BY
CLARA CHOOI
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
May 13, 2013
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
May 13, 2013
Anwar says he will not stop until justice is
served. — Reuters picKUALA LUMPUR, May 13 — Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim vowed last
night never to surrender Pakatan Rakyat’s (PR) fight to ensure the pact claims
its rightful place in Putrajaya, maintaining his stance that Barisan Nasional
(BN) had cheated its way to victory on May 5.
The
de facto PR leader, looking energetic and full of gumption as he addressed
thousands of black-clad supporters at PR’s third post-Election 2013 rally in
Ipoh, acknowledged that it has been a week since the polls results were
formally announced.
But
he insisted that although Datuk Seri Najib Razak has been sworn in as prime
minister and it appears to be business as usual for the ruling pact in
Putrajaya, the BN chairman and Umno president was not the actual person chosen
for the job.
“Umno
leaders would say, ‘we have the mandate so you shut up’. But I say — ‘No way’.
We have the mandate and we will... lawan tetap lawan (keep on fighting),” he
thundered, urging the crowd to sound PR’s often-used rallying cry along with
him.
“Najib
has been endorsed as having won... and he has been sworn in. What should we do?
“So
that is why we say.... in Kelana Jaya, we amassed hundreds of thousands of
people with just two days’ notice... In Penang, hundreds of thousands turned up
in Batu Kawan... the people’s uprising.
“Why?
Because the voice of the people is sacred,” the prime minister hopeful
continued, unabated.
“On
Tuesday, we gather in Kuantan. On Wednesday in Johor. And we will not stop
until justice is served in this country.
“We
will not stop until the valid results are announced. Yes. We will continue and
we will never surrender,” he added, according to a live streaming of the event
last night.
Anwar
and his team in PR have insisted that the just-concluded May 5 polls were
rigged, citing irregular voting patterns, suspicious handling of ballot boxes
and other issues.
Claiming
to have gathered sufficient evidence to back their claims, lawyers from both
the DAP and PAS are mulling filing election petitions to contest the results.
PR
officials say they are disputing up to 29 election results and the rallies,
which began in Selangor last Wednesday, moved on to Penang on Saturday and
Perak last night, will continue in Kuantan on Tuesday, followed by Johor on
Wednesday.
The
ruling BN pact soared to a narrow victory on May 5 with just 133 federal seats
to PR’s 89, significantly lower than the 140 seats it won in Election 2008.
But
even more daunting for BN was that it lost the overall popular vote, garnering
just under 48 per cent of the votes cast, a significant three-percentage point
lower than PR’s 51 per cent.
In
Perak, BN fared even worse, polling just 507,123 or 45.25 per cent of the votes
cast, trailing behind PR’s 613,490 votes or 54.75 per cent, despite sailing to
an overall victory in the silver state with 31 seats in the 59-seat assembly.
Perak
PR leaders have cried foul over the results, insisting that administrative
power over the state should be theirs as the majority of Perak folk had voted
against BN.
In
his speech earlier, Anwar also slammed senior Umno leader Datuk Seri Mohamed
Nazri Aziz for claiming that the Chinese community who voted against BN had
been misled into thinking that a government led by PR would lead to the
abolishment of Bumiputera and Malay rights.
The
Permatang Pauh MP denied this, pointing to a signed agreement between all three
PR parties — the DAP, PKR and PAS — which formally endorsed all provisions in
the Federal Constitution, including Article 153, which touches on the special
privileges of the country’s dominant ethnic group.
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