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Malaysia’s
Anwar predicts he will be PM by 2011
KUALA LUMPUR—Malaysia’s opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim confidently
predicted Wednesday that he would be prime minister within three years,
sketching out the first rough timetable for his dramatic political
comeback.
“I don’t think we have established a definite, clear timeframe when I
will take over (as prime minister) but it certainly wouldn’t reach three
years... much earlier than that,” the former deputy premier told
newsmen.
“(But) I am not in a rush,” he added. Anwar, heir-apparent to long-time
former premier Mahathir Mohamad before being sacked and jailed a decade
ago, has emerged as a serious threat to the ruling coalition after the
opposition’s strong showing in parliamentary polls.
He became free to run for office again last week, when a five-year ban
stemming from his corruption conviction expired, and says he has the
support of enough defectors to topple the government. The Barisan
Nasional coalition has ruled Malaysia for more than half a century since
the former colony gained independence from Britain but has been rocked
by its unprecedented electoral setback in March.
The Pakatan Rakyat opposition alliance claimed more than a third of
parliamentary seats and five states in the polls, putting Mahathir’s
successor, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, under heavy pressure.
Anwar, 60, pledged more effective governance and to wipe out corruption
and promote racial equality, addressing some of the public’s major
concerns.
“Our reform programme will certainly be more secure. We will push for a
market economy, judicial independence and equality for all Malaysians,”
he said. Anwar also repeated his claim that lawmakers from Sabah and
Sarawak states had indicated interest in defecting from the ruling
coalition to the opposition. He spoke to newsmen at Kuala Lumpur airport
on his way to Sabah.
“Lawmakers in the two states in Borneo island have approached me about
switching sides, but so far none has declared their intentions
publicly,” he said. Meanwhile, Anwar told reporters in eastern Sabah
state that coalition lawmakers could jump ship by August after being
sworn in at the end of April. “It’s all a matter of timing. Let
parliament resume and they are sworn in as MPs (on April 28).... It
could be the month after or by August,” he said. Anwar also said that if
the opposition took power, Sabah and Sarawak would be able to keep 20
percent of revenue from the oil they produce, up from the current 5
percent.
—Agencies
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