Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Malaysia’s defiant premier rejects calls that he quit

- By Eileen Ng

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak poured scorn on a huge two-day rally that brought together at least tens of thousands of yellowshir­ted protesters demanding his resignatio­n over a financial scandal.

Large crowds of protesters camped overnight on the streets of Kuala Lumpur wearing yellow shirts of the Bersih movement — a coalition for clean and fair elections — even after authoritie­s blocked the organizer’s website and banned yellow attire and the group’s logo.

Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has been spearheadi­ng calls for Mr. Najib’s resignatio­n, appeared at the rally with his wife for a second day, telling protesters that “people power” was needed to remove Mr. Najib and return the rule of law.

Mr. Najib has been fighting for political survival after leaked documents in July showed he received some $700 million in his private accounts from entities linked to indebted state fund 1MDB. He later said the money was a donation from the Middle East, fired his critical deputy and four other Cabinet members as well as the attorney general investigat­ing him.

Police estimated the crowd size at 35,000, but Bersih says it swelled to 300,000 on Sunday from 200,000 on Saturday.

Mr. Najib has slammed the protests for tarnishing Malaysia’s image, and dismissed their size.

In his National Day message late Sunday, Mr. Najib said the government rejected street protests, saying they can disrupt public order and not the right way to show unhappines­s in a democratic country.

They “reflected a shallow mind and poor national spirit,” he said.

Mr. Najib vowed not to bow to pressure. “Once the sails have been set, once the anchor has been raised, the captain and his crew would never change course,” he said.

The rally was peaceful Saturday and lasted until midnight Sunday to usher in Malaysia’s 58th National Day.

“This is a watershed moment. Malaysians are united in their anger at the mismanagem­ent of this country. We are saying loudly that there should be a change in the leadership,” said protester Azrul Khalib, who slept on the street with his friends.

He said he was aware that the rally will not bring change overnight, but he wants to be “part of efforts to build a new Malaysia.”

Scores of police barricaded roads leading to the Independen­ce Square, a national landmark that authoritie­s declared off-limits to protesters. Previous two Bersih rallies, in 2011 and 2012, were dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannons.

Analysts said the rally attracted a largely urban crowd with a smaller participat­ion of ethnic Malays, which could be the reason why the Najib government allowed it to go on.

“They feel safe because it has not really affected the rural Malay segment, their bedrock support,” said political analyst Ibrahim Suffian. However, he said, this doesn’t mean that rural Malays are happy with the government, as many are upset with the plunging currency and economic slowdown.

A nation of 30 million, Malaysia is predominan­tly Malay Muslim with significan­t Chinese and Indian minorities. Its ambitions to rise from a middle-income to a developed nation this decade have been stymied by slow-paced overhauls and Mr. Najib’s increasing authoritar­ianism.

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