Wednesday, December 04, 2019

2019 Environmental Review: Southeast Asia




The year—and the decade—in environmental terms, is coming to its end, with some species and entire ecosystems in their death throes. For starters, Malaysia recently lost its last Sumatran rhino, the poaching of Sabah’s pygmy elephants is rapidly increasing, Australia’s koala bears are being incinerated in wildfires, dugongs are dying in Thailand, Laos has lost all of its tigersorangutans are being shot up and blinded by bullets, and the Mekong River is being strangled by hydroelectric dams in Laos and China. 
A smorgasbord of rare and spectacular species—and the habitats in which they live—are being erased. Nowhere on Earth can the effects of man’s dominance over the planet be seen with greater clarity than in Southeast Asia. 
There are so many disturbing news reports popping up on so many outlets that it can be overwhelming to try to keep tabs on everything that is happening when it comes to environmental issues. Nonetheless, I have attempted to create linked-soaked summaries on a country-by-country basis consisting largely of small press releases that could have easily slipped by in hopes that a more complete picture could emerge from the dark room of dismal news. We’ll open with one of the countries with some of the most disturbing recent reports, Malaysia. 
Malaysia
Perhaps one of the most symbolic reports concerning wildlife in the 21st Century comes from Malaysia in the death of Imu, the last Sumatran rhinoceros of the country. She died in captivity after having been taken from the jungle for safety from poachers. A long health struggle ensued, with news outlets around the world covering her recent demise. 
But it’s worth asking how we got here. Chinese demand for rhino horn stretches back millennia, with Southeast Asia becoming an easy source after China wiped out its own rhinos. In other words, Sumatran rhinoceros, which are now only found in a few pockets in Sumatra and perhaps in Kalimantan, were hunted out of their jungle redoubts to satisfy superstitious Chinese demand long before wildlife conservation NGOs ever existed. These smallest, hairiest and gentlest of rhinos had been mercilessly persecuted for a long time, and November 2019 was the end of the road for the species in Malaysia. 
Elsewhere in the country, the government voted against protecting sharks in the waters off its coast, baby sharks are being caught and sold en masse in Miri, and pygmy elephant poaching is escalating and in gruesome style with head, feet, and skin being hacked off an animal in Sabah. A Critically Endangered Malayan tiger dizzily wandered into a village, apparently suffering from canine distemper disorder, which is often spread by domestic hunting dogs entering forests with poachers. 
Poachers have their sights set on Sabah’s bantengs, an indigenous Orang Asli was arrested with elephant tusks in Kelantan, and yet authorities are fighting hard to protect Sabah’s Tabin Wildlife Reserve, and the government recently gazetted one million hectares of Sarawak’s ever-dwindling forests as a protected area; however, the ongoing construction of a Pan Borneo Highway across Malaysian Borneo will undo some of this. Finally, the majestic Helmeted Hornbill continues to be relentlessly poached out of existence in the country. 
Indonesia
While the Amazon fires grabbed global headlines, Indonesia’s forest fires have been raging as well, turning key elephant and tiger habitats into plumes of smoke in Sumatra. A journalist who wrote critically of palm oil was found dead in Medan in what was almost certainly murder. 
