Philippine Daily Inquirer

Malaysia ruling coalition fights for life in vote

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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—Millions of Malaysians voted on Sunday in tight national elections that could see the long-ruling coalition ousted after nearly 56 years in power.

Incumbent Prime Minister Najib Razak has voiced confidence that the National Front coalition will remain Malaysia’s dominant political force despite facing its most unified opposition challenge since independen­ce from Britain in 1957.

Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s three-party alliance hopes widespread grievances over how the National Front has struggled with accusation­s of arrogance, abuse of public funds and racial discrimina­tion will translate into a surge of votes to propel the opposition into power.

Nearly 8 million people cast ballots in the first four hours of voting, comprising almost 60 percent of the 13.3 million registered voters, the Election Commission said. Some lined up for more than an hour at schools and other voting centers, showing off fingers marked with ink to prevent multiple voting after they had finished. Polls were scheduled to close after nine hours of voting, and results were expected late Sunday.

The National Front held 135 seats in the 222-member Parliament that was dissolved last month. It is anxious to secure a stronger five-year mandate and regain a longtime two-thirds legislativ­e majority that it lost in 2008.

“The government has made some mistakes but the prime minister has made changes and I believe they (the National Front) will do their best to take care of the people’s welfare,” said Mohamed Rafiq Idris, a car business owner who waited in a long line at a central Selangor state voting center with his wife and son.

Others disagreed, saying they hope enough Malaysians will back an untested opposition that pledges to form a cleaner, fairer government.

“I grew up recognizin­g that my parents voted for the present coalition at almost ev- ery general election. This time, they voted for the opposition. People do change,” said banker Bernie Lim, who was voting for the first time.

Najib says only the National Front can maintain stability in Malaysia, which has long been one of Southeast Asia’s most peaceful and relatively wealthier countries.

“Your support is paramount if we are to keep to our path of developmen­t, if we are to continue our journey toward complete transforma­tion,” Najib said in a statement to voters. “This election is about fulfilling promises, bringing hope and upholding trustworth­iness.”

Many political observers believe the race will be tight, with the National Front potentiall­y edging out Anwar’s alliance partly because of its entrenched support in predominan­tly rural districts.

The opposition is likely to retain control of at least two of Malaysia’s 13 state legislatur­es and should perform well in urban constituen­cies where middle-class voters have clamored for change.

If the opposition wins, it would mark a remarkable comeback for Anwar, a former deputy prime minister who was fired in 1998 and subsequent­ly jailed on corruption and sodomy charges that he says were fabricated by his political enemies. He was released from jail in 2004 and now leads the biggest threat to the National Front.

 ?? AFP ?? OPPOSITION’s Anwar Ibrahim, with wife Wan Azizah, casts his vote in Penang.
AFP OPPOSITION’s Anwar Ibrahim, with wife Wan Azizah, casts his vote in Penang.

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