Anwar's wife seeks election

Anwar's wife seeks election

Wan Azizah Wan Ismail arrives for a court hearing in a defamation suit brought by husband Anwar Ibrahim against Malaysian Foreign Affairs Minister Anifah Aman in February this year. (EPA Photo)
Wan Azizah Wan Ismail arrives for a court hearing in a defamation suit brought by husband Anwar Ibrahim against Malaysian Foreign Affairs Minister Anifah Aman in February this year. (EPA Photo)

KUALA LUMPUR — The wife of Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim on Saturday entered the race for the parliamentary seat vacated by her husband's recent jailing over a much-criticised sodomy conviction.

Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, an Irish-trained medical doctor and mother of six, filed her nomination papers for the byelection in Anwar's constituency in the northern state of Penang, said Fahmi Fadzil, communications director for the People's Justice Party.

It marks the second time that Wan Azizah, 62, has stepped in for her husband during one of his controversial imprisonments.

She won Anwar's seat in 1999 after he was sacked as deputy prime minister in Malaysia's long-ruling government and jailed on sodomy and corruption charges widely considered politically motivated.

The episode left her in control of a reform movement that emerged in response to Anwar's ouster. The popular Anwar later became leader of a rejuvenated opposition, which he inspired to unprecedented gains in parliament.

"It is not that I am asking for sympathy but don't we want to fight the injustice? I need your help and I need your prayers," she said in a speech on Saturday.

Wan Azizah is now the president of the People's Justice Party. She appears unlikely to replace her husband as opposition leader, however, with the baton expected to pass to Anwar's longtime protege Azmin Ali.

The election is set for May 7.

Anwar was jailed in February for five years for sodomising a former male aide.
He denies the charge, calling the case a conspiracy by Prime Minister Najib Razak's government to cripple the three-party opposition.

Najib has been condemned at home and abroad for the arrests of scores of opposition politicians and other critics over the past year on sedition and other charges.

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