Skip to main content

Mahatir Mohamed Rejects new PM | Malaysian King will look for Mahatirs | Effects on South East Asian Politics.

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s political crisis deepened on Saturday after 94-year-old Mahathir Mohamad rejected a decision by the king to pick his rival as the next prime minister, insisting he had enough backing to return to the role.

Ex-interior minister Muhyiddin Yassin was earlier named for the job by the monarch, who appoints the country´s premiers after deciding who has backing from MPs, signalling a defeat for Mahathir and the return of a scandal-plagued party to power. It capped a week of turmoil that began when Mahathir´s "Pact of Hope" alliance collapsed and he resigned as prime minister following a bid by his rivals to form a new government and push out leader-in-waiting Anwar Ibrahim. Their alliance stormed to a historic victory in 2018 that broke the six-decade stranglehold on power of a corruption-riddled coalition, but it was riven by infighting over who should succeed the world´s oldest leader.
The victory of Muhyiddin and his coalition, which is dominated by the country´s ethnic Malay Muslim majority, was a shock as Mahathir had appeared to be in the lead, and it sparked widespread public anger. Not only does the win remove a democratically elected government but it also signals the return to power of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the scandal-plagued party of disgraced ex-leader Najib Razak.
UMNO was the lynchpin of a long-ruling coalition toppled from power at historic elections two years ago amid allegations Najib and his cronies looted state fund 1MDB. Najib is now on trial for corruption.
The coalition also includes a hardline Muslim party pushing for tougher Islamic laws in Malaysia. Addressing supporters outside his Kuala Lumpur house, Muhyiddin said: "I urge all Malaysians to take the decision that has been made by the palace today well."
The palace earlier said the king believed Muhyiddin had enough support and he would be sworn in Sunday.
But after meeting his political allies, Mahathir said he had received the backing of 114 MPs to be prime minister -- above the required number of 112 -- and released a statement listing their names.
Mahathir said he would send a letter to the king explaining this, and added the number of MPs that Muhyiddin claimed to have supporting him was "not accurate".
Anger was growing at the surprise decision to name Muhyiddin premier and allow UMNO back into power. The hashtag NotMyPM was trending on Twitter, and a small group of protesters gathered in downtown Kuala Lumpur.
These are not the people we voted for," one protester, who only gave her surname Soon, said, as chants of "long live the people, rise up" rang out. "These are not the people who were given the democratic mandate two years ago."
The political crisis began when a group of ruling coalition lawmakers joined forces with opposition parties in a bid to form a new government without Anwar and stop him becoming premier.
After the government fell, Mahathir was appointed interim premier and he and Anwar initially launched separate bids for power, reviving their old rivalry.
But as Muhyiddin´s bid quickly gained support and it became clear that he could get into power with UMNO, Mahathir and Anwar did a volte-face and joined forces again on Saturday.
growing number of their allies threw their support behind Mahathir to become premier -- but it was too little, too late.
The "Pact of Hope", a ragtag band of opposition groups, was uneasy from the start. It saw its popularity fall rapidly as it faced criticism it was not doing enough to protect Muslims´ rights, and it lost a string of local elections.

Comments

Popular Posts

Who will win this economic war ||Will this pandemic like early 1900 pandemic will cause a new world war || Post Corona Effects on Global warfare .

US and China: edging towards a new type of cold war? Matt Pottinger, a senior White House official, delivered a searing message to China this week in a video later posted on YouTube. Speaking in pitch-perfect Mandarin, he praised Chinese historical figures who supported democratic ideals and helped in the 1940s to write the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which remains a bedrock for liberal values today.  “The cliché that Chinese people cannot be trusted with democracy was . . . the most unpatriotic idea of all,” said Mr Pottinger , the US deputy national security adviser. He lauded the Chinese who keep the flame of liberty alive today, including 20 Catholic priests who “refused to subordinate God to the party and the millions of Hong Kong citizens who peacefully demonstrated for the rule of law last year”. Beijing’s reaction was withering. “Mr Pottinger thinks that he really understands China but from this speech it seems that he does not really understand China . . . becau...

Delhi Riots| Modi Fascist government in Dehli | Is united India is dream??| Two nation Theory ,JINNAH and NEHRO 70 years back.....

Surrounded by smoldering houses and the blackened skeletons of burned-out cars, Mohammed Efaz picked his way through the streets of Khajuri Khas, a neighborhood in north-east Delhi. The 32 year-old Muslim said he would never return to India’s capital after what he saw happen here last week. “We will never come back here to live among Hindus,” Efaz told to a News  agency Saturday as he loaded a burlap sack into his small truck, preparing to travel back to his home village. “ The divide between Hindus and Muslims is unbridgeable now.” The violence began on Feb. 23 and lasted for several days, leaving at least 46 people dead in Delhi, the majority of them Muslims. It was the worst religious violence in India in years. Though some Hindus too were killed in the riots, it quickly emerged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and the Delhi police force his government oversees, had tacitly supported the mobs, who chanted Hindu nationa...