Malaysia PM dissolves Parliament to hold elections

Schoolchildren walk in front of a flag of the opposition National Front Party outside a secondary school ahead of the upcoming general elections in Ipoh, Malaysia, Tuesday, April 2, 2013. AP/Vincent Thian

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia's prime minister dissolved Parliament on Wednesday to call for national elections expected later this month.

The polls will be fiercely contested between Prime Minister Najib Razak's long-ruling National Front coalition and opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's three-party alliance.

Najib said in a nationally televised address that he has obtained royal consent from Malaysia's constitutional monarch to dissolve Parliament immediately.

The Election Commission is expected to meet within a week to set a polling date. Voting must be held within two months but is widely expected by the end of April.

Najib urged Malaysians in his 15-minute speech to give the National Front a strong mandate so that it can work to improve "the fate of our children and grandchildren."

The National Front's current five-year mandate had been scheduled to end April 30.

At stake are 222 seats in Parliament and control of 12 Malaysian states. The National Front won 2008 elections with less than a two-thirds parliamentary majority, its poorest results in more than five decades of uninterrupted rule since independence from Britain in 1957.

Najib was marking exactly four years as prime minister Wednesday. He succeeded Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who was pressured to step down after being blamed for weak leadership that contributed to the National Front's electoral setback.

Anwar's opposition alliance wrested control of several states in 2008 by pledging to curb long-entrenched problems including corruption and racial discrimination.

Najib has intensified efforts to win back support over the past year with measures such as channeling more funds to the poor and abolishing security laws that were widely considered repressive.

Most analysts believe Najib's coalition will still have the upper hand because of its support in predominantly rural constituencies that hold the key to a large number of Parliament's seats.

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