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Anwar faces long trek PDF Print
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Wednesday, 26 November 2008 00:00

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - AFTER a botched bid to oust the government in September, Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim will likely have to bide his time until elections in 2012-13 before making another bid for power.

From watershed elections in March to his triumphant return to parliament after a decade's absence, Anwar dominated the headlines. Even his arrest and trial on fresh sodomy charges failed to thwart his campaign to topple the government by his self-imposed deadline of Sept 16.

Victory seemed within his grasp when the government apparently felt compelled to ship 40 MPs to Taiwan on a 'study trip' in mid-September to prevent them from defecting to Anwar's camp and thus giving him a majority in parliament.

The deadline passed. Financial turmoil swept the globe, and with an economic slowdown looming, voters in this Asian country of 27 million people suddenly had more immediate worries than Malaysia's chronic political intrigue.

Now the 61-year-old Anwar, whose People's Justice Party holds its annual convention this weekend, has to explain why he is not addressing the meeting as the new prime minister of Malaysia.

'His (Anwar's) strategy of haste that he adopted after March 8 (elections) stopped working after Abdullah was forced to retire,' said Ooi Kee Beng, an analyst at Singapore's Institute of South-east Asian Studies.

'Now, he has to do it the patient way.' Lacklustre Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi essentially derailed Anwar's express train to power by deciding to hand power to his more assured deputy, Najib Razak, earlier than planned.

Affirmative selection
Mr Abdullah's National Front coalition, which has ruled uninterrupted for 51 years, stopped being transfixed by Anwar and started making policies to deal with an economy that is expected to grow by only 1.5 per cent next year from 5.4 per cent this year.

Mr Najib, 55, will take office in March when he becomes president of the United Malays National Organisation, the dominant party in the 13-party National Front.

Mr Najib, who is deputy premier and finance minister, has taken the fight to Anwar by linking him to unpopular measures proposed by the International Monetary Fund when Anwar was finance minister during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, while projecting an aura of economic competence himself.

He has announced some measures to offset lower economic growth, but hasn't raided the treasury to do so, putting US$2 billion (S$3.02 billion) saved from petrol subsidies into pump-priming measures.

Mr Najib even stole some of Anwar's thunder by relaxing a requirement that ethnic Malays have to own 30 per cent of companies - one of the affirmative action programmes that aim to uplift Malays who constitute 60 per cent of the population.

Anwar's opposition coalition had campaigned for abolition of those programmes in the March elections.

Inflation is falling rapidly from a peak of 8.5 per cent in mid-year and the central bank on Monday unexpectedly cut interest rates for the first time in five years.

'There's a widespread acceptance that Anwar will no longer take over the country,' said an investment analyst at a foreign bank in Singapore. 'Being PM is out of the question right now.' 'Najib is reinforcing his power base. He's the new face of Malaysia,' he said.

Snap elections?
The opposition and some pro-government newspapers have started to push the idea of snap elections soon after Mr Najib takes power in March, saying he would need to win a popular mandate.

But Umno's coalition allies are still in disarray after the electoral debacle eight months ago.

'The risk (for snap polls) is very great. It will be suicidal because of the hangover from the March political tsunami,' said political author Yahaya Ismail.

Other analysts said Mr Najib would likely wait for mandatory re-drawing of electoral boundaries in 2012 before calling for polls. The government's current five-year mandate ends in 2013.

One glimmer of hope for Anwar could be polls in the timber- and petroleum-rich state of Sarawak on Borneo island. Sarawak has been a Barisan stronghold since it joined Malaysia in 1963 and may hold state elections as early as next year.

Provided Anwar can fend off what he says are politically motivated sodomy charges that are a reprise of the court action that got him jailed in the 1990s, and can keep his fractious three-party coalition together, victory in Sarawak could be another lever to apply pressure to government legislators.

Key to that will be how well the opposition runs the five states it controls. There has already been a backlash in the pro-government media over issues ranging from race relations to dual language street signs.

