Malaysia has yet to issue sports betting license-report

June 7 (Reuters) – Malaysia has yet to issue a sports betting license amid growing public anger in the mostly-Muslim nation, a news website reported on Monday.

Cyclical Consumer Goods | Industrials

Malaysiakini.com cited Prime Minister Najib Razak in a written reply to MPs as saying that the government had not yet finalised the terms and conditions of the permit that was supposed to awarded last month to Ascot Sports Sdn Bhd, a betting operator.

“The government is still sourcing feedback from various quarters for the proposal to license bookmaking in Malaysia, with the aim of reducing and subsequently eradicating illegal gambling,” Malaysiakini quoted Najib, who is also Finance Minister, as saying.

Ascot, acquired last month by Malaysian gaming group Berjaya Corp (BGRO.KL) from its major shareholder — tycoon Vincent Tan, was expected to kick start its sports betting operation in the second half of this year. [ID:nSGE64B0HI]

Tan also controls Berjaya Sports Toto (BSTB.KL), one of three number forecast operators in the Southeast Asian country dominated by Muslims who are forbidden to gamble under Islamic laws.

Shares of Berjaya ended down 0.7 percent on Monday compared to the broader market .KLSE that fell 0.6 percent.

News of government plans to legalise sports betting in time for the World Cup surfaced in May and had sparked some protests across Malaysia.

Analysts say the value of the Malaysian sports betting business, long controlled by illegal syndicates, could range from 612 million ringgit to as much as 8 billion ringgit ($191.1 million – $2.50 billion)

(Reporting by Niluksi Koswanage)

Malaysia’s Anwar wants sodomy accuser disqualified

The lawyer for Malaysia’s Anwar Ibrahim said on Tuesday he will seek to have Anwar’s accuser disqualified for perjury, a move aimed at casting doubts on a sodomy trial that could end the opposition leader’s career.

Anwar has been charged with consensual sodomy but his former aide, Saiful Bukhari Azlan, insisted under cross-examination by the defence on Tuesday that he was sodomised against his will.

The former deputy prime minister denies the charge, which he says is politically motivated to prevent him from wresting power following the government’s record losses in the last general election in 2008.

A conviction in the trial, set to end in late August, carries a maximum 20-year jail term, one which would end the career of the 63-year-old politician.

Sex between males is illegal in this conservative Southeast Asian country. Consensual and non-consensual sodomy are listed as separate offences.

The prosecution argued it was entitled to charge Anwar for either consensual or non-consensual sodomy but Anwar’s lawyer, Karpal Singh, later told reporters he would move to have Saiful disqualified for contradicting the charge.

“This is the first time in a criminal case in this country that you have a statement to the police saying that the act was non-consensual and yet the charge says consensual,” Anwar told reporters outside the packed courtroom.

HIGH STAKES

Malaysian media have lapped up lurid details of the politically charged trial and have published photos showing “in camera” trial proceedings that prompted complaints by the opposition of bias.

Analysts say the sensational media coverage signals a more important battle over the case that is being waged in the court of public opinion between the Anwar-led opposition and Prime Minister Najib Razak’s ruling coalition.

“Despite the proceedings, in the court of public opinion people already seem to have made up their minds,” said political analyst Ong Kian Ming.

“The more important question now is how far the continuing revelations in the trial will affect Anwar’s image among those who now feel that this charge was manufactured,” said Ong.

Anwar leads an opposition group that denied the ruling coalition control in five of Malaysia’s 13 states but was hit by a series of recent setbacks, including the resignation of four opposition MPs.

Victory by the ruling National Front of Prime Minister Najib Razak in its first parliamentary by-election since the 2008 general election has boosted the government’s confidence.

But analysts say the country’s non-Muslim minorities who abandoned the government due to alienation have yet to swing back to them. Tensions have also gone up due to a row over the use of the word “Allah” by Christians to describe God.

Najib took office in April 2009 pledging political and economic reforms to revive his ailing coalition and win back foreign investment.

