Malaysian opposition leader and former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim on August 25 said he was confident of winning a critical by-election despite claims of a government dirty-tricks campaign to undermine him.
The opposition has accused the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition of buying votes and stoking racial tensions in an effort to sideline Anwar, who is bidding to return to parliament in a step towards seizing power. “It shows the level of desperation and abuse of power by the Barisan Nasional,” Anwar said of the bitter campaign for August 26 vote, and the government’s focus on sodomy charges levelled against him by a young male aide.
“I am confident, God willing, we will win, but we are fighting an entire government machinery which has spent millions of dollars in an attempt to deny me a victory,” he said.
The charismatic 61-year-old, who was sacked as deputy premier in 1998 and spent six years in jail on sodomy and corruption charges, said he was still on track to unseat the government by mid-September with the help of defectors.
“Yes, there are MPs in the ruling party that have expressed support for me,” he told a press conference.
The Merdeka Centre research firm said Anwar was likely to claim victory in the Permatang Pauh electorate in his home state of Penang, and that 59 per cent of voters there believed the sodomy accusations were politically motivated.
“I think Anwar will win,” said the centre’s pollster Ibrahim Suffian.
“The issue of the sodomy allegations, while it gained some traction at the beginning of the campaign, by the end had reached saturation point and won’t significantly affect his chances of winning,” he was reported as saying.
With both sides trading allegations of misdeeds and attacks on supporters, the mood was tense in Permatang Pauh, where some 4,500 police were on duty, and riot squad officers patrolled in trucks and on motorcycles.
In a last-ditch bid for votes before a midnight curb on campaigning, Anwar held a huge gathering Monday night that drew some 20,000 people by late evening with many more streaming in despite drizzling rain.
Roslan Ismail, 33, said he was undeterred by the personality attacks against the opposition leader.
“It is all Barisan Nasional propaganda. We will vote for Anwar, God willing he will become the prime minister,” he said after crossing a six-lane highway to reach the rally site with his wife and three young children.
Although most pundits expect Anwar to claim victory, the size of his winning margin will be seen as an indicator of his ability to overcome the accusations and be an effective leader of an unwieldy three-member opposition alliance.
After the March elections that handed the alliance control of five states and a third of parliamentary seats, he has to persuade 30 government lawmakers to switch sides in order to seize power.
He must also show he can continue to command support from across the racial spectrum in Malaysia, whose population is dominated by Muslim Malays but also includes large ethnic Chinese and Indian communities.
The opposition has accused the Barisan Nasional coalition – which has ruled for half a century – of painting Anwar as a “Chinese agent” who has sold out the interests of Malays in his pursuit of power.
But on the streets of Permatang Pauh most people of all races said they favoured Anwar, who is running against Arif Shah Omar Shah from the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) which leads the coalition.
“I voted for Wan Azizah, I will vote for Anwar Ibrahim because I want the Barisan Nasional to be toppled,” said Ahmad Zawawi, a food vendor. “We want a new leadership – 51 years is enough.”