Iran Daily

Malaysia bars ousted PM from leaving country

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Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad barred his predecesso­r, Najib Razak, from going overseas on Saturday, saying there was enough evidence to investigat­e his links to a multi-billion-dollar scandal.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s issued a travel ban on Najib and his wife Rosmah Mansor just minutes after the ousted prime minister said they were leaving on a weeklong trip overseas to rest after his thumping electoral defeat, Reuters reported.

“It is true that I prevented Najib from leaving the country,” Mahathir said at a news conference, adding that doing so had averted extraditio­n problems later.

“There is sufficient evidence that an investigat­ion into certain things ... done by the former prime minister has to be done and, if necessary, the rule of law will apply,” he said.

During a day of fast-moving events, Mahathir also named his first few cabinet ministers, including Lim Guan Eng, a former banker and qualified chartered accountant, as finance minister. Lim is the chief minister of Penang state, but is largely unknown in internatio­nal financial circles.

It is also only the second time since Malaysia became independen­t six decades ago that the post has gone to a member of the ethnic Chinese minority.

Mahathir also named a defense minister and a home or interior minister, but said other appointmen­ts would be made later. Mahathir and Deputy Prime Minister Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, the wife of his jailed ally Anwar Ibrahim, make up the rest of the cabinet.

Zeti Akhthar Aziz, who was internatio­nally lauded during a 16-year stint as central bank governor, and billionair­e tycoon Robert Kuok were among those named to a special team that will advise the government on economic and financial matters for the next 100 days.

Mahathir has been prime minister of the Muslim Malay-majority nation earlier, for 22 years, governing in a tough, pugnacious style.

He said the attorney general, who had cleared Najib of wrongdoing in the graft scandal at state fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB), had been sacked.

Apandi Ali, the attorney general, declined to comment.

As Najib came under increased pressure, the world seemed to be opening up for Anwar, who, from jail and a hospital bed, combined with Mahathir to hand out the defeat to the administra­tion alliance.

Mahathir has said the king has indicated to him that a royal pardon for Anwar would be announced soon.

After the ban on his travel was announced, Najib said in a Twitter message that he would respect the decision and would remain in the country.

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AP

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