
Malaysia's prime minister called an  emergency session of the ruling party's top policy-making body, seeking to stamp  his authority after the dramatic defection of ex-premier Mahathir Mohamad.       Mahathir's departure, which cast further doubt on  Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's own future, has raised Malaysia's  political risks and spooked investors as the government grapples with high  inflation, slowing economy and rising subsidies.
Abdullah, who was to chair a special meeting of the United Malays  National Organisation (UMNO) supreme council at 12:00 GMT (4:00 PM NZ), also  faced pressure from opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who said his group had the  numbers to topple the government.       "The  excessive politicking has generated extra uncertainties into the whole political  and economic environment," said Zainal Aznam Yusof, a senior fellow at  Malaysia's Institute of Strategic and International Studies.
UMNO has been in turmoil since a poor showing in March elections, when the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition which it dominates lost its crucial two-thirds majority in parliament. Malaysia said on Wednesday the annual inflation rate hit 3.0% in April, the highest in 15 months, led by firmer food prices.
The government is also considering reforms to fuel subsidy policy, aware that  substantial fuel price hikes could stoke popular anger.       Record food and energy prices are increasing Malaysian price  pressures but price controls on goods such as flour and cooking oil are helping  to keep inflation among the region's lowest.
      The stock market eased on Wednesday, after losing more than one  percent the previous day on jitters over the political flux, prompting the  second finance minister to reassure the market that economic fundamentals remain  strong.       
Anwar waiting in the  wings?
Mahathir's bombshell  resignation on Monday from the party he led for 22 years came with a call for  other UMNO members to quit en masse. A meeting of lawmakers on Tuesday ignored  the call and rallied behind Abdullah.       Mahathir, who has become increasingly vehement in criticism of his  successor, said he was leaving UMNO in an attempt to force Abdullah out.
Mahathir wrote in his blog www.chedet.com that BN lawmakers  should temporarily leave the coalition and declare themselves as independents in  a vote of no-confidence in Abdullah.       "This is  one way to force Abdullah to resign. Once he resigns, the MPs can return to the  BN fold," he said.       Abdullah has refused to  quit.
Analysts said the most likely outcome of Wednesday night's meeting was a  reaffirmation by UMNO leaders of their support for him.       "At this point, there are so many factions and alliances within the  leadership," said Lee Hock Guan, senior fellow with Singapore's Institute of  South East Asian Studies.       "But he will  probably get the support of the majority within the Supreme Council."       Mahathir's resignation came three days after  Abdullah ordered the attorney-general to investigate the former premier and five  others on possible offences over the appointment of judges while the former  premier was in power.
The political  uncertainties have added to speculation over whether the BN coalition can keep  its stranglehold on power. An emboldened opposition, headed by Mahathir arch-foe  Anwar, is seeking to wrest parliamentary control by wooing BN defectors.
      "We have the numbers"
"I do intend to topple the government, we have the  numbers," Anwar told reporters in Singapore, a claim echoed by government  insiders.       "I'm looking forward to early  elections," Anwar said, adding that he hoped these would take place before  September.       "The moment we are sure we can  contest, we move."       "If you have a one to two  majority, the government will be too fragile...You don't need a two-thirds  majority," he said, adding that he wanted a majority of five or six and saw a  vote of no-confidence in parliament as the best course of action.
UMNO, backbone of the 14-party BN that has ruled  since independence from Britain in 1957, holds 79 of its 140 seats.       The opposition is a loose alliance of Islamists, a  Chinese-based party and the multiracial PKR, and needs to gain just 30 seats to  win a simple majority and form the government.
      In a sign that the party is tearing itself apart, the leader of  UMNO's youth wing demanded on Wednesday that another senior member, Mukhriz  Mahathir, son of the former premier, face disciplinary action for urging  Abdullah to resign.       Mukhriz said on Tuesday he  would not join his father in quitting UMNO but demanded that thepremier steps  down.       But another of Mahathir's sons,  businessman Mokhzani, decided to leave the party, along with Mahathir's wife.
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