Qatar Tribune

Anwar sworn in as Malaysia’s PM

After 25-year struggle for reform, the 75-yearold veteran politician took his oath of office yesterday.

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ANWAR Ibrahim has been sworn in as Malaysia’s 10th prime minister, marking an incredible comeback for a man who was first lined up for the job in the boom years of the 1990s before he was suddenly sacked and jailed.

After 25-year struggle for reform, the 5-year-old veteran politician took the oath of office in front of King Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah at the palace in Kuala Lumpur shortly after 5pm 09:00 GMT on Thursday afternoon, hours after he had been named to the top job by the monarch.

King Sultan Abdullah had taken control of the process of forming a new government after Anwar’s Pakatan Harapan PH coalition won the most seats in

the weekend’s election, but not the 112 seat parliament­ary majority necessary to form a government.

PH and the rival conservati­ve Malay-Muslim Perikatan Nasional PN coalition under former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, which had the second-highest number of seats,

both began negotiatio­ns to form a government, wooing smaller coalitions in the Borneo states of Sabah and Sarawak as well as Barisan Nasional BN , the alliance that dominated Malaysia for some 60 years before its historic defeat in the last elections in 201 .

With neither able to make a breakthrou­gh, the king met Anwar and Muhyiddin, as well as newly elected members of parliament to canvas their views on who should lead the new government.

After a meeting of the royal households on Thursday, Anwar was announced as the leader because the king was convinced he had the support of the majority of Malaysia’s 222 members of parliament.

There are “no absolute winners and no absolute losers,” King Sultan Abdullah said in the statement, urging all politician­s to work together for the benefit of the country.

Following his inaugurati­on, Anwar said he would shoulder the duties entrusted to him with “utmost humility”.

“With my team, I will carry out this heavy responsibi­lity based on the people’s aspiration­s,” he said in a Twitter post.

“It is a long time coming for Anwar,” Asrul Hadi Abdullah Sani, the deputy managing director at consultanc­y BGA Malaysia, told Al Jazeera. “All his struggles and campaigns for reform are now vindicated.”

 ?? ?? Malaysia’s newly appointed prime minister Anwar Ibrahim (C) with his wife Wan Azizah waves as they arrive ahead of his address at a gathering in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Thursday.
Malaysia’s newly appointed prime minister Anwar Ibrahim (C) with his wife Wan Azizah waves as they arrive ahead of his address at a gathering in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Thursday.

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