Thursday, 28 August 2008

Anwar is back

Video

Anwar, you have my utmost respect for "never say die" attitude.

1 comment:

Guanyu said...

Anwar sworn in to Malaysian Parliament

The Associated Press
Thursday, August 28, 2008

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim rejoined Malaysia’s Parliament on Thursday, resurrecting his mission to become prime minister a decade after he was charged with sodomy and his career written off.

Dressed in a dark-blue traditional Malay shirt, pants and cap, Anwar was sworn in as a legislator in a simple ceremony to take his seat amid loud thumping of desks by opposition members. He was also formally declared the leader of the combined opposition in Parliament.

“I am glad to be back after a decade. I really feel vindicated. I feel great,” said Anwar, who is once again facing a sodomy accusation. Anwar has dismissed it as a “sickening” government conspiracy to prevent his rise.

Anwar later staged a walkout with opposition lawmakers to protest a proposed government law that would make it mandatory for criminal suspects to provide DNA samples. Critics say the law is meant to bolster the sodomy charge facing Anwar, but the government denies it.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak and most Cabinet ministers from the ruling National Front coalition were not present during Anwar’s swearing-in.

He will face them and other former colleagues-turned political foes on Friday when Abdullah presents the annual budget — a job Anwar used to handle as finance minister and deputy prime minister in the early 1990s.

At the time, he was a rising star in the National Front, the heir apparent to then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. But they had a falling out over policy differences during the 1997 Asian financial crisis. On Sept. 2, 1998, Mahathir fired Anwar from the Cabinet.

He was soon charged with corruption and sodomizing his family driver. He was convicted on both charges and forced to resign his seat in Parliament. Anwar spent six years in jail, where he was beaten by police, while his supporters carried on street protests for weeks.

The sodomy conviction was overturned in 2004 but the corruption conviction prevented him from contesting the general elections in March. A special election was held Tuesday after his wife vacated her seat, which she had held for two terms during Anwar’s political exile.

Anwar regained the seat, which he had represented from 1982 until he was forced to resign, in a landslide victory. His triumph came on the heels of big gains by the opposition in the March general elections that loosened the governing National Front’s 51-year grip on power.

The Front returned to power with a simple majority of 140 seats in the 222-member house. Anwar’s People’s Alliance coalition increased its strength from 19 to 82 seats and needs 30 more to form a government.

Anwar’s victory is a “second political tsunami. The government is a Titanic that will sink,” said Lim Kit Siang of the Democratic Action Party, a component of the opposition alliance.

Anwar said the alliance remains on track to topple the government by Sept. 16 with defections from the National Front. If he succeeds, he will lead the first opposition-led government in Malaysia, which has been ruled continuously by the National Front coalition since independence in 1957.

National Unity Minister Shafie Apdal said lawmakers from two eastern states where the defections are considered most likely to occur will sign a pledge of loyalty to the National Front’s leadership and submit it to Abdullah on Friday.

Significant hurdles remain for Anwar, the biggest of them the new criminal charge that he sodomized a 23-year-old male aide. A court will hear his case on Sept. 10 to set a date for the trial. Under Malaysian law, even consensual sodomy is punishable by up to 20 years in jail.

A recent opinion poll indicated that most Malaysians think the charge is politically motivated.

“Anwar — whatever we think of him and many of us are deeply skeptical — is looking more and more like our future Prime Minister,” columnist Karim Raslan wrote in The Star daily on Thursday.

“There is a mounting sense of inevitability to his impending succession,” he wrote.