Malaysian opposition figurehead Anwar Ibrahim said Tuesday that the three parties he rallied to stunning election results were a "government in waiting".
Anwar, a former deputy premier who has made a spectacular political comeback after being sacked and jailed a decade ago, said he is in no hurry to return to parliament when a ban on his taking public office expires next month.
"I have not dealt with this issue yet. My priority now is to assist and help the state governments to establish themselves," he said, after the opposition took four states from the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition in Saturday polls.
"I will attend parliament. But I will be in the public gallery.
He laughed off a question about whether he saw himself as a future prime minister, but he made his ambitions clear.
"I don't like the term 'opposition head'. We are the government in waiting," he told a press conference.
Anwar has previously said he will return to parliament through a by-election in a seat held by his Keadilan party after April, when the ban related to a corruption conviction expires.
In 1998, Anwar was convicted on sex and graft charges that he dismissed as politically motivated. The sex charge was later quashed.
Keadilan won 31 seats for the biggest opposition presence in the new 222-seat parliament, while the Chinese-based Democratic Action Party won 28 and the Islamic party PAS won 23.
Sitting on the opposition benches will be Anwar's wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, who extended a majority in her parliamentary seat in Saturday's poll, and his daughter, Nurul Izzah Anwar, who won in her first attempt.
Anwar weathered blistering personal attacks during the campaign from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's ruling party, which was clearly rattled as he criss-crossed the nation delivering barn-storming speeches.
Agence France-Presse - 3/11/2008 8:02 AM
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
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