But the uncertainties have helped dent foreign investment. Net portfolio and direct investment outflows reached $61 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to official data.

Flows have returned to the Malaysian bond market, with official data showing foreign ownership of Malaysian government bonds rose to 55.4 billion Malaysian ringgit ($17.32 billion) as of March 10 from 41 billion ringgit, largely after a central bank rate hike and speculation of a Chinese currency revaluation.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Paul Tait)

Malay-Indian youngsters to discuss community issues with Prime Minister

Malaysia, Apr 27 (ANI): Malay-Indian winners of the “The Wish List of Generation 2020”

competition will share their vision directly with the Malay Prime Minister Najib Razak

on June 12 this year.

The competition has been organised by the government to give the Malaysian Government a

chance to woo for Malay-Indians who form twenty percent of the Malaysian vote-bank. The

general elections are soon to be held in the country.

“The main objective of the competition is to provide a platform for the youths from the

Indian community to voice their needs and hopes to the Prime Minister,” The Star quoted

Deputy Minister M. Thambirajah, as saying.

The government is leaving no stone unturned to appease the Malay-Indian community. Apart

from a chance to meet the PM, prizes include motorcycles and laptops. (ANI)

Malaysia’s Makkal Sakthi party wants Tamil school nearby

Malaysia, Apr 27 (ANI): The Malaysia Makkal Sakthi Party (MMSP) which is lead by R.S. Thanenthiran, is pushing for the construction of a Tamil school in the Serendah region.

The proposal is in line with federal government promises to the people of Hulu Selangor District.

The nearest Tamil school is in faraway Rawang, causing much inconvenience to Malay-Indian students.

“The school is urgently needed in the area and I hope it will be built as soon as possible, preferably in the next two years,” The Star quoted Than-entharan as saying.

The Barison-Nasional government lead by Prime Minister Najib Razak enjoys the support of Malay-Indians.

MMSP is working hard for the upcoming general elections. Recognising the importance of delivering on its promises to the Malay-Indian community, Thanenthiran said that the government needs to fulfil its duties with alacrity. (ANI)

Malaysia PM’s reforms put at heart of by-election

Malaysia’s opposition put questions over Prime Minister Najib Razak’s ability to deliver on his reform pledges at the centre of a tense by-election campaign which started on Saturday.

The race for the mainly rural seat located about 44 miles (70km) from the capital pits opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s party against the National Front coalition and could provide an early verdict of Najib’s reforms.

Thousands of opposition supporters chanted “down with Najib,” and “long live the people” as they gathered opposite an equally large number of government supporters at the nomination centre in Hulu Selangor on Saturday morning.

Political tensions in this Southeast Asian country have been high since a general election in 2008, in which the coalition that has now ruled Malaysia for 52 years suffered record losses.

Hundreds of riot police kept watch on the rival groups of supporters who were separated by barbed wire as police helicopters circled overhead in the constituency the opposition won in the 2008 general election for the first time with a majority of 198 votes.

“Najib was someone who wanted to be everything to all people and ended up finally satisfying almost no one,” said Dzulkifli Ahmad, a senior figure in the Pan Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), one of the three parties in the opposition People’s Alliance.

Najib, who took office in April last year, has pledged to woo foreign investment and revive his ailing coalition. Last month, he announced a series of economic reforms to boost growth.

Meant to replace Malaysia’s four-decade-old race-based affirmative action policies, the new plans have triggered fears of a backlash from the majority ethnic Malay population.

Conservative rights groups have sprung up demanding that privileges be preserved for Malays, who make up about 55 percent of the 28 million population and are the core voter base for Najib’s own political party.

Analysts worry the moves to pander to the Malay vote-bank may end up pressuring Najib to water down reforms.

The stakes are high for the opposition as well, which is fielding 59-year-old former law minister Zaid Ibrahim.

Zaid is seen as one of opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s potential successors should Anwar be convicted of sodomy in a trial set to end in late August.

