Give Anwar more time to improve economy: Sultan of Johor

The ruler also emphasised the importance of Malaysia maintaining friendly relations with China

10:33 PM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR – The Sultan of Johor Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim should be given more time to improve the country’s economy.

In an exclusive interview with Sin Chew Daily, the ruler acknowledged the financial challenges faced by Anwar’s administration.

“Anwar only came to realise the government’s financial difficulties after taking office,” said Sultan Ibrahim in the interview with the local Chinese newspaper.

Sultan Ibrahim also expressed his relief that the prime minister’s visit to China earlier this year brought back several positive outcomes.

Speaking on Anwar, His Majesty said he has a good relationship with the prime minister.

“At times, he seeks my opinion, and at times, he provides me with suggestions,” he said.

The ruler also emphasised that it is important for Malaysia to maintain friendly relations with China.

The Johor Sultan said it is the right approach to place the Malaysia My Second Home (MM2U) programme under the purview of the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture and reports directly to the prime minister.

To attract more investments, Malaysia must offer investor-friendly and practical visa options, especially in reconsidering the current MM2U programme, because the second phase was already unfriendly and the third phase is even worse, he added. – August 27, 2023

Topics

 

Popular

Kelantan, Terengganu PKR heads defend division chief posts

Datuk Seri Mohd Suparadi Mohd Noor retains position in Tanah Merah while Ahmad Nazri Mohd Yusof retains Kemaman

Don’t blame students for govt’s failure, Shafie tells GRS amid UMS water protest

Warisan president criticises state govt for scapegoating UMS students protesting ongoing water supply issues in Sabah, calling for accountability rather than blame

NCPR route: Activists slam Penang’s RM2.4bil ‘car-centric’ solution for endangering environment, wildlife

Environmentalists and transport advocates warn of irreversible damage as state pushes ahead with controversial Tanjung Bungah-Teluk Bahang road

Related