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Published 30 Jun, 2008 12:00am

Malaysian leader takes refuge in Turkish embassy

KUALA LUMPUR, June 29: Malaysia’s de facto opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim took refuge at the Turkish embassy on Sunday due to fears he could be assassinated after fresh accusations of sodomy.

The developments come at a time of heightened political tension in Malaysia after the government’s worst election result earlier this year put pressure on Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to quit.

Anwar, who was sacked as deputy prime minister in

1998 and later jailed for sodomy and corruption, has seen a revival of his fortunes since the opposition alliance’s strong showing in the March election. Anwar has said the old charges were trumped up, and said the new accusations were politically motivated.

“I was transported to the embassy earlier this morning fearing that my personal safety was in danger,” Anwar said in a statement.

“I have been told that my assassination has not been ruled out as a means to subvert the people’s will and bring an end to the transformational changes taking place in Malaysia,” he said.

Anwar says he has won enough support from ruling coalition lawmakers to form a new government by September, which has sparked fears of policy shifts and unsettled investors.

Anwar has said he would alter oil-production sharing contracts, cut fuel prices, introduce minimum wages and redistribute oil wealth to the poor. “With grumblings within the ruling coalition, most probably Abdullah’s days are numbered,” said political analyst Yahya Ismail.

“So the government must find ways to cripple the opposition.”

The new sodomy allegations arose on Sunday when Anwar’s private assistant, identified by Anwar’s party as 23-year-old Saiful Bukhari Azlan, lodged a police complaint.—Reuters

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