In Malaysia Police open defamation probe against ex-PM Mahathir
To shore up his position, Najib has silenced dissenters within his party, in the opposition and the government. Aside from replacing the attorney-general, he also sacked his deputy prime minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, last year.
Former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad
is under investigation for defaming the attorney-general in blog posts
criticising his failure to bring corruption charges against Prime
Minister Najib Razak, police said on Monday.
The
feud between Malaysia's past and current leaders has gripped the
Southeast Asian nation for almost a year, with Mahathir repeatedly
calling on Najib, his former protege, to step down over a financial
scandal at indebted state-fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).
In
a Feb. 5 posting on his personal blog, Mahathir wrote attorney-general
Mohamad Apandi Ali had "no credibility", after he cleared Najib of any
criminal offences or corruption arising from a graft probe into a $681
million deposit in Najib's personal bank account.
Najib
replaced the previous attorney-general and appointed Apandi just weeks
after a Wall Street Journal report on 1MDB revealed the deposits of vast
sums in Najib's account.
Apandi closed
investigations into Najib earlier this month after concluding that the
money was gifted by a member of the Saudi royal family, and most of it
had been returned. .
Inspector-General of Police
Khalid Abu Bakar said several police reports had been lodged against
Mahathir over his attack on Apandi.
"We will
investigate according to the proper legal procedures. If there is a case
to be made, we will discuss it with the attorney-general's chambers and
take further action if needed," Khalid said at a press conference in George Town, the main city in Penang state.
Mahathir on Monday used his blog account to issue his own challenge to Apandi.
"As
a good Muslim he should swear on the Koran in a mosque witnessed by
mosque officials and the public that the reports did not implicate Najib
in any way," wrote Mahathir.
"He should
not try to cheat by vowing in his heart something else, and swearing
aloud something else. That would be a double sin. He will go to a worse
hell."
In several earlier blog posts,
Mahathir had accused Apandi of protecting Najib and expressed doubts
about Apandi's willingness to cooperate with his counterpart in a Swiss
investigation into 1MDB.
To shore up his position,
Najib has silenced dissenters within his party, in the opposition and
the government. Aside from replacing the attorney-general, he also
sacked his deputy prime minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, last year.
Earlier
this month Najib loyalists within the United Malays National
Organisation (UMNO) forced Mahathir's son, Mukhriz Mahathir, to quit as
chief minister of the northern state of Kedah.
Mahathir
was also questioned by the police in November after he made a surprise
appearance at an anti-government rally in Kuala Lumpur and called for
Najib to resign. But no action has been taken so far.
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