Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Malaysia’s Anwar seeks to oust Muhyiddin after securing support from MPs

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MALAYSIAN opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim said yesterday he has secured a majority in parliament to form a new government that is “strong, stable and formidable” while seeking an audience with the king to formalize his appointmen­t as prime minister.

The Southeast Asian nation has been in turmoil since an alliance that came to power in 2018, which was headed by veteran politician Mahathir Mohamad as prime minister and included Anwar, collapsed in February amid bitter infighting. Muhyiddin Yassin became premier at the head of a coalition backed by a scandal-plagued Barisan Nasional (BN) party that had been ousted at the polls two years earlier, but he had only a wafer-thin majority in parliament.

Speaking at a press conference in Kuala Lumpur, veteran politician Anwar, who has long sought to become prime minister, said he now had the backing of enough members of parliament to form the government and oust

Muhyiddin.

“Conclusive­ly we have a strong, formidable majority,” the 73-year-old PM said. “The government under the leadership of Muhyiddin Yassin has fallen.” But he did not reveal how many parliament­arians were backing him or which parties they were from. A government must command the support of a majority of the 222 members in parliament. The king has the authority to appoint a prime minister in Malaysia if a candidate can prove he has enough support in parliament.

Muhyiddin said yesterday Anwar must prove he holds a parliament­ary majority before laying claim to the premiershi­p. “Until proven otherwise, the Perikatan Nasional government remains steadfast, and I am the rightful prime minister,” he said in a statement, referring to his ruling coalition. In a separate statement, the secretarie­s-general of parties under the ruling coalition said they remain firmly behind Muhyiddin and rejected Anwar’s assertion that he has majority parliament­ary support to form the government.

The move marks the latest twist in Malaysia’s roller-coaster politics and comes less than seven months after Muhyiddin became leader. Should Muhyiddin get an audience with the king first, he could advise him to dissolve parliament and trigger snap national polls.

Anwar’s move came ahead of weekend elections for the legislatur­e in the eastern state of Sabah, which will be a major test of the current government’s popularity.

Muhyiddin’s administra­tion has had the difficult task of leading Malaysia through the coronaviru­s pandemic, and the economy suffered its worst contractio­n in more than 20 years in the second quarter amid a strict lockdown. But restrictio­ns have been eased, and authoritie­s have won praise for their handling of the outbreak, which has been relatively small, leading Muhyiddin to receive a 69% approval rating in survey earlier this month.

Long-time opposition leader Anwar was a key figure in the alliance that won a shock victory in landmark elections in 2018, toppling a scandal-plagued coalition that had ruled Malaysia uninterrup­ted for over six decades. Voters kicked out the old regime in large part due to anger at former premier Najib Razak’s involvemen­t in a massive financial scandal that saw billions looted from state coffers. Mahathir, now 95, became prime minister for a second time and Anwar was released from jail, where he had been serving a sentence after being convicted of dubious sodomy charges. But the government collapsed amid tensions between rival factions over whether Mahathir would stick to a promise to hand power to onetime nemesis Anwar, and Muhyiddin seized power without an election.

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