Bangkok Post

Party ditches coalition partner

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Malaysia’s move to suspend democracy has done little to douse the friendly fire between Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s Bersatu party and his powerful ally, the United Malays National Organisati­on (Umno).

Umno, the biggest party in the ruling coalition, will no longer cooperate with Bersatu in the next general election, the latter said in a statement yesterday. Bersatu was due to meet last night to discuss the matter.

The decision may pressure Mr Muhyiddin to further delay elections, after having pledged to seek parliament’s dissolutio­n and obtain a new mandate once the pandemic subsides. Mr Muhyiddin rose to power a year ago after his predecesso­r abruptly quit, having cobbled a razor-thin majority with his rival-turned-allies.

Malaysia in January declared a state of emergency to tackle a fresh surge of coronaviru­s infections that had stretched the health system to breaking point. That move allowed Mr Muhyiddin to suspend parliament until the emergency ends in August, amid calls for immediate snap polls from Umno.

While the nation has since managed to slow its infection rate and ease movement curbs, its parliament remains suspended as almost half of the 220 MPs are in the high-risk group — above 60 years of age, Law Minister Takiyuddin Hassan said.

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