Elsewhere on the island, the insidious trade in songbirds is making the forests become increasingly silent, while down in South Sumatra province a farmer was attacked and killed by a Critically Endangered Sumatran tiger. The same tiger is said to have stormed into a tourist tent and attacked them in an earlier incident. Up in Aceh in November, a blind orangutan, still alive, was riddled with two dozen bullets, while earlier in the year an orangutan named Hope was found to have 74 bullets in her body
Five sea turtles were found dead within two weeks of the opening of a coal-fired power plant in Bengkulu, and Indonesia appears to be backing away from its tough stance against illegal trawlers and foreign poaching vessels. However, a new toad was identified in the Barisan Mountains of Sumatra, and it appears that Kerinci National Park—home to tigers, tapirs and allegedly, the orang pendek or tropical yeti, is getting a reprieve from a spate of road-building
A gorgeous new species of honeyeater has been named in Alor Island, while in other good news a dam project has been cancelled in Gunung Leuser National Park in Aceh. Nonetheless, the plan to relocate the Indonesian capital from Java to Borneo will almost certainly result in large-scale environmental destruction.     
Cambodia
Over 60 percent of Cambodians rely on fish for their daily protein, with much of it caught freely in the Mekong River and Tonle Sap Lake, but both of these water sources are in serious trouble, with Tonle Sap fisheries down 50 percent in 2019 and the Mekong at its lowest level in 100 years thanks to a drought and an upriver dam-building bonanza. 
But on a positive note, the Irrawaddy River dolphins on Cambodia’s stretch of the Mekong in Kratie are faring better these days, and wild bantengs—with the help of Wildlife Alliance and a nearby local community—are hanging tough in an isolated patch of forest in Kampong Speu province. However, Kep residents are complaining about the destruction of a nearby mountain that has turned into a stone quarry, triggering a slew of environmental problems
Chinese gold miners are poisoning a river in Kratie, and China’s Shenzen Institute has been tasked with creating a development “masterplan” for Sihanoukville, a province has seen an utterly transformative onslaught of Chinese investment. It is difficult to imagine that the strategic position of Sihanoukville on the Cambodian coast was not carefully considered by Beijing, and so rabidly has China shredded the charm of this beach town that the popular travel web site Travelfish as downgraded it to a half-star destination
Back in January, I saw a dead slow loris splayed out on a motorbike in Virachey National Park, and a friend of mine recently saw more dead lorises openly for sale in the Ban Lung Market in Ratanakiri. 
Prey Lang forest—Indochina’s largest lowland forest—continues to be hammered by illegal logging, and overall, the Kingdom’s forest cover has shrunk to 47 percent (it was 73 percent in 1975). 
Thailand
Way down south near Koh Libong island in Trang province an endangered and orphaned dugong became an internet sensation among the Thais after a video was released showing the four-month old pup hugging a local vet in the water. The baby dugong later died, having a stomach filled with plastic. Plastic waste in Thai seas and beyond is increasingly turning the oceans into minefields for marine life, and a Thai marine expert put forth proposals for dealing with the plight of the dugongs, which number around 250 in Thai waters. The government hopes to increase that number by 50 in the coming years. Thai fishermen admitted to killing 30 dolphins in Malaysia waters, but over 10 black-tipped reef sharks were recently recorded in Maya Bay of Koh Phi Phi in a sign that efforts to restore the ecosystem in this scenic national park are bearing fruit. 
