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页面导航: 博客英语网 >> 英语电台 >> VOA常速英语 >> VOA常速英语2008 >> VOA常速英语2008年10月 >> 文章正文
Malaysia's Prime Minister to Step Down in March
Updating Time:2008-10-9 15:29:05

 

By Nancy-Amelia Collins
Jakarta
08 October 2008

Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi says he will step down in March. VOA's Nancy-Amelia Collins in Jakarta reports the announcement was made amid turmoil in the ruling party.



Malaysia's Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi gestures before press conference in Kuala Lumpur, 08 Oct 2008
Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced he was stepping down from his post in March - four years before the end of his term - to save his ruling party from splitting.

Mr. Abdullah, whose announcement was widely expected, said he would nominate his deputy, Najib Razak, as party president of the ruling Barisan Nacional.

The ruling-party president automatically becomes prime minister.

Abdullah has been facing mounting pressure to resign since his United Malays National Organization, called UMNO - which forms the core of the Barisan Nacional coalition - lost its majority rule in the March general elections to the opposition coalition.

Abdullah said his decision to resign was to keep the party coalition united.

"I will not stand for the presidency of UMNO in the coming party election," he said. "I do not want a divided party and governing coalition, but one that is united and harmonious. A united Barisan Nacional is vital in order for the country to face the global challenges ahead and for Malaysia to become a fully developed nation with prosperity and fairness to all."

Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim has repeatedly said he has enough parliamentary defectors to bring down the government, despite facing sodomy charges he says are politically motivated.

But political analyst Khoo Kay Peng says with the country facing economic and political turmoil, both coalitions will need to work together no matter who is prime minister.

"You need a national unity government because Malaysia at the moment has a very highly centralized federal government. And with the political contestation going on between the two coalitions, you will make it very difficult for it to work ... so I think the point is that we will have to see whether the two of them can come now to their senses and say that for now the focus has to be on the economy," said Khoo Kay Peng.

Analysts say Malaysia's economy, already hard hit by the high price of oil - inflation reached a 27-year high this month - will further slow down because of the global financial crisis, with growth expected at just three percent in 2009.
 
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