http://www.arabnews.com/node/1299751/world
Malaysia's veteran leader Mahathir wins shock election victory

Former Malaysian prime minister and opposition candidate Mahathir Mohamad
(C) celebrates with his coalition leaders during a press conference in
Kuala Lumpur on early May 10, 2018. (AFP)

Updated 09 May 2018

Reuters

May 09, 2018 23:35

1633

   -

   Mahathir’s at the age of 92 will become the oldest elected leader in the
   world
   -

   Mahathir has promised to seek a royal pardon for Anwar if they win the
   election and, once Anwar is free, to step aside and let him become prime
   minister

KUALA LUMPUR: An alliance of opposition parties spearheaded by Mahathir
Mohamad won Malaysia’s general election on Thursday, official results
showed, setting the veteran strongman on course for a return to the Prime
Minister’s Office he occupied for 22 years.
Mahathir’s stunning defeat of the ruling coalition that has ruled the
Southeast Asian country since independence from Britain six decades ago
means that, at the age of 92, he will become the oldest elected leader in
the world.
Official results at 4:08 a.m. (2008 GMT on Wednesday) showed that
Mahathir’s Pakatan Harapan (Alliance of Hope) had won 112 of parliament’s
222 seats, clinching the simple majority required to rule.
Najib’s ruling coalition, Barisan Nasional (BN), had 79.
Two more seats remained to be announced.
Mahathir told a news conference he expected to be sworn in as prime
minister later on Thursday.
“The time for change has come, and I hope the people in power realize
this,” said Asifa Hanifah, a young woman who joined thousands of opposition
supporters in central Kuala Lumpur who waved flags, cheered and honked car
horns.
Few had expected Mahathir to prevail against a coalition that has long
relied on the support of the country’s ethnic-Malay majority.
However, he joined hands with his one-time protege, the jailed politician
Anwar Ibrahim, and together their alliance exploited public disenchantment
over the cost of living and a multibillion-dollar scandal that has dogged
Najib since 2015.
Mahathir has promised to seek a royal pardon for Anwar if they win the
election and, once Anwar is free, to step aside and let him become prime
minister.
Several key roads in the heart of the capital, where violence between races
has played out in the past, were blocked off by police as evidence grew
that Najib’s coalition was on the back foot. In a statement, the police
appealed for calm and said that for now the situation was under control.
Najib’s United Malays National Organization (UMNO) party postponed an
evening news conference and said Najib, who has ruled the country for
nearly 10 years, would address the media at 9:45 a.m. (0145 GMT) on
Thursday.
Malaysia’s currency weakened in offshore trading on the election result,
with the ringgit one-month non-deliverable forward falling 2.4 percent to
4.07 against the dollar.

* "History in the making"*
The reverse for UMNO, the dominant partner in BN, takes Malaysia into
uncharted political terrain, said Keith Leong, head of research at the KRA
Group consultancy. “We are witnessing history being made in this country,”
he said.
Ethnic-Malay Muslims have long tended to support BN for affirmative-action
policies that give them government contracts, cheap housing and guaranteed
university admissions.
Mahathir’s alliance, which counts on urban votes and support from the
minority ethnic-Chinese and Indian communities, had hoped the veteran Malay
leader would win over voters usually loyal to BN. That strategy appeared to
have paid off.
“There has been a significant shift in the Malay vote,” said Rashaad Ali,
an analyst with the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore.
Mahathir is a polarizing figure and many voters are suspicious of him
because of his iron-fist rule as prime minister from 1981 to 2003.
But 64-year-old Najib’s popularity dropped sharply over the past three
years, partly due to a scandal over 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), a
state fund from which billions of dollars were allegedly siphoned off.
Mahathir was once Najib’s mentor, but he left UMNO over the 1MDB affair and
joined the opposition. Najib, who was chairman of 1MDB’s advisory board,
has denied any wrongdoing and he has been cleared of any offense by
Malaysia’s attorney general.
In an even more unlikely change of heart, Mahathir last year buried a feud
with Anwar, 70, and the two agreed to join forces to topple Najib.
Mahathir sacked Anwar as his deputy prime minister in 1998. Anwar then
started a movement known as ‘Reformasi’ — reform — to end UMNO’s race- and
patronage-based governance, but he was stopped in his tracks by charges of
sodomy and graft, which he denied, but for which he was jailed.
Anwar was imprisoned again in 2015, when Najib was prime minister, after
another sodomy charge, which he described as a politically motivated
attempt to end his career.

Kirim email ke