The by-election will be one in a series of “warm-up” polls ahead of the next general election, which is not due until 2013 but which could be held as early as next year.

Political uncertainty in Malaysia since the 2008 elections has helped dent foreign investment — net portfolio and direct investment outflows reached $61 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to official data.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by bill Tarrant)

MIC chief Samy Vellu says he won’t retire before 2012

Kuala Lumpur, Sep 19 (ANI): Rejecting former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s demand to immediately step down as the Malaysian Indian Congress Chief, S. Samy Vellu has said that he would stick to his original plan and resign in 2012.

“He (Prime Minister Najib Razak) is aware of my retirement plan. I will keep to my word to the prime minister and I will not change (my plan),” the New Strait Times Online quoted him, as saying.

Earlier, Dr Mohamad had warned that Samy Vellu would become a liability to the Barisan Nasional in the next general election since his leadership has failed.

Mohamad suggested that Samy Vellu should step down and take responsibility for the party’s failure in the last general election.

Reacting to Dr Mohamad’s statement, Samy Vellu said the former prime minister who is now calling him a liability had labelled him an asset “when we were winning.”

“His comments are like telling a young wife that she is beautiful and an asset, but when she becomes old, she is branded a liability,” he said.

“I am not at all surprised. But I think he refuses to understand that the BN losses in the last general election were not because of me. An experienced man (politician) like him should understand that,” he added.

MIC vice-president Dr S. Subramaniam said the leadership of any political party was decided by its members, and it should be respected by the other BN component parties.

“The members decide whether to give or withdraw the mandate and if a decision is made by the members, it should be respected by the other BN component parties. It will be better if all BN leaders avoided commenting about other parties,” said Subramaniam. (ANI)

MIC chief Samy Vellu says he won’t retire before 2012

Kuala Lumpur, Sep 19 (ANI): Rejecting former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s demand to immediately step down as the Malaysian Indian Congress Chief, S. Samy Vellu has said that he would stick to his original plan and resign in 2012.

“He (Prime Minister Najib Razak) is aware of my retirement plan. I will keep to my word to the prime minister and I will not change (my plan),” the New Strait Times Online quoted him, as saying.
Earlier, Dr Mohamad had warned that Samy Vellu would become a liability to the Barisan Nasional in the next general election since his leadership has failed.
Mohamad suggested that Samy Vellu should step down and take responsibility for the party’s failure in the last general election.
Reacting to Dr Mohamad’s statement, Samy Vellu said the former prime minister who is now calling him a liability had labelled him an asset “when we were winning.”
“His comments are like telling a young wife that she is beautiful and an asset, but when she becomes old, she is branded a liability,” he said.

“I am not at all surprised. But I think he refuses to understand that the BN losses in the last general election were not because of me. An experienced man (politician) like him should understand that,” he added.
MIC vice-president Dr S. Subramaniam said the leadership of any political party was decided by its members, and it should be respected by the other BN component parties.
“The members decide whether to give or withdraw the mandate and if a decision is made by the members, it should be respected by the other BN component parties.

It will be better if all BN leaders avoided commenting about other parties,” said Subramaniam. (ANI)

Malaysian state crisis deepens with court ruling against opposition

Malaysian state crisis deepens with court ruling against opposition Kuala Lumpur – A political and constitutional crisis that has crippled a Malaysian state for almost four months showed no sign of ending when an appeal court Friday ruled in favour of a government takeover of the state.

The judgement put an end to the opposition’s short-lived victory when the High Court decided earlier this month that the ruling National Front government had unlawfully ousted opposition Chief Minister Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin of the northern state of Perak in a controversial takeover in February.

Perak was one of five states won by the opposition People’s Alliance, led by former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim, during last year’s March general elections.

The Kuala Lumpur High Court ruling had been a clear rejection of the controversial takeover orchestrated by Prime Minister Najib Razak, who used the defections of three previously opposition lawmakers to spark the power grab.

