Gulf News

I am not senile yet, nonagenari­an says

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Malaysia’s former authoritar­ian leader Mahathir Mohammad wasn’t invited to the forum that planned to debate whether at well past 90 years he is too old to be prime minister again. He turned up anyway.

“As far as health is concerned, I am not senile yet,” he announced to the stunned participan­ts, many of whom stood and snapped photos with their smartphone­s.

For good measure, Mahathir sat in the front row and tweeted: “I’m here guys. Say it to my face.”

The recent move was trademark Mahathir. During more than two decades of strongarm rule, he rarely shied from aggressive­ly confrontin­g opponents, real and perceived. And at 92 his appetite for political brawling remains apparently unsated.

The difference is that Mahathir’s targets aren’t those of yesteryear such as an imagined Jewish conspiracy against the Muslim world or the domestic opponents he ruthlessly silenced or imprisoned.

In an unlikely comeback, he’s switched sides in Malaysian politics, coming out of retirement to unite an opposition that’s seeking to end his former party’s 60-year hold on power and oust his protégé, Prime Minister Najeeb Razzak, in May 9 elections.

Mahathir, a maverick in the early days of his political career who survived expulsion from the dominant United Malays National Organisati­on party, was the first commoner to become prime minister of Malaysia.

Though credited with transformi­ng the Southeast Asian backwater into a modern economy, his dominance, like that of his contempora­ry, Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore, was stifling.

Under his rule, the judiciary was a tool of the government, the media were muzzled and a system of economic privileges for the Malay majority remained entrenched. His retirement in 2003 was welcomed by many Malaysians who wanted the country’s progress

 ?? AFP ?? Mahathir Mohammad
AFP Mahathir Mohammad

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