Monday, April 14, 2008

Abdullah reject announcing succession plan

Malaysian PM rejects pressure to unveil exit plan

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - MALAYSIAN Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said on Monday he would be re-appointed to the top job by his party in December polls and rejected calls to formalise his plans to relinquish power.

Mr Abdullah has faced persistent demands to quit after the coalition led by his United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) was dealt an unprecedented setback in March general elections.

But despite mounting demands to quickly unveil his plans to hand over to his deputy Najib Razak, he said succession talks would only take place after Umno's internal leadership polls in December.

'Delegates will continue to give me support during the party election and they will put me as president and Najib as deputy,' he told reporters.

'After that Pak Lah and Najib will discuss issues related to transfer,' he said, referring to himself by his nickname. 'Why should I not contest the December party polls?'

Foreign Minister Rais Yatin indicated earlier that Mr Abdullah's timeframe was not adequate, telling the official Bernama news agency that Umno members had the right to ask Mr Abdullah to step down or announce a succession plan.

'I feel if the succession plan is announced, then the grassroot leaders would know the time frame, and that is good to stabilise the party. The grassroots should be allowed to say what they feel,' he said.

Pressure on the premier also came from Trade Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, an influential Umno vice-president, who said the party would 'fade away' if there were no immediate changes to the leadership.

'I think the sentiments are boiling at the grassroots. Therefore, if change does not happen in Umno, many adverse things will surface,' he said according to a newspaper interview.

'Will it be able to redeem its loss while we face the wave of new political thinking or will we collapse into the political chasm for good?' he asked.

The Umno-led coalition lost its two-thirds majority in parliament and control of five states in March 8 general elections, in the worst performance of its half-century rule over Malaysia.

Former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad, who handed over to Mr Abdullah in 2003 but has since said he regretted his choice, on Sunday called on him to resign immediately to ensure a smooth handover.

Mr Abdullah reportedly accepted partial responsibility for the party's electoral losses over the weekend, and said he would not 'retain the leadership forever'. -- AFP

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