However, the Court of Appeal on Friday overturned the ruling, thus reinstating the Front-elected chief minister in Perak, Zambry Abdul Kadir, as lawful state leader.

“The High Court judge had failed to make a right and thorough assessment of all the statements and facts before him, leading him to make a wrong judgement,” said judge Mohamad Raus Shariff, one member of the three-man panel, in his ruling.

But Friday’s decision might not solve the brewing crisis in Perak, with business and trade being badly affected by the lack of a proper governing authority for the past four months.

“The whole state is one big mess now,” said banker Chin Lee Foon, who lives in Perak’s capital Ipoh.

Chin, 31, said approvals for projects and financial deals have ground to a halt for the past four months as banks and businesses wait for an end to the crisis.

Many politicians have called for fresh elections as the answer to the problem, warning that both the opposition and government stand to lose in the continuing battle.

“Najib cannot win in the court of public opinion,” said Lim Kit Siang, veteran leader of the opposition Democratic Action Party.

“All it means is that the restoration of national and international confidence in the independence, impartiality and integrity of the judiciary is still a long distance away.”(dpa)

Malay Indians need help to buy ASM units: MIC

Kuala Lumpur, Apr.25 (ANI): The Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) is reportedly concerned that many Malay Indians may not have the financial means to take up the 15 per cent quota of Amanah Saham Malaysia (ASM) units allocated to the community.

Party president S. Samy Vellu was quoted by The Star as saying that according to Permodalan Nasional Berhad, as of last Wednesday, Malay Indians had bought only 10.71 per cent or 53.5 million units of their quota of 499.5 million.

He proposed that the government assist the Malay Indians by providing a partial grant or loan to buy the units through any of its agencies or financial institutions.

MIC secretary-general Dr. S. Subramaniam said he would discuss with Prime Minister and Finance Minister Najib Razak a mechanism to ensure that the Indians could purchase the entire ASM units allocated to them. (ANI)

PRESS DIGEST – Malaysia – April 20

Following are the main stories in Malaysian newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

THE STAR (www.thestar.com.my)

– Pakatan Rakyat (People’s Alliance) partner Democratic Action Party (DAP) has expressed unhappiness over Parti Keadilan Rakyat (People Justice Party) keeping Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng in the dark about the resignation of assemblyman Mohammad Fairus Khairuddin.

– The issuance of government bonds is expected to leapfrog by 80 percent this year to a gross amount of 90 billion ringgit, Bond Pricing Agency Malaysia Sdn Bhd Chief Executive Officer, Meor Amri Meor Ayob said.

BUSINESS TIMES (www.btimes.com.my)

– China, Malaysia’s fourth largest export destination, could help sustain Malaysia’s export performance this year as the former’s growth cranks up, giving rise to a strong purchasing power, said the Malaysian External Trade Developing Corp (Matrade).

– Al Rajhi Bank of Saudi Arabia (Al Rajhi Bank KSA), the world’s largest Islamic bank with $44 billion (158 billion ringgit) in assets, has last month obtained a licence from Bank Negara Malaysia to establish an international Islamic banking unit in Malaysia, said the bank.

NEW STRAITS TIMES (www.nst.com.my)

– Accept the differences, not just tolerate them. This was the message Prime Minister Najib Razak had for Malaysians on his 1Malaysia blog on Sunday.

– Rulers are above politics and as such cannot participate in open debate to answer allegations hurled against them by political groups, Sultan Azlan Shah of the Perak state said.

THE EDGE FINANCIAL DAILY (www.theedgedaily.com.my)

– While confidence has returned to the market as evidenced by the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (KLCI) closing at a six-month high of 965.17 last Friday, many investors are wondering how long the rally would last and when a pullback would happen.

THE MALAYSIAN RESERVE (www.themalaysianreserves.com)

– Axiata Group Bhd (AXIA.KL), which is open to divesting its non-core units, will consider listing its Bangladesh subsidiary, AKTEL, in 2010 or the year after if capital markets stabilise by then, its President Jamaludin Ibrahim said.

