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Critics want Malaysia PM to resign over Anwar win

By SEAN YOONG,Associated Press Writer AP - Thursday, August 28

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - Dissidents in Malaysia's ruling party demanded the prime minister's resignation Wednesday after opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim returned to Parliament with a sweeping election victory.

Anwar regained his Parliament seat in the north by a landslide in Tuesday's by-election, delivering a demoralizing defeat for the government. Anwar's success came on the heels of big gains the opposition made in the March general elections.

Veteran government lawmaker Razaleigh Hamzah, who wants to challenge Abdullah for the leadership of the United Malays National Organization ruling party, said the results meant that "what scraps of credibility (Abdullah) had left" were gone.

Abdullah, however, played down the significance of Anwar's triumph.

"I believe we can still continue the government," Abdullah was quoted as saying by the Bernama national news agency. "What happened ... was not something so big as to change the situation that exists after the last general election."

Abdullah's party has been the main plank of a coalition that has ruled Malaysia uninterrupted since independence from Britain in 1957, but which was seriously weakened for the first time in the March elections.

Anwar has said he aims to bring the government down by mid September via defections to his opposition group from disaffected government members.

Government leaders had mounted a fierce campaign to deny Anwar victory, hoping voters in Anwar's longtime bedrock of support would desert the charismatic politician after he was charged with sodomizing his 23-year-old former male aide. No date has been set for a trial.

Anwar says the "most sickening" allegation is politically motivated.

In the March elections, Anwar's three-party alliance won an unprecedented 82 of parliament's 222 seats _ 30 short of a majority _ and wrested control of five states.

Parliament Speaker Pandikar Amin Mulia said Anwar would be formally sworn in as a lawmaker Thursday. Opposition parties also planned to endorse him as their leader ahead of a key parliamentary session Friday, when Abdullah announces the annual budget.

Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has slammed his successor Abdullah's policies, said he believed many government supporters voted for Anwar "so that Abdullah will realize that his leadership is no longer wanted."

"Abdullah must take responsibility and resign now," Mahathir said.

Mukhriz Mahathir, Mahathir's lawmaker son, said that "with Anwar Ibrahim in Parliament, we cannot afford to have a weak leadership because it could lead to our downfall."

"The walls are crumbling but the top guy seems oblivious to his surroundings," he said.

Government supporters also vented their fury on Internet forums. Mykmu Net, a popular Web site for ruling party members, published comments by readers who said they "hope (Abdullah) will be quickly ousted" and that Abdullah's "resignation will be the only way out."

Abdullah resisted calls to resign immediately after the March elections, though he has pledged to hand power to his deputy, Najib Razak, by mid-2010 in a protracted transition plan publicly endorsed by most top government officials.

Anwar's re-entry into Parliament will complete his political rehabilitation. He was fired as deputy prime minister in 1998 and jailed for six years after he was convicted of corruption and sodomizing his family driver. That sodomy conviction, which he said was politically motivated, was overturned by Malaysia's top court in 2004.

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