In other positive news, rare helmet urchins were found in the Similan Islands for the first time in years, while not far away, another rare sea creature—the giant ray—was spotted gliding through the crystal blue waters. Not far from the ray a huge leatherback turtle was spotted laying a clutch of 104 eggs on a Phang Nga beach. On land, Sa Kaeo police busted an illicit wildlife trader attempting to drive a large haul of wild animals—what some are calling a “feast of wildlife”—including turtles, tortoises, and monitor lizards, to Cambodia. 
Vietnam
The rediscovery of the silver-backed chevrotain or “mouse deer” sent excitement through the conservation community, though some wonder whether or not the ancient and critically endangered saola still roams the Annamite Mountains or if it has silently been hunted to extinction; it was last camera-trapped in Vietnam in 2013, and is or was found in Laos as well. On the avian front, Asian openbill storks, black-headed ibises, and other rare birds have been flocking to Back Lieu Bird Garden, while fishermen released a rare turtle back into the sea despite offers from locals to buy and cook it. Back on land, the Vietnam delta is sinking into the sea and action needs to be taken quickly to stop it.   
Laos
The poverty-stricken, landlocked nation lost all its tigers in recent years, while gold mining and dam-building continue to erode the country’s once-rich natural heritage. Tiger farms are still operating in the once-reclusive country, and the Chinese are well on their way to bulldozing a path all the way to Thailand for their high-speed trains, which the majority of Lao people will never use. 
At the very top of Southeast Asia, what remains of the forests of China’s Yunnan province are being hammered for the paper and pulp industry, while over in Myanmar palm oil plantations are encroaching on protected areas in a story all too familiar to the region. Along the eastern border of Burma, the Karen people are working hard towards making the Salween Peace Park a permanent ecological haven for rare species like tigers, leopards, bears. A China-backed dam will flood a Philippine protected area in Luzon, and a snake that hadn’t been seen in Singapore 172 years was recently sighted in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve. 
The causes of it all
What is the driving force behind all this? Rising incomes and traditional (unscientific) beliefs in all Southeast Asian countries contribute massively to these issues, as does infrastructure development, which often sees new roads bulldozed into final wildlife frontiers. Having China as a neighbor does not help, as a recent haul of live wildlife shows, and online Chinese message boards facilitate the sales of dead tigers, leopards, helmeted hornbills, elephant skins, and a sad array of other wildlife products. 
There can be no doubt that 2020 will be just about the last chance to try and reverse the gloomy trends mentioned here, and to build on the few bright spots that remain. After all, just as I typed this up, it was reported that yet another rare leatherback sea turtle crawled out of the Andaman Sea at Phang Nga in Thailand and laid another large clutch of eggs. Thai authorities roped off her nesting site and it will be protected. And the koala bears that some news outlets said are “functionally extinct” throughout the entirety of Australia? Not just yet, though their numbers are in decline. Wildlife can bounce back if we let it, jungles can grow back if we let them, the oceans can start to be cleared of plastic if we stop polluting and start cleaning them up. It’s got to happen starting right away, in the new decade.  