THE SUN (www.sun2surf.com)

– Responding to allegations hurled against rulers by political groups, Perak’s Sultan Azlan Shah said on Sunday that rulers are above politics and cannot take part in open debate to defend themselves.

– Share prices on Bursa Malaysia are expected to continue their rally this week on the back of improved investor sentiment locally and globally, dealers said.

** Looking for more information from local sources? Reuters Business Briefing has 13 Malaysian sources including Business Times Malaysia. For details of the product please call your local help desk (PHONE/HELP). ($1=3.643 Malaysian Ringgit) ((Kuala Lumpur Newsroom; Tel: +603-2333 8046; Fax: +603-2072 6752; Bureau Email: areuters@gmail.com))

Mahathir praises new Malaysia PM’s cabinet

Malaysia’s influential former premier Mahathir Mohamad endorsed Prime Minister Najib Razak’s new cabinet on Thursday and praised efforts to stamp out corruption.

The outspoken former premier, who ruled Malaysia for 22 years and famously spurned International Monetary Fund cash and advice during the 1998 financial crisis, was a fierce critic of Najib’s predecessor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, hastening his departure.

“I think Najib did very well by dropping most of the people who are accused of corruption, although one or two somehow or other slipped in,”he told a small group of reporters.

Mahathir’s son Mukhriz was made deputy trade minister in a move seen by political analysts as placating Mahathir. Abdullah’s son-in-law Khairy Jamaluddin, a target of Mahathir’s criticisms, was left out.

Mahathir remains fiercely critical of Khairy, whom he had said exerted undue influence on Abdullah’s administration.

“He (Khairy) was not given any posts. That is proof that Najib wants to clean up the party,” he said.

Mahathir said he had faith his own son would perform well in his cabinet debut.

“Of course I’m happy,” he said in response to a question.

Cops To Hang For Mongolian Model’s Murder

Cops To Hang For Mongolian Model's Murder Two Malaysian police officers have been sentenced to death for the murder of a Mongolian model in a case the opposition has tried to link to new premier Najib Razak.
Abdul Razak Baginda, a close associate of Mr Najib, was accused of ordering police to kill his former lover after she came to his home asking for money.

But he was acquitted last year of abetting 28-year-old Altantuya Shaariibuu’s murder in 2006.

With its ingredients of sex, politics and violence, the case has gripped the nation.

Miss Altantuya’s body was blown up with military-grade explosives in a jungle clearing, leaving only shattered bone fragments as evidence.

The two officers found guilty of the murder, Chief Inspector Azilah Hadri and Corporal Sirul Azhar Umar, are from an elite unit that guards top ministers.

The men have blamed each other and failed to “raise reasonable doubt against the prosecution’s case”, the court heard during their trial.
“I sentence both of you to death,” said Shah Alam High Court judge Zaki Mohamad Yasin. “You will be taken to a place of execution where you will be hanged.”

Sirul has claimed he is a “scapegoat” and lawyers for both men said they will file an appeal.

Malaysia’s top blogger, Raja Petra Kamaruddin, has been charged with sedition after repeatedly linking Mr Najib and his wife to the murder on his popular website Malaysia Today.

Prime Minister Najib has vehemently denied any involvement in the killing, insisting he never met Altantuya.

But despite any evidence linking him to the case, the allegations persist and the opposition has called for an official inquiry.

Karpal Singh, an opposition politician and leading lawyer representing Miss Altantuya’s family, said the verdict would not quell speculation over the case.

“You must satisfy the international community. The international community does not accept that only these two are responsible for the murder. It goes beyond these two,” he said.

Malaysian court sentences former cops to death for Mongolian murder

Kuala Lumpur – A Malaysian court sentenced two policemen to death Thursday on charges of murdering a Mongolian woman who was blown up with military-grade explosives in 2006.

The murder of Altantuya Shaariibuu, 28, created great controversy after her lover Abdul Razak Baginda, who was a political advisor to Prime Minister Najib Razak, was jointly charged along with the two police officers with her murder.

