing Anwar. &lt;br /&gt; - 111 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Mahathir did not know was that Abdullah did not really fully comprehend the &lt;br /&gt;ramifications of Anwar’s release. In fact, it was Khairy who reckoned that Anwar’s release &lt;br /&gt;would be beneficial to his own political career. Firstly, Khairy felt that Anwar would &lt;br /&gt;always be a useful tool against other Umno politicians who might threaten Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;throne; people such as Tengku Razaleigh and Najib. Secondly, Khairy felt releasing Anwar &lt;br /&gt;and meeting him openly would increase his popularity (and Abdullah’s). &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 8 - Sunset, sunrise &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, behind the scenes, both Abdullah and Khairy have continued to at least maintain &lt;br /&gt;some form of relationship with Anwar. Abdullah himself has said nothing about any &lt;br /&gt;telephone calls to or from Anwar. Khairy, on the other hand, has been very open to his &lt;br /&gt;inner circle about his constant communication and, indeed, about meetings with Anwar’s &lt;br /&gt;stalwarts such as PKR Youth Leader Ezam Mohd Nor. Those in the know include Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;men who are obvious Anwar supporters; such as Zambry Abdul Kader as well as the usual &lt;br /&gt;suspects such as Norza Zakaria. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 9 - Birth of a salesman &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaludin did not start out immensely rich, although his family was well off due to &lt;br /&gt;the position of his father as a prominent member of the diplomatic community. The family &lt;br /&gt;could not equal other notable scions of UMNO Youth such as the Hishammuddin Hussein- &lt;br /&gt;Najib Tun Razak clan who are descended from the first Malay billionaire, Tan Sri Noah, or &lt;br /&gt;the Sheikh Fadzir family, comprising of Kadir, Aziz, Musa and Haidar, whose palatial &lt;br /&gt;Kulim mansion dwarfed even the National Palace in Kuala Lumpur. So Khairy realised he &lt;br /&gt;had to build up his wealth fairly quickly especially since, by Malaysian standards, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi was a rather poor fellow. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 10 - The National Auctioneer &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One example was Temasek’s entry into TM (previously known as Telekom Malaysia). &lt;br /&gt;Temasek had bought 5% of TM for a price of RM1.6 billion in the early days of Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;administration. It was supposed to be a signal of the major cross-strait thaw in the &lt;br /&gt;relationship. As everyone knows, Temasek is also a substantial shareholder of SingTel, run &lt;br /&gt;by Lee Hsien Yang, the youngest son of Singapore founder Lee Kuan Yew. It was a &lt;br /&gt;massively important political and business deal. What the public did not know was that &lt;br /&gt;Temasek had made payments to Khairy through a Singapore-based company closely &lt;br /&gt;associated to Khairy proxy and UMNO Supreme Council member, Norza Zakaria. The &lt;br /&gt;company had its registered address in the Singapore Land Tower at 50 Raffles Place. &lt;br /&gt;Seemingly, payments were made to the company for ‘consultancy services’, but in effect it &lt;br /&gt;was nothing more than kickbacks. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 11 - Khairy and his Money Factory &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The biggest coup that is being planned is a potential sale of residual assets of Danaharta, &lt;br /&gt; - 112 - &lt;br /&gt;currently being brokered by Khairy proxy Norza Zakaria through his allies in Singapore. &lt;br /&gt;Norza’s company in Singapore is a joint venture with a certain Mr S who is a Singaporean &lt;br /&gt;ex-classmate of Khairy in the United World College (UWC). Mr S, ostensibly, is a corporate &lt;br /&gt;finance specialist with interests in real-estate and multimedia. He meets up with Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and his Khazanah cronies to discuss various ways in which to strip the assets of Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;GLCs and make a percentage commission on them. One of the advisors to Khairy is a &lt;br /&gt;shareholder of Ethos Consulting who currently works with Deutsche Bank in Kuala &lt;br /&gt;Lumpur. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 12 - Ringing in the cash till &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, since March, a rough calculation of Khairy’s received and potential income would be as &lt;br /&gt;follows: &lt;br /&gt;1. Commission from sale of 5% of TM to Temasek Holdings, Singapore – RM16 million. &lt;br /&gt;2. Commission from the purchase of M1 shares by Khazanah and TM – RM6 million. &lt;br /&gt;3. Expected commission from further sale of 5% of TM to Temasek Holdings, Singapore – &lt;br /&gt;RM17 million. &lt;br /&gt;4. Expected commission from sale of Danaharta assets – RM85 million. &lt;br /&gt;5. Expected commission from sale of Felda non-core assets to Temasek Holdings and DBS &lt;br /&gt;Bank – RM30 million. &lt;br /&gt;6. Expected commission from allocation of Bumiputra shares in foreign-owned company 1 &lt;br /&gt;– RM15 million. &lt;br /&gt;7. Expected commission from allocation of Bumiputra shares in foreign-owned company 2 &lt;br /&gt;– RM20 million. &lt;br /&gt;The total amount? A cool RM189 million. And that’s only the ones that have been in the &lt;br /&gt;public eye. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 13 - He loves me, he loves me not &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Unknown to Aziz Samsudin as well as to Mahathir’s other aides, the story about Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;alleged homosexuality was planted by Anwar Ibrahim’s men. A certain former deputy &lt;br /&gt;minister who had been a close Anwar supporter (and therefore dropped by Mahathir in the &lt;br /&gt;1999 General Election) had been used to bring the rumour to Aziz’s attention through his &lt;br /&gt;civil service friend. The rumour itself was created by then PKR Youth Leader Ezam Mohd &lt;br /&gt;Nor who had allegedly ‘heard about the rumour’ from a senior civil servant who was a &lt;br /&gt;reformasi sympathiser and who had a child in the same school as Khairy. It was completely &lt;br /&gt;untrue. The idea that Khairy is gay is a figment of the imagination of the PKR leaders who &lt;br /&gt;desperately wanted to tar Abdullah Badawi whom they felt, at that time, was less &lt;br /&gt;sympathetic to the plight of their boss; having been his mortal enemy in UMNO for more &lt;br /&gt;than one and a half decades. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 14 - Crowning the king &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the matter of Anwar Ibrahim’s goings on, it is Khairy that is entrusted in gauging their &lt;br /&gt;value and to produce the next strategy for Abdullah. Abdullah knows that Anwar is more &lt;br /&gt;valuable to Khairy than to himself. After all, bringing Anwar back into UMNO’s fold &lt;br /&gt; - 113 - &lt;br /&gt;would help Khairy’s credentials as a young but fair politician of the future. Also, Anwar &lt;br /&gt;would help prop Khairy up in the face of a Najib onslaught. But as for Abdullah himself, &lt;br /&gt;bringing Anwar back can only mean pitting himself for a head-to-head confrontation with &lt;br /&gt;the pincer movements of both Mahathir Mohamad and Najib Tun Razak. So, bringing &lt;br /&gt;Anwar in is Khairy’s way of transforming himself in the long term from a mere crown &lt;br /&gt;prince to a king with real powers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 15 - The game of high stakes &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In spite of Anwar’s public pronouncements against rejoining UMNO, the truth is both &lt;br /&gt;Anwar and Khairy are testing the waters before the actual gamble is made. Khairy needs to &lt;br /&gt;test UMNO members’ reaction to the re-entry of Anwar by denying the ease with which &lt;br /&gt;Anwar hopes he could re-enter UMNO. Anwar, on the other hand, needs to test his &lt;br /&gt;followers’ perception of his leadership before actually telling them that that choice has been &lt;br /&gt;opened up for him. He could not afford to alienate too many of his former reformasi &lt;br /&gt;supporters. Though Anwar knows some will fall away in disgust at his opportunism, yet &lt;br /&gt;many others will remain simply for the fact that seven years is too long for most of them to &lt;br /&gt;be without any political power at all. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 16 - The walls that talk &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Whether Khairy realises it or not, most of the stories circulating around town regarding his &lt;br /&gt;efforts to allow Anwar an easy passage back into UMNO come from sources that are in &lt;br /&gt;direct communication with him. While officially denying that Anwar will rejoin UMNO, in &lt;br /&gt;private, nothing else is as important. Ezam and Azmin have for some time been dropping &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s name as their source of inside information within UMNO. They have gone so far &lt;br /&gt;as to even suggest that Khairy is the main conduit for discussions between Abdullah and &lt;br /&gt;Anwar. They say that Khairy is helpful where other officers such as Thajudeen Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Wahab are not. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 17 - The comforting branch breaks &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A few days before Endon’s death, some very close friends of Abdullah, who had been with &lt;br /&gt;him through thick and thin from the early days of his foray into the realm of politics, &lt;br /&gt;remarked that things weren’t going the way they had predicted. Previously, they thought &lt;br /&gt;that with Endon gone from the scene, Abdullah would go back to the old circle of friends &lt;br /&gt;who have been the most tried and tested of his most loyal of followers. Instead, they found &lt;br /&gt;that, in the dying days of Endons’ life, Abdullah had begun to cling more tightly to Nori &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy’s younger set of advisors. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 18 - Cannons behind his back &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What Khairy does not understand is that he surrounds himself with loose cannons. But &lt;br /&gt;those loose canons do not aim at random figures. Instead, they swivel towards him and, &lt;br /&gt;sooner or later, the cannonballs will begin hitting him hard. Khairy’s worst enemies are &lt;br /&gt;actually the people closest to his circle. He has reached the stage often felt by a politician in &lt;br /&gt; - 114 - &lt;br /&gt;high power; loneliness at the top. Even his friends cannot be trusted anymore. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 19 - A republic of fear &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s main role in Abdullah Badawi’s administration is as a spin-doctor. He builds up &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s image. But there is no substance in that image. Now the cracks are beginning to &lt;br /&gt;show but it is a little too late for the damage to be repaired. Khairy persuades analysts in &lt;br /&gt;the foreign banks (many who swoon over the opportunity to have tea with him) to write &lt;br /&gt;‘analyses’ saying that Abdullah’s reforms have to be given time to bear fruit. This is mere &lt;br /&gt;hogwash. Many of Khairy’s apologists such as Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, &lt;br /&gt;Brenda Pereira and Phar Kim Beng are masters of spin who owe their lives and careers to &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. One can scarcely hope for them to be genuinely critical in their assessments. They &lt;br /&gt;are servants of the master propagandist -- no more, no less. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 20 - Does UMNO really want to win? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The special shirt that Khairy wore had extra pockets for the three handphones that he &lt;br /&gt;carries around. The First Handphone is the Maxis 012 that is his public number. Everyone &lt;br /&gt;knows what it is because Khairy puts it on all his name cards as well as the Pemuda &lt;br /&gt;UMNO website. Khairy uses it to send SMSes and the phone is always kept on silent mode &lt;br /&gt;because it rings every other minute. Everyone feels that Khairy owes them an audience and &lt;br /&gt;they range from the lowest member of UMNO Youth and part-time Internet buff who had &lt;br /&gt;come across the number in the old UMNO Youth website, to a Chinese towkay trying his &lt;br /&gt;luck with the man Singapore businessmen are already dubbing ‘Mr 20%’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 21: The Aftermath: Whose little victory? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the past, Khairy’s friends who were close to Najib tried to build a consensus between the &lt;br /&gt;two camps. Najib also went to great pains to pander to Khairy’s whims and fancies -- such &lt;br /&gt;as bowing to his choice of officers in the Deputy Prime Minister’s Department. However, &lt;br /&gt;Pengkalan Pasir was the turning point in that relationship. It is now obvious to Najib that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy intends to rush headlong into UMNO politics instead of patiently awaiting his turn. &lt;br /&gt;At risk is Najib’s own tenure as the future Prime Minister and the position of his allies, &lt;br /&gt;including that of his cousin Hishammuddin. The self-seeking publicity Khairy sought in &lt;br /&gt;Pengkalan Pasir made it patently obvious to Najib’s camp that this young man was too &lt;br /&gt;much in a hurry and was willing to bulldoze his way through. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 22: A fatal miscalculation &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The flaw that Khairy has developed since his ascension as Vice Youth Chief of UMNO is &lt;br /&gt;that he no longer tolerates criticism. In the first place, he has never had a valid circle of &lt;br /&gt;friends. His closest companions are foreigners, mainly Singaporeans or Malaysians who &lt;br /&gt;have never been schooled in Malaysia. Like him, they are the elite who rarely touch ground &lt;br /&gt;with the common people. Khairy tried to transcend this disability by acquiring new friends &lt;br /&gt;within UMNO Youth whom he felt was more in touch with the grassroots. Unfortunately, &lt;br /&gt;most UMNO Youth leaders turn out to be people who use their alliance with Khairy either &lt;br /&gt; - 115 - &lt;br /&gt;to threaten other political rivals or enrich themselves at the expense of genuine &lt;br /&gt;businessmen. Khairy, in fact, has no real friends within UMNO, and the few that he has &lt;br /&gt;outside it have been rewarded with high posts that they are now afraid to lose. So they &lt;br /&gt;have all stopped speaking the truth to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 23: Faster, Higher, Stronger &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Whatever happens in 2006, it will be Khairy’s year to make sure that his dream becomes a &lt;br /&gt;reality. The short-term objectives as stated above are the prelude to Khairy securing a &lt;br /&gt;parliamentary seat, probably in a by-election sometime in 2007, and entering the cabinet &lt;br /&gt;almost immediately after the 12th General Election. The countdown to Khairy assuming &lt;br /&gt;the Prime Ministership of the country, which began only around four years ago, has now &lt;br /&gt;less than a decade to run. Khairy is not wasting any time and neither should his enemies. &lt;br /&gt;At the moment, the odds are on Khairy making the cut while his opponents seem headed &lt;br /&gt;towards having themselves sacrificed upon his political altar. &lt;br /&gt; - 116 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 25: A New Deal: Running Out of Time &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;One of Khairy’s closest allies is a London-trained Malaysian-Indian lawyer who currently &lt;br /&gt;works for an international bank. Several years Khairy’s senior, he deliberately stays hidden &lt;br /&gt;from Khairy’s direct political and business links. This is not without reason. Although &lt;br /&gt;proud of Khairy’s achievements, he confides to his friends his innermost thoughts that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is about to make the greatest mistake of his life. In fact, this person believes that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy stands at perhaps the shakiest moment in his entire career and that he is caught &lt;br /&gt;between the devil and the deep-blue sea -- and that the moves Khairy makes may well lead &lt;br /&gt;to his downfall from which he will never recover. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Several months ago, the lawyer had gone to see Khairy to offer some friendly advice. He &lt;br /&gt;told Khairy in no uncertain terms that while he understands Khairy is intelligent enough to &lt;br /&gt;have his own reasons for doing things as he has done, Khairy should also be more cautious &lt;br /&gt;and wary. The lawyer advised Khairy that the latter was beginning to look like a ‘young &lt;br /&gt;man in a hurry’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The advice was well meaning. In the past, Khairy had quietly listened to this lawyer friend &lt;br /&gt;and kept his own counsel. Often, he would be able to accept the criticism and act &lt;br /&gt;accordingly. But the Khairy of today is a very different man. Nowadays, such advice is &lt;br /&gt;dismissed as ‘unsolicited’. Khairy feels that his friends are getting too clever for their own &lt;br /&gt;good. He no longer feels obligated to listen to them, nor follow their advice. After all, if his &lt;br /&gt;friends knew better than him, surely they would be where he is today. Instead, it is he, the &lt;br /&gt;youngest of the clique, who managed to secure the highest position in the fastest time. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This attitude of Khairy bewilders many of his friends. The lawyer somehow feels that the &lt;br /&gt;reason Khairy is acting so poorly is because he has lost sight of reality. Power and wealth is &lt;br /&gt;a heady combination that has made Khairy very, very drunk and completely deaf to the &lt;br /&gt;voices of dissent that are beginning to gather around him. Even the closest of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;admirers feel that the recent months have shown that Khairy too can make false steps. He &lt;br /&gt;has replaced the friends who could give him sound advice and dispassionate views with &lt;br /&gt;Umno Youth lackeys who carry bags of money for him. Often, Khairy is accompanied by &lt;br /&gt;twenty-somethings with RM10,000 or more in brown paper envelopes, from which they &lt;br /&gt;dole out payments to loyal supporters at branch and division-level meetings. These &lt;br /&gt;sycophants are what remain of Khairy’s circle of friends. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s actions over the last few months demonstrate immense immaturity and stupidity. &lt;br /&gt;The obvious corrupt and insider dealing involved in the purchase of ECM Libra and the &lt;br /&gt;use of government-owned Avenue Capital to bail out Khairy’s business cronies and make &lt;br /&gt;them multi-millionaires overnight are actions that could have been better handled and with &lt;br /&gt;greater finesse. Instead, its execution bears all the hallmarks of a rushed job, the handiwork &lt;br /&gt;of an amateur in politics and business. The image that Khairy portrays has transformed &lt;br /&gt;from an intelligent, confident young man to a greedy and corrupt opportunist. The ‘smooth &lt;br /&gt;operator’ has gone, to be replaced by the ‘grab-and-run’ conman. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Perhaps there is pattern in this madness. Maybe the fast-paced actions were not a headlong &lt;br /&gt; - 117 - &lt;br /&gt;rush created out of chaos but a calculated attempt to salvage whatever remains of the &lt;br /&gt;teetering administration of Abdullah Badawi. The administration that started out &lt;br /&gt;promising Malaysians the sun and the moon, and that enjoyed the biggest majority since &lt;br /&gt;the General Election of 1955, has begun to be seen as the most inept and bumbling &lt;br /&gt;government ever. Abdullah Badawi is lurching from crisis to crisis; unable to deal with &lt;br /&gt;issues with the decisiveness that Malaysians have become so accustomed to over the last &lt;br /&gt;two decades or so. Swaying from right to left, Abdullah Badawi leads a government rife &lt;br /&gt;with internal conflict and unable to grapple with the simplest of ordinary issues. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy knows that his future -- political, business or otherwise -- depends on Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi’s longevity in office. That now seems increasingly shaky. Unlike his predecessor, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi is unable to capitalise on his strength in Parliament. Led astray by the &lt;br /&gt;silly ideas of people such as Nazri Aziz and Backbencher Club President Shahrir Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Samad, Abdullah Badawi lost control of his own Parliament and saw senators and &lt;br /&gt;backbenchers attacking his government with a ferocity unseen since the days of Tunku &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Rahman. While thinking that Parliament should be allowed more say, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;failed to realise that many of the backbenchers could think and speak better than him or his &lt;br /&gt;menagerie of hapless ministers. As a result, when Parliament began to take up the mantle &lt;br /&gt;of criticising ridiculous government policies, Abdullah finds it difficult to respond in a &lt;br /&gt;convincing manner. Slowly, the rickety sinews that bind his fragile government begin to &lt;br /&gt;appear for all to see. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s ministers too have become a very serious liability. Many of them were &lt;br /&gt;promoted in spite of their complete uselessness. A good example is Shafie Salleh, who in &lt;br /&gt;any other administration would not have been worth more than a Parliamentary Secretary. &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah does not seem to realise that Shafie Salleh is completely dependent on a bunch of &lt;br /&gt;political secretaries and special officers who have the finesse of a bulldozer in running the &lt;br /&gt;most sensitive of ministries. Yet Abdullah cannot do anything about it because of own &lt;br /&gt;weakness and inability to judge good ministers. He is caught in a world of mediocrity and &lt;br /&gt;completely reliant on the Young Turks who were brought in by Khairy rather than his own &lt;br /&gt;ministers. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It is common knowledge that many cabinet ministers do not respect Abdullah. The recent &lt;br /&gt;episode of the nine non-Muslim ministers presenting a memorandum to Abdullah is a farce &lt;br /&gt;that would have been unthinkable in any other administration. The public is told that the &lt;br /&gt;ministers have withdrawn their memorandum and decided to present their case through &lt;br /&gt;the ‘proper channel’ of a cabinet meeting. However, in reality, this announcement was a lie &lt;br /&gt;and a desperate attempt by Abdullah’s spin-doctors to salvage the reputation of the &lt;br /&gt;bumbling prime minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What the public does not know is that the memorandum was presented by the ministers &lt;br /&gt;during a cabinet meeting and not outside as reported by the official press. Abdullah was so &lt;br /&gt;stunned by the presentation of the memorandum that he was speechless and did not know &lt;br /&gt;how to respond to it. At a loss for words, he tried to brush off the presentation by saying &lt;br /&gt;that he would ‘think about it’. By the time the news leaked to the press, Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;reputation had already suffered. Never in Malaysian history had a Prime Minister faced so &lt;br /&gt; - 118 - &lt;br /&gt;bold a revolt from within his own cabinet, including from several of the presidents of key &lt;br /&gt;component parties in the Barisan Nasional. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So the decision was taken to use the media to lie to the public. Bernama and the usual &lt;br /&gt;bunch of brown-nosers at the NST were told to report that the memorandum was &lt;br /&gt;‘improper’ as it had not been presented in a cabinet meeting. This gave Abdullah the &lt;br /&gt;chance to portray the ministers as being out of line. Najib Tun Razak was then immediately &lt;br /&gt;instructed to blast the ministers for acting ‘out of norms’ and ‘not in keeping with the BN &lt;br /&gt;spirit’. In actual fact, every one of the ministers in the XXL cabinet knew that the &lt;br /&gt;memorandum was duly presented in the most proper way and Abdullah had simply failed &lt;br /&gt;to respond correctly in the face of the biggest revolt since his assumption of the &lt;br /&gt;premiership. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was one thing for the ministers to demonstrate blatant disrespect to Abdullah by &lt;br /&gt;submitting the memorandum, following that episode, several other ministers, including &lt;br /&gt;those from UMNO, gleefully leaked confidential cabinet papers proving that the nine &lt;br /&gt;ministers had indeed done the correct thing; and that it was Abdullah who had reacted &lt;br /&gt;improperly. During the UMNO Supreme Council meeting of 24 January 2006, two &lt;br /&gt;particular ministers closely allied to former PM Dr Mahathir Mohamad even photocopied &lt;br /&gt;Cabinet minutes outlining the episode and circulated them to other UMNO leaders after &lt;br /&gt;the meeting ended. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;During that meeting, while Abdullah was explaining the ‘misconduct’ of the nine non- &lt;br /&gt;Muslim ministers, one of the UMNO Supreme Council members received an SMS that said, &lt;br /&gt;“PM SILAP. MENTERI2 IKUT PROSEDUR”. The SMS had come from 019-331XXX2, the &lt;br /&gt;mobile phone number of a minister who sat directly across the said Supreme Council &lt;br /&gt;member. The same SMS was then circulated to several other Supreme Council members &lt;br /&gt;present in the meeting. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak looks at all this with great excitement. He tells &lt;br /&gt;friends that the situation is drastic, but he must play his cards carefully lest what befalls &lt;br /&gt;Anwar Ibrahim afflicts him too. He is of course acting with the utmost secrecy. Najib has &lt;br /&gt;been trying to find out if Abdullah is planning any moves that may become potential &lt;br /&gt;obstacles to his rise in power. Aware that Abdullah is communicating with Anwar Ibrahim &lt;br /&gt;through Khairy, Najib himself has tried to cushion the impact by making conciliatory &lt;br /&gt;moves to several members of Anwar Ibrahim’s camp. At the same time, Najib is laying the &lt;br /&gt;ground for trapping Khairy because, in the end, he knows that the last hope for Abdullah is &lt;br /&gt;to draw upon Khairy’s genius to save the day. Removing Khairy, therefore, would mean &lt;br /&gt;destroying Abdullah’s strategic base. Najib knows the old group around Abdullah Badawi &lt;br /&gt;is no longer 100% in support of the Prime Minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Some key supporters such as Nordin Kardi and Mahadzir Khalid are now estranged from &lt;br /&gt;their former ally, Thajudeen Abdul Wahab, Abdullah’s Chief Private Secretary. While all &lt;br /&gt;may be Khairy’s enemies, they have been rendered impotent by their own quarrel with &lt;br /&gt;each other. Thajudeen Abdul Wahab’s greediness in granting contracts to selected &lt;br /&gt;businessmen allied to him, over and above the recommendation of other long-time &lt;br /&gt; - 119 - &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah supporters, has caused the old group to break up. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;All of this is a cause for concern to Khairy. Time is fast running out and another big crisis &lt;br /&gt;will deal a body blow to the government of Abdullah Badawi. History teaches us that &lt;br /&gt;weak, insecure Prime Ministers last scarcely a term in office. Hussein Onn for example, &lt;br /&gt;although lauded upon his ascension as the anointed heir of Tun Razak, and a strict &lt;br /&gt;disciplinarian deemed able to keep Umno in check, fell unceremoniously after being &lt;br /&gt;challenged by that non-entity Sulaiman Palestin in the 1978 Umno elections. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah may not face such a challenge due to his own manipulation of Umno election &lt;br /&gt;rules, but he faces many other attacks from inside Umno. Umno division leaders openly &lt;br /&gt;laugh at his incapacity to control the government and seethe with anger at the sudden &lt;br /&gt;enrichment of his son-in-law. Sooner or later, the last fall will fall and the camel’s back will &lt;br /&gt;be broken and the Bedouin will be thrown off to hit the dust. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy understands that Abdullah Badawi is fast becoming the biggest joke in Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;politics. Whether he likes to or not, Khairy must face the fact that he too will fall with &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah unless he acts fast with ruthlessness and decisiveness. His enemies are rapidly &lt;br /&gt;closing in on him and he must engage them now before it’s too late.... &lt;br /&gt; - 120 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 26: A New Deal: The bag-carriers &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The attendance was wafer thin -- only about 50 or 60 Umno Youth members milled around &lt;br /&gt;the village hall when Khairy Jamaluddin arrived. It was another event organised by Umno &lt;br /&gt;Youth’s newest wing, Putera Umno, and Khairy was there to grace its function. This time it &lt;br /&gt;was the launching of an English tuition programme for junior secondary school students. &lt;br /&gt;The irony was that the activity had been a long-standing of Umno Youth. In fact, it was &lt;br /&gt;started back in the days when Aziz Sheikh Fadzir helmed the Vice Head position, but &lt;br /&gt;Khairy wanted the programme to be seen as his own idea; in keeping with his declared &lt;br /&gt;intention of bringing English, especially Shakespeare, to rural Malay kids. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So, in this balmy Kedah kampung, Khairy arrived in his Volvo with an entourage of two &lt;br /&gt;Mercedes and several Wajas in tow. Khairy wore his trademark Umno short-sleeved white &lt;br /&gt;shirt with the many pockets which some call ‘Khairy’s magical pockets’, as sometimes &lt;br /&gt;RM50 and RM100 notes emerge from them as if by magic. Not today, it seems. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy was greeted by a Kedah Youth leader, Mohd Zulfekri Awang. He tapped Zulfekri &lt;br /&gt;on his shoulders; Khairy’s usual style of charming his followers. His questions are always &lt;br /&gt;the same: “How’s things? How’s the movement? How are the local folks?” Khairy’s droopy &lt;br /&gt;eyes did not change when the answers were given, as they were always the same: &lt;br /&gt;“Everything OK, Boss!” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The two of them went up to the stage. As the function kicked off with a dreary comment &lt;br /&gt;from the local Umno Youth Chairman, Khairy glanced at his bag-carrier who sat in the &lt;br /&gt;third row of the village hall. Let’s call him Wan Gemuk (not his real name, but close &lt;br /&gt;enough for people in the know). Wan Gemuk instantly knew what Khairy meant. It was &lt;br /&gt;time to do the groundwork. Such has been the case since around six months ago when &lt;br /&gt;Khairy began to change his tactics in cornering Umno Youth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Prior to this, Khairy thought that the charm offensive was sufficient in getting him support &lt;br /&gt;from the ground. This was no longer the case. Khairy changed his mind when he realised &lt;br /&gt;all other Umno Youth leaders used money to buy support. Hishammuddin Hussein and to &lt;br /&gt;a greater extent Khir Toyo has been doing the same for many years. They are the biggest &lt;br /&gt;paymasters; basically because they can afford to do so. Other well-known Umno Youth &lt;br /&gt;paymasters include Mahathir’s sons, Mokhzani and Mukhriz, who have been known to &lt;br /&gt;build groundwork not only in Umno Youth but also in other organisations such as &lt;br /&gt;ANSARA (MARA Science College Alumni Association) through their largesse. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Wan stood up and went to the back of the hall. He picked up his phone, a Nokia 9300 &lt;br /&gt;Communicator, to send an SMS to a certain Kedah Umno Youth leader. In fact, he could &lt;br /&gt;have just tapped the person on the shoulder as they were both in the same room. But the &lt;br /&gt;SMS had a special purpose. Wan wanted to inform that particular Umno Youth leader (let’s &lt;br /&gt;call him Razak -- actually they call him Razak Kuda, but let’s just call him Razak for short) &lt;br /&gt;to come and ‘collect his dues’, as Khairy had instructed. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Razak received the SMS almost immediately. It read simply ‘JOM SAT’. He noted that the &lt;br /&gt; - 121 - &lt;br /&gt;number was Wan Gemuk’s. He looked up and saw Wan leaving the hall. Razak &lt;br /&gt;immediately stood up and followed Wan out of the hall. Once outside, they summoned &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s driver who in a flash drove up with the Volvo and both got into the back. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Razak asked, “So how’s things?” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“OK,” answered Wan Gemuk. “Boss wanted me to give you what you requested last &lt;br /&gt;week.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“That’s good,” said Razak. “I am running dry. It’s not easy keeping these Putera Umno &lt;br /&gt;people on our side. Mukhriz is doing his best to get them to support him. He has been very &lt;br /&gt;generous.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Wan keyed in the combination 010, which was the number of Khairy’s favourite car, and &lt;br /&gt;took out a brown envelope from the black leather case. “Even if Mukhriz is generous, he &lt;br /&gt;will run out of money. Khairy is the man to watch and he is piling up money fast. He will &lt;br /&gt;have money for years to come, whereas Mukhriz will dry up.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“I hope so,” said Razak. “Last week, at Titi Gajah, he gave RM100 to each of the Putera &lt;br /&gt;Umno boys. That’s a lot of money to the kampung people.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“Well, we can give more,” countered Wan Gemuk. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“How much more?” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“RM5,000.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“RM5,000?” said Razak. “But Khairy gave more than that to Balik Pulau last week. Shah &lt;br /&gt;Headan said Khairy distributed RM10,000 at the Balik Pulau function.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“What does Shah Headan know? I am the bag-carrier. I know how much I gave them. It’s &lt;br /&gt;RM5,000, no more no less.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“Not enough. Kedah is different from Penang. In Penang, Khairy can count on Salim Bari &lt;br /&gt;and Shah Headan. In Kedah there is stiff competition. Aziz Sheikh Fadzir, Azimi Daim and &lt;br /&gt;Mukhriz are all big guns and Khairy has to compete with them. Kedah is not Penang. &lt;br /&gt;Kedah is Mahathir territory. Penang is Pak Lah territory. Penang will support Pak Lah even &lt;br /&gt;if Pak Lah does the stupidest of mistakes. Kedah can fall to Mahathir anytime. And the new &lt;br /&gt;MB Mahadzir Khalid does not like Khairy.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“OK-lah,” said Wan Gemuk. “RM8,000 OK?” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“RM15,000 lagi baik.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“RM15,000 is impossible. That's too much. That's how much Hishammuddin gave the &lt;br /&gt;whole of Pemuda Umno Kedah last year for the Tsunami disaster. If he gave RM15,000 for &lt;br /&gt; - 122 - &lt;br /&gt;the Tsunami, it’s impossible for Khairy to give that much just for your bahagian.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“How much do you have in the envelope?” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“I have RM12,000, but Boss asked me to reserve RM4,000,” smiled Wan. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Razak knew what Wan Gemuk was saying was a lie. Khairy meant to give the whole &lt;br /&gt;RM12,000, which is the bribe he had to pay to keep his machinery well-oiled and in check. &lt;br /&gt;But Wan Gemuk is not a dumb bag-carrier. While loyal to Khairy, he also understands that &lt;br /&gt;his role is a fleeting one. Khairy could choose to terminate his services anytime. Why not &lt;br /&gt;make hay while the sun shines? Wan often keeps some of the money for himself, and this is &lt;br /&gt;what he is doing today. