PAS Has Closed Door To Talks On Unity Government

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KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 27 (Bernama) — PAS president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang said on Tuesday the party had closed the door to talks to form a unity government with Umno.

He said there had been a change in the national leadership and PAS had yet to evaluate the attitude adopted by the current national leader.

“The unity government is no longer viable. We have closed the book on it. The (former) Prime Minister (Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi) has already stepped down.

“As for the existing leader, we don’t know what is his attitude and position, the situation has also changed,” he told reporters at the Parliament Lobby, here.

He said Umno too had stopped raising the issue on the unity government and instead the party and Barisan Nasional (BN) were currently tackling the crisis faced by the BN component parties.

Meanwhile, when asked to comment on the advice by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad that the PAS spiritual leader, Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat, relinquished his party posts, Abdul Hadi said the former prime minister had no right to interfere in the affairs of PAS.

He said PAS could determine its own leadership and was confident that Nik Abdul Aziz was still capable of playing his role as the PAS spiritual leader.

He also said that there was no necessity for Nik Abdul Aziz to step down.

“We practice democracy in PAS. Everyone can give their opinion and we have been practicing it all the while and we could resolve party problems amicably,” he said.

Meanwhile, party sources believed that the Special Meeting of the PAS Central Committee tomorrow could resolve the leadership problem that had been plaguing the party for quite some time, although there were talks that the special meeting was merely to ‘sweep the dirt under the carpet’.

A source told Bernama that it would be difficult for the top leadership to resolve the real issue because the problem involved a leader who was respected by the grassroots on one side, and the party leadership chosen by the delegates to steer the party on the other.

Actually, it was not the first time that Nik Abdul Aziz had voiced his unhappiness over several party leaders and he had clearly named the leaders concerned in the run up to the PAS election held in June.

Ironically, the individuals named had been chosen by the delegates to lead PAS for the next three years while the candidates from the professional group supported by Nik Abdul Aziz had lost.

— BERNAMA