'The next electoral showdown is the Sarawak election, so it is a given goal for (the opposition coalition) to make an impression there,' analyst Ooi Kee Beng said. 'It will try to open the floodgates so that the 'March 8 tsunami' will flow into east Malaysia as well. - REUTERS

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written by ahmadneil, November 25, 2008 18:33:18
Abang Anwar,My batik shirt shirt is torn and worn out by then.
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written by ahmadneil, November 25, 2008 18:34:59
I will be 92 years old by then and can hardly vote for you becos I can't see and cannot put this'X' on your ballot paper.
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written by rizzku, November 25, 2008 18:35:14
DSAI is a witty strategist. Sept 16 is just a date to build up the hype and then let it cool a bit. Now the BN thinks everybody will ignore DSAI. DSAI will continue to keep quite for the next few months. The new PM become too confident that DSAI has lost the steam, and gullibly declare a snap election. DSAI then springs and hit with second wave of tsunami (second wave of tsunami is always more devastating than the first wave).
Opps.. me and my big mouth.
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written by temenggong, November 25, 2008 18:47:18
Umno will not allow Pakatan to survive 5 years. The 5 Pakatan state govts will be eroded and shredded by 2013. Anwar must make his move now.
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written by ahmadneil, November 25, 2008 18:53:55
Abang Anwar,You Must move forward your date becos I will be dead by then.Laju sekit!
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written by Gargamel, November 25, 2008 18:54:16
No way! Malaysians cannot stomach Najis for another 5 years. Umno is also likely to implode in the fight between Mahathir, Najis, Kuli and assorted evildoers. Then Anwar can take over. And we won't have to wait 5 years to watch that happen - it is already the beginning of the end for Umno.
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written by citizenmy, November 25, 2008 19:21:08
"I will be 92 years old by then and can hardly vote for you becos I can't see and cannot put this'X' on your ballot paper. "

Dont worry sir, just borrow your IC, we will make sure your ballot paper goes in with an "X" on it.
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written by ahmadneil, November 25, 2008 20:26:42
Anwar,The wait is long and painful so I hope the result will satisfying.Ya!
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written by mikewang, November 25, 2008 21:18:26
PK should focus on good governance for the time being in those states you rule and deliver based on your promises to the voters.
Never cheat or rob the people like UMNO.

With a tainted Najib at the helm, opportunities are bound to happen.
Seize them when they arise.
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written by remielfl, November 25, 2008 21:30:18
Yes, the opportunity is lost. PK did not convince enough people to stand for election and enough people to vote for them. Frogs can never be trusted so it is just as well that none hopped over.

By 2013 or whenever the next elections is held, there is no assets in Malaysia for Anwar or PK manage. They will need to build Malaysia up just like Lee Kuan Yew built up Singapore .................. from scratch.

Best of luck.
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written by MalaysianFirst, November 25, 2008 23:52:47
No matter how long the trek may be, I'll be there trekking. PR's failure to unseat BN has not broken my resolve one bit. Between 08 March 2008 and now, I see it as a God given respite for BN to realize its misdeeds and repent. It has not.

My resolve is in fact stronger now. PR, you can depend on my vote.
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written by lamepug, November 26, 2008 00:52:55
for meself...supporting PKR is like going in "Kedai Ekor" (lottery shop) to play...

"Ada beli, Ada peluang" (have buy, have HOPE)

And every weeks I still hoping the best to come... smilies/wink.gif
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written by Proarte, November 26, 2008 06:35:56
In the same way Badawi squandered the goodwill and support of the Rakyat in 2004, Anwar has done the same.

I feel sad for the people who were willing to give this confidence trickster the benefit of the doubt.

Once you lose moral authority, it is almost impossible to get it back.

I am hoping someone like Zaid Ibrahim will join DAP to forge a truly multiracial and secular party.
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written by borneoman, November 26, 2008 09:02:01
is it really true that the malays make up 60% of the total population of malaysia?where did reuters gets its statistic?
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written by batsman, November 26, 2008 09:58:11
Often short cuts and haste has bad results. A long struggle will toughen the mind and body - make the next generation lean and mean. So what if I am dead by then?
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written by MalaysianFirst, November 26, 2008 16:14:59
Quote: I feel sad for the people who were willing to give this confidence trickster the benefit of the doubt". Unquote

Why should you feel sad? Pakatan Rakyat did not fail any one because the people never really gave Pakatan Rakyat any mandate to govern the country on 08 March 2008. It only became a strong opposition. That's all. If there's any blame, then blame it on the people who refused to give PR the chance.

What PR tried to do after that was simply trying to unseat BN. It failed in its efforts because other non-UMNO MPs, for reasons best known to themselves, refused to leave BN to give PR the necessary numbers.

As far as governing the opposition states, I can see that PR doing a much better job than BN. Instead of remaining loyal to PR till the next GE, I see that many are actually talking about handing back the job to BN just because we didn't make it this time. (Sigh)

THIS, is really sad.
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