Abdul Razak was acquitted in October of abetting the murder.

On Thursday, High Court judge Mohamad Zaki Yasin said the prosecution had proven the case against Chief Inspector Azilah Hadri and Corporal Sirul Azhar Umarm beyond reasonable doubt.

“They have failed to raise any reasonable doubt in the prosecution’s case which I find to be irresistibly conclusive on account of the physical and circumstantial evidence adduced before me.

“I therefore now sentence you, Azilah and Sirul Azhar, to death and both of you will henceforth be kept in lawful custody until you are brought to a lawful place where you will be hung by the neck until you are dead,” Mohamad Zaki was quoted as saying by the official Bernama news agency.

Opposition leaders have tried to link Najib to the case, with an opposition lawmaker even demanding in Parliament recently that Najib answer to allegations that he was involved in the murder and even knew the victim. Najib has repeatedly denied any role in the murder.

The defence team has said it would appeal against the conviction.(dpa)

Malaysians cast their votes in triple by-election

Kuala Lumpur – Voters in three constituencies in Malaysia went to the polls Tuesday in a by-election indicative of the level of support for newly appointed Prime Minister Najib Razak.

The special parliamentary elections are being held simultaneously for the Bukit Gantang seat in the northern state of Perak, in Bukit Selambau in neighbouring Kedah state and in the Batang Ai constituency in the eastern state of Sarawak on Borneo island.

Results were due to be announced later Tuesday.

The by-elections, which were called after one lawmaker resigned and two died, are a crucial popularity test for Najib, who was appointed Friday.

Najib is taking over at a time when the ruling National Front coalition is facing its lowest-ever public support, evident in the losses the Front sustained during general elections in March 2008.

The Front failed to retain a two-thirds majority in Parliament for the first time in almost 40 years and lost an unprecedented five of the country’s 13 states to the three-party opposition People’s Alliance, led by former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim.

While the triple by-election will not cause any shift in power because the ruling coalition currently holds a majority 139 seats against the opposition’s 82, its results would be an indication of sentiment toward Najib’s leadership.

“I only hope the people will adopt an open and positive attitude in evaluating my leadership,” Najib told a local television channel days before the polling. “Hopefully, the people will accept my leadership.

Malaysians vote in poll seen as referendum on new PM

Voters turned out in large numbers on Tuesday in a tense by-election in the northern Malaysian state of Perak that is seen as a key test for the country’s new prime minister.

Amid a heavy police presence and soaring temperatures hundreds of supporters of the government and opposition faced off outside a polling station in this rural Malaysian constituency where a parliamentary seat is being contested.

The seat in Perak which is being contested along with two state assembly posts is especially tense as new Prime Minister Najib Razak led a putsch to oust the opposition-led state government.

“This by-election is not just about progress and promises of development but also about larger issues such as justice and corruption,” Ilham Abdul Aziz, a 32-year old businessman, who had just cast his vote.

By 0415 GMT turnout in the Perak constituency was 20 percent, while in the state assembly seat in neighbouring Kedah it was 42 percent and in a state seat in Sarawak on the island of Borneo it was 70 percent, according to the Election Commission.

About 100,000 voters are eligible to vote in the three state seats, representing a major test for Najib just four days after he became prime minister.

The election results will not alter the national balance of power but analysts say Najib needs to win to put his stamp on the government and reverse a growing tide of public disappointment in the ruling coalition.

“If the (ruling coalition) BN or (opposition) Pakatan were to win 3-0 tonight, a mini-tsunami could inundate the political landscape,” the pro-government New Straits Times newspaper said on Tuesday.

The ruling National Front coalition has lost two crucial by-elections since last August, after suffering its worst performance in the 2008 general election.

One of the by-elections returned opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim to parliament.

Analysts say the ruling coalition stands a good chance of winning the Batang Ai state seat in Sarawak but faces a tough fight for the other two seats.

