Malaysia
Accused of slander, PM Anwar says no problem in giving proof that Dr Mahathir enriched own family 
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim speaks during a dialogue session with students at Universiti Teknologi Mara in Shah Alam April 7, 2023. ― Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

KUALA LUMPUR, April 7 — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim today said that he would provide proof that Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad had enriched himself and his family when he led the government.

During a dialogue session with students at Universiti Teknologi Mara in Shah Alam, Selangor, the incumbent Pakatan Harapan chairman said that Dr Mahathir had done some good and a lot of damage to Malaysia when the latter was prime minister.

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"I will answer. If he asks for proof, I will give proof. No problem,” Anwar replied to a student who asked for his response to Dr Mahathir’s legal threat over the enrichment claims.

The latest feud between the two leaders started on March 18 when Anwar said that a person who had led the country for 22 years and 22 months had enriched himself and his family, and that during that time Malay power had eroded.

Dr Mahathir later said that Anwar must have been talking about him, since there was no one else who had been prime minister for the same amount of time.

The 97-year-old was prime minister twice; first from 1981 to 2003; and the second from 2018 to February 2020.

Dr Mahathir then sent a letter of demand to Anwar and gave the latter until April 17 to retract or prove his enrichment claim or face a lawsuit.

In today’s dialogue with the university students, Anwar said that Dr Mahathir painted a very negative image of Malays that was based on a colonial mindset.

"He says the Malays are lazy, don’t know how to appreciate, easily forget. Is it true that Malay culture is like that?

"Which race doesn’t have people who are lazy... all races have easily forgotten things,” he said.

Anwar also said that the Malay race had birthed great thinkers and leaders throughout history.

"How can the Malays in Melaka be called lazy, when it was a famed global trading hub and cosmopolitan centre.

"The problem instead lies with the thinking of leaders,” he added.

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