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Malaysian opposition leader threatened with spurious new charges
By John Roberts
1 July 2008
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In the midst of the countrys deepening political turmoil,
Malaysian police suddenly announced on Saturday that they were
investigating charges of sodomy against de facto opposition leader
Anwar Ibrahim. Saying that he feared an attempt on his life, Anwar,
on the advice of his Peoples Justice Party (Keadilan), went straight
from a party meeting in Kuala Lumpur to seek refuge in the Turkish
Embassy.
Both Anwar and senior Keadilan leaders have dismissed the charges
as politically motivated and pointed the finger at the Barisan
Nasional (BN) government. His wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail branded
the investigation as a political conspiracy to marginalise her
husband and a repeat of what happened 10 years ago.
In 1998, amid bitter divisions in the government over economic
policy, Anwar was sacked from his posts as finance minister and
deputy prime minister then detained and beaten when he began organising
anti-government protests. He was convicted on trumped-up charges
of corruption and sodomy, but was freed in 2004 after the latter
conviction was overturned on appeal. Sodomy is outlawed in Malaysia
and carries a sentence of up to 20 years jail.
Anwar emerged from the Turkish Embassy late on Monday only
after he and his lawyers received personal safety assurances from
government ministers. He has initiated defamation action against
his accuser23-year-old Saiful Bukhari Azian, who has worked
for Anwar as an assistant since March. Senior Keadilan officials
claimed to have evidence that Saiful had been planted by pro-government
supporters. At a news conference on Sunday, Anwars wife
produced a photo allegedly showing Saiful with top officials from
the ruling United Malay National Organisation (UMNO)the
main party of the BN coalition.
Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi has denied any involvement in
the case. But there is little doubt that members of the government
and ruling coalition are complicit, if not directly involved,
in orchestrating new accusations aimed at undermining Anwar. It
is a desperate attempt to cling to power under conditions where
the opposition is threatening to replace the BN government for
the first time in more than 50 years.
Anwar recently claimed that enough disgruntled BN parliamentarians
would defect to his Pakatan Rakyat (PKR), or Peoples Front, to
form a new government by September 16the anniversary of
the establishment of the Malaysian federation. The opposition
made major gains in national elections in March due to growing
anger over rising prices and hostility to the governments
anti-democratic methods.
Support for UMNO is continuing to hemorrhage due to Prime Minister
Abdullahs decision early in June to slash subsidies and
allow energy and fuel prices to rise sharply. Petrol prices rose
by 41 percent to 2.70 ringgit per litre or $US0.87 and diesel
by 63 percent to 2.58 ringgit or $0.80. Electricity prices went
up by 18 percent for millions of households and by 26 percent
for commercial and industrial customers. Inflation was already
at a 10-year-high of 3.8 percent in May, in large part due to
rising food costs, and will now rise further.
The government claimed that the price hikes were necessary
because increasing global oil prices meant it could no longer
afford to subsidise fuel. The oil subsidy this year would have
risen to 56 billion ringgit ($US17 billion). Overall, subsidy
schemes consume one third of the state budget.
The justification had little impact on public opinion. Abdullah
himself described the reaction as furious. On June
14, more than 1,000 people marched through Kuala Lumpur, chanting
Down with Barisan Nasional and demanding the prime
ministers resignation. Other demonstrations were held throughout
the country.
The Peoples Front and consumer groups such as the Peoples Anti-Oil
Manipulation Movement have called for a mass anti-government demonstration
in Kuala Lumpur on July 5. They are expecting a large turnout,
with figures of over 100,000 being cited by organisers. If such
numbers do take to the streets, it will be largest political rally
in Malaysia since the turmoil during the Asian financial crisis
in 1997-98.
The BN was already racked by internal divisions after serious
losses at the March 8 elections. The coalition won only 140 seats
in the 222-seat parliament, losing the crucial two-thirds majority
needed to amend the constitutiona power it has often used
to shore up its position. Opposition parties gained 82 seats,
compared with just 19 in the previous house. If 30 BN members
cross the floor, the government will fall.