The National Front coalition, backed by influential former premier Mahathir Mohamad, has promised economic reforms as Malaysia faces its worst recession since the Asian financial crisis a decade ago.

But Najib who took over from ex-premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi last Friday also has his hands full to attempt to convince voters that he can clean up the National Front and the main coalition party that he leads, the United Malays National Organisation.

Wives express relief and joy over HINDRAF leaders release

Kuala Lumpur, Apr.4 (ANI): The wives of Hindu Rights Action Force (HINDRAF) leaders R. Kengadharan and V. Ganabatirau are happy over the release of their husbands.

Kengadharan’s wife, Dr M. Kalaivani, 41, thanked Prime Minister Najib Razak for freeing him.

“I am elated. Our family is really grateful to the prime minister for this gesture. But I’m still sad for the families of the other three HINDRAF leaders who are still under detention,” the New Strait Times quoted her, as saying yesterday.

Ganabatirau’s wife, B. Buvaneswary, 33, said this was the news the family had been waiting for.

“We are surprised to hear about his release. All of us are extremely excited as this is the moment we have been waiting for,” she said.

She said her first priority was to get Ganabatirau to hospital to undergo surgery on his infected neck bone. (ANI)

FACTBOX – Malaysia’s new prime minister Najib Razak

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) -Malaysia’s new Prime Minister Najib Razak, 55, faces an immediate challenge of steering Malaysia through its first likely recession since the

1998 Asian economic downturn.

The British-trained economist, who takes over from Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, also faces the tough task of trying to reinvigorate an ailing ruling coalition.

The following are some facts about Najib:

- He is the eldest son of Abdul Razak Hussein, Malaysia’s second prime minister. Abdul Razak is credited with rescuing the country from the brink of disaster following racial riots in 1969, and laying the foundations for modern Malaysia.

Abdul Razak expanded the ruling alliance and created what is now known as the National Front. He also introduced the New Economic Policy which gives ethnic Malays preference in jobs, education and business, to narrow the wealth gap between poor Malays and the richer Chinese minority.

- Najib, one of the youngest to be elected into Malaysia’s parliament, won his father’s constituency of Pekan in 1976 at the age of 22 after Abdul Razak died of leukemia. Najib retained the seat in six subsequent general elections, and also served for a term as chief minister in his home state of Pahang.

- Najib was groomed for political leadership. He served for 22 years under the administration of former premier Mahathir Mohamad, who has said he owes a debt of gratitude to Najib’s father for his ascent to the top post.

But Mahathir, in an interview with Reuters last month, said Najib’s entry into politics was accidental.

- Najib was a firebrand in the 1980s, heading the youth wing of the main United Malays National Organisation party at meetings where people called for Chinese blood on the Malays’ keris (traditional knives). But he has now pledged to unite all races and urged Malaysians to close ranks.

- An avid golfer, he has a network of friends and confidantes from the country’s elite business circle, whom he often taps for input. His brother, Nazir Razak, heads CIMB, Malaysia’s second-largest bank.

- After being appointed deputy prime minister in 2004, Najib was given a broad portfolio of responsibilities including oversight of FELDA, a state-run cooperative of oil palm smallholders developed by his father. FELDA is one of the world’s largest plantation owners and managers, owning over 800,000 hectares of rubber and oil palm estates.

Najib provided infrastructure and benefits for the 115,000 mostly Malay landless families under the scheme and developed a strong network of grassroots support among the rural poor.

Incoming Malaysia PM faces uphill reform drive

Incoming Malaysian premier Najib Razak looks set to initiate aggressive political and economic reforms, but change could be slow and difficult as the country faces one of its toughest tests.

Najib, a British-trained economist, will become Malaysia’s sixth prime minister on Friday, assuming the mantle as the economy enters its first recession in a decade and the government faces the prospect of losing power to a resurgent opposition.

Outgoing premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi handed in his resignation letter to the king on Thursday, following a tenure considered weak and ineffective by many.

