Mahathir says had to act against friend Anwar: Paper
Mahathir says had to act against friend Anwar: Paper
Reuters, Kuala Lumpur
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who retires this month
after 22 years in power, said on Monday the worst moment of his
political career was having to sack Anwar Ibrahim, his deputy and
friend, in 1998.
The humiliation of Anwar, who challenged Mahathir and was
subsequently jailed for 15 years on charges of sodomy and abuse
of power, split Malaysia's majority ethnic Muslim Malays and for
a time made Mahathir an outcast in the West.
"A lot of people were saying that I was deliberately getting
rid of him. I had no such intention at all but I had to have some
responsibility for the future," Mahathir said in a lengthy
interview with The Star English-language daily.
"If someone is going to succeed me, he must be of some good
character," he said, mentioning Anwar several times by name --
something he rarely does.
"Because of that I had to take an action which I hated very
much because he was, after all, a friend.
"So that was something that was a very big regret," he said,
when asked what his toughest moment had been. Mahathir fired
Anwar as the Asian financial crisis raged, and imposed capital
and currency controls directly at odds with measures proposed by
the International Monetary Fund. Anwar, who was finance minister
as well as deputy prime minister, had been following the IMF's
recommendations.
Anwar was arrested less than three weeks later, after he led
thousands of people in antigovernment street protests.
The IMF has since accepted that Mahathir's formula worked.
Anwar's trials were condemned by domestic critics and Western
powers, including the United States as politically driven.
His appeals continue, but Mahathir washed his hands of the
case: "That is not for me to decide. He did something, he broke
the law."
As Mahathir prepares to step down, the 78-year-old also
addressed critics who say he indulged in nepotism, particularly
toward his eldest son Mirzan.
"I give them no support at all. They never apply to me because
they know I will not approve," he told The Star.
Mirzan's Konsortium Perkapalan Bhd. sold its shipping assets
to state-controlled Malaysia International Shipping Corp. (MISC)
Bhd. in 1998 for US$220 million.
"He wasn't bailed out. The fact is he couldn't pay his debts,"
said Mahathir, who added the sale to MISC was because the
government would not have allowed a foreigner to buy the assets.