Gregory McCann writes on environmental topics in Southeast Asia and is the author of the book Called Away by a Mountain Spirit: Journeys to the Green Corridor
AsiaSentinel.com

Malaysia’s Lagging Agriculture Sector




Malaysia, whose agriculture sector led the economy for decades into the 1970s, is falling behind Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and other regional players like China, Taiwan, and Korea in terms of innovation, technology, know-how and methodology and product and value chain development. 
The country’s long neglect of the sector and narrow focus on plantation crops at the cost of encouraging crop diversity has left the country with serious issues and challenges. Despite the fact that the sector contributes 7.3 percent to national GDP, it employs 1.5 million workers, fully 10 percent of the workforce. 
Agriculture’s dominance of the economy ended in 1981, when then-Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed’s massive push towards industrialization left the Ministry of Agriculture without sufficient budget to operate the office air-conditioning system fulltime during working hours. While the sector was rejuvenated somewhat by Mahathir’s successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, through massive fund increases, it has never really recovered. 
The plantation sector is operated by primarily government-linked companies (GLCs) and large publicly listed estate companies. Utilizing around 5 million hectares, palm oil production contributed RM40.2 billion to GDP in 2018. The high profitability of palm oil as a crop over the years has deterred the development of alternative crops. 
However, palm oil production in 2018 declined by about 2.5 percent over the year before. In March this year, the European Commission dealt the industry another blow, concluding that palm oil cultivation has caused deforestation and decided that palm oil as a feedstock in European biodiesel will be phased out by 2030. Malaysian plantations are working towards achieving Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil (MSPO) certification, which requires estates to meet a list of specific environmental standards and workers’ rights before January 1 in an attempt to alleviate EU concerns. 
In addition, there are concerns over health issues with consuming palm oil, which will take a lot of resources on the part of the palm oil lobby to counter. Malaysian palm oil trade to India is also in jeopardy due to Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s refusal to allow the extradition of the firebrand fugitive Islamist preacher Zakir Naik back to India, where he faces money laundering charges. 
With the expected decline in world demand for palm oil, Malaysia, Thailand, and Indonesia are trying to consume more domestically as biodiesel. However, Malaysia with its diesel subsidies is struggling due to the relatively high cost of palm oil, vs subsidized diesel. Malaysia cannot afford to be complacent over palm oil any longer. It’s a mature market where production is set to decline over the coming years, where alternatives are needed. 
Malaysia is still the world’s 5th largest producer of rubber behind Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, and China. Rubber production is almost totally in the hands of 600,000 smallholders. However, with prices drastically depressed due to severely weakened demand from China, reports claim that more than half of Malaysia’s rubber holdings have been abandoned. Even with the Malaysian Rubber Board providing incentive payments to cover lower prices, rubber production has dropped by almost 20 percent in the last year. The rubber industry is set to shrink until demand outstrips supply once again. 
Historically, Malaysia’s rice production has only produced 60-70 percent of the country’s consumption. Approximately 200,000 aging paddy farmers on plots ranging between 1 and 5 hectares cultivate paddy in the country. Paddy farming only produces marginal income, even with the subsidies provided by the government to farmers. Unlike paddy farmers of the past, farmers today usually don’t multi-crop paddy, vegetables, fruits, coconuts, and raise fish, poultry, and livestock. 
Paddy production lacks standardization and doesn’t have Good Agricultural Practice (GAP) or HACCP certification. Often unregistered pesticides are used, leaving chemical residuals. Thus, food safety and traceability are issues. Although Malaysian paddy yields are on a par with Thailand, they are behind Philippine, Indonesian, and Vietnamese yields. 
Farmers mostly don’t own mechanical equipment, so must hire an array of contractors through the production process. Due to Shariah law on inheritance, land holdings continue to be broken up between families, making paddy farming even more difficult. Large belts of idle land, estimated at 119, 273 hectares, can be seen across the country partly due to family land disputes. Farmers have no involvement through the supply chain, so opportunities to add value to rice are non-existent. Under the present paddy farming system, there is no way farmers will be able to improve their incomes. 
The only future for paddy farming to benefit farmers is to develop cooperatives that manage economically viable estates made up of a group of farmers holdings. These cooperatives should be for the benefit of the farmers, run by the farmers, and owned by the farmers. These cooperatives could plant, cultivate, harvest, brand and package value-added products like red and brown rice varieties that have higher market end opportunities. Contract farming initiatives creating paddy estates have shown to reduce costs by 50 percent and increase yields up to 30 percent. 
