Gulf Today

Anwar says his priority is to address the cost of living

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Malaysia’s newly appointed Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said on Friday his primary focus would be on the cost of living as he takes office with a slowing economy and a country deeply split ater a close election.

Anwar, 75, was sworn in as premier on Thursday, capping a three-decade political journey from a protege of veteran leader Mahathir Mohamad to protest leader, a prisoner convicted of sodomy and opposition figurehead.

Anwar, who was appointed by Malaysia’s king on Thursday following an inconclusi­ve election, said his primary concern was the economy and he would have a smaller cabinet than those of previous administra­tions.

“My priority now is addressing the cost of living,” he told a news conference ater reporting for duty at the prime minister’s office.

Anwar has yet to announce any cabinet appointmen­ts for his coalition government. He had earlier indicated there would be two deputy prime ministers in his cabinet — one from former ruling alliance Barisan and another from smaller political blocs in Malaysia Borneo.

New Malaysian PM, who was appointed by king following an inconclusi­ve election, says his pr imar y concer n is the economy and he will have a smaller cabinet than those of previous administra­tions

His appointmen­t ended five days of unpreceden­ted post-election crisis.

His rival, former prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin, had refused to concede, challengin­g Anwar to prove his majority in parliament. But on Friday, Muhyiddin said he accepted Anwar’s appointmen­t and his bloc would play the role of the opposition.

The campaign for Saturday’s election pited Anwar’s progressiv­e, multi-ethnic coalition against Muhyiddin’s mostly conservati­ve ethnic-malay, Muslim alliance.

But neither leader won a majority, which raised the risk of a standoff exacerbati­ng instabilit­y in ethnically diverse Malaysia, which has had three prime ministers in as many years.

The wrangling also risked delaying policy decisions needed to foster economic recovery.

The constituti­onal monarch, King Al Sultan Abdullah, defused the crisis by appointing Anwar ater consultati­ons with various politician­s.

Anwar had over the course of his career been denied the premiershi­p despite geting within striking distance several times. He also spent nearly a decade in jail for sodomy and corruption ater what he says were politicall­y motivated conviction­s.

“Anwar’s tasks have just started, to unite a very polarised and divided nation, based on race and religion,” said former lawmaker and coalition ally Lim Kit Siang.

Markets surged on Thursday on the end of political deadlock, but investors will be monitoring how Anwar manages the atermath of the election.

Malaysian stocks on Friday morning were flat, ater 4% gains the previous day, while the ringgit extended gains, up nearly 1%.

Anwar’s supporters expressed hope that his government would avert a return to historic tensions between the ethnic Malay, Muslim majority and ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities.

Anwar’s coalition, known as Pakatan Harapan, won the most seats in Saturday’s vote with 82, while Muhyiddin’s Perikatan Nasional bloc won 73. They needed 112 — a simple majority — to form a government.

The long-ruling Barisan bloc won only 30 seats — the worst electoral performanc­e for a coalition that had dominated politics since independen­ce in 1957.

Anwar said on Thursday the Barisan and an alliance of parties from Malaysian Borneo had pledged to support his government.

On Friday, he said another Borneo bloc had also joined, giving him the backing of more than two-thirds of members of the 222-seat parliament.

A two-thirds majority will allow Anwar’s government to amend the constituti­on. No Malaysian government has held such a majority in the lower house since 2008.

Muhyiddin’s bloc includes the PAS, whose electoral gains raised concern within the ethnic Chinese and Indian communitie­s, most of whose members follow other faiths.

Authoritie­s have warned of a rise in ethnic tension since the vote on social media and short video plaform Tiktok said this week was on high alert for content that violated its guidelines. Another looming issue for Anwar to deal with is the budget for next year, which was proposed before the election was called but has yet to be passed.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Anwar Ibrahim (centre) leaves Putra Mosque after offering prayer in Putrajaya on Friday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Anwar Ibrahim (centre) leaves Putra Mosque after offering prayer in Putrajaya on Friday.

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