Gulf News

Tension as Malaysia’s Najeeb gets new powers

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Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najeeb Razzak will get sweeping security powers on Monday amid planned protests calling for his resignatio­n over US allegation­s millions of dollars from a state fund wound up in his personal bank account.

The new National Security Council (NSC) Act, which comes into force on August 1, allows Najeeb to designate any area as a “security area”, where he can deploy forces to search any individual, vehicle or premise without a warrant. It also allows investigat­ors to dispense with formal inquests into killings by the police or armed forces in those areas.

Najeeb’s ruling coalition promoted the law as a means to counter threats to security in predominan­tly Muslim Malaysia, which has long dealt with a fringe element of radical Islamists.

But critics say the law’s expansive powers threaten human rights and democracy in the middle-income emerging nation, and could now be used to silence critics of the One Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) fund scandal.

“The concern among the civil society and others is because the NSC can be used against anything that the government is unhappy with,” said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, chief executive of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs.

The law was passed on the last day of the legislatio­n session in December, surprising the opposition, as Najeeb came under mounting criticism over the multibilli­on dollar 1MDB scandal. The law was enacted without the customary royal assent from Malaysia’s king, who had asked for some changes.

 ?? AP ?? Najeeb Razzak
AP Najeeb Razzak

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