FROM PRISON TO POWER, A DREAM FULFILLED
It has been a bumpy road to the pinnacle of power for Anwar
Ibrahim, who on Thursday achieved his dream of the Malaysian premiership.
In his decades-long quest for the top job, the 75-year-old has
tasted political triumph and defeat, led street protests for democratic reforms
and strung together a multi-ethnic opposition coalition while behind bars.
He was named prime minister by Malaysia's king after days of
political deadlock resulting from an inconclusive election.
-
Impatient firebrand -
Anwar was born into a political family in August 1947.
His father, Ibrahim Abdul Rahman, was a former member of
parliament and his mother, Che Yan Hussein, was a political organiser in the
northern state of Penang, in what was then part of the British empire.
A firebrand youth activist during his student days, Anwar has
spoken of his admiration for Philippine revolutionary hero Jose Rizal,
describing him as "a true Asian renaissance man".
In 1982, Anwar was recruited into the United Malays
National Organisation (UMNO), the party then in the middle of its 60-year
domination of Malaysian politics.
His star rose, and the suave young politician became finance
minister and then deputy prime minister in the early 1990s under then-premier
Mahathir Mohamad, bringing a youthful counterbalance to the wily political
veteran.
They were considered one of the most dynamic duos in Southeast
Asian politics, but their relationship soured over how to handle the 1997-98
Asian financial crisis.
Some observers say Anwar had been too impatient to become prime
minister, slighting his patron.
Mahathir sacked Anwar, who was also expelled from UMNO and
charged with corruption and sodomy.
He was sentenced to six years in jail for corruption in 1999,
with a nine-year prison term added for the sodomy charge the following year,
the two sentences to run consecutively.
As Anwar claimed political persecution, street protests erupted
and coalesced into a multi-ethnic opposition movement calling for democratic
reforms.
Photos of Anwar with a black eye, inflicted in prison by
Malaysia's then-police chief, were published in newspapers around the world,
turning him into a symbol for a struggle that adopted the battle cry of
"Reformasi!", or reforms.
-Despair
and hope-
The Malaysian Supreme Court overturned Anwar's sodomy
conviction in 2004 and ordered him freed.
He took a brief hiatus from politics to go into academia, but
returned to lead an opposition coalition in the 2013 general election.
His alliance won 50.87 percent of the popular vote but failed to
muster a parliamentary majority.
Controversy continued to hound the married father of six.
He was again jailed for sodomy in 2015, this time for five
years.
He has maintained his innocence and received a full pardon from
the Malaysian king three years into his sentence. Anwar returned to parliament
months later in a by-election.
-Fragile
alliance-
The 2018 election brought a new alliance with his erstwhile
rival Mahathir, the pair making an unlikely reunion to take on their former
party UMNO, led by prime minister Najib Razak, then mired in the billion-dollar
1MDB financial scandal.
They scored a historic victory against UMNO and Najib, who is
now serving a 12-year jail term for corruption.
Mahathir became prime minister for the second time, with an agreement
to hand over the premiership to Anwar later.
He never fulfilled that pact, and their alliance collapsed after
22 months.
"I sense the people's strong desire for change and to see
Malaysia progress in a new direction," Anwar said before last week's
polls.
After his swearing-in
Thursday, Anwar will finally get to set that direction.
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