Other agricultural activities include cocoa production, which in the 1980s looked promising before most plantings were wiped out through disease. Although production is still dwindling, some entrepreneurs are producing boutique beans and developing downstream niche chocolate production. Vegetable and fruit production produce 40 percent and 66 percent of the nation’s needs respectively. Production is gradually increasing with an impetus of new younger farmers, who are trying to make businesses out of their farms. 
However, knowledge, experience, know-how, are still being built up. Soil and environmental conditions are poor in many areas, with nutrient lacking soils, polluted water sources, with chemical contaminants present. The disease has almost wiped out potentially promising niche industries like dragon fruit. Many producers are still nascent to certifications and supply chain management. 
Malaysia currently only produces around 20-25 percent of its beef, goat and mutton requirements. Despite many previous government initiatives to bolster meat production, there is a chronic shortage of grazing land on the peninsula, and in some cases, public abattoir facilities are not certified. Likewise, dairies supply only a fraction of local demand. In contrast, the privately developed and operated poultry industry has been developed as a successful state of the art, fully integrated industry, not only producing all of Malaysia’s poultry needs, but Singapore’s as well.
Smallholders have tended to be minimally educated and are now well into their 60s. Paddy fields, rubber plantations, and dusuns (fruit orchards) have been left idle with no one to take over. This is in contrast to farmers in other countries who take over from their fathers with technical and business degrees and vision. 
Local Malaysian farmers have been indoctrinated by the agricultural backgrounds of their localities and that their land holds limited crop opportunities. They have been scared by scammers who tell them to plant bananas, lemongrass, chili fertigation, agarwood, and teak, only to fail technically or have no buyer once the crop is ready to harvest. Young people don’t want to take over the family farm holding because they want to find better opportunities. 
This is one of the weaknesses of the Ministry of Agriculture and subordinate agencies. These organizations lack the ability to empower the youth of rural communities through outreach and extension. There is also no vision of how integrated communities should be created and developed into multiactivity local-sustainable micro-economies. Malaysia, unlike Thailand, doesn’t have model integrated farms that demonstrate and teach communities how to farm and create cottage industries. 
While Malaysian academics write academic papers with an eye to promotion, their Thai counterparts are in the community helping the people create products, processes, brands, and markets. They enrich community sustainability. This is a prerequisite to develop and expand coconut production and create multiple downstream industries using coconut materials to produce coconut oil, virgin coconut oil, coconut milk, activated carbon, copra, processed coconut products, and even animal feeds. 
The Ministry of Agriculture’s research priorities have been developed by bureaucrats rather than industry. Research priorities need to be focused on the problems and opportunities of today, for current stakeholders. Research has been left to small units at the Malaysia Agricultural Research and Development Institute (MARDI). This would include products like ginger, chili, onion, garlic, cabbage, sweet corn, eggplant, okra, long beans, avocado, asam jawa – tamarind – figs, grapes, mangoes, cashew nuts, and macadamia nuts, etc. 
The successful food processing firm Adabi Consumer Industries is unable to purchase all its needs locally and is forced to import raw materials. Unlike Thailand and Taiwan, little has been done to help communities develop downstream products like dried and canned fruits, processed foods, dairy foods, snacks, ice cream, sausages, pies, and burger patties, etc. Institutes like MARDI may show the minister and media some of these products in exhibitions, but rural communities rarely get to see them, let alone learn how to produce them.
Little is done to create branding paradigms other than the slogan “Malaysia Best.” Sabah and Cameron Tea companies have successfully used geographical branding, halal farming is largely ignored even though the global halal market is growing by double digits. Organic and ethical products hardly exist.  
The Pakatan Harapan government has decided that rather than put effort into meeting the country’s current agricultural challenges the rural community depends on, it will invest time and resources into smart farming. This is an opportunity for consulting and technology companies to make a lot of money, and bureaucrats travel overseas on junkets to smart farming exhibitions at taxpayer expense. 
But smart farming will not revitalize existing farming in the country. It will assist new entrepreneurs with access to expertise and capital to pick up grants and incentives. Smart farming is set to be the next white elephant, just as the biotech initiative was. 
Malaysian agriculture is at a crossroads. The whole sector needs rethinking. People with experience and knowledge of the issues are in the country. Before committing to smart farming, which does have a place in some niches, the potential future directions of the sector need to be discussed openly, so a new thought out direction can be set in Malaysian agriculture. The government needs to work on transforming what already is, help rural communities that are in need, rather than look after its own with one more white elephant.

