Malaysia's new PM takes office amid mounting health crisis
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[August 21, 2021]
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia
swore in a new prime minister, Ismail Sabri Yaakob, on Saturday as the
Southeast Asian nation battles its worst COVID-19 surge and public anger
grows over mismanagement of the pandemic.
The appointment of Ismail Sabri, 61, restores the role to a party
tainted by graft accusations, after he secured a parliamentary majority
from the same alliance that collapsed this week and replaced Muhyiddin
Yassin .
Ismail Sabri, formerly Muhyiddin's deputy, was sworn in at the national
palace after being picked by King Al-Sultan Abdullah, the
constitutional monarch.
He took the oath of office in front of the monarch and other coalition
leaders, including former prime minister Najib Razak.
King Al-Sultan Abdullah has previously said the new prime minister would
have to face a confidence vote in parliament to prove his majority.
Ismail Sabri starts his job at a time when Malaysia's infections and
deaths relative to population rank as southeast Asia's highest.
An online petition started this week drew 350,000 signatories opposing
Ismail Sabri's appointment, citing his handling of the pandemic.
Friday's 23,564 cases were a record for a third straight day, taking the
tally beyond 1.5 million.
Public anger has grown as infections spread despite multiple extended
lockdowns and ramped up vaccinations. Since last month, Malaysians in
need have hoisted white flags at their homes to seek public help.
Although Malaysia escaped the worst of the pandemic
last year, a regional election led to a steady spike in infections since
the fourth quarter of 2020, with the Delta variant worsening the
situation in recent months.
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Malaysia's new Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob receives a
document from King Al-Sultan Abdullah during his inauguration at
National Palace in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia August 21, 2021. Malaysia
Information Department/Khirul Nizam Zanil/Handout via REUTERS
Flip-flops on lockdown measures, failure to act against politicians
who violated rules and months of politicking have soured the public.
The pandemic has also dampened economic growth, with the central
bank slashing its 2021 forecast twice this year.
With Ismail Sabri in office the post is being returned to the United
Malays National Organisation (UMNO), which governed for more than
six decades since independence, but was defeated in a 2018 election
over a scandal at state fund 1MDB.
He becomes Malaysia's third prime minister since the 2018 election,
after UMNO pulled its backing for Muhyiddin last month, citing his
failure to manage the pandemic.
Najib was convicted over 1MDB but has denied wrongdoing and appealed
the ruling.
(Reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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