In Malaysia students fight for allowing to go to university WITHOUT headscarves, whereas in Turkey students fights for the right TO WEAR heandscarves in universities. It's silly to compare the two. Turkey has been secular for 80 years, while Malaysia is still trying to lay the foundations for a secular state order. In Turkey religion does not interfere in the legal system or the courts, whereas in Malaysia, there are still Islamic courts. Let's not mix things up.
A State of Denial
Anwar speaks out against his charges and Malaysia's teetering government.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
It's been a tumultuous year in Malaysia. In March, Anwar Ibrahim, a former deputy prime minister jailed 10 years ago on suspected corruption and sodomy charges, led the opposition to a surprisingly strong showing in parliamentary elections. Since then, he's been steadily working to fracture and bring down the ruling coalition by luring away minor parties. Late last month his plan seemed to go off the rails once more, when new sodomy charges were brought against him by a former volunteer in his office. Then last week embattled Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi—widely blamed for the government's sagging fortunes—announced that he'd hand over power in mid-2010 to a deputy, Najib Razak, who's been linked to the murder of a Mongolian model. Najib has denied the allegations. Anwar spoke by telephone with NEWSWEEK's Jonathan Kent about the charges against him and Malaysia's chaotic politics. Excerpts:
KENT: What do you make of Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi
'
s plans to yield power in two years?
ANWAR: Umno [Abdullah's party] remains in a state of denial as to the credibility of its leadership. Having lost the popular vote in [West] Malaysia, the party had yet to come to terms with the loss of its hegemony. UMNO leaders are far more concerned with protecting their own parochial interests while the nation continues to suffer from their failed economic and social policies. This has given rank-and-file UMNO members ample reason to throw their support to the opposition.
The government has again made allegations of sexual misconduct against you. What is your response?
It's disgusting of them to repeat this, but there is a difference from last time. [Now] I don't cast aspersions on the entire government machinery or on the prime minister. I've no evidence to link him to fabricating evidence, but [Najib's] office appears to be involved. I also have evidence on the fabrication and suppression of evidence in my 1999 trial involving the current inspector general of police and the attorney general.
So you believe the charge against you was prompted by the fact that you are about to make public new evidence against these officials?
Yes. The sodomy allegation may have been prompted because the police chief and the attorney general are privy to my initial complaints against them [from 1999]. The former volunteer in my office who made these latest sodomy allegations has been part of Najib's apparatus, and we have evidence to that effect.
Malaysian politics seems at a turning point. How do you see events unfolding?
There is no way UMNO can stay together with such major divisions and falling confidence in Abdullah. The relationship between UMNO and its coalition parties is at the lowest ebb, and this has created a power vacuum. Malaysians are coming to see us as a formidable force, an alternative.
Do you think you can win power through the ballot box?
In the past elections, vote rigging was massive. And of course the ruling coalition utilized to the fullest their media monopoly. But we now control five of Malaysia's 13 states, our reach via the Internet is growing massively and we are winning over thousands of the people in East Malaysia whose votes essentially keep the government in power. Yes, we have problems with vote rigging and with the government's control of the media, but there's a limit to what a weak government can do. No dictator or authoritarian leader, like Mugabe and the rest, will surrender easily. But I trust in the wisdom of Malaysians.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »







