Anwar rises above allegations of immorality to challenge the foundations of 
UMNO rule in Malaysia
By Abdar Rahman Koya in Kuala Lumpur
http://www.muslimedia.com/my-anwarwin.htm
If the trend of powerful political parties expiring after fifty years’ rule is 
anything to go by, then Malaysia ’s ruling United Malays National Organisation 
(UMNO), in power since the country’s independence from Britain in 1957, had 
better be prepared.  Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim is thought to be close to 
carrying out his now-familiar threat to engineer a mass-defection of government 
MPs and show UMNO the door long before the next general elections, which are 
due in 2012.  His threat seems to be real, especially now that he has 
embarrassed the government and grabbed a resounding victory in a by-election on 
August 26, barely six months after the setbacks suffered by the UMNO-led 
National Front coalition in the last general elections.
 PIC: Anwar with wife Wan Azizah, casting their ballots on August 26.
The by-election on August 26, called the “mother of all elections” by both 
opposition and government supporters, followed a gruelling multi-million-dollar 
campaigning by UMNO in Permatang Pauh, a semi-urban multiracial town in the 
northern state of Penang .  Anwar obtained a majority bigger than that won last 
March by Dr Wan Azizah Ismail, his wife, who resigned the seat she had held 
while Anwar was in prison to pave the way for her husband’s official return to 
Malaysia ’s political stage.
The result shows that the Malays’ political loyalty – and indeed the respect 
they have for the ruling UMNO – was affected badly by Anwar’s dismissal and his 
launch of the reformasi movement, and indeed it now seems to be lost almost 
permanently.  But all that was more than ten years ago; such a loss in Malay 
support is worse now because of the almost complete desertion of the ruling 
coalition by the non-Malays, namely the Chinese and Indians, caused by a number 
of factors, the most important of which is the perceived discrimination against 
them in the distribution of the socio-economic pie.
No amount of assurance by government leaders that judicial and economic reforms 
will take place has removed the suspicion that change can only come through 
Anwar and the coalition of parties he leads.  That the larger show of support 
comes at a time of intense propaganda against Anwar’s character also confirms 
how little credibility (scarcely any) the ruling party has managed to retain 
since 1998/99, which is when Mahathir orchestrated the campaign to destroy his 
deputy’s political career.  This time around even an oath sworn upon the Qur’an 
by the accuser in the latest sodomy allegation against Anwar, which was 
broadcast repeatedly during television news bulletins almost every day 
throughout the campaign, had failed to persuade voters to forsake Anwar.  The 
result is that a clear line has been drawn, and for the first time in Malaysia 
’s history the government, despite all the machinery on its side, has found its 
match.
Although Anwar could not have pulled off such a feat without the full support 
of the Islamic Party (PAS) and the Chinese-dominated Democratic Action Party 
(DAP), the fact is that neither could the opposition have achieved the kind of 
political storm that is now rapidly changing Malaysia .
The by-election marks Anwar’s return to active politics.  But Anwar, a shrewd 
politician whose rise from student leader to the number-one man in the 
government has been meteoric, had returned to politics the day he was released 
in September 2004.  This by-election victory, more than filling up the void 
left by Dr Wan Azizah, not only brings Anwar back to parliament, but also 
answers the question of whether he can really get a decisive margin with which 
to implement his plan to take over power by means of defections in Parliament.  
Now, with that endorsement in hand, the one-time prime-minister-in-waiting has 
never been any closer to the seat he was supposed to occupy ten years ago.  The 
proximity is also true literally: as the parliamentary opposition leader, he 
now sits in parliament face-to-face with prime minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.
But being an opposition leader has never been his intention, something he 
indirectly made clear days after the opposition coalition denied the UMNO-led 
government its traditional two-thirds parliamentary majority, in the general 
elections on March 8.  He had then already started talking about toppling the 
ruling coalition.  At that point, the thought was met with cynicism by both 
friends and foes.  Even if he was bluffing then, however, his recent election 
victory looks set to prove the cynics wrong, especially when it has become 
clear that support for him has peaked in spite (or because) of the latest 
campaign to vilify him with yet more allegations of sodomy.
Anwar may be on the verge of once again climbing up the final rungs of the 
prime ministerial ladder, a simple task that suddenly became Herculean a decade 
ago.  That is all the more reason for him to exercise a little more caution, 
because having had to take a sudden plunge at the height of his career is 
something which has happened before, more than once in his almost forty years 
of political activism.  His political life, after all, has been like a 
roller-coaster ride.
When elections fail to play their role, the defection of MPs acts as a 
release-valve in parliamentary democracy.  For now, Anwar seems bent on going 
for the kill before another downhill road suddenly opens up in front of him.  
For that alone, September 2008 may or may not be Malaysia’s longest month in 
politics.  And even if September 16 – the date Anwar has chosen for UMNO’s 
grand exit – passes by like any other rainy September day in Malaysia , it can 
mean any of these three things: that Anwar was only bluffing; that he failed; 
or that UMNO is surviving on borrowed time.

With Regards

Abi


      

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