The Guardian (Nigeria)

Malaysia’s Mohamad to become world’s oldest leader at 92

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MAHATHIR Mohamad is to become the world’s oldest elected leader at 92, after a shock victory in Malaysia’s bitterly fought election.

The former PM came out of retirement and defected to the opposition to take on his one-time protégé Najib Razak.

His historic win has ousted the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, which has been in power since independen­ce in 1957.

Jubilant Mahathir supporters filled the streets as the victory became clear.

Mr Najib has said he will “accept the verdict of the people”, but correspond­ents say a smooth transition to power is not a given after such a major political upheaval.

No single party within the coalition won a majority, so technicall­y it fell to Malaysia’s king to decide who formed a government. “Yes, yes, I am still alive,” Mr Mahathir, told a news conference in the early hours of yesterday. He said his coalition would not seek revenge but would “restore the rule of law”.

He also announced - to cheers among his supporters - that there would be a two-day public holiday, adding: “But there will be no holidays for the winners.”

The official results showed the opposition Pakatan Harapan - the Alliance of Hope - secured 113 of the 222 seats being contested, including some, which have only ever been held by the government. BN took 79 seats.

Rising living costs and long-running allegation­s of corruption weighed heavily on many voters and saw them peel away from Mr Najib and his once unshakeabl­e coalition.

“I feel that with this change we probably can see something better in the future,” Suva Selvan, a 48-year-old doctor, told AFP.

“Our hope for the future is a better government, fair, free and united.”

Mr Mahathir was prime minister, at the head of the BN coalition, for 22 years, from 1981 until he stepped down in 2003.

Under his leadership, Malaysia became one of the Asian tigers - the group of countries, which saw their economies, expand rapidly in the 1990s. But he was an authoritar­ian figure who used controvers­ial security laws to lock up his political opponents.

Most infamously his deputy prime minister, Anwar Ibrahim, was sacked and accused of corruption and sodomy - and later jailed on the latter charge - when he called for economic and political reforms.

Mr Mahathir was also a mentor to Mr Najib, who became prime minister in 2008.

But Mr Najib has been dogged by corruption allegation­s. He has been accused of pocketing some $700m from the 1Malaysian Developmen­t Berhad, a state investment fund he set up.

He has vehemently denied all allegation­s and been cleared by Malaysian authoritie­s but the fund is still being investigat­ed by several countries. Mr Najib has been accused of stifling Malaysian investigat­ions by removing key officials from their post.

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