Chong Pooi Koon,
Bloomberg
On
day one of taking power, a People’s Alliance government would liberalise
newspaper licences, Anwar said in an interview in Kuala Lumpur today.Pakatan
Rakyat will win the country’s upcoming general election with a parliamentary
majority of more than 10 seats and control at least six of the nation’s 13
states, leader Anwar Ibrahim said.
Policy
priorities within the first 100 days would include education, corruption and
government procurement. No retribution would be taken against past leaders,
including Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who sacked him in 1998, he said.
“I
don’t want to sound over confident, but I believe looking into the trend now it
will be a comfortable majority,” the 65-year-old politician said. “Beyond 10 is
comfortable.”
Prime
Minister Najib Razak must dissolve parliament for polls by April 28, after
which an election must be held within 60 days. Anwar wants to oust a government
he once served as deputy prime minister and finance minister, and which has
ruled Malaysia for 55 years.
Mahathir,
who served as prime minister for 22 years before retiring in 2003, took on the
role of finance minister himself after firing Anwar during the Asian Financial
Crisis. Subsequent premiers Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and Najib also held the
portfolio. Anwar said he would give the job to someone else if he becomes prime
minister.
“Having
experienced eight years as finance minister, I know it’s very taxing,” said
Anwar. “You cannot have a prime minister as finance minister. You won’t have
time when you have forex problem, dealing with the Securities Commission.”
Pakatan
hasn’t decided who would be finance minister nor other cabinet posts, he said.
The
contest will be “very close,” Ibrahim Suffian, a political analyst at the
Merdeka Center for Opinion Research, said by phone. “This is the opposition’s
strongest moment in the history.”
Anwar
was jailed for corruption and sodomy after being sacked by Mahathir. His
conviction for sex with another man was later overturned.
Since
his release from prison in 2004, Anwar has taken charge of an ideologically
disparate and multi-ethnic opposition. He has pledged to roll back racial
preferences for the ethnic Malay majority and trim the budget deficit if he
wins power.
The
governing BN coalition won the 2008 election by its narrowest margin, prompting
Abdullah to take responsibility by handing over the reins mid-term to Najib.
Sabah incursion
The
prime minister said in December his ruling alliance wants to restore its
two-thirds majority in the poll. His approval rating fell to 61 percent in
early February from 63 percent at end of December, the Merdeka Center said on
Feb 26.
“For
Najib, it’s very, very precarious because if he loses he’d be out, and if he
wins with a narrow margin they’d force him out,” Anwar said. “He’d be removed
either way.”
Pakatan
will probably retain Penang, Selangor, Kelantan and Kedah states, Anwar said.
It will also regain Perak, win Negeri Sembilan for the first time and make
inroads in Johor, he said.
The
opposition leader was less certain about prospects in Sabah in light of a
recent insurgency.
Najib
yesterday declared parts of Sabah special security zones. Police and military
are fighting a Muslim clan that invaded Malaysia’s eastern state last month
from the Philippines to assert its sovereignty claim.
Voting
could be delayed in these areas, Bernama reported
yesterday, citing Election Commission chairperson Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof.
Polling
elsewhere isn’t likely to be postponed, Anwar said. The opposition currently
holds 75 of 222 parliamentary seats, while BN has 137 seats.
Winning
a 10-seat majority would give Anwar’s supporters 116 seats after the election.
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