"If Anwar goes to jail, the opposition will be stronger because Anwar will be seen as a martyr."
The United States and Amnesty International have raised concerns over the charges against Anwar, who in his first trial was brought to court with a black eye after a vicious beating from the police chief.
The earlier charges emerged after he challenged veteran ruler Dr Mahathir Mohamad. The latest allegations followed the landmark polls that give him an excellent chance of victory in the next general election.

A survey last year found just 11 percent of Malaysians believed the accusations that Anwar sodomised Mohamad Saiful Bukhari Azlan, who was then a 23-year-old volunteer at his office.
Anwar: A deeply flawed case
Anwar, 61, spent six years in jail until 2004 when the nation's highest court overturned the sodomy conviction. After a few years of recuperation he emerged to build the most successful opposition force the country has seen.
He is the undisputed glue in the Pakatan Rakyat, an alliance of three unlikely partners - his own multiracial PKR party, the conservative Islamic party PAS, and the liberal Chinese-based DAP.
Contrary to fears the opposition could spin apart if Anwar is convicted and jailed, leading Southeast Asia academic Bridget Welsh said that at least initially it could galvanise its supporters and give it a sense of unity.
"But the issue is long term, it's the question of who would then lead the opposition and that raises certain types of questions," she said, including the issue of which party should come out on top.
Anwar says the case against him is deeply flawed, and remains defiant about his prospects and that of his party.
"There is no question of the Pakatan Rakyat continuing, surviving. It will continue to defend the rights of the people and challenge the government, gaining strength from any conviction made against me," he told AFP last week.

Anwar's first trial was full of drama, lurid testimony, and headline-grabbing incidents including one when a mattress supposedly stained with semen was hauled into the courtroom.
The current hearing, which begins on Wednesday and is expected to last at least several weeks, is likely to get off to a slow start with legal argument over evidence and a defence motion to strike out the charges altogether. - AFP
It will be good too to ask him to just drop her , that fat lady
ReplyDeleteLong live the new Jib !
2 nights ago, I managed to catch this local talk show on some local TV station (cant' remember which) where some local govn. official stated that the people will support the govn as long as their rice bowl are maintained and there's wealth for everyone....
ReplyDeleteDoesn't this prove how out of touch Najib and his govn are, on what Malaysians want!!??
It's no longer like TDM's time where people will close one eye on rampant corruption just because there's money in the pockets.....we're a lot more informed now....and we know we have a better alternative in PR...so why settle for 2nd best!!??
'wealth for everyone' !!?? @#$%^&* !
ReplyDelete