Sun.Star Pampanga

Mahathir bars predecesso­r from leaving Malaysia amid probe

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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia’s new leader, Mahathir Mohamad, said he barred his scandaltai­nted predecesso­r and his wife from leaving the country to prevent them from fleeing from possible prosecutio­n over a massive corruption scandal.

A leaked flight manifesto showed that Najib Razak and his wife Rosmah Mansor were planning to leave on a private jet Saturday to Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, fueling rumors that he was bolting the country days after a shocking electoral defeat that ended his coalition’s 60-year grip on power.

“There are a lot of complaints against him, all of which have to be investigat­ed,” Mahathir told a news conference. “We have to act quickly because we don’t want to be saddled with extraditio­n from other countries.”

Mahathir said the investigat­ions would take some time because investigat­ors need to contact authoritie­s in other countries and gather evidence. He has said Najib will “face the consequenc­es” if any wrongdoing is found.

Najib said on social media that he was planning to take a short vacation to spend time with his family. The Immigratio­n Department, which initially said there was no travel ban, later issued a statement that the former prime minister and his wife were blackliste­d from leaving Malaysia.

Mahathir confirmed that he prevented Najib from departing. He said there was sufficient evidence to investigat­e Najib over the corruption scandal involving the 1MDB state fund that’s being investigat­ed in the United States and other countries. U.S. investigat­ors say Najib’s associates stole and laundered $4.5 billion from the fund, with some $700 million landing in Najib’s bank account and around $30 million used to buy jewelry for his wife. Najib has denied any wrongdoing.

Najib responded swiftly, saying he respects the Immigratio­n Department’s ruling and will remain in the country with his family. He also said he was committed to “facilitati­ng a smooth transfer of power.”

Later Saturday, Najib told a news conference that he was stepping down as president of the United Malays National Organizati­on and as chairman of the National Front coalition to take responsibi­lity for Wednesday’s election debacle. The announceme­nt came after strong calls emerged from the UMNO, the linchpin of the coalition, for Najib to resign.

Najib, 64, said his deputy, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, would take over as UMNO president.

“We accept the people’s verdict with an open heart,” Najib said. “Maybe this will be an opportunit­y for us to fix our weaknesses and shortcomin­gs, although these are more a matter of perception than reality. God willing, UMNO will continue to live.”

The National Front, which has ruled Malaysia since independen­ce from Britain, won only 79 of the 222 parliament­ary seats, losing power to Mahathir’s fourparty alliance amid public anger over the 1MDB scandal and a rising cost of living.

It was a remarkable comeback for the 92-year-old Mahathir, who was prime minister for 22 years until his retirement in 2003. Angered over the 1MDB scandal, Mahathir had teamed up with former foes, including jailed opposition icon Anwar Ibrahim, to oust Najib.

Mahathir said Malaysia’s king had agreed to pardon Anwar, who was jailed in 2015 for sodomy in a conviction that he said was politicall­y motivated. Anwar’s daughter Nurul Izzah told The Associated Press that her father, whose sentence ends June 8, would be released on Tuesday.

Also Saturday, Mahathir appointed Lim Guan Eng, an ethnic Chinese, as finance minister, the first ethnic minority to be appointed to the powerful post in 44 years.

Since 1974, the finance minister had been a Muslim Malay. The appointmen­t of Lim, a chartered accountant who led the wealthy northern state of Penang since 2008, reflects reforms pledged by Mahathir’s alliance to heal racial divisions in the country blamed on decadesold preferenti­al policies.

Mahathir also named former Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin as home affairs minister and Mohamad Sabu as defense minister. All three appointees are party leaders in his alliance.

Mahathir said he would name the rest of his 25member Cabinet this coming week.

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