Oman Daily Observer

PM’s coalition triumphs in Malaysian state poll

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s ruling coalition romped to victory in elections in the country’s largest state on Saturday, providing some relief for Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is under fire over allegation­s of massive graft.

The vote in Sarawak, on Borneo island, has been closely watched for clues that Najib’s troubles have eroded ruling-coalition support as national elections loom by mid-2018.

But parties aligned to the ruling Barisan Nasional (National Front) gained 17 seats, giving them a total of 72 and a resounding majority in the 82-seat state assembly, according to Malaysian media.

The BN was likely aided by its wellestabl­ished political machine, a burst of government spending announceme­nts in the polls run-up and the creation of 11 new seats in its stronghold areas.

Disunity in Malaysia’s opposition may also have helped, with candidates competing head-to-head in some areas.

Najib led the BN — in power since independen­ce in 1957 — to its worstever showing in 2013 national elections amid voter concerns over the economy, corruption and alleged government repression.

It now faces allegation­s billions of dollars were plundered from a debtstrick­en state-owned investment fund Najib founded in 2009.

The accusation­s, which burst forth last year, include the revelation Najib received at least $681 million in deposits to his personal bank accounts in 2013.

Najib and the state company, 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad, steadfastl­y deny the money was syphoned from 1MDB, but the prime minister has sparked anger by shutting down investigat­ions and sidelining critics.

A recent independen­t survey found most Sarawakian­s support the BNaligned state government, however, and were little swayed by the Najib graft allegation­s.

Sarawak holds state-assembly elections out of sync with the rest of Malaysia.

Allegation­s of electoral abuses have marred the polls, including the redistrict­ing exercise that created 11 new seats, which critics have labelled gerrymande­ring by the ruling coalition. The state government has also blocked opposition politician­s and activists from entering to campaign, using entry controls Sarawak retained when it joined Malaysia in the 1960s.— AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Malaysians stand in a queue to cast their votes at a polling station in Kuching on Saturday.
— AFP Malaysians stand in a queue to cast their votes at a polling station in Kuching on Saturday.

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