UMNO’s Corporate Cornucopia


Image result for UMNO’s Corporate Cornucopia

In the 1980s and 1990s, Halim Saad and Tajudin Ramli were two of Malaysia’s brightest stars, picked by former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad to lead the country’s ethnic Malays onto the national stage as exemplars of a new Bumiputera business culture that would catch up with the ethnic Chinese who had dominated commerce as long as Malaysia had been in existence.

When Mahathir took office, insiders say, his plan was to create a cadre of 100 super-rich bumis who in turn would help rural Malays into prosperity under a konsep payung, or umbrella concept routed through the United Malays National Organization, much the way he envisioned driving the country into industrialization through massive projects.

But greed intervened. Once the privileged got rich, there was little incentive to share it with the kampungs, the Malay rural villages. Many of the companies eventually collapsed and are being supported by government institutions such as Kazanah Nasional, the country’s sovereign investment fund, or the Employee Provident Fund.

Rise of the Umnoputeras

Although the Umno connection was widely assumed during Mahathir’s 22 year reign as prime minister, today a flock of explosive court documents filed in different Kuala Lumpur courts appear to be breaking open conclusively the open secret that Tajudin and Halim and others were essentially front men for Umno, the country’s biggest ethnic political party and part of a class of rentier businessmen who became known as Umnoputeras, a play on the word Bumiputera, or native Malaysians, predominantly ethnic Malays.

Nor were they alone. Others included Syed Mokhtar Al Bukhary, one of Malaysia’s richest men, as well as Yahaya Ahmad, who headed Mahathir’s national car project and who tragically was killed with his wife in a helicopter crash, and Samsuddin Abu Hassan, introduced by Mahathir to the government of Nelson Mandela but who had to flee South Africa after being accused of misappropriating millions and evading South African debts totaling about R50 million (US$7.233 million at current exchange rates). Samsuddin left behind his glamorous wife, Melleney Venessa Samsudin, along with a failed Durban bank, and returned to Malaysia.

Samsudin ultimately ended up on the board of directors of Mitrajaya Holdings Bhd., another Umno-linked company that has played a significant role in major national projects including the Kuala Lumpur International Airport, KL’s Light Rail Transit System, the CyberJaya Flagship Zone and numerous other projects.

23 companies vehicles for Umno

At least 23 of Malaysia’s biggest companies (see list below) appear to have been vehicles for Umno to siphon off vast amounts of money in government contracts as Mahathir’s plans went awry. The companies and the people who run them are so hard-wired into Umno, the government and its investment arms that de-linking them would probably destroy the party. That in effect makes a mockery of Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s widely publicized speech in July in which he promised to root corruption out of his party.



Much of the ownership appears to have been channeled through a mysterious company, Realmild, that emerged in 1993 to stage an RM800 million management buyout of a major chunk of Malaysia’s media including the New Straits Times Press (M) Bhd and TV3. Realmild already owned a controlling interest in Malaysian Resources Corporation Bhd, which got the contract to develop the massive Kuala Lumpur Sentral transport hub. It also acquired ownership of the Labuan and Sabah Shipyards, which supply the Malaysian Navy, as well as Redicare and Medivest, which were awarded lucrative contracts to supply medical supplies to government hospitals.

Thieves fall out, details emerge in court

In September, Syed Anwar Jamalullail, the brother to the Sultan of Perlis, and others testified in a tangled court battle in a Kuala Lumpur High Court that Daim Zainuddin, the prime minister’s close associate, often told Malay businessmen to act as nominees in the management of Malaysia’s top companies. The long-running suit was launched five years ago in2005 by Khalid Ahmad, a former Realmild director, who alleged he had been cheated out of a RM10 million payment for five percent of Realmild’s shares by Abdul Rahman, thought to be the beneficial owner.

According to the testimony, Abdul Rahman paid out the RM10 million but later reneged after he learned from Mahathir that the shares actually belonged to Umno. The trustees for Realmild in fact were Mahathir himself as well as former Berita Harian Group Editor Ahmad Nazri Abdullah, New Straits Times Group Editor Abdul Kadir Jasin and Mohd Noor Mutalib. Another witness, Ahmad Nazri, said in a deposition that he held the majority share of 80 percent in Realmild, although 70 percent of the shares were actually in trust for Mahathir.

The companies others ran included Faber Group Bhd, a member of the UEM Group, now involved in integrated facilities management and property solutions sectors; KUB Malaysia Bhd. A holding company dealing in information, communications & technology, property, engineering & construction and food related industries.

Companies mismanaged into state ownership

The companies have been involved a wide variety of activities including media, property development, construction, toll roads, hospital equipment, logistics and distribution, cellular telephony and other businesses. What they had in common was that most of them benefited from government contracts doled out by the Barisan Nasional, the ruling coalition that has controlled Malaysia since its inception as a country. The other thing they had in common was that at some point most of them were mismanaged into financial trouble of one kind or another and had to be bailed out or bought out by the government.

