NO because the challenger has always been there, just that the challenger has been to small for the Prime Minister's eye.
THEREFORE, at ground zero in Malaysia, what the layman sees in his daily life as corruption at the highest level in the country has gone un challenged.
THE curious case that has taken place in Revenue Group Bhd, should be a stark warning to the Prime Minister that an elite bunch within the system, has the balls to do as they please.
ARE they a minority? It is is very difficult to say as in some cases they could well be a minority but in Bursa Malaysia and the Securities Commission at the policy and decision making level, they are definitely a majority.
CONSIDER this despite Royal Malaysian Police having publicly identified Victor Chin Boon Long and his henchman Francis Leong Seng Wui as part of READ : Corporate Mafia, the attorney general's office has neither charged both men, or come out and say that the investigation is flawed.
OR how about, despite all the negative publicity that was being generated with regards to Victor Chin Boon Long and his men with regards in their efforts to gain control of the Revenue Group, the Securities Commission and Bursa Malaysia did not blink an eyel, when its then managing director blatantly was involved in an insider trading scam.
OKAY, granted that the Securities Commission and Bursa Malaysia may have their reasons for not charging Eddie Ng Chee Siong but how many more times are we going to give Bursa Malaysia and the Securities Commission the benefit of the doubt?
EACH time the SC and Bursa Malaysia are given the benefit of the doubt, they seem to take delight in making a mockery of Anwar Ibrahim's fight against corruption, a bit more bolder.
THE latest being, the case of READ : Who has pumped in RM10 million in cash into Revenue Group by converting 15 million warrants into mother shares by paying the company 75 sen per share, when the mother share was trading at about 30 sen