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Razak knew this too. He realised that Wan Gemuk wanted to have his ‘cut’ but he was not &lt;br /&gt;going to get away that easy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“OK,” said Razak. “But spare me a few hundred of your ‘reserve’.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“No problem,” said Wan Gemuk as he counted out RM8,000 in fifty and hundred ringgit &lt;br /&gt;notes and handed them to Razak. It was just in time. The car which had driven off in a &lt;br /&gt;circle around the kampung had now returned to the front of the village hall. Khairy had just &lt;br /&gt;finished his speech. He had told the Putera Umno audience how he loves Shakespeare’s &lt;br /&gt;history plays which taught him the rudiments of politics -- though they were far less &lt;br /&gt;ruthless than Umno. Khairy had enthralled the audience by telling of his fascination with &lt;br /&gt;football and his work with the FAM. The speech had been brief but enough to convince the &lt;br /&gt;crowd that the rumours of the Oxford graduate not being able to speak Malay were simply &lt;br /&gt;not true. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy left the hall and entered his Volvo to move on to the next function. At the same time &lt;br /&gt;his bag-carrier stepped out of the Volvo and into one of the Wajas trailing behind. This &lt;br /&gt;scene will be repeated all over Kedah that day as Khairy makes his rounds. The Umno &lt;br /&gt;Youth members call it Hari Salam Khairy -- the day to shake hands with Khairy. And &lt;br /&gt;shaking hands with Khairy means they will have a little to spend afterwards. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The above is an actual event which repeats itself across the whole of Malaysia wherever &lt;br /&gt;Umno holds sway, except in Sarawak. Money politics is well and alive in Umno and many &lt;br /&gt;have now forgotten that Abdullah Ahmad Badawi rode into power on the backdrop of a &lt;br /&gt;promise that he will clean up Umno of this affliction, which he has often described as ‘a &lt;br /&gt;cancer that kills’. Abdullah Badawi is proven no less a liar by his own son-in-law who now &lt;br /&gt;realises that his father-in-law’s tenuous hold on Umno can be perpetuated only if it is &lt;br /&gt;compounded by a show of generosity to the ordinary members. The pile of cash that &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is building up is not only a nest egg for himself and his family, but a necessity in the &lt;br /&gt;face of rivals who have much deeper pockets. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy channels the money to the members by planting a person in each division who acts &lt;br /&gt;as the ‘umbrella’ or ‘payung’. The payung’s function is to distribute cash to people who are &lt;br /&gt; - 123 - &lt;br /&gt;deemed Khairy supporters. These people must turn up at functions graced by Khairy and &lt;br /&gt;will then be able to receive their dues. From the money that Khairy circulates, each payung &lt;br /&gt;keeps something like RM1,000 to RM2,000 per month for himself for rainy days -- i.e. times &lt;br /&gt;when rivals come to compete for the favours of the Umno members. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The payungs are often Vice-Heads of Umno Youth divisions or branches. Sometimes they &lt;br /&gt;are members of Khairy’s informal ‘Vice Heads of Umno Youth Club’. Often, they are also &lt;br /&gt;people who have served with Khairy in his previous incarnation as an appointed Umno &lt;br /&gt;Youth Exco member with responsibility for education affairs. Each and every time, they are &lt;br /&gt;invariably also people who spy on other Youth leaders who appear to be paying too much &lt;br /&gt;attention to Khairy’s potential rivals for the headship of Umno Youth in the party elections &lt;br /&gt;of 2007. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The bag-carriers are people one step up from the payung. These are Umno Youth members &lt;br /&gt;who have been especially entrusted by Khairy to become distributors of funds. Some, such &lt;br /&gt;as Wan Gemuk, handle sums to the tens of thousands of ringgit. Others such as Rozabil &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Rahman of Perlis deal in the hundreds of thousands. Even higher up are the bags &lt;br /&gt;themselves, creatures such as Wan Farid Wan Salleh of Terengganu who are actually &lt;br /&gt;responsible for collecting ‘tolls’ on behalf of Khairy and for directing the funds to special &lt;br /&gt;accounts from which the bag-carriers can draw their allocations. At the very top is Khairy &lt;br /&gt;himself, safely insulated from the dirty business, but nevertheless casting a watchful eye on &lt;br /&gt;all proceedings. Only when Khairy winks do the bag-carriers approach the payung. They &lt;br /&gt;dare not act otherwise. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Like royalty, Khairy does not handle any cash himself. He lets others do that work for him &lt;br /&gt;while he keeps his hands clean. This is actually nothing new in Umno politics. Since the &lt;br /&gt;time of Tun Razak it has been customary for Umno Youth leaders ranging from Syed Jaafar &lt;br /&gt;Albar to Harun Idris to Suhaimi Kamaruddin to Anwar Ibrahim to Najib Tun Razak and &lt;br /&gt;Zahid Hamidi to have bag-carriers and payungs. What has changed is the sum. In the past, &lt;br /&gt;where Umno members used to be satisfied with orange RM10 notes once every few &lt;br /&gt;months, they are now only happy if the money comes monthly and in the blue and purple &lt;br /&gt;denominations of fifties and hundreds. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Politics is alive and well in Malaysia and money continues to be its lifeblood. All the &lt;br /&gt;nonsense that Abdullah Badawi spouted at the damning of Isa Samad and others of the &lt;br /&gt;same character is belied by the fact that his own trusted advisors do exactly the same and &lt;br /&gt;in far more blatant fashion. The Umno disciplinary committee led by the aging and literally &lt;br /&gt;toothless Tengku Ahmad Rithuaddeen is nothing but a sham. In the face of the Young &lt;br /&gt;Turks who are bold enough to hand out these payments, the committee does little. After &lt;br /&gt;all, if Khairy’s best friend, Putrajaya UMNO Youth Head Ahmad Zaki Zahid, can get away &lt;br /&gt;with it with a mere limp slap on the wrist, even for the bold act of dishing out cash in broad &lt;br /&gt;daylight, why shouldn’t the others do the same? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It’s another day in Umno politics and the money keeps rolling on, oiling the Khairy &lt;br /&gt;bandwagon as it transforms into a juggernaut, swallowing support in its wake.... &lt;br /&gt; - 124 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 27: A New Deal: Crash and Burn &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The government of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi started with much promise and on the &lt;br /&gt;backdrop of many pledges, resolutions, manifestoes and assurances. For a brief moment, &lt;br /&gt;the gullible Malaysian public was led to believe that the dark ages of Dr Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;Mohamad had come to an abrupt end and changes were about to hit the country like a &lt;br /&gt;Tsunami to sweep away the disasters of the past and bury Mahathir's legacy into the &lt;br /&gt;history books. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yes, happy days are here again, or so we visualised, which some would rather label as &lt;br /&gt;fantasise. Being the unsophisticated lot that we are, we gave the benefit of the doubt to a &lt;br /&gt;man whom many had described as ‘Mr Clean’ -- even though there was hardly any reason &lt;br /&gt;for that epithet to be bestowed on someone who had never been exposed to the temptation &lt;br /&gt;of being crooked. The fact is Abdullah has never been able to use any of his past &lt;br /&gt;government positions to gain riches basically because they were never strategic positions in &lt;br /&gt;which money could easily be made. Therefore, he remained relatively poor compared to &lt;br /&gt;other ministers not out of choice -- and it was due to this that he got the ‘clean’ image. It &lt;br /&gt;was not due to lack of trying, mind you, but lack of opportunities that made Abdullah by &lt;br /&gt;‘accident’ a cleaner man than others of his ilk. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;More than two years into his premiership, the spin that Abdullah’s aides, headed by &lt;br /&gt;Khairy Jamaluddin, gave to the public is rapidly unravelling. Previously, the bumbling &lt;br /&gt;incompetence of a man unfit to hold the highest office of the land could be hidden behind &lt;br /&gt;the razzmatazz of so-called new initiatives and differentiation of style. Unfortunately for &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah however, even the simplest of crises had become a problem for him to tackle. He &lt;br /&gt;is simply ill-equipped to manage government, whether it is the routine cabinet meetings in &lt;br /&gt;which he often falls asleep midway through discussions, or at international forums where &lt;br /&gt;he sometimes forgets which country’s president he is meeting. To a certain extent, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is the Ronald Reagan of Malaysia -- prone to gaffes, but charming, yet deeply &lt;br /&gt;flawed when it comes to policies; and definitely one of the shallowest intellects ever to &lt;br /&gt;grace the corridors of power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The most pressing problem for Abdullah has been the problem of timing. While his &lt;br /&gt;administration aims to lengthen his life by doing everything slowly and with the utmost &lt;br /&gt;caution, the closest around him -- including his immediate family -- have been hasty, &lt;br /&gt;reckless and greedy in their attempt to enrich themselves. Abdullah closes his eyes to the &lt;br /&gt;rampant misuse of government position by Khairy’s cronies like an ostrich with its head &lt;br /&gt;buried in the sand. The sudden wealth of Scomi, ECM Libra, Ethos Consulting, Binafikir &lt;br /&gt;and Dewina can all be ignored because Abdullah continuously spins the white lie that he &lt;br /&gt;has nothing to do with their movements or activities. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To a certain extent this is true -- Abdullah does not directly involve himself with the efforts &lt;br /&gt;of his brother, sister-in-law, son, son-in-law and daughter-in-law in acquiring millions &lt;br /&gt;within the short space of the last two years. But neither does he stop them from doing so, &lt;br /&gt;and neither does he concern himself with telling them to slow down. Abdullah is an &lt;br /&gt;indulgent fellow who sees nothing wrong with what his family does. Unfortunately, with &lt;br /&gt; - 125 - &lt;br /&gt;the death of Endon Mahmood, the brakes are no longer there. The circle around Abdullah, &lt;br /&gt;made up of the younger and greedier members of his family, blatantly use their position as &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia's ‘First Family’ to force government departments to give them contracts -- and, in &lt;br /&gt;the case of Khairy, to use a Ministry of Finance-owned company to bail out a business &lt;br /&gt;directly linked to him. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The frustration felt by the public does not match the frustration of Abdullah’s close friends &lt;br /&gt;from the old BTN and GPMS days. They had hoped that Abdullah would begin to reward &lt;br /&gt;them by dishing out some of the patronage that he is now empowered to dispense. In fact, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah pointed out several close friends from his days at BTN and GPMS to his private &lt;br /&gt;secretaries to indicate that ‘these people should be given contracts’. However, whenever &lt;br /&gt;they pay homage to Thajudeen Abdul Wahab to enquire about their apportioned largesse, &lt;br /&gt;they are often blocked by Khairy’s cronies in the PM’s Department, especially ‘Mr Twenty &lt;br /&gt;Percent’, Ahmad Zaki Zahid -- the very man whom Abdullah trusts almost completely on &lt;br /&gt;all economic and financial affairs, yet the same man the UMNO Disciplinary Committee &lt;br /&gt;convicted of corruption. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This is the paradox of Abdullah Badawi. He sees nothing wrong with corruption in his &lt;br /&gt;own family, but opposes it vehemently when others do it. He considers Tan Sri Isa Samad a &lt;br /&gt;traitor to UMNO for giving out money to win political positions within UMNO. But when &lt;br /&gt;Zaki Zahid does the same, Abdullah treats it as an innocent mistake. When Kasitah &lt;br /&gt;Gaddam uses government funds to help out companies associated with his family, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah goes after him like a charging lion. But when Kalimullah and Khairy pressure &lt;br /&gt;Nor Mohamed Yakcop to instruct Avenue Capital to buy out ECM Libra, Abdullah says ‘he &lt;br /&gt;knows nothing’ about the deal. Either the man is an incorrigible liar or he is simply the &lt;br /&gt;most stupid Prime Minister we have ever had. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Let’s assume that it is the latter, that Abdullah is innocent of corruption in spite of the fact &lt;br /&gt;that his family is deeply mired in it. Even so, Abdullah becomes a dangerous liability to the &lt;br /&gt;country. Nothing is worse than a man who goes about his work unaware that his very &lt;br /&gt;closest and dearest are rapidly getting fat at the public’s expense. Stories about Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;incompetence and stupidity are too many to recount. Former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;Mohamad complains to his friends that Abdullah often sleeps away, even during times &lt;br /&gt;when he is supposed to keep important appointments with foreign dignitaries and &lt;br /&gt;corporate leaders. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Ministers such as Syed Hamid Albar find to their chagrin that Abdullah had given Khairy &lt;br /&gt;top-secret documents regarding negotiations between Malaysia and Singapore for his &lt;br /&gt;‘bedtime reading’. Already uncomfortable with the in-depth knowledge of Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;foreign policy decisions that is known to his Singaporean counterparts, Syed Hamid Albar &lt;br /&gt;has become so suspicious of Khairy that he brings his briefing papers to the Prime Minister &lt;br /&gt;in person instead of forwarding them in advance to the Prime Minister’s desk. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Recently, Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop discovered to his horror that a &lt;br /&gt;list of contracts to be awarded under the Ninth Malaysia Plan had been scribbled with &lt;br /&gt;names of companies to be awarded such projects, even before the tenders have been &lt;br /&gt; - 126 - &lt;br /&gt;drafted and called. The scribbling was in the longhand of Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;After a recent Cabinet meeting, Rural Development Minister Aziz Shamsudin met with a &lt;br /&gt;certain UMNO Youth leader from Pahang who came asking for contracts. Aziz was &lt;br /&gt;surprised to find that the young Dato’ was requesting for a project that had been approved &lt;br /&gt;by the Cabinet only two days before that. When he probed further, Aziz was astonished to &lt;br /&gt;find that the contract-seeker had a copy of the last Cabinet meeting which he claimed &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had given him. While privately angry at the breach of secrecy and protocol, there &lt;br /&gt;was nothing Aziz could do except to grant the request. Though a long-time friend of &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah, Aziz had realised many months ago that he no longer had any clout with the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister who now listens only to his son-in-law and to no one else. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The problem even goes down to the level of the state administration. A certain Chinese &lt;br /&gt;businessman recently told Penang Chief Minister Koh Tsu Koon that Khairy had granted &lt;br /&gt;him the rights to develop the extension of the Bayan Lepas airport through land &lt;br /&gt;reclamation -- in spite of the fact that the state government had not even discussed the &lt;br /&gt;project outside of its policy circle. At least two Gerakan Exco members have said that when &lt;br /&gt;Koh Tsu Koon is eventually transferred to a Federal ministry, they would become the new &lt;br /&gt;Chief Minister -- after all, Khairy had ‘promised this’ to them. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Perak Menteri Besar Tajol Rosli Ghazali received a letter from a small RM2 construction &lt;br /&gt;company based in Lumut saying that Khairy had given them permission to quarry sand &lt;br /&gt;from the Lumut shores for sale outside Perak. This is in spite of the ban currently in place &lt;br /&gt;for the sale of sand between states and even though it contravenes Perak’s efforts to &lt;br /&gt;preserve its shoreline for purposes of environmental protection. But it did not matter to the &lt;br /&gt;owner of the said construction company. He is the Vice Youth Chief of an UMNO Division &lt;br /&gt;and therefore a member of Khairy’s ‘Vice Youth Chief Club’. When Tajol Rosli protested, &lt;br /&gt;the Vice Youth Chief threatened to inform Khairy and bring it up ‘to the very top’. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman has been trying very hard for some time to get &lt;br /&gt;Danaharta to sell the Sutera Harbour project to a Kadazan business associate of his named &lt;br /&gt;Melvin. Previously, the effort met with little success until Musa instructed a certain Sabah &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth leader, Hasnul Ayub Aman, son of the Sabah Times Chairman, to approach &lt;br /&gt;Khairy with the deal and offer him a certain percentage. With Khairy’s hands now in the &lt;br /&gt;pie, the Ministry of Finance is about to approve the sale of Sutera at a much lower price &lt;br /&gt;than that previously set by Danaharta, and the sale is being done on a negotiate-without- &lt;br /&gt;tender basis. