from channelnewsasia.com: Malaysia's premier is under mounting scrutiny for cracking down on
opponents, troubles in a strategic development fund and questions over
his family assets, with even ruling-party conservatives questioning his
leadership.
Prime Minister Najib Razak, 61, took the helm of the
multi-ethnic country's long-ruling regime in 2009, promising to soothe
racial tensions and bolster democracy. But he is under fire from
progressives for abandoning such pledges and from ruling-party
hardliners over 1MDB - a development vehicle he launched that is
believed to be in a precarious state.
"People are beginning to
doubt whether he is the sort of leader who can address Malaysia's
problems," said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, head of Malaysian think-tank IDEAS.
Malaysia also drew international criticism after opposition leader Anwar
Ibrahim was jailed for five years last week on a sodomy conviction
widely considered politically motivated, the latest in a crackdown on
Najib's opponents.
1MDB, meanwhile, has missed repeated deadlines
to pay down billions of dollars in debts, according to Malaysian media
reports, with questions swirling around the whereabouts of huge sums.
1MDB said a US$560 million loan payment was finally made last week,
after a Malaysian billionaire was reportedly drafted in to stump up the cash.
Also last week, a New York Times investigative report
detailed multi-million-dollar purchases of luxury US real estate by a
close Najib family associate, financier Low Taek Jho, whom various
reports have linked to 1MDB. It also said documents showed millions of
dollars in jewellery purchases for Rosmah Mansor, Najib's wife, who is
widely ridiculed in Malaysia for her luxurious tastes.
In a
statement to AFP, Najib's office said the report raised "false
allegations". "The prime minister does not have, nor has he ever had, a
financial interest in, or any sort of agreement related to, the
properties mentioned in the article," it said.
It added that "no
purchases by the prime minister or his family involved funds from 1MDB".
In a separate statement, 1MDB denied ever missing any debt payments and
said it has no links with Low.
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But
Malaysia's opposition and other government critics, who allege decades
of widespread government graft, have called for Najib to detail the
sources of his wealth and for an independent audit of 1MDB. The
government is yet to respond to such calls.
Fears that the fund
could collapse and rattle Malaysia's financial system have exacerbated
economic unease in the energy-exporting country.
Sagging oil
prices have dragged the ringgit currency to six-year lows and are
expected to crimp economic growth this year while the government
struggles to contain a troubling deficit. Most experts expect the
economy to avoid serious harm.
Leading criticisms of 1MDB is
Mahathir Mohamad, who was premier from 1981 to 2003 and still casts a
long shadow at 89. That is potentially worrisome for Najib - Mahathir
engineered the ouster of his own chosen successor, installing Najib.
Mahathir
wrote on his widely read blog last week that "there is something
rotten" in Malaysia, and on Thursday suggested Najib should resign. "The
country is currently facing a lot of problems but the government is not
admitting it. They are in denial," he said.
Political observers
say such pressure is part of a battle for influence and spoils in the
ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), pitting Najib against
forces seeking to take the country even further to the right.
"The
danger for Najib on 1MDB is that people in his own party realise the
magnitude of money going around, and that the cake is not being shared
equally," said Rafizi Ramli, the opposition's leading graft
whistle-blower. Analysts say Najib appears secure for now. No other UMNO
figures are seen rivalling him, the son of a Malaysian founding father.
A HISTORY OF SCANDAL
A
British-educated Anglophile known for his impeccable, high-priced
suits, Najib has proven his ability to survive scandal, with the help of
UMNO's firm grip after 58 years in power. These include widely alleged
multi-million-dollar kickbacks to Malaysian officials in the 2002
purchase of French-made submarines when Najib was defence minister.
The
government has long resisted a full inquiry into the affair. But UMNO
is increasingly being rejected by voters, who are fed up with corruption
and authoritarianism.
Najib's government has responded by hurling
sedition and other charges at dozens of critics, mainly opposition
politicians. Meanwhile, Najib has tolerated divisive racial and
religious rhetoric by Islamists, which analysts view as a bid by UMNO, a
Muslim party, to sow sectarian fears and justify its crackdown.
Wan
Saiful said Najib intended to bring in reforms but misjudged resistance
in UMNO, and is now in full retreat from conservatives seeking a
tougher hand on dissent and the strengthening of policies favouring
majority ethnic Malays that many experts say shackle the economy. Wan
Saiful warned that if ethnic divisions in particular were not checked,
it could "generate a vicious cycle" of racial enmity, scaring off
foreign investment and sending Malaysian money abroad.
Najib's
office defended his record but added "he believes there is still more
work to do, and his efforts are on-going," while blaming unspecified
opponents for spinning "baseless smears and rumours for pure political
gain". Najib's government and national carrier Malaysia Airlines also
remain under fire from relatives of flight MH370 passengers over the
plane's still unexplained disappearance last year with 239 people
aboard, with many alleging a cover-up.
SOURCE: Channel News Asia

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