Malaysians should be happy to hear that the prime minister said we have the money, and the millions spent on the spaceman programme should not affect other projects and programmes in the country.
However, it is ironic that on the same day and in the same newspaper, it was also reported that the MCA president saying there are still many Chinese primary schools that needed financial aid for classrooms, facilities, books and important activities. He said this at a cheque presentation ceremony where a private foundation has donated RM50,000 to each of the 12 selected schools.
Let's get this straight. More than RM100 million can be spent on sending a Malaysian space tourist to the International Space Station (ISS) while some schools have to rely on private organisations to fund their basic facilities? What in the world is this country coming to? To rub it in, there are now proposals to send a second Malaysian into space costing another RM100 million or more.
Some would suggest that we didn't pay a single cent for the first space trip as it is an offset agreement for the purchase of 18 fighter jets from Russia. Well, if that is the case we can concede that we didn't pay RM100 million directly for the trip to the ISS. But we are paying RM3.2 billion for 18 Sukhoi fighter jets plus one trip to the ISS! Malaysians are not so naive. No matter how you want to slice and dice it, we are still paying for the trip to the ISS.
Meanwhile, after welcoming home the Malaysian spaceman in Russia, the deputy prime minister and his spouse flew to France to attend the launching of the first Scorpene submarine which Malaysia has purchased. You see, we have also bought submarines - two new Scorpene submarines reportedly costing about RM4 billion.
Closer to home, the PSC-Naval Dockyard was contracted to build six patrol boats for the Malaysian Navy with the first to be delivered in 2004. However, only two problem-ridden boats have been delivered so far. The original cost of RM5.35 billion has now ballooned to RM6.75 billion .
If you add those figures together we are looking at an astronomical sum of RM14 billion spent on these purchases of military hardware. Mind you, we are talking about not RM100 million, not RM1,000 million but RM14,000 million!
Yes, the country certainly have a lot of money. But the government of the day has no right to waste any of it. It is after all taxpayers' money. The auditor-general must continue his good work to verify that every single ringgit is accounted for and there is no abuse of public funds in the government agencies involved.
This is especially so as the money can be put to much better use such as providing decent facilities for the education of all students. No schools should ever need to rely on donations from the private sector.
