The ringgit will
continue with its current free fall unless a certain "person” is not
around, said former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
While he did not name
the person, it is widely assumed the retired statesman was referring to Prime Minister
Datuk Seri Najib Razak.
Dr Mahathir said the
performance of the Malaysian currency was worse than during the Asian financial
crisis from 1997 to 1998.
Citing the Thai baht
as an example, he said at its worst, the exchange rate between the ringgit and
the Thai currency was RM1 to 10 baht.
But now it was RM1 to
only 7 or 8 baht, said Dr Mahathir.
"Why is this
happening? It is because people do not trust Malaysia's economy, they want to
run and are dumping the ringgit because the value may drop further tomorrow.
"This will become
worse in the future. I don't see how it can improve unless the person is not
around," he said at a talk, titled “Malaysia Hari Ini: Ke Mana Kita?
(Malaysia Today: Where are we heading?)”, at the Pasir Gudang stadium in Johor
this afternoon.
Dr Mahathir has been
one of Najib's most strident critics and has repeatedly called for the prime
minister's resignation over the scandals surrounding 1Malaysia Development
Berhad (1MDB) and the RM2.6 billion "donation" from an unknown Middle
Eastern donor into Najib's personal bank accounts.
Dr Mahathir said today
the ringgit was so weak now that some people do not even want to use the
currency, and those who have it would rather exchange it for other stronger
currencies.
He also said a lot of
Malaysians, especially those with children studying overseas, struggled to cope
with the weak ringgit.
Despite Putrajaya's
assurance that the country's fundamentals were strong, worries remained over
the economy as the ringgit, Asia's worst performing currency in the past one
year, has plunged beyond RM4 against the
US dollar while foreign exchange reserves slipped below US$100 billion last
month for the first time since 2010.
Many attributed the
ringgit's poor performance to the worsening global outlook, China's surprise
devaluation of the yuan, plunging commodity prices and the current political
scandal linked to Najib.
Najib is facing
intense scrutiny over the US$700 million (RM2.6 billion) "donation"
from an unknown Middle Eastern donor
into his personal accounts while at the same time, his brainchild, state
investment firm 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) is facing multiple probes
over its alleged financial irregularities.
The country is also
suffering from a perception of interference when Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail was
abruptly replaced as attorney-general while the Malaysian Anti-Corruption
Commission (MACC) offices were raided and its officers detained for questioning
by the police over alleged leak of information related to 1MDB.
On Tuesday, Najib
announced a new committee to ensure Malaysia's economic growth in the face of
what he described as "uncertain and challenging times".
"The committee's
objective is to ensure Malaysia's growth momentum will continue for some time
and be able to generate prosperity in the rather uncertain and challenging
times," he said.
Najib, however, said the
details about the committee wwould be announced "soon".
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