Realmild unloaded Malaysian Resources Corporation Bhd onto the Employee Provident Fund in late 2005 as part settlement for an outstanding Rm500 million loan. Putera Capital Bhd, is threatened with bankruptcy. It formerly owned the Putra World Trade Center, Umno’s headquarters, which rents out office space to businesses. UEM Builders Bhd, an offshoot of United Engineers Malaysia (UEM), along with UEM World Bhd, was dumped onto Kazanah Nasional, the investment holding arm of the government and the government’s strategic investment vehicle.

Kazanah Nasional now also owns PLUS, which held the tollway contract for the national north-south highway, as well as Pharmaniaga, a former UEM subsidiary dealing in hospital supply and other services. Court documents show that MAS, then the state-owned flag carrier, was taken over and privatized by Tajudin Ramli only to lose an estimated RM8 billion (US$2.77 billion at current exchange rate), with a major part of that being funneled into a Frankfurt, Germany cargo logistics company whose directors were closely connected to Tajudin.

According to the website Malaysia Today, Tajudin’s lawyers revealed that Tajudin had only been a front man for Umno and that Umno “not only has to protect him from prosecution but that they also had to ensure that the government bought back the shares at the same price that they were sold to him although the shares were only worth a portion of the real value.”

Overpriced government contracts provide a lifeline

Other depositions made available in recent weeks have listed a long series of documents detailing misdoings in UEM/Renong, once headed by Halim Saad, which has long been accused of looting the government treasury through vastly overpriced construction contracts. Halim told the press in September that he had left the UEM/Renong board in 2001, saying authorities wanted Kazanah to take it over “to prevent a systemic risk to the banking system in Malaysia and to enable a sustained restructuring of the group.”

UEM itself is still at it. The government-linked company was given the contract to build a second bridge from the mainland to the northern city of Penang at a price estimated in 2007 at Rm2.7 billion. It has since climbed to RM4.3 billion without figuring in a variety of ancillary costs including compensation for fishermen and project development costs of RM285 million, with the total now nearing RM5 billion.

Other documents show how completely the country’s press was in the thrall of UMNO. Media Prima Bhd, a listed company, apparently took over the ownership from Realmild of TV3, 8TV, ntv7 and TV9 as well as 90 percent of the equity in The New Straits Times Press (Malaysia) Bhd, which publishes three national newspapers; the New Straits Times, Berita Harian and Harian Metro. It also owns three radio networks, Fly FM, Hot FM and One FM. Other cross media interests of Media Prima include content creation; event and talent management.

It also owns outdoor advertising companies Big Tree Outdoor Sdn Bhd, UPD Sdn Bhd, Right Channel Sdn Bhd, Kurnia Outdoor Sdn Bhd and Jupiter Outdoor Network Sdn Bhd. It is online through a digital communications and broadcasting subsidiary, Alt Media, with the Lifestyle Portal gua.com.my and the newly launched TonTon, a cutting-edge video portal with HD-ready quality viewing experience that offers the individualism of customized content and interactivity of social networking.

The companies:

·       Faber Group Bhd
·       KUB Malaysia Bhd
·       Malaysian Resources Corp. Bhd
·       Media Prima Bhd
·       New Straits Times Press (M) Bhd
·       Putera Capital Bhd
·       UEM Builders Bhd
·       UEM World Bhd
·       PLUS
·       Pharmaniaga
·       Utusan Melayu (M) Bhd (partly owned by Syed Mokhtar Albukhary, another Mahathir crony and one of Malaysia’s 10 richest men according to the Forbes List
·       Renong Bhd
·       Realmild Sdn Bhd
·       Mahkota Technologies (Also a partnership with Syed Mokhtar Al Bukhary)
·       Malaysian Airlines
·       Celcom
·       Malaysian Helicopter Service
·       Temasek Padu Sdh Bhd
·       Sabah Shipyard
·       Labuan Shipyard
·       Redicare
·       Medivest