Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad is
celebrating his 90th birthday today and Malaysia's longest-serving prime
minister remains sharp and combative as ever, as he continues campaigning to
oust his latest successor Datuk Seri Najib Razak.
Dr Mahathir, who was prime minister
from July 16, 1981 to October 31, 2003, was born in Alor Star, Kedah on July
10, 1925 but his official birthdate is December 20.
It is understood that a big birthday
bash has been organised for the medically trained politician this month.
But age has not slowed him down
despite stepping down from public office in 2003. Dr Mahathir remains a key
influential figure in Malaysian politics – who helped remove his successor Tun
Abdullah Badawi in office in 2009 and now agitating for Najib's ouster because of the
scandals surrounding strategic investor 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB).
The influential politician had cut
his support for Najib in August 2014 and in recent months, has ratcheted his
campaign against the prime minister, whose father, the late Tun Abdul Razak
Hussein, was also prime minister.
He had also asked Najib to resign from
the top job, echoing the calls of both government and opposition leaders who
are seeking the truth behind The Wall Street Journal's (WSJ) revelations last
week that US$700 million (RM2.67 billion) had been funnelled into Najib’s bank
accounts.
The prime minister has vowed to
fight the WSJ claims, saying he did not gain personally from the accounts in
AmPrivate Bank. Bank Negara Malaysia has frozen six bank accounts but said none
was linked to the prime minister.
Despite that, Dr Mahathir has been
asking the authorities, including the Internal Revenue Board, to investigate
Najib's wealth and harangue the government to explain the high debt racked by
1MDB.
The auditor-general and Public
Accounts Committee (PAC) are investigating 1MDB's business but an interim
report submitted yesterday had cleared the company of any wrongdoing.
But Dr Mahathir has cleared through
the fog surrounding 1MDB to ask one question: why did 1MDB raise that
much debt but only spent US$15 billion to acquire land and utilities
across Malaysia and Asia.
Najib last week accused his former
political mentor of working with the foreign media against him after several
exposes in WSJ and The New York Times.
Dr Mahathir has denied the claims
but remains a formidable political influence among the 30-million population,
most of whom grew up during his rule. – July 10, 2015.
Source: The Malaysian Insider
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