From prisoner to PM: Anwar’s long ride to top
More than t wo decades after his dramatic ouster from government and imprisonment, Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim finally had his day.
Anwar was named Malaysia’s 10th prime minister by the nation’s king on Thursday night, trumping a Malay nationalist leader to clinch the top job after divisive general elections led to a hung Parliament.
Becoming prime minister caps Anwar’s roller- coaster political journey, from a former deputy prime minister whose sacking and imprisonment in the 1990 sled to massive street protest sand are form movement that rose into a major political force.
It is a second victory for his refor mist bloc, which won 2018 polls but lost power after 22 months due to a power struggle that led to continuous political turmoil.
Last Saturday’s election, which was supposed to end the instability that had led to three prime ministers since 2018, instead produced new uncertainty after no party won a clear mandate. Anwar’s multiethnic Alliance of Hope led with 82 seats, short of the 112 needed for a majority.
Muhyiddin’s right- l eaning National Alliance won 73 seats, with its ally Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party emerging as the biggest single party with 49 seats.
Anwar emerged victorious after smaller blocs agreed to back him to form a unity government.
Still, he faces a tall task in bridging racial divides and reviving an economy battling inflation and a currency that has fallen to its weakest point.
“Anwar’s political struggle is of a comparable level as (South Africa’s) Nelson Mandela, as both went through many persecutions in the process of democratising their countries,” said Ei Sun Oh from Singapore’s Institute of International Affairs.