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These are but some of the many events which have happened over the last two years &lt;br /&gt;involving Khairy and the maladministration of Abdullah’s government -- which are but a &lt;br /&gt;scratch on the surface. Previously, ministers and politicians were too scared to talk about &lt;br /&gt;them. But now they are so angry with Abdullah they are becoming quite open and vocal &lt;br /&gt;about Khairy’s misdeeds. Slowly, the stories are filtering through and while the official &lt;br /&gt;media -- controlled by Khairy’s lackeys like Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, &lt;br /&gt;Brendan Pereira, Wong Sulong and Wong Chun Wai -- keep an ominous silence about the &lt;br /&gt;son-in-law’s movements, the UMNO grassroots have been getting information by word of &lt;br /&gt; - 127 - &lt;br /&gt;mouth and through the ‘underground’ media. Only the very stupid of UMNO members do &lt;br /&gt;not now realise that Khairy is king and puppet-master whose control over Abdullah is &lt;br /&gt;almost absolute. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A danger for Khairy is that people are no longer afraid to talk about the corruption &lt;br /&gt;perpetuated by Abdullah’s family. After all, they have had enough of the same happenings &lt;br /&gt;under Mahathir. But Mahathir never promised them reforms. So, while people always &lt;br /&gt;thought it was ‘natural’ for Mahathir’s family to be corrupt, they are more disappointed &lt;br /&gt;that Abdullah, with his so-called Islamic and intellectual background, can allow the same &lt;br /&gt;to happen at even greater speed, more blatantly, and with visible disregard for public &lt;br /&gt;decency. Many are saying that Abdullah is dangerous to UMNO and should be removed as &lt;br /&gt;soon as the opportunity arises. Still, none want to make the first move and be the one to &lt;br /&gt;bell the cat. But there are many who are being cajoled into leading such a charge. Former &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad is the most obvious choice for the many disgruntled &lt;br /&gt;UMNO members who are looking for a sympathetic ear, as are other veteran leaders such &lt;br /&gt;as Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The only saving grace for Khairy is that Malaysians have become too immune to official &lt;br /&gt;corruption, having been so long under the rule of Mahathir Mohamad. While they are still &lt;br /&gt;cautious, Khairy has time to increase his wealth and consolidate his power of patronage &lt;br /&gt;over those UMNO leaders who can still be bought. Khairy can also rely on Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;greatest fear, the return of Anwar Ibrahim into UMNO politics, which no doubt Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;will support. If any of Mahathir’s followers -- for example, Najib Tun Razak -- dare openly &lt;br /&gt;criticise Abdullah, Anwar is the pawn that Khairy will use in the battle against Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt;As long as Anwar can distract the public by continuing his vengeful pursuit of Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;and others involved in the 1998 conspiracy that brought about his downfall, then Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;still safe. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Anwar is rapidly losing popularity and Khairy too faces this same problem. Both are at &lt;br /&gt;the losing end of the perception battle and there are many within UMNO who would love &lt;br /&gt;to see both Khairy and Anwar destroyed once and for all. It is tempting for many of the &lt;br /&gt;older UMNO leaders to imagine a situation where they can remove Khairy, topple &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah and thereby make sure Anwar remains an obsolete and powerless leader of a &lt;br /&gt;rump and limp opposition. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Those who describe Khairy as high-flying may have now seen that the engines are on fire. &lt;br /&gt;Given the right ingredients, Khairy’s plane might yet crash and burn... &lt;br /&gt; - 128 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 28: A New Deal: Losing the Plot? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was billed as a minor reshuffle, but within hours of the announcement of the new cabinet &lt;br /&gt;line-up, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi was already thrown into serious damage-control mode. &lt;br /&gt;The backlash was almost instantaneous. Reporters who covered the event scarcely knew &lt;br /&gt;what to ask the Prime Minister because the expectations built up for a proper reform of the &lt;br /&gt;XXL dinosaur cabinet that Abdullah and Khairy Jamaluddin had stitched up after the last &lt;br /&gt;General Election had been badly dashed. While some foreign journalists expressed cynical &lt;br /&gt;comments regarding the retention of scandal-ridden, bumbling and corrupt ministers, the &lt;br /&gt;local newsmen, who had only a few days earlier been chastised for being too ‘foreign’ in &lt;br /&gt;their outlook, were left asking the silliest questions, such as the so-called ‘expectations’ of &lt;br /&gt;the prime minister of his new line-up. Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak could &lt;br /&gt;scarcely hide his glee at the obvious discomfort Abdullah was feeling at the disappointing &lt;br /&gt;announcement. No Malaysian watching the broadcast on TV missed noticing the body &lt;br /&gt;language of the two top leaders, which said it all. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Has Abdullah lost the plot? Over the last few months, some of Khairy’s closest associates &lt;br /&gt;had been told to spread the rumour that Abdullah was seriously changing the face of the &lt;br /&gt;cabinet to reflect more of his own avowed policy against corruption. Khairy had leaked &lt;br /&gt;information to foreign journalists including to his favourite stringers at the Singapore Straits &lt;br /&gt;Times that certain ministers such as the highly unpopular Rafidah Aziz would be removed, &lt;br /&gt;if not transferred to a less important ministry. But in the end the decision to retain her and &lt;br /&gt;other similar relics of the Mahathir era, plus the addition of a former minister, Tengku &lt;br /&gt;Adnan Mansor, who is facing bankruptcy charges in court, seem to show that Abdullah no &lt;br /&gt;longer listens to the whims of his favourite advisor and son-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Only hours before Abdullah made the announcement, Khairy had called up Reme Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;of The Straits Times to tell him of his ‘frustration’ at the line-up. The spin was working &lt;br /&gt;fulltime. Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan was told to inform his friends from the &lt;br /&gt;foreign media that Khairy was ‘disappointed’ with Abdullah’s appointments and that he &lt;br /&gt;had no hand in the new structure. Brendan Pereira and Hishamuddin Aun went the whole &lt;br /&gt;way by actually using the New Straits Times and Utusan Malaysia to mildly criticise &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s choices. So did The Star’s Wong Chun Wai who received an instruction from &lt;br /&gt;Khairy to ‘slap the new line-up with a silken blouse’. It was all a lie -- a big ruse to cover-up &lt;br /&gt;what is perhaps Khairy’s most devious action to date. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The laymen amongst us could be forgiven for thinking that Abdullah was finally his own &lt;br /&gt;man. Lacklustre though it may seem, Abdullah had appointed a cabinet without consulting &lt;br /&gt;Khairy and basically deciding with little regard to the thoughts of the increasingly &lt;br /&gt;unpopular UMNO Youth Vice Chief. Certainly Khairy would like it to appear as if &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah was finally his own man. Over the last six months or so, one of Khairy’s main &lt;br /&gt;problems is the perception by both UMNO members and the public at large that he has &lt;br /&gt;become too powerful and influential and was the hand behind Abdullah. Khairy was seen &lt;br /&gt;as a meddler, an immensely powerful Svengali who plays puppet-master to the tired and &lt;br /&gt;sleepy puppet Prime Minister. It was becoming increasingly dangerous for Khairy because &lt;br /&gt;most of Abdullah’s gaffes and failures were being blamed on his ill advice and greediness. &lt;br /&gt; - 129 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s PR problem resulted from these perceptions -- be it true or not. Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;administration started out with the razzmatazz of an American imperial presidency but is &lt;br /&gt;now ending up looking like the silly farce that it really is. The civil servant turned politician &lt;br /&gt;is proving unable to shake off his flaccid image and he is beginning to inspire little &lt;br /&gt;confidence amongst the voters who had just recently put him in charge of the biggest &lt;br /&gt;majority ever enjoyed since the time of Tunku Abdul Rahman. For his own selfish long- &lt;br /&gt;term future, Khairy wants to seem as if he is no longer the Rasputin behind the Czar. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But a closer look at the cabinet line-up shows that Khairy’s fingers are still very much in the &lt;br /&gt;pie. Firstly, the retention of the so-called ‘dinosaurs’ such as Rafidah Aziz, Azmi Khalid, &lt;br /&gt;Aziz Samsudin, Rais Yatim, Samy Vellu, Lim Keng Yaik and the like. While seen by many &lt;br /&gt;as the failure of Khairy to reform the cabinet, it is actually Khairy’s very clever camouflage &lt;br /&gt;tactic. For the long term of his political career, Khairy does not need to drop these ministers &lt;br /&gt;now and make enemies of them more than two years before the next UMNO elections, &lt;br /&gt;when he is expected to challenge Hishammuddin for the post of UMNO Youth Chief. &lt;br /&gt;Dropping them now would not be a good move, as it would create animosity and &lt;br /&gt;strengthen the hand of Khairy’s enemies, especially Dr Mahathir Mohamad and his protégé &lt;br /&gt;Najib Tun Razak. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;With this in mind, Khairy chose to retain these ministers and he persuaded Abdullah to do &lt;br /&gt;such. After all, if it becomes necessary, he can always take his time to drop them in the next &lt;br /&gt;few years. In any case, by retaining them, Khairy builds up the already steaming public &lt;br /&gt;anger towards these incompetent public individuals who are seen as enemies of the people &lt;br /&gt;by virtue of their propensity to enrich themselves at public expense. Khairy knows, not &lt;br /&gt;removing them would allow the devil to play in their idleness. Futhermore, if slighted, &lt;br /&gt;these people have sizeable treasure chests which they would readily spend to score their &lt;br /&gt;revenge on Khairy. So the tactic is to retain them, increase the public anger towards their &lt;br /&gt;misdeeds, and push for their removal only after the next General Election when some of &lt;br /&gt;them would have already reached the threshold age of 70 years or beyond. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Instead of disturbing or disrupting the top leadership, Khairy has instead strengthened his &lt;br /&gt;hand at the second echelon level. He has rescued a key loyalist, Noh Omar, from the frying &lt;br /&gt;pan of the Ministry of Internal Security and put him in the safer and relatively powerful (as &lt;br /&gt;far as UMNO eyes are concerned) post of Deputy Education Minister. Noh Omar is one of &lt;br /&gt;those people whom Khairy can rely on to secure a good stream of information about the &lt;br /&gt;activities of his current boss and potential rival, Hishammuddin Hussein. The truth of the &lt;br /&gt;matter is Noh Omar has been placed in that position for only two purposes. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Firstly, Khairy wants Noh to spy on Hishammuddin and sabotage any attempts he may &lt;br /&gt;make to strengthen his position ahead of the next UMNO elections. Secondly, Noh is a &lt;br /&gt;prominent member of the UMNO Club Alumni Organisation of overseas student &lt;br /&gt;graduates and, in the position of Deputy Education Minister, Noh would be able to &lt;br /&gt;enhance efforts of creating a powerful support base for Khairy among overseas Malay &lt;br /&gt;graduates. In the one year left leading to the next General Election, Noh would be in a &lt;br /&gt;powerful position to supply Khairy crucial tactical and strategic information. &lt;br /&gt; - 130 - &lt;br /&gt;Simultaneously, Noh has been placed in the most senior federal position for a Selangor &lt;br /&gt;politician. By dropping Shafie Salleh from the Ministry of Higher Education, Noh is now &lt;br /&gt;the most senior Selangor candidate who Khairy can use as a potential menteri besar to &lt;br /&gt;replace the dangerous Khir Toyo, a man who is a potent obstacle to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Another Khairy loyalist who got rewarded was Johari Baharom, the former Political &lt;br /&gt;Secretary of Dr Mahathir who turned traitor when he realised his boss' days were &lt;br /&gt;numbered. Abdullah and Khairy had been using Johari as their eyes and ears in Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;office when the latter was in the dying days of his premiership. When Mahathir’s son, &lt;br /&gt;Mukhriz, tried to challenge Khairy for the post of UMNO Youth Vice Chief, Khairy had &lt;br /&gt;instructed Johari to destroy Mukhriz’s attempt by sabotaging his election in the Kubang &lt;br /&gt;Pasu UMNO Youth division. Johari’s success at tarnishing Mukhriz resulted in Khairy &lt;br /&gt;winning unopposed and Mukhriz was left licking his wounds in order to possibly stake his &lt;br /&gt;claim only in the next UMNO elections. By making Johari the Deputy Internal Security &lt;br /&gt;Minister, Khairy was making sure that the independent-minded minister of that &lt;br /&gt;department, UMNO Secretary-General Radzi Sheikh Ahmad, would be kept in check. &lt;br /&gt;Johari wanted to be promoted to a full minister like his fellow Political Secretary, Aziz &lt;br /&gt;Samsudin, but Khairy felt he needed Johari to continue being his agent and saboteur. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;While Abdullah had explained, unconvincingly, that popularity in the UMNO elections &lt;br /&gt;means nothing in his decision to appoint cabinet ministers, the demotion of Ahmad Zahid &lt;br /&gt;Hamidi to one of only two positions in the Information Ministry was another of Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;key tactics. Zahid was a popular UMNO Youth Head (popular to his own members, but &lt;br /&gt;scarcely so to the outside world). In fact, his strong showing in the UMNO Supreme &lt;br /&gt;Council elections a few years ago made Khairy quake. Like former UMNO Youth Head &lt;br /&gt;Syed Jaafar Albar, Zahid could quite easily make a comeback should Hishammuddin go &lt;br /&gt;for the higher post of Vice President. In such a situation, if Khir Toyo chickens out, Zahid &lt;br /&gt;could easily mount a challenge and defeat Khairy, knowing full well that he has the &lt;br /&gt;support of both the Najib faction (he was Najib’s former political secretary) and also the &lt;br /&gt;supporters of former Deputy President Anwar Ibrahim (who admire Zahid for having been &lt;br /&gt;detained under the ISA during the early days of Reformasi). In such a contest that would &lt;br /&gt;easily score him 60% of the votes. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy cannot take the risk of facing such a challenger, especially if he is a minister. By the &lt;br /&gt;next UMNO elections, Khairy could not expect to be a minister, as it would appear too &lt;br /&gt;obvious that nepotism had become the policy of this tottering administration. The most &lt;br /&gt;Khairy could expect to become was a parliamentarian with perhaps a minor Deputy &lt;br /&gt;Minister’s post. That would scarcely be enough, given Zahid’s position as a highly popular &lt;br /&gt;former UMNO Youth Chief, Supreme Council member, his previous experience as BSN &lt;br /&gt;Chairman, and a huge treasure chest built up over two and a half decades from selling &lt;br /&gt;himself to the highest bidding businessman. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Zahid loses his chance at a cabinet position yet again. He can scarcely be expected to &lt;br /&gt;fight back as he is still retained as a Deputy Minister, which is better than anything ever &lt;br /&gt;given to him by Dr Mahathir during the latter’s premiership. Dangling a carrot before &lt;br /&gt;Zahid is enough to keep the donkey in check and prevent him from becoming a stallion &lt;br /&gt; - 131 - &lt;br /&gt;that might challenge Khairy’s throne. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Another key Khairy strategy is bringing back Tengku Adnan Mansor, the Melaka-born &lt;br /&gt;thug with royal pretensions. Khairy had earlier committed a blunder by removing Tengku &lt;br /&gt;Adnan after he had convincingly won the Putrajaya parliamentary seat. In an act of &lt;br /&gt;desperation and revenge, Tengku Adnan tried to kill off Khairy’s key ally, Ahmad Zaki &lt;br /&gt;Zahid, as Putrajaya Youth Chief. While he failed in that attempt through his nominee, the &lt;br /&gt;son of Home Ministry Secretary-General Aseh Che Mat, he had not kept quiet at his &lt;br /&gt;demotion. To placate him in spite of having promised the position of Federal Territory &lt;br /&gt;Minister to Tengku Adnan’s erstwhile deputy in the UMNO Liaison committee, Zulhasnan &lt;br /&gt;Rafique, Khairy placed him back in the cabinet. The position of Tourism Minister is one &lt;br /&gt;very suited to the womanising and fun-loving Tengku Adnan whose other key interests &lt;br /&gt;include shares in gambling companies and escort agencies. Khairy knows that, by the next &lt;br /&gt;election, he can always put Ahmad Zaki Zahid as the new Putrajaya MP and remove &lt;br /&gt;Tengku Adnan once and for all. But now is not yet the time. He can still accommodate &lt;br /&gt;Tengku Adnan for awhile. At the same time, appointing Zulhasnan as cabinet minister &lt;br /&gt;removes the possibility of him going to Najib’s side and instead make him forever grateful &lt;br /&gt;to the son-in-law. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The line-up of Abdullah’s cabinet seems lacklustre because the public focuses on only the &lt;br /&gt;first level of headline grabbers. However, everything falls into place when we look at the &lt;br /&gt;second tier of future leaders -- those expected to provide fuel and fodder to Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;attempt to seize the premiership of the country before the age of 40. The cold ruthless &lt;br /&gt;machinations of the young pretender can be seen at every nook and cranny of the new &lt;br /&gt;cabinet. Those who think that Abdullah has lost the plot may well be correct in thinking so, &lt;br /&gt;but Khairy has certainly not lost his. In fact, his position is strengthened. The scorecard for &lt;br /&gt;the new cabinet is that Abdullah is seen as placating the Mahathir-Najib faction and &lt;br /&gt;therefore could not be expected to be challenged by them anytime soon -- while Najib &lt;br /&gt;himself could not propel forward, as many ministers equally if not more senior to him &lt;br /&gt;remain in the cabinet and could scarcely be expected to kowtow to their more junior &lt;br /&gt;colleague in spite of his role as nominal Deputy Prime Minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;However, it is Khairy who benefits in the long term. The cabinet now may be made up of &lt;br /&gt;dinosaurs, but even as you read this Khairy is nurturing a new pit of vipers that will help &lt;br /&gt;him hiss his way onto the main stage of UMNO politics.... &lt;br /&gt; - 132 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 29: A New Deal: Rosebud – a new person in Abdullah’s life &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Other than being fellow Penangites, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and former &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim share a common trait -- both are fans of fellow &lt;br /&gt;Penang native P. Ramlee. If Anwar Ibrahim loves to croon the tune of Azizah, obviously &lt;br /&gt;referring to his own wife, Abdullah instead prefers the less well-known composition Anak &lt;br /&gt;Dara Rindu. Abdullah’s contemporaries at university used to relate how he would hum the &lt;br /&gt;tune and its longing lyrics, calling for a childhood sweetheart left in the home village by the &lt;br /&gt;river that runs eternally into the sea -- though Abdullah’s rendition would be more akin to &lt;br /&gt;A.R. Tompel’s voice rather than P. Ramlee’s. When Abdullah served with Khairy &lt;br /&gt;Jamaluddin’s father in the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports, both were often called to &lt;br /&gt;sing P. Ramlee songs to entertain their colleagues from neighbouring countries and, more &lt;br /&gt;often than not, Abdullah would opt for this same song. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This was more than a mere coincidence. Early on in his career in the civil service, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;had met and married a junior civil servant hailing from a distinguished Selangor Civil &lt;br /&gt;Service family by the name of Endon Mahmood Ambak. It was a love match packaged with &lt;br /&gt;the obvious benefit of having a senior civil servant father-in-law at a time when Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;himself was a young, junior officer climbing the slow and slippery ladder of higher ranks &lt;br /&gt;in the PTD. Abdullah and Endon were always seen as the perfect couple. But those who &lt;br /&gt;know Abdullah since childhood, who grew up in the shadow of the ‘pondok’ that is the &lt;br /&gt;legacy of Abdullah’s great scholar grandfather, Sheikh Abdullah Fahim, knew that &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s heart was first stolen by someone local, and it was only later when situations &lt;br /&gt;had changed that he fell for Endon. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, no one doubts that Abdullah’s marriage to Endon was a very happy one indeed &lt;br /&gt;and unusual in its strength. Endon was a crutch which Abdullah relied on almost too &lt;br /&gt;heavily and, in the old days before Khairy Jamaluddin appeared onto the scene, the twin &lt;br /&gt;towers of Endon and Abdullah’s late Political Secretary, Fatah, held Abdullah together like &lt;br /&gt;the sky-bridge astride KLCC Park. Fatah’s death just a few months after Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;ascension to the office of Deputy Prime Minister, followed by Endon’s debilitating cancer &lt;br /&gt;which led to her untimely death, makes Abdullah reliant on a circle of people whose &lt;br /&gt;loyalty to him is coloured more by the rewards and benefits they could obtain rather than &lt;br /&gt;the devotion to his person. This situation makes Abdullah vulnerable. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is a man who does not know how to rely on his own counsel. Indeed, he &lt;br /&gt;probably has none. He therefore has to build up a circle of close advisors from whom he &lt;br /&gt;can formulate ideas and strategies. Often he does not even understand them but instead &lt;br /&gt;becomes a mouthpiece for their thoughts. Such is the way that this country is run under &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, these advisors act not for the good of the country, but often because they could &lt;br /&gt;gain some benefits. Even in Abdullah’s family, while he acknowledges that he is often &lt;br /&gt;reliant on the views of son Kamal and daughter Nori, these views have recently been &lt;br /&gt;skewed by the ever-present insatiable demands of Kamal’s business partners in Scomi, and &lt;br /&gt;Nori’s incessant request to shore up the political ambitions of her notoriously cunning &lt;br /&gt; - 133 - &lt;br /&gt;husband. So, in the end, Abdullah’s advisors are more vultures than viziers, pecking at the &lt;br /&gt;meat until they reach the driest of bones. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A few months ago, after the final tahlil of Endon’s hundred days, Abdullah began to see &lt;br /&gt;some old friends from Kepala Batas. One of them, a man who had been a constant &lt;br /&gt;companion in the last days of Endon and who was responsible for organising the almost &lt;br /&gt;nightly Yasin reading in the ten days prior to her demise, suggested that Abdullah receive a &lt;br /&gt;delegation from his hometown of Kepala Batas. “Just some old friends,” said the man. &lt;br /&gt;What Abdullah did not know was that his friend was up to his old tricks again, acting as a &lt;br /&gt;chaperone, hoping to reintroduce ‘Rosebud’, the demure little lady from Kepala Batas who &lt;br /&gt;had stolen Abdullah’s heart fifty years ago when he was still a teenager, unsure of his place &lt;br /&gt;in the future. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yes, Rosebud is still around. She is now in her fifties and a widow with children and young &lt;br /&gt;grandchildren whom she dotes upon. She spends her time amongst the local community, &lt;br /&gt;doing what most ladies of that age and background do -- mainly social work and getting &lt;br /&gt;closer to God. But she has retained her lively nature and often asks about the well-being of &lt;br /&gt;the person who used to sit by the roadside in front of his two-storey wooden bungalow, &lt;br /&gt;waiting for her to pass by. She is at the moment fully occupied with her job as a full-time &lt;br /&gt;grandmother but who, according to Abdullah’s old friends, is more suitable to give &lt;br /&gt;support to the soft-spoken, gentle Abdullah. This lady has absolutely no political ambitions &lt;br /&gt;and is much less likely to use her station in life as the wife of a Prime Minister to demand &lt;br /&gt;things which other gold-diggers would no doubt want to pursue. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And there are many such women. Actresses, singers, former wives of ministers, owners of &lt;br /&gt;unsold high-rise buildings and other such projects, single mothers with ambitious twenty- &lt;br /&gt;something children, even discarded pretty young things of some of the more senior &lt;br /&gt;members of Malaysian royalty, who would offer themselves for that vacant position. Some &lt;br /&gt;have even gone so far as to publicise their ‘interest’ in tabloids by depicting themselves as &lt;br /&gt;the ideal mother-figure for the nation. These women all hope that, like Azmi and Effendi, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah too would fall for one of these doe-eyed young creatures who could twist him &lt;br /&gt;around their tiny little fingers. But Abdullah is no Datuk K and, in spite of rumours to the &lt;br /&gt;contrary, had been a rather timid husband who never strayed more than a metre from the &lt;br /&gt;bedroom that he shared with Endon, except to go to the bathroom. Unfortunately, or &lt;br /&gt;fortunately, all the promoters, events managers, introducers, and go-betweens, who &lt;br /&gt;include amongst them several members of the current cabinet, have all failed to make &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah fall the Normala-Tiara way. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;How serious is Abdullah and Rosebud? Well, remember, you read it here first. Several &lt;br /&gt;months ago, a delegation visited Putrajaya, and amongst the seventeen ladies who went in &lt;br /&gt;that green and yellow bus from the Butterworth Padang Merdeka station was Mrs &lt;br /&gt;Rosebud. Abdullah recognised her almost instantly and was pleased that she had come &lt;br /&gt;with a packet of homemade bahulus which he used to remember her making those many &lt;br /&gt;Hari Rayas ago. No more than a few words were exchanged between them. Abdullah then &lt;br /&gt;instructed a trusted member of his security team to run a security check on Mrs Rosebud, &lt;br /&gt;just in case. Nothing untoward came up and a return visit by several womenfolk married &lt;br /&gt; - 134 - &lt;br /&gt;to Abdullah’s uncles and cousins was quickly made to the lady’s dour house in Kepala &lt;br /&gt;Batas. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was only after a certain ex-BTN Dato’ (a close friend of Abdullah and currently a Yang &lt;br /&gt;Berhormat) inadvertently mentioned the lady’s name at a lunch in the Prime Minister’s &lt;br /&gt;official residence that the children got wind of it. Surprisingly, no one recognised the &lt;br /&gt;significance of Mrs Rosebud, except Khairy. Khairy realised that of all the types of women &lt;br /&gt;in the world whom he did not want Abdullah to marry, this was the one -- someone more &lt;br /&gt;likely to push Abdullah on the side of the straight and narrow and make him feel guilty of &lt;br /&gt;letting too many opportunities fall into the hands of his son-in-law and his business cronies &lt;br /&gt;rather than to more deserving people. It was fine if Abdullah had fallen for a young model &lt;br /&gt;who could be easily persuaded to shut her eyes to goings-on behind his back. Khairy could &lt;br /&gt;easily split the spoils with her. Nor would Khairy be threatened by someone in the form of &lt;br /&gt;Rosmah Mansor who could easily be persuaded to keep quiet by giving her the official &lt;br /&gt;respect and excessive protocol her ego demanded. Such women are no threat to Khairy &lt;br /&gt;who knows that he can put his ‘Hindustani good looks’ (as Greg Sheridan described them) &lt;br /&gt;to persuade the weaker sex to toe the line. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But against a god-fearing creature, the warlock that Khairy is, has no magic. He could not &lt;br /&gt;fight such purity by the cunning taught to him by his Oxford dons. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Khairy persuaded Nori that it was a bad idea for Abdullah to dishonour the living &lt;br /&gt;memory of the unforgettable and irreplaceable Endon by marrying another wife, however &lt;br /&gt;much Abdullah needs a soul-mate at the moment. Nori’s argument was simple -- that we &lt;br /&gt;four are enough, meaning Kamal, Azrene his wife, Nori and Khairy himself. That sufficed &lt;br /&gt;for Abdullah and they were all the crutches he needed. No more would be necessary, nor &lt;br /&gt;should anyone else enter the lonely halls of the Putrajaya official residence. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;To a certain extent, Abdullah has given way to Nori’s persuasion, egged on by Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;fear of a bahu (Hindustani for mother-in-law). But Abdullah’s friends have not given up so &lt;br /&gt;easily. Khairy was shocked to discover that just before the last cabinet reshuffle, during his &lt;br /&gt;brainstorming session with Kamal in Perth, Abdullah had chanced upon Mrs Rosebud and &lt;br /&gt;her grandchildren at a strudel shop in Perth. It was not a chance encounter. Indeed, several &lt;br /&gt;members of Abdullah’s secretarial team had arranged for Mrs Rosebud to go on a short &lt;br /&gt;holiday to Perth at the same time that Abdullah was there. Of course, Nori and Khairy &lt;br /&gt;were furious. But there would come a time when they will not be able to control Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;movements and, who knows, that 'chance' meeting might reoccur several more times in the &lt;br /&gt;future. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Gentle readers, you would love for me to tell you the name of Mrs Rosebud. In fact, the &lt;br /&gt;name is very well known. To those who remember P. Ramlee's songs, if Anwar has his &lt;br /&gt;‘Azizah’, the real name of Mrs Rosebud can be found in another of that great crooner’s &lt;br /&gt;litany of chansons. But it is enough for now to say that if Abdullah was caught in front of a &lt;br /&gt;window in his office in Putrajaya softly whispering the lyrics of Anak Dara Rindu, it would &lt;br /&gt;not be for boredom, but more out of loneliness, for what had been lost and could now be &lt;br /&gt;found again. &lt;br /&gt; - 135 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Sama sekampung, sedangkan dirindu &lt;br /&gt;Inikan lagi hai jauh di mata &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What God has put together, even the combined might of Kamal, Azrene, Nori and Khairy &lt;br /&gt;could not rent asunder.... &lt;br /&gt; - 136 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 30: The Battle Begins: Pekan Boy Strikes Back &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was a dark and stormy night. The Visitor made his way in an unpretentious car along &lt;br /&gt;Taman Duta, past the Indian High Commission, and into the private home of Deputy &lt;br /&gt;Premier Najib Tun Razak. The car was one of those Wajas you see on almost any road in &lt;br /&gt;Malaysia, but the occupant in the shotgun seat was shielded by dark tinted screens which &lt;br /&gt;are not regulation windows approved by the JPJ. This was a necessary precaution, given &lt;br /&gt;the sensitivity of the meeting. Both men held high offices within UMNO and in the current &lt;br /&gt;administration of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and neither wanted the world to know, &lt;br /&gt;especially Khairy Jamaluddin, what they were planning. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The initiator of the meeting is the occupant of the Taman Duta house. Najib Tun Razak &lt;br /&gt;emerged from the main hall of the house which had been converted into a temporary surau &lt;br /&gt;for the guests he had invited earlier that evening for an informal dinner. By now all 40 of &lt;br /&gt;them had left and those who tried to linger (including former editor of New Straits Times &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Ahmad and several former ministers) were persuaded by Najib’s Special Officers &lt;br /&gt;to make an early exit. Najib was expecting an important visitor soon, giving the impression &lt;br /&gt;as if Najib was going to meet his boss the Prime Minister. But in reality it was someone &lt;br /&gt;totally unrelated, except for the fact that both he and Najib were out to discuss how to &lt;br /&gt;overthrow Khairy at the next UMNO General Assembly. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The Visitor is a titled person, not yet middle-aged, who has nursed a long grievance against &lt;br /&gt;Khairy. Up until recently Najib has refused to see him in private for fear of tipping Khairy &lt;br /&gt;off that he is out to remove the young man from UMNO politics. But the time has come for &lt;br /&gt;Najib to act. The Rembau boy is about to be slapped politically by the patrician from Pekan. &lt;br /&gt;The first blow of the battle for UMNO and the leadership of the government post-Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi has begun. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The Visitor did not step out of his car until it reached the very steps of Najib’s house. He &lt;br /&gt;very quickly clambered up the hall, Najib greeting him only when he was inside. The &lt;br /&gt;Visitor would have been recognised due to his prominence in Malaysian politics as a &lt;br /&gt;serving member of Abdullah’s Supreme Council in UMNO. Any whisper of him meeting &lt;br /&gt;Najib would have rocked the capital and made their subject of discussion the speculative &lt;br /&gt;frenzy of UMNO. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It was no surprise that Najib was to expose his plans first to his Visitor. For one, the Visitor, &lt;br /&gt;like Najib, knew if Khairy continued to be the power behind Abdullah’s throne, both their &lt;br /&gt;days were numbered. Najib and the Visitor realised their longevity in politics was highly &lt;br /&gt;dependent on the political death of Khairy. There can be no accommodation or feigning of &lt;br /&gt;loyalty to the boy whose sole purpose is to become Prime Minister of the country at the age &lt;br /&gt;of 40. The only way Khairy could achieve this was to kill off Najib and the Visitor, and both &lt;br /&gt;were not going to commit seppuku just to curry favour with Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Almost everyone in UMNO knows Khairy has only contempt for Najib. According to &lt;br /&gt;former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, Khairy has gone so far as to threaten Najib that &lt;br /&gt;he holds many of Najib’s secrets, most supplied to him by the Singapore Secret Service. &lt;br /&gt; - 137 - &lt;br /&gt;Amongst these are the corrupt dealings of the Deputy Prime Minister during his tenure as &lt;br /&gt;Minister of Defence and even after Abdullah had become Prime Minister. Singapore was &lt;br /&gt;keen to ensure that Najib stayed away from the office of Prime Minister until they at least &lt;br /&gt;had gained all the benefits of Abdullah’s weaker and ‘more friendly’ attitude to Lee Hsien &lt;br /&gt;Loong and his government. Also, in the dossier held closely by Khairy, are details of &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s scandals. True, after the Anwar Ibrahim episode, many could not care less if Najib &lt;br /&gt;buggered a goat, but it was still fodder for the conservative Malay heartland that wanted &lt;br /&gt;their leaders to be as pious as saints. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The most damaging attack on Najib would have been the usage of close personal contact &lt;br /&gt;Razak Baginda and other personalities to skim off the budget of the Ministry of Defence &lt;br /&gt;used in procuring certain machineries. These go into the double digit millions and could &lt;br /&gt;easily be proved as Najib’s account holder and nominee in Singapore is someone who &lt;br /&gt;sniffs money and follows its scent rather than maintain loyalty to his political master. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had once remarked to Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan that removing Najib &lt;br /&gt;would be ‘peanuts’. This is the absolute truth. With the control of the media that Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;in which even Mahathir Mohamad could scarcely whisper a discouraging word, Najib has &lt;br /&gt;no chance to present his own case against accusations by Abdullah and Khairy. A &lt;br /&gt;trumped-up levelling of fingers pointing to Najib’s shenanigans would be easier to prove &lt;br /&gt;than anything Mahathir had attempted on Anwar Ibrahim. Najib could only weakly &lt;br /&gt;defend his record as no one believes what he says. With the po-faced visage that he has &lt;br /&gt;been increasingly trying to reduce but failed to achieve, Najib is as convincing a liar as Umi &lt;br /&gt;Hafilda when she said she was still a virgin. In other words, no one believes the Pekan Boy &lt;br /&gt;even when he is telling the truth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad learnt through his own contacts that Khairy has worked very hard to &lt;br /&gt;gain these documents from Singapore. Much has been offered to obtain them and most of &lt;br /&gt;the cost has been borne by the GLCs that now answer to new masters. This is one reason &lt;br /&gt;why Mahathir is so seething. When statements were made recently implying some leaders &lt;br /&gt;were selling the nation, Mahathir made that accusation in the future tense. He should have &lt;br /&gt;made it in the past. The sale has already been made, the price already paid by Singapore, &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy has got what he wants: enough to remove Najib from the scene. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s closest circles, including those who often call Malaysia Today, have often remarked &lt;br /&gt;that Najib has no backbone to fight anyone, even a two-legged mangy cat. But this time &lt;br /&gt;things have gone too far. Najib knows he would not survive sixty days in prison if he had &lt;br /&gt;to face the same fate as Anwar. It has not been easy for Najib to come to this conclusion as &lt;br /&gt;he has always been a cautious player. Previously he could count on the support of &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad as his godfather and his most ardent supporter, however, AND THIS &lt;br /&gt;IS OFFICIAL, Mahathir Mohamad no longer supports Najib as the alternative to Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi. Najib has lost so much credibility with Mahathir that the Grand Old Man is now &lt;br /&gt;thinking of anointing a new challenger to Abdullah. As far as Mahathir is concerned, Najib &lt;br /&gt;is a cowardly politician, unlike his late father who he regards as a mentor. While Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;has tried to play the same role to Najib, he has reached his own conclusion that his efforts &lt;br /&gt;have failed miserably and Najib does not share the characteristics of his late father. &lt;br /&gt; - 138 - &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir has realised after many, many years that Najib is not fit to carry the mantle of &lt;br /&gt;successor-in-chief to the legacy of Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Currently, Mahathir is still looking for somebody to replace Najib as his blue-eyed boy. He &lt;br /&gt;has yet to find one though. Whatever it may be, he is giving Najib one last chance to rise up &lt;br /&gt;and defend the old guards’ legacy. Any protestations of loyalty to Abdullah would no &lt;br /&gt;longer be tolerated by Mahathir and he is ready to unceremoniously dump Najib as he did &lt;br /&gt;Anwar. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In his latest remark upon his return from visiting ailing former Indonesian President &lt;br /&gt;Suharto, Mahathir said it would have been better if Najib claimed his place in Ghafar &lt;br /&gt;Baba’s grave. He has not been able to defend any of Mahathir’s legacies and is as useful as &lt;br /&gt;all the other residents of Makam Pahlawan. While cutting, the remark - made to a former &lt;br /&gt;Deputy Chief Minister of Sabah - was the complete truth as Mahathir saw it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib and the Visitor are now laying plans on how to sabotage Khairy’s meteoric rise to the &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Vice-Presidency. Yes, you heard it right! Khairy is not going for UMNO Youth &lt;br /&gt;Chief. He is targeting the vacant post of UMNO Vice President, so quickly emptied by Isa &lt;br /&gt;Samad. Plans are being laid out that all potential challengers such as Mukhriz, Mokhzani &lt;br /&gt;and Zahidi Zainul Abidin will concentrate their limited resources on getting support from &lt;br /&gt;Pemuda. But it will all come to nought because it will not be the young ones who will give &lt;br /&gt;their support to Khairy, but the old ones, paid off handsomely and cowed by threats from &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s supporters. They will announce their undivided support for the youngest Vice &lt;br /&gt;President of UMNO since the time of Ghafar or Anwar. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What glory is there of Khairy becoming Youth Chief? Why become a big fish in a small &lt;br /&gt;pond when you can become a shark in the ocean? In fact, Khairy has already selected the &lt;br /&gt;person who will become his proxy as the UMNO Youth Chief and, again, you read it first, &lt;br /&gt;he is not in the current UMNO Youth Exco line-up. But there is a strong agreement that this &lt;br /&gt;person will go for the Youth Chief post and get it as Khairy’s proxy, while the boy himself &lt;br /&gt;goes for the more exalted rank of Vice President. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s plan is for the Visitor to be the spoiler. He will play the role of stalking-horse and &lt;br /&gt;emerge as the most logical challenger as UMNO Youth Chief. But Najib already knows &lt;br /&gt;Khairy is not planning to go for the post of UMNO Youth Chief. All protestations to the &lt;br /&gt;contrary have been swallowed up by people such as Joceline Tan and other political &lt;br /&gt;commentators. Najib knows that this is all a façade. At the very last moment, the Visitor &lt;br /&gt;will announce that he is challenging Khairy for the Vice Presidency or any other post which &lt;br /&gt;he might decide to go for. He has made this a personal crusade to block Khairy and tail him &lt;br /&gt;wherever he goes and become the biggest stumbling block to the boy’s rise to power. By &lt;br /&gt;now, readers would want to know who the Visitor, the former deputy chief minister and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s proxy for UMNO Youth Chief are. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;This is the beginning of a new series of The Khairy Chronicles which will chart the battle &lt;br /&gt;between the Old Guard and the Young Turks in UMNO as it happens. Over the next few &lt;br /&gt;weeks, these names will be revealed to you. But it is still too early to spoil the fun. UMNO &lt;br /&gt; - 139 - &lt;br /&gt;is about to tear itself apart, just like PKR did before this. Revealing the names now would &lt;br /&gt;allow Khairy to react and remove his rivals. He will have to wait, just like any other reader &lt;br /&gt;of The Khairy Chronicles, for the identity of his bete-noir to be revealed when the time &lt;br /&gt;comes. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But one thing that we would like to reveal now is that in this battle between Najib and &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, Najib would be the loser. In fact, in the current state of play of the game, Najib has &lt;br /&gt;kissed away his last chance of becoming Prime Minister. But this is only one aspect of the &lt;br /&gt;battle. There is still the Battle Royale between the Grand Old M &lt;br /&gt; - 140 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 31: Khairy Chronicles in review continued &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Episode 31 of The Khairy Chronicles is supposed to be called The Battle Begins: Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;secret weapon, where we were going to tell you about Mahathir’s White Knight who will &lt;br /&gt;emerge to fight the Khairy Dragon. However, since the last episode of The Khairy Chronicles &lt;br /&gt;on 5 May, there have been many and fast-changing developments in the Malaysian &lt;br /&gt;political scene that what we write seems to become obsolete even before we can publish it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;You must note that it takes days, sometimes a week to research and write each episode of &lt;br /&gt;The Khairy Chronicles. The intimate details that we reveal means we need to meet many &lt;br /&gt;contacts and enter into long discussions on what is going on behind the scenes. Sometimes &lt;br /&gt;the source is willing to sing like a canary and at times is not really prepared to open up and &lt;br /&gt;remains tight-lipped. It therefore requires some very delicate probing and beating around &lt;br /&gt;the bush to slowly extract what we are looking for. Then there are those who delight in &lt;br /&gt;telling us half stories with the punch line, “I have told you what happened, now you go &lt;br /&gt;figure out the rest yourself.” Or they would say, “That is what happened, but I can’t &lt;br /&gt;mention names.” We then have to continue investigating and talk to others to put in the &lt;br /&gt;missing pieces to that story and plug the many gaps and holes that our source left us with. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the latest episode of The Corridors of Power (Politics is about the attainment of power), we &lt;br /&gt;concluded by saying: &lt;br /&gt;In the meantime, watch the ongoing power struggle in Malaysia. Much conniving and &lt;br /&gt;money changing hands will be seen over the next year or so. And the man left standing will &lt;br /&gt;be he who plays the game best. And all’s fair in love, war and politics. There will be no &lt;br /&gt;dirty politics, only real-politics. And the next prime minister, whoever it may be, will be he &lt;br /&gt;who outwits the others and outbids everyone with the best price. And the next prime &lt;br /&gt;minister will have to be the dirtiest player in the game; there are no two ways about it. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The impression created is that Malaysia’s political scene is calm and calculated. That is &lt;br /&gt;certainly the appearance given. But Malaysia’s politics is like a deep river. Deep rivers &lt;br /&gt;appear calm but the turbulence beneath the surface would drag you down if you were to &lt;br /&gt;suffer the misfortune of falling into it. Then there would be the many crocodiles lurking &lt;br /&gt;below waiting to pounce on you if you are spared drowning. The calmer the river, the &lt;br /&gt;more you should stay out of it for not many have been able to defy nature and walk away &lt;br /&gt;to tell their tale. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yes, nature, mankind’s folly in thinking that he can shape this earth in his own image and &lt;br /&gt;not suffer the consequences. Whether it be the Highland Towers collapse (due to the &lt;br /&gt;shifting of the underground stream), the Tsunami tragedy (due to the destruction of &lt;br /&gt;mangroves along the shoreline), landslides (due to development on hill slopes), and much &lt;br /&gt;more, have all proven that nature has power over mankind. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;And what is the nature of politicians? Politicians are animals that scheme, plot, connive, &lt;br /&gt;engage, survive, and kill. A politician is a modern-day gladiator. Politicians must kill or be &lt;br /&gt; - 141 - &lt;br /&gt;killed. Politicians must make alliances and break alliances. In politics, the ends justify the &lt;br /&gt;means. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the latest episode of The Corridors of Power (Politics is about the attainment of power), we &lt;br /&gt;said: &lt;br /&gt;Enemies become friends and friends become enemies. An enemy of your enemy becomes &lt;br /&gt;your friend, even if the former is also your enemy, but as long as the latter is a bigger &lt;br /&gt;enemy. An enemy of your friend also becomes your enemy, even if the former is also your &lt;br /&gt;friend, but as long the latter can serve your political interests. That is the political game. &lt;br /&gt;And you must learn to treat all political friends as potential enemies and keep them close &lt;br /&gt;where you can watch over them -- plus keep your political enemies even closer so that you &lt;br /&gt;can monitor them and neutralise their every move. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Well, this is exactly what is happening in Malaysian politics today and, over the last couple &lt;br /&gt;of weeks while we were putting together episode 31 of The Khairy Chronicles, the behind the &lt;br /&gt;scenes goings-on has forced us to go back to the drawing board lest what we publish &lt;br /&gt;becomes obsolete as you read it or the rapid changing events make what we write highly in &lt;br /&gt;error. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;For example, since the last episode of The Khairy Chronicles, the recently removed Umno &lt;br /&gt;Perlis Youth Leader has decided to take on Khairy Jamaluddin and give him a run for his &lt;br /&gt;money. He is now making his moves and laying the groundwork to launch this challenge. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The Islamic Party of Malaysia (PAS) is attempting to bring together Ex-Prime Minister Dr &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad, his one-time deputy Anwar Ibrahim, and Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah &lt;br /&gt;to team up for the good of the ‘Malay cause’. Is the hidden agenda really to challenge the &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Dr Mahathir has categorically stated in his Malaysiakini interview last week that there is no &lt;br /&gt;possibility of any reconciliation with Anwar. Then there are certain forces who are &lt;br /&gt;attempting to open a channel for Anwar to meet Dr Mahathir so that the former can &lt;br /&gt;apologise to the latter. It is hoped that once Anwar does this, then the old man would give &lt;br /&gt;his blessing in the event that Umno would like to take Anwar back. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Last Friday, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi met Dr Mahathir in Tokyo. Dr &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir returned to Malaysia the following day while Abdullah the day after that. It has &lt;br /&gt;been reported that Abdullah is trying to mend fences with the old man but the terms and &lt;br /&gt;conditions for reconciliation may be too much for Abdullah to endure. Other than the &lt;br /&gt;reinstatement of the cancelled ‘Crooked Bridge’, Dr Mahathir wants Abdullah’s son-in-law, &lt;br /&gt;Khairy, removed from the corridors of power. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Yes, there is much going on behind the scenes and it appears like all roads lead to Khairy, &lt;br /&gt;even the cancellation of the ‘Crooked Bridge’. Will Abdullah sacrifice his son-in-law to &lt;br /&gt;pacify him who still has the power to hire and fire and can shape the political environment &lt;br /&gt;of this country? Will Najib strike now while Khairy is teetering on the verge and about to &lt;br /&gt; - 142 - &lt;br /&gt;be pushed over the edge by the many enemies he has made in such a short space of time, &lt;br /&gt;Dr Mahathir included? Will Anwar become the powerbroker and kingmaker in the &lt;br /&gt;redrawing of political boundaries, realignment of political loyalties, and new political &lt;br /&gt;alliances? Will the Dr Mahathir-Anwar-Tengku Razaleigh team become a reality or will the &lt;br /&gt;PAS effort fizzle just like the Dinar idea which it mooted recently? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There is so much to look into and the events swing from one extreme to the other within &lt;br /&gt;mere days. Anyway, while we are getting our hands on the latest and juiciest of the &lt;br /&gt;backroom political manoeuvres, let us continue with our Khairy Chonicles in review before &lt;br /&gt;we go to the next episode of our story on the young upstart who would be Prime Minister &lt;br /&gt;by the age of 40 and what he would have to do to eliminate the competition. Parts 1 to 24 of &lt;br /&gt;this review can be viewed here. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 24 - Khairy Chronicles in review &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;It seems Khairy Jamaluddin is not happy with The Khairy Chronicles. And when Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;not happy, he must be made happy. These ‘certain parties’ do not work for Khairy. They, in &lt;br /&gt;fact, answer to the government. Indirectly, they are responsible to the people. Their job is to &lt;br /&gt;uphold the law and punish the law-breakers, not to serve certain political interests. Their &lt;br /&gt;function is to defend our constitutional rights, including freedom of expression and the &lt;br /&gt;independence of the media. But that is only a pipedream. In reality, they bow to the will of &lt;br /&gt;the powers-that-be. In this case, they bow to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy has no position in the government of the day. He is officially only a ‘corporate &lt;br /&gt;advisor’. No doubt he is deputy head of UMNO Youth, but that role too is not one that &lt;br /&gt;allows him to run the country as he wishes. Nevertheless, he does. For some time now, &lt;br /&gt;these ‘certain parties’ have been feeding him reports (as well as to his father-in-law), &lt;br /&gt;including the results of their snooping on opposition politicians and functions. Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;no right to these reports, but he receives them anyway -- because the ministers and deputy &lt;br /&gt;ministers in charge are too afraid to raise their objections. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;What makes Khairy uncomfortable with The Khairy Chronicles is the fact that it has pre- &lt;br /&gt;empted many of his moves since the middle of last year -- and now that he is beginning to &lt;br /&gt;make these moves we can turn round and say, “I told you so.” &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 25 - A New Deal: Running Out of Time &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s actions over the last few months demonstrate immense immaturity and stupidity. &lt;br /&gt;The obvious corrupt and insider dealing involved in the purchase of ECM Libra and the &lt;br /&gt;use of government-owned Avenue Capital to bail out Khairy’s business cronies and make &lt;br /&gt;them multi-millionaires overnight are actions that could have been better handled and with &lt;br /&gt;greater finesse. Instead, its execution bears all the hallmarks of a rushed job, the handiwork &lt;br /&gt;of an amateur in politics and business. The image that Khairy portrays has transformed &lt;br /&gt;from an intelligent, confident young man to a greedy and corrupt opportunist. The ‘smooth &lt;br /&gt;operator’ has gone, to be replaced by the ‘grab-and-run’ conman. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 143 - &lt;br /&gt;Perhaps there is pattern in this madness. Maybe the fast-paced actions were not a headlong &lt;br /&gt;rush created out of chaos but a calculated attempt to salvage whatever remains of the &lt;br /&gt;teetering administration of Abdullah Badawi. The administration that started out &lt;br /&gt;promising Malaysians the sun and the moon, and that enjoyed the biggest majority since &lt;br /&gt;the General Election of 1955, has begun to be seen as the most inept and bumbling &lt;br /&gt;government ever. Abdullah Badawi is lurching from crisis to crisis; unable to deal with &lt;br /&gt;issues with the decisiveness that Malaysians have become so accustomed to over the last &lt;br /&gt;two decades or so. Swaying from right to left, Abdullah Badawi leads a government rife &lt;br /&gt;with internal conflict and unable to grapple with the simplest of ordinary issues. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy knows that his future -- political, business or otherwise -- depends on Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Badawi’s longevity in office. That now seems increasingly shaky. Unlike his predecessor, &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi is unable to capitalise on his strength in Parliament. Led astray by the &lt;br /&gt;silly ideas of people such as Nazri Aziz and Backbencher Club President Shahrir Abdul &lt;br /&gt;Samad, Abdullah Badawi lost control of his own Parliament and saw senators and &lt;br /&gt;backbenchers attacking his government with a ferocity unseen since the days of Tunku &lt;br /&gt;Abdul Rahman. While thinking that Parliament should be allowed more say, Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;failed to realise that many of the backbenchers could think and speak better than him or his &lt;br /&gt;menagerie of hapless ministers. As a result, when Parliament began to take up the mantle &lt;br /&gt;of criticising ridiculous government policies, Abdullah finds it difficult to respond in a &lt;br /&gt;convincing manner. Slowly, the rickety sinews that bind his fragile government begin to &lt;br /&gt;appear for all to see. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 26 - A New Deal: The bag-carriers &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Money politics is well and alive in Umno and many have now forgotten that Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;Ahmad Badawi rode into power on the backdrop of a promise that he will clean up Umno &lt;br /&gt;of this affliction, which he has often described as ‘a cancer that kills’. Abdullah Badawi is &lt;br /&gt;proven no less a liar by his own son-in-law who now realises that his father-in-law’s &lt;br /&gt;tenuous hold on Umno can be perpetuated only if it is compounded by a show of &lt;br /&gt;generosity to the ordinary members. The pile of cash that Khairy is building up is not only &lt;br /&gt;a nest egg for himself and his family, but a necessity in the face of rivals who have much &lt;br /&gt;deeper pockets. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy channels the money to the members by planting a person in each division who acts &lt;br /&gt;as the ‘umbrella’ or ‘payung’. The payung’s function is to distribute cash to people who are &lt;br /&gt;deemed Khairy supporters. These people must turn up at functions graced by Khairy and &lt;br /&gt;will then be able to receive their dues. From the money that Khairy circulates, each payung &lt;br /&gt;keeps something like RM1,000 to RM2,000 per month for himself for rainy days -- i.e. times &lt;br /&gt;when rivals come to compete for the favours of the Umno members. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The payungs are often Vice-Heads of Umno Youth divisions or branches. Sometimes they &lt;br /&gt;are members of Khairy’s informal ‘Vice Heads of Umno Youth Club’. Often, they are also &lt;br /&gt;people who have served with Khairy in his previous incarnation as an appointed Umno &lt;br /&gt;Youth Exco member with responsibility for education affairs. Each and every time, they are &lt;br /&gt;invariably also people who spy on other Youth leaders who appear to be paying too much &lt;br /&gt; - 144 - &lt;br /&gt;attention to Khairy’s potential rivals for the headship of Umno Youth in the party elections &lt;br /&gt;of 2007. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Like royalty, Khairy does not handle any cash himself. He lets others do that work for him &lt;br /&gt;while he keeps his hands clean. This is actually nothing new in Umno politics. Since the &lt;br /&gt;time of Tun Razak it has been customary for Umno Youth leaders ranging from Syed Jaafar &lt;br /&gt;Albar to Harun Idris to Suhaimi Kamaruddin to Anwar Ibrahim to Najib Tun Razak and &lt;br /&gt;Zahid Hamidi to have bag-carriers and payungs. What has changed is the sum. In the past, &lt;br /&gt;where Umno members used to be satisfied with orange RM10 notes once every few &lt;br /&gt;months, they are now only happy if the money comes monthly and in the blue and purple &lt;br /&gt;denominations of fifties and hundreds. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 27 - A New Deal: Crash and Burn &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These are but some of the many events which have happened over the last two years &lt;br /&gt;involving Khairy and the maladministration of Abdullah’s government -- which are but a &lt;br /&gt;scratch on the surface. Previously, ministers and politicians were too scared to talk about &lt;br /&gt;them. But now they are so angry with Abdullah they are becoming quite open and vocal &lt;br /&gt;about Khairy’s misdeeds. Slowly, the stories are filtering through and while the official &lt;br /&gt;media -- controlled by Khairy’s lackeys like Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan, &lt;br /&gt;Brendan Pereira, Wong Sulong and Wong Chun Wai -- keep an ominous silence about the &lt;br /&gt;son-in-law’s movements, the UMNO grassroots have been getting information by word of &lt;br /&gt;mouth and through the ‘underground’ media. Only the very stupid of UMNO members do &lt;br /&gt;not now realise that Khairy is king and puppet-master whose control over Abdullah is &lt;br /&gt;almost absolute. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;A danger for Khairy is that people are no longer afraid to talk about the corruption &lt;br /&gt;perpetuated by Abdullah’s family. After all, they have had enough of the same happenings &lt;br /&gt;under Mahathir. But Mahathir never promised them reforms. So, while people always &lt;br /&gt;thought it was ‘natural’ for Mahathir’s family to be corrupt, they are more disappointed &lt;br /&gt;that Abdullah, with his so-called Islamic and intellectual background, can allow the same &lt;br /&gt;to happen at even greater speed, more blatantly, and with visible disregard for public &lt;br /&gt;decency. Many are saying that Abdullah is dangerous to UMNO and should be removed as &lt;br /&gt;soon as the opportunity arises. Still, none want to make the first move and be the one to &lt;br /&gt;bell the cat. But there are many who are being cajoled into leading such a charge. Former &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad is the most obvious choice for the many disgruntled &lt;br /&gt;UMNO members who are looking for a sympathetic ear, as are other veteran leaders such &lt;br /&gt;as Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The only saving grace for Khairy is that Malaysians have become too immune to official &lt;br /&gt;corruption, having been so long under the rule of Mahathir Mohamad. While they are still &lt;br /&gt;cautious, Khairy has time to increase his wealth and consolidate his power of patronage &lt;br /&gt;over those UMNO leaders who can still be bought. Khairy can also rely on Mahathir’s &lt;br /&gt;greatest fear, the return of Anwar Ibrahim into UMNO politics, which no doubt Abdullah &lt;br /&gt;will support. If any of Mahathir’s followers -- for example, Najib Tun Razak -- dare openly &lt;br /&gt;criticise Abdullah, Anwar is the pawn that Khairy will use in the battle against Mahathir. &lt;br /&gt; - 145 - &lt;br /&gt;As long as Anwar can distract the public by continuing his vengeful pursuit of Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;and others involved in the 1998 conspiracy that brought about his downfall, then Khairy is &lt;br /&gt;still safe. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 28 - A New Deal: Losing the Plot? &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Instead of disturbing or disrupting the top leadership, Khairy has instead strengthened his &lt;br /&gt;hand at the second echelon level. He has rescued a key loyalist, Noh Omar, from the frying &lt;br /&gt;pan of the Ministry of Internal Security and put him in the safer and relatively powerful (as &lt;br /&gt;far as UMNO eyes are concerned) post of Deputy Education Minister. Noh Omar is one of &lt;br /&gt;those people whom Khairy can rely on to secure a good stream of information about the &lt;br /&gt;activities of his current boss and potential rival, Hishammuddin Hussein. The truth of the &lt;br /&gt;matter is Noh Omar has been placed in that position for only two purposes. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Firstly, Khairy wants Noh to spy on Hishammuddin and sabotage any attempts he may &lt;br /&gt;make to strengthen his position ahead of the next UMNO elections. Secondly, Noh is a &lt;br /&gt;prominent member of the UMNO Club Alumni Organisation of overseas student &lt;br /&gt;graduates and, in the position of Deputy Education Minister, Noh would be able to &lt;br /&gt;enhance efforts of creating a powerful support base for Khairy among overseas Malay &lt;br /&gt;graduates. In the one year left leading to the next General Election, Noh would be in a &lt;br /&gt;powerful position to supply Khairy crucial tactical and strategic information. &lt;br /&gt;Simultaneously, Noh has been placed in the most senior federal position for a Selangor &lt;br /&gt;politician. By dropping Shafie Salleh from the Ministry of Higher Education, Noh is now &lt;br /&gt;the most senior Selangor candidate who Khairy can use as a potential menteri besar to &lt;br /&gt;replace the dangerous Khir Toyo, a man who is a potent obstacle to Khairy. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 29 - A New Deal: Rosebud – a new person in Abdullah’s life &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah is a man who does not know how to rely on his own counsel. Indeed, he &lt;br /&gt;probably has none. He therefore has to build up a circle of close advisors from whom he &lt;br /&gt;can formulate ideas and strategies. Often he does not even understand them but instead &lt;br /&gt;becomes a mouthpiece for their thoughts. Such is the way that this country is run under &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Of course, these advisors act not for the good of the country, but often because they could &lt;br /&gt;gain some benefits. Even in Abdullah’s family, while he acknowledges that he is often &lt;br /&gt;reliant on the views of son Kamal and daughter Nori, these views have recently been &lt;br /&gt;skewed by the ever-present insatiable demands of Kamal’s business partners in Scomi, and &lt;br /&gt;Nori’s incessant request to shore up the political ambitions of her notoriously cunning &lt;br /&gt;husband. So, in the end, Abdullah’s advisors are more vultures than viziers, pecking at the &lt;br /&gt;meat until they reach the driest of bones. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Part 30 - The Battle Begins: Pekan Boy Strikes Back &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Almost everyone in UMNO knows Khairy has only contempt for Najib. According to &lt;br /&gt;former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, Khairy has gone so far as to threaten Najib that &lt;br /&gt; - 146 - &lt;br /&gt;he holds many of Najib’s secrets, most supplied to him by the Singapore Secret Service. &lt;br /&gt;Amongst these are the corrupt dealings of the Deputy Prime Minister during his tenure as &lt;br /&gt;Minister of Defence and even after Abdullah had become Prime Minister. Singapore was &lt;br /&gt;keen to ensure that Najib stayed away from the office of Prime Minister until they at least &lt;br /&gt;had gained all the benefits of Abdullah’s weaker and ‘more friendly’ attitude to Lee Hsien &lt;br /&gt;Loong and his government. Also, in the dossier held closely by Khairy, are details of &lt;br /&gt;Najib’s scandals. True, after the Anwar Ibrahim episode, many could not care less if Najib &lt;br /&gt;buggered a goat, but it was still fodder for the conservative Malay heartland that wanted &lt;br /&gt;their leaders to be as pious as saints. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy had once remarked to Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan that removing Najib &lt;br /&gt;would be ‘peanuts’. This is the absolute truth. With the control of the media that Khairy has &lt;br /&gt;in which even Mahathir Mohamad could scarcely whisper a discouraging word, Najib has &lt;br /&gt;no chance to present his own case against accusations by Abdullah and Khairy. A &lt;br /&gt;trumped-up levelling of fingers pointing to Najib’s shenanigans would be easier to prove &lt;br /&gt;than anything Mahathir had attempted on Anwar Ibrahim. Najib could only weakly &lt;br /&gt;defend his record as no one believes what he says. With the po-faced visage that he has &lt;br /&gt;been increasingly trying to reduce but failed to achieve, Najib is as convincing a liar as Umi &lt;br /&gt;Hafilda when she said she was still a virgin. In other words, no one believes the Pekan Boy &lt;br /&gt;even when he is telling the truth. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir Mohamad learnt through his own contacts that Khairy has worked very hard to &lt;br /&gt;gain these documents from Singapore. Much has been offered to obtain them and most of &lt;br /&gt;the cost has been borne by the GLCs that now answer to new masters. This is one reason &lt;br /&gt;why Mahathir is so seething. When statements were made recently implying some leaders &lt;br /&gt;were selling the nation, Mahathir made that accusation in the future tense. He should have &lt;br /&gt;made it in the past. The sale has already been made, the price already paid by Singapore, &lt;br /&gt;and Khairy has got what he wants: enough to remove Najib from the scene. &lt;br /&gt; - 147 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 32: The Battle Begins: Mahathir chooses his weapon &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In December 1990, as he lay on his deathbed, First Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman &lt;br /&gt;received the unwelcome news that the then Prime Minister was about to come pay him a &lt;br /&gt;visit. According to Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s staff, it was a ‘courtesy call’ upon the dying &lt;br /&gt;Bapa Malaysia who was spending his last few hours on this earth, generally at peace with &lt;br /&gt;himself after having delivered his final message to the people at a gathering in Kuching &lt;br /&gt;several days earlier. The Tunku wanted to let the world slip away without any rancour. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Mahathir had come to disturb that idyll. He wanted to make his peace with the dying &lt;br /&gt;Father of Independence. Nevertheless, the Tunku was no hypocrite. He was not about to &lt;br /&gt;pretend he had suddenly changed his 25-year old feelings of contempt for the man who &lt;br /&gt;once called him ‘traitor to the Malays’. The Tunku did not want to pretend that he could so &lt;br /&gt;easily forgive Mahathir for all that he had done -- including what the Tunku believed was &lt;br /&gt;the dismantling of the Malaysian democracy which he had so painfully established. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So the Tunku, in his usual puckish humour, decided to ‘fall asleep’. Mahathir came into the &lt;br /&gt;hospital room and addressed the Tunku respectfully, rambling on and on about how he &lt;br /&gt;really respected the man, all the while the Tunku ‘snored’ as if he was in a deep slumber. &lt;br /&gt;By doing so, he did not need to address Mahathir nor even acknowledge the presence of &lt;br /&gt;the Prime Minister. He faked a snooze in order to escape having to give a false impression &lt;br /&gt;that all was forgiven and forgotten. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;16 years later, it was Mahathir’s turn to do the same to his own successor as Prime &lt;br /&gt;Minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. True, Mahathir is nowhere close to dying, nor is he &lt;br /&gt;even sick, but he too did not want to pretend that ‘all is forgiven’ nor that ‘all is well’ &lt;br /&gt;between him and Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;When Abdullah used a common friend (one of the doctors in his entourage) to arrange a &lt;br /&gt;meeting with Mahathir in Tokyo during the recent Nikkei conference in late May, Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;was of course reluctant to accept. But he could not refuse to meet the Prime Minister as he &lt;br /&gt;was told that Abdullah was already on his way to his hotel suite and could hardly turn &lt;br /&gt;back. Nevertheless, this did stop Mahathir from ‘doing a Tunku’. He pretended to be in a &lt;br /&gt;hurry and, after dismissing Abdullah with some hellos, grunts and umphs, the ‘courtesy &lt;br /&gt;call’ was all over in less than ten minutes. In spite of Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul &lt;br /&gt;Hassan’s and Brendan Pereira’s attempt to portray a reconciliation with the great giant of &lt;br /&gt;UMNO politics, the meeting had all the excitement of a hospital morgue. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;As far as Mahathir was concerned, meeting Abdullah was an exercise in futility. &lt;br /&gt;Reconciliation with Abdullah was certainly something farthest from his mind. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;had already decided to cross the bridge from which there is no turning back -- in fact, he &lt;br /&gt;was burning the bridge as far as Abdullah is concerned. Mahathir is no longer thinking of &lt;br /&gt;how to depose Abdullah as UMNO President and Prime Minister but has instead devised a &lt;br /&gt;plan to unseat what he considers a most unworthy successor. Mahathir is no longer a critic &lt;br /&gt;of the government but a potent opponent who is dedicated to its overthrow. The former &lt;br /&gt;Prime Minister is now officially the Leader of the Opposition to Abdullah’s rule. &lt;br /&gt; - 148 - &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;There are those who still believe that Mahathir’s hopes lie with Najib. This is no longer so. &lt;br /&gt;Najib has been well and truly discounted in spite of several last-minute attempts to prove &lt;br /&gt;himself a worthy inheritor of the Mahathir legacy. For example, knowing that he has been &lt;br /&gt;accused by the Mahathir faction of not being able to take advantage of Abdullah’s many &lt;br /&gt;wrong turns and strategic blunders, Najib recently consolidated his support among the &lt;br /&gt;anti-Khairy faction. He gave the opportunity for Reezal Merican Naina Merican to lead &lt;br /&gt;GPMS in spite of the fact that Reezal is now the most virulent anti-Khairy force in &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s office. Najib also managed to secure the acquiescence of that wishy-washy &lt;br /&gt;Suhaimi Ibrahim by promising him the kiss of life when he is already politically dead. &lt;br /&gt;Najib hoped that by doing so, he shows his mettle and ability to solve a problem in a &lt;br /&gt;society where the traditional leader has been Abdullah himself. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But Mahathir knows that Najib is a lame horse whose legs have been crippled by the piles &lt;br /&gt;of incriminating evidence Khairy has gathered from the Singapore secret service which will &lt;br /&gt;eventually be used to slay Najib and end his career in a shower of scandals. So Mahathir, &lt;br /&gt;while willing to accept that the fall of Abdullah may lead to a temporary succession of &lt;br /&gt;Najib, no longer relies on Najib to spearhead the movement to unseat Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s secret weapon lies in three particular areas. The first, strangely enough, is in &lt;br /&gt;UMNO Youth, though not through Mukhriz. Many feel that Mahathir will launch his &lt;br /&gt;attack on Khairy, his most hated target, through either one of his politically active sons, &lt;br /&gt;Mukhriz or Mokhzani. While these two may stand for key positions in the next UMNO &lt;br /&gt;elections, Mahathir has actually groomed someone else with the calibre to match Khairy &lt;br /&gt;and displace him in a swift blitzkrieg of surprise. Mahathir’s choice has fallen on a young &lt;br /&gt;Oxbridge graduate, the son of a former cabinet minister who is meticulously building up &lt;br /&gt;his war kitty and is rapidly accumulating millions to finance his expenses at the UMNO &lt;br /&gt;elections. Coming from a long established political family, Mahathir’s stalking-horse is &lt;br /&gt;young, able and rich. The element of surprise is the most vital component for this weapon &lt;br /&gt;as the figure chosen by Mahathir is yet to appear on the national scene. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Khairy thinks that Mahathir’s choice is a dud. Of course, it is natural he should think so, &lt;br /&gt;given that he himself was in the early years considered unable to gather the support he &lt;br /&gt;currently enjoys. Mahathir’s choice, however, has the advantage of being relatively &lt;br /&gt;unknown with hardly any ‘surplus baggage’ bogging him down. In the UMNO elections to &lt;br /&gt;come, should Khairy choose to stay in the ranks of UMNO Youth, he will find himself &lt;br /&gt;facing a new personality who has all of his good traits but none of the bad publicity which &lt;br /&gt;he has thus far accumulated resulting from his many business and political misbehaviours. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The way Mahathir’s choice builds his support is not only through UMNO Youth but also &lt;br /&gt;through those other organisations inching their way into Mahathir’s camp. Amongst these &lt;br /&gt;are many professional organisations whose members are frankly too sick of Abdullah’s &lt;br /&gt;inabilities or too jealous of Khairy’s pre-eminence. They feel that they are the equals, if not &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s betters, and are eager to offer themselves to Mahathir in the hope that when the &lt;br /&gt;change comes, they will exchange their low stations for Khairy’s lofty clouds. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; - 149 - &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir has been secretly meeting many of Khairy’s contemporaries, collecting data about &lt;br /&gt;Khairy’s personal life plus on his every move. In spite of the many opportunities to do so &lt;br /&gt;while he was Prime Minister, Mahathir had made the tactical error of not pursuing those &lt;br /&gt;leads when he had the chance then. Now he is actively picking them up and meeting with &lt;br /&gt;those young people who count Khairy as one of their current or former circles. They are &lt;br /&gt;quite happy to trade information for a pat on the back from the Grand Old Man of &lt;br /&gt;Malaysian politics. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Another of Mahathir’s weapon is the civil servants who are staffed at Abdullah’s office and &lt;br /&gt;other relevant ministries such as the Ministry of Finance. It is an open secret that many &lt;br /&gt;senior civil servants are disgusted with what they regard as Khairy’s direct interference in &lt;br /&gt;government policies and his constant pestering for projects through his stooges like Ahmad &lt;br /&gt;Zaki Zahid and others of that ilk. These civil servants continue to report to Mahathir almost &lt;br /&gt;all the scandals and misbehaviour associated with Khairy -- including one recent case &lt;br /&gt;where Khairy influenced the sale of Malaysian government assets to a consortium of &lt;br /&gt;Singaporeans scouting for a company operating from the sensitive nation of Israel. Such &lt;br /&gt;information could not have surfaced if not for the connivance of insiders, just like most of &lt;br /&gt;the information in these Khairy Chronicles is obtained from disgruntled officers of many &lt;br /&gt;government agencies. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;These scandals are indeed complex and difficult for the common public to understand. But &lt;br /&gt;if there is one knack which Mahathir has not lost, it is his ability to convey to the common &lt;br /&gt;people in the simplest of terms what is often a murky and intellectually challenging issue. &lt;br /&gt;Therein rests the biggest problem for Abdullah. Except when he is parroting Khairy’s &lt;br /&gt;words, Abdullah is not a great communicator like Mahathir. Faced with Abdullah, UMNO &lt;br /&gt;members quickly fall into la-la land whereas Mahathir can enthral an audience from start &lt;br /&gt;to finish. If Mahathir openly challenges Abdullah, there is no doubt that the latter would &lt;br /&gt;seem the weaker blunderer, stuttering from word to word, unable to form a coherent &lt;br /&gt;sentence or convince the audience. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the meantime, anyone who has studied Mahathir in the last 25 years will know that he is &lt;br /&gt;the master of double-speak. Mahathir’s recent interviews should not be read at face value &lt;br /&gt;but instead examined for its hidden meaning. Mahathir is on a crusade, believing that only &lt;br /&gt;he can save the country from certain ruin. In such a crusade, all and every alliance should &lt;br /&gt;be considered. And even those whom Mahathir feel are spawns of the devil will eventually &lt;br /&gt;find themselves being considered in the great big fight against Abdullah. Readers may well &lt;br /&gt;think that we are suggesting some form of reconciliation between the battling figures &lt;br /&gt;which in the last eight years have coloured Malay politics. That may or may not be the case. &lt;br /&gt;What is true is that feelers are being sent by all parties and dogs may well marry cats before &lt;br /&gt;the next year is up..... &lt;br /&gt; - 150 - &lt;br /&gt;PART 33: The Battle Begins: The Mahathir attack - Caesar becomes Brutus &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The time on the clock showed four in the morning. Former Deputy Prime Minister Musa &lt;br /&gt;Hitam just couldn’t close his eyes and fall asleep. The heat of the day was still bugging him &lt;br /&gt;in spite of the full blast of the air conditioner hanging over his bed. At 72, Musa had long &lt;br /&gt;left the world of politics, shying away from the dangers that he courted when he dared &lt;br /&gt;challenge the might of his boss, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, nearly 20 years ago. Since failing &lt;br /&gt;to wrest power from Mahathir, Musa has slipped quietly into oblivion, reaping scraps from &lt;br /&gt;corporate tables and pretending to be a diplomat. There were many nights before this &lt;br /&gt;when Musa could not sleep, but none were like this particular one. Cold sweat dripped &lt;br /&gt;from his forehead. It was as if some nightmare was haunting him and preventing him from &lt;br /&gt;falling into slumber-land. Alarm bells kept ringing in his head, harking back to the days &lt;br /&gt;when not only his political career but the fate of the nation hung in balance. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Earlier that day, Musa had attended the great fete celebrating UMNO’s 50th Anniversary. &lt;br /&gt;As a former top leader of the party, he had been placed on the dais together with other &lt;br /&gt;veterans lined up like ancient Chinese ancestral portraits. They looked down from the &lt;br /&gt;heights of the stage onto the current actors singing the sacrifices of leaders past and &lt;br /&gt;drawing all the credit they could for their own future benefits. Musa had been placed like a &lt;br /&gt;precious avatar next to the grandest UMNO deity, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, the only living &lt;br /&gt;former UMNO President, a man with an almost god-like status amongst the ranks of the &lt;br /&gt;former leaders. But it was not the celebration that day that kept Musa from sleeping. It was &lt;br /&gt;what Mahathir had whispered to him throughout the day that was nagging him and &lt;br /&gt;prevented him from sleeping. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Actually, you could not really call it a whisper. It was obvious that Mahathir was unhappy, &lt;br /&gt;maybe even angry. And the brunt of his anger was the man who stood on the steps of the &lt;br /&gt;grand palace of Johor Bahru, his anointed successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;could scarcely hide his contempt for the man; cursing Abdullah’s recent actions which he &lt;br /&gt;felt undermined not only his legacy but the future of the nation itself. Mahathir hissed. &lt;br /&gt;Finally, apparently quite perturbed with the constant needling of the man standing beside &lt;br /&gt;him, Musa asked Mahathir what he was going to do about it. And it was Mahathir’s reply &lt;br /&gt;that shocked Musa so much that now he could not fall asleep. Mahathir told Musa his &lt;br /&gt;plans for deposing Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Musa knew what Mahathir had told him was a decision that the UMNO giant had no &lt;br /&gt;intention of reversing. Like Caesar crossing the Rubicon, Mahathir had cast all his doubts &lt;br /&gt;aside and was determined to pursue a final battle that would either mark him as the &lt;br /&gt;saviour of the nation or stamp his skin with the scarlet word ‘Traitor’. Mahathir had &lt;br /&gt;decided he would take up the role of chief conspirator in the great plot to kill the political &lt;br /&gt;career of Abdullah Badawi, once and for all. Only thus can he be assured that he will not be &lt;br /&gt;dying with his eyes wide open. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Musa reached for his phone and dialled a number, reaching a certain Member of &lt;br /&gt;Parliament from Johor who could be counted on to deliver a certain message to Abdullah. &lt;br /&gt;While he did not completely agree with what Abdullah was doing -- in fact, Musa was one &lt;br /&gt; - 151 - &lt;br /&gt;of the first to voice his concern to Abdullah that his son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin, was &lt;br /&gt;becoming too powerful and too rich an advisor -- Musa did not want Malaysian politics to &lt;br /&gt;again be embroiled in the cutthroat savageness that he witnessed in 1987 and again in 1998. &lt;br /&gt;As a Johore Malay of the old school, Musa’s mantra, rightly or wrongly, has always been to &lt;br /&gt;yield to the lesser of two evils -- the other alternative being a full-blown war where both &lt;br /&gt;parties suffer casualties and every top leader gets killed. It was better, Musa felt, to be &lt;br /&gt;called timid and cautious rather than die fighting a battle that everyone will come out of &lt;br /&gt;fatally wounded. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;So Musa decided to tip off the Member of Parliament and, in no uncertain terms, convey &lt;br /&gt;this most crucial message to Abdullah. The message was simple and came in three parts. &lt;br /&gt;First, Mahathir was about to strike and his aim was to remove Abdullah from power. &lt;br /&gt;Second, it was a decision that Mahathir had fully considered and any effort to mitigate the &lt;br /&gt;situation by trying to mediate would be fruitless. Third, he (Musa) had chosen his side, and &lt;br /&gt;his side is with Abdullah against the might of Mahathir from which he once shirked in &lt;br /&gt;terror. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah Badawi got the message later the next morning. He did not understand why &lt;br /&gt;Musa felt the attack was imminent. After all, he had gone out of his way to try and assuage &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s anger with the most subtle moves that would usually soothe the anger of the &lt;br /&gt;Grand Old Man. But Abdullah had long played a double game. While he tried portraying &lt;br /&gt;what Musa was later to call ‘ an elegant silence’, his underlings from the most sycophantic &lt;br /&gt;cabinet minister to the littlest of UMNO branch leader have been constantly told that many &lt;br /&gt;of Mahathir’s policies were no longer working and Abdullah was in repair mode, trying to &lt;br /&gt;make things better for everyone before it was too late. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The press under the control of Kalimullah Hassan Masheerul Hassan had been dressed up &lt;br /&gt;to appear more open in preparation for the day when they could, like a self-fulfilling &lt;br /&gt;prophecy, declare that they were freer and more critical now than they ever had been &lt;br /&gt;under Mahathir. Even so, when the attack finally came, the Khairy-controlled press &lt;br /&gt;scrambled to vilify Dr Mahathir. Some of the attempts were actually quite comical. For &lt;br /&gt;example, Datuk Kamarulzaman of TV3 went so far as to interview ketua kampungs and &lt;br /&gt;penghulus to voice their support for Abdullah. Even the often-erudite Rehman Rashid could &lt;br /&gt;do no more than write a so-called open letter to Dr Mahathir, nauseatingly praising &lt;br /&gt;Abdullah’s so-called ‘open press policy’ without declaring of course that this policy gave &lt;br /&gt;him back the job from which Abdullah Ahmad had dismissed him before. In other words, &lt;br /&gt;the small bit players came out with their little pen-knives to scratch Mahathir’s skin and &lt;br /&gt;laugh gleefully as it bled a little. The truth was that the efforts to undermine Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;began from day one of Abdullah’s administration. It was a deliberate and cohesive strategy &lt;br /&gt;devised by Khairy, presented many months before the handover to the team he had formed &lt;br /&gt;to play the role of Abdullah’s crutches. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;In the first Khairy Chronicles, we had outlined how Khairy was going to demolish &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s legacy piece by piece. It has taken two years, but the plans that were hatched &lt;br /&gt;those many months before have now come to a boil. Mahathir’s engineered downfall will &lt;br /&gt;be disguised as a reform movement spearheaded by Abdullah, or at least tacitly endorsed &lt;br /&gt; - 152 - &lt;br /&gt;by his administration. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The first fruits have already ripened. Mahathir’s blatant misuse of the judiciary, his &lt;br /&gt;favouring of certain business interests, the usage of government funds for grand projects, &lt;br /&gt;and other perceived abuses, have now been brought to the surface and laid bare for all and &lt;br /&gt;sundry to feast their eyes on. The next stage would be as Khairy himself remarked earlier &lt;br /&gt;to his close friends (and what these Chronicles had stated before): that certain figures from &lt;br /&gt;the Mahathir administration would now be hauled in front of show trials where their ‘sins’ &lt;br /&gt;would be exposed and ‘appropriate’ punishment meted out. The verdict would be a direct &lt;br /&gt;indictment of the middle leadership under Mahathir, but the actual target would be the &lt;br /&gt;Grand Architect himself. Mahathir’s name will be dragged through courts all over the land &lt;br /&gt;and he will be described as the evil genius who directed the corrupt and abusive actions of &lt;br /&gt;his underlings in his 22 years as Malaysia’s Prime Minister. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Eventually, Khairy’s target would be to put at least one or two former and key Mahathir &lt;br /&gt;underlings in jail. Prominent amongst these targets are the group of people who served as &lt;br /&gt;poster boys of Mahathir’s corporate agenda -- in other words, those who are closest to &lt;br /&gt;former Finance Minister Daim Zainuddin. Daim has always been Khairy’s most obvious &lt;br /&gt;target. Although many credit him as being the planner of Malaysia’s economic growth in &lt;br /&gt;the 1980s and 1990s, because Daim had always attributed the credit to Mahathir, it is easy &lt;br /&gt;to tar Daim as the bad boy without feeling too guilty about it. Obviously, Daim’s record is &lt;br /&gt;not clean if compared to other Finance Ministers, with the possible exception of Anwar &lt;br /&gt;Ibrahim, Daim was known to have a circle of trusted lieutenants whom he fed with money, &lt;br /&gt;positions and contracts. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;But surely Mahathir knows all this. Indeed he does. One of the factors that triggered &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir’s outburst was a recent discovery brought to his attention by one of his former &lt;br /&gt;political secretaries. It seems Khairy had had a meeting with several former judges who &lt;br /&gt;were planning an attack upon their more corrupt ‘brothers’ who had been promoted by &lt;br /&gt;Mahathir mainly for their subservience. Of course, some of Khairy’s new ‘friends’ were &lt;br /&gt;sincere in wanting to reform the judiciary. But let there be no doubt about it -- most of the &lt;br /&gt;others are as corrupt as their future victims and they only want to support Khairy in order &lt;br /&gt;to
