Anwar now realises he was duped by Mahathir, Latest World News - The New Paper
World

Anwar now realises he was duped by Mahathir

This article is more than 12 months old

PETALING JAYA: Malaysia's Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) president Anwar Ibrahim said he has now realised he was duped by Dr Mahathir Mohamad when the latter promised to pass on the country's top job to him, Sin Chew Daily reported.

In an exclusive interview with the Malaysian newspaper, the Pakatan Harapan leader said right from the get-go, he had believed Dr Mahathir would fulfil his promise of handing over the baton to him after two years in office.

"We did not know earlier but we know now," Mr Anwar was quoted as saying in the interview.

However, Dr Mahathir kept changing the date before finally saying he would vacate the post after the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting this November.

On Feb 24, he resigned as prime minister without informing Pakatan party leaders, leading to the collapse of the Pakatan-led government and voiding the succession promise.

Mr Anwar said he knew many were against him being prime minister.

"Many billionaires, including a rich Malay whom I know. I also know those corrupted ones were against me too. They are playing the racial card by saying 'Anwar is not very Malay, and he does not protect the Malays'.

"I have been taking this stand firmly, mainly because our target is to enhance the economy.

"Everyone can be successful. We should support the ones with potential, including Chinese entrepreneurs.

"I am concerned with the welfare of the people. I hate those who steal from the poor."

Mr Anwar maintained that Dr Mahathir's resignation as prime minister was the main cause of the collapse of the 22-month-old Pakatan government.

"It is a fact there are traitors in PKR and Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia.

"But do you think those traitors mushroomed in one week? They must have planned this a long time ago. The question is, why do we allow such a scenario to occur?"

He also said he did not know whether Dr Mahathir, who is the former Bersatu chairman, was responsible for planning the exit of Bersatu from Pakatan.

"But there must be elements which have changed the (initial) multi-racial approach."

Mr Anwar denied that Dr Mahathir's resignation was due to pressure from PKR, claiming the request made by PKR grassroots for Dr Mahathir to vacate the position was not a form of pressure.

"Why was there pressure? Because he (Dr Mahathir) did not seem to be leaving. One year, two years, three years, election..." said Mr Anwar, who added that while he could still communicate with Dr Mahathir, he would never endorse him as prime minister again. - THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

WORLD