Anwar is not currently in the parliament because at the March
election he was still banned from standing for public office as
a result of his earlier convictionshis five-year ban ended
in April. He is planning to reenter parliament via a by-election
before September. He already campaigns as the de facto opposition
leader, castigating the government in populist terms.
Public anger over cronyism and corruption is high. While fuel
and electricity costs have skyrocketed for the majority of the
population, the so-called Independent Power Producers (IPP)privately-owned
electricity generating corporationscontinue to receive both
subsidised gas and lucrative prices for power sold to the state-owned
distribution company.
Prime Minister Abdullah is desperately seeking to shore up
his position by promising relief measures for the poor to offset
the price hikes, and offering concessions and more development
funds to Sabah and Sarawak, the two states where Anwar claims
most BN politicians are waiting to defect to the opposition.
At the same time, Abdullah is facing calls within UMNO for
him to step down. Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad quit
UMNO in May to demonstrate his lack on confidence in Abdullah
and has publicly called for Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak
to be installed as the new leader. Abdullah has said he will contest
the party leadership in December and not hand over to any successor
for some time after that.
On June 23 the opposition parties turned a parliamentary vote
on the price increases into a vote of no-confidence in Abdullahs
governmenta move that was defeated. Earlier in the day,
the government avoided another no-confidence motion that was to
be moved by two parliamentarians from the East Malaysian-based
Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP)part of BN. The motion was
ruled out of order due to insufficient notice. In the event, the
Sabah MPs did not turn up. SAPP officials claimed that threats
had been made against them.
The media had anticipated that the SAPP would use the occasion
to formally break with BN and become the first of the defections
that Anwar claims to have organised. Nervousness in government
ranks is apparent. Housing and Local Government Minister Ong Ka
Chuan, who heads the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA), was
earlier forced to deny opposition claims that MCA parliamentarians
were preparing to join Anwar and the Peoples Front.
Conflict over economic policy
Anwars imprisonment in 1998 and defiance of the frame-up
attracted sympathy from substantial sections of the population
who oppose UMNOs authoritarian rule. His condemnation over
recent years of UMNOs discriminatory New Economic Policy
(NEP), which gives preference to ethnic Malays in business, jobs
and education, has won him broader support. The NEP only benefits
a relatively small layer, especially the Malay business elite
around UMNO.
What was at the centre of the 1998 dispute, however, was a
bitter conflict within the Malaysian ruling elite and UMNO over
economic policy. Anwar, who was finance minister, advocated the
free market restructuring being pushed by the World Bank and IMF
in the midst of the Asian financial crisis. Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad, who imposed capital and currency controls instead, expelled
Anwar from UMNO then had him arrested.
Anwars populist condemnations of a reduction in fuel
and energy subsidies, however, are cynical and politically dishonest.
His perspective is diametrically opposed to the aspirations of
working people for democratic rights, economic security and social
equality. His essential disagreement with Abdullah is that the
BN government has not moved quickly enough to meet the demands
of international capital, which he championed in 1998.
In 1998, the majority of the ruling elite sided with Mahathir.
The subsequent global and regional economic changes, particularly
the staggering growth of China as the worlds leading cheap
labour platform, have produced a marked shift. With the growing
signs of an economic slowdown and sharp inflationary pressures,
a substantial layer of the business elite now believe there is
no alternative but to accelerate free market restructuring.
Many in ruling circles also believe that Anwar and the opposition
are best placed to implement such an agenda and contain the inevitable
social backlash that will flow from cutbacks to government spending,
privatisations, job cuts and deepening social inequality. UMNO,
which is notorious for its corrupt practices and nepotism, was
never going to surrender its power and its privileges without
a bitter fight.
The latest accusations against Anwar highlight the desperation
in UMNO ranks and indicate that the regime is in deep crisis.
See Also:
Rising prices hit Malaysia
[17 June 2008]
Malaysia's ruling coalition
rattled after election debacle
[13 May 2008]
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