“The handover and swearing in of the new Prime Minister will take place as scheduled on Friday,” a high-level government source told Reuters after Abdullah and Najib met the king separately on Thursday.

Falling foreign investment and racial tensions will push Najib to tackle corruption and review a race-based policy which has kept control of the economy in the hands of well-connected ethnic Malay tycoons.

“His major clear clarion call is a call for change from the politics to the economics side,” said Zainal Aznam Yusof, a member of a council that advises the premier on economic issues.

The 55-year old Najib has pledged to wean the economy off its reliance on low-end manufacturing, further open up the services sector and close a widening ethnic and religious divide.

REFORM EXPECTED

A source told Reuters last week that Najib would name his cabinet within a week of taking office and radically reform state-linked firms to make them more profit-oriented.

But Najib has to drive reforms while trying to steer Asia’s third most open economy through the headwind of slumping exports and rising unemployment.

A son of Malaysia’s second prime minister and nephew of the third, Najib is regarded as a capable administrator who has been groomed for over three decades for the country’s top job.

But his reputation has been sullied by allegations of corruption over a slew of defence deals and involvement in the murder of a Mongolian model.

Najib has dismissed both claims as “malicious lies”.

An immediate test would be three by-elections — one parliamentary and two state seats — on April 7.

The outcome of the polls would not alter the balance of power in parliament but it is still crucial after Najib led the ruling coalition to defeats in two recent by-elections.

“If the National Front loses… it will show that the voters have not yet seen the changes that they expect, and that they want the process of reform to continue,” said political analyst Khoo Kay Peng.

STRONG-ARM TACTICS

As Najib wrestles with a resurgent opposition, there are

fears of strong-arm tactics to stifle political dissent.

Last week opposition websites were barred from covering the annual meeting of the main political party. An opposition MP and a popular blogger have been charged with sedition, and two opposition newspapers have been banned.

“Najib is already blamed for quickly transforming the political atmosphere in the country to an increasingly gloomy and darkening landscape, coupled with grave concerns about his suitability, integrity and legitimacy,” said Lim Kit Siang, an opposition leader.

In the longer term, Najib has the tricky task of reviewing a decades-old policy favouring Malays in jobs, education and business without upsetting the main ruling party’s power base.

“I don’t think there is much appetite or political consensus to put into effect a radical reorientation of affirmative action,” said Manu Bhaskaran, a partner at U.S. advisory Centennial.

“It would probably be better to iron out the weaknesses in the affirmative action programme, to tackle specific areas where the weaknesses are particularly egregious in terms of the openings for corruption, for cronyism, for damaging, inefficient consequences.

Malaysia’s main political party to choose new leaders

Kuala Lumpur – More than 2,500 delegates from Malaysia’s ruling party gathered Tuesday to kick off the annual congress which will see a historic change of guard in its leadership.

The meeting of United Malays National Organisation, or UMNO, was initially scheduled for November, but was postponed due to political uncertainties after the party led the ruling National Front coalition through a humiliating election in March.

The five-day gathering, which will end Saturday, will see the election of top leaders including president, deputy president, three vice presidents, 25 supreme council members and heads of the party’s youth and women’s wings.

The party fell into crisis when the government suffered massive losses in last year’s general elections. A three-party opposition led by former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim took control of five out of the country’s 13 states, and denied the Front a two-thirds’ majority in parliament.

Following those results, many top UMNO leaders demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, also the party president.

Abdullah finally announced he would not seek re-election as party chief, and would hand over his premiership to deputy prime minister Najib Razak.

No date has been set for the handover, but reports have said it could be as early as April 2 or 3.

Najib, the son of a former prime minister, has acknowledged that he is taking over the party and the country in a “critical” time, when public opinion of both UMNO and the ruling coalition is at an all-time low.

Najib was due to officially open the conference Tuesday.

Long criticized as a racist and corrupt party, UMNO will likely replace most of the veteran leaders with fresh faces, a move hoped to restore public confidence. (dpa)