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Malaysia's Mahathir calls for 'people power' movement to topple PM

By Trinna Leong and Al-Zaquan Amer Hamzah KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad, joining anti-government protesters for a second day on Sunday, called for a "people's power" movement to topple Prime Minister Najib Razak over a financial scandal. "The only way for the people to get back to the old system is for them to remove this prime minister," said Mahathir, a deeply respected 90-year-old who was once Najib's patron and is now his fiercest critic. "And to remove him, the people must show people's power. The people as a whole do not want this kind of corrupt leader," he told media before heading to the rally, whose numbers police estimated at 25,000. The two-day protest brought onto the streets a political crisis triggered by reports of a mysterious transfer worth more than $600 million into an account under Najib's name. Najib, who denies wrongdoing, has weathered the storm and analysts say the protest is unlikely to inspire broad public support for him to quit because it lacks a strong leader. The rally, unlike the last one in 2012, also lacks the support of a party identified with the Malay majority: most protesters were from the minority ethnic Chinese and Indian communities. However, Mahathir - the country's longest-serving leader - was a leader of the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), which represents Malays. UMNO Vice-President Hishammuddin Hussein said that by turning up unexpectedly at the anti-government rally on Saturday, Mahathir had "crossed over the line". Another UMNO leader, Jamal Yunos, told Reuters that 1 million government supporters would stage a rally on Oct. 10 that would trump the protests of the past two days. Mahathir’s siding with protesters sits oddly with the often-authoritarian style of his own 22-year rule until 2003, during which Malaysia became a powerhouse of economic development but also won a reputation for cronyism and dubious "mega-projects". Najib was once a protégé of Mahathir, just as the now-jailed Anwar Ibrahim – once widely viewed as Mahathir's heir apparent – was before him. Anwar fell from favor when he began a popular "reformasi" (reform) movement against the graft and nepotism he said marked Malaysia’s business and political worlds. Mahathir sacked him from his posts, and charges of sodomy and corruption followed. Mahathir has always maintained that the sodomy charges were genuine and made Anwar unfit to be leader. RIOT TRUCKS On Sunday, security remained tight and anti-riot trucks stood ready, but there were no reports of violence. City authorities rejected an application by pro-democracy group Bersih for a protest permit, which had raised fears of a repeat of the 2012 rally when police used water cannon and teargas to disperse protesters. In a sign the government was losing patience, Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi warned organizers they could face legal action. "They must face the consequences if they dare to break the law," he said, the New Straits Times reported online. The national news agency Bernama said 12 people in the southwestern city of Malacca were arrested for wearing the signature yellow T-shirts of the protests, which the government had banned before the rally. Najib said in a speech later that demonstrations were "not the right channel to voice views in a democratic country", and cited the religious leader of an Islamic party-ruled Malaysian state as saying the protests were illegal in the eyes of Islam. Malaysia has been gripped since July by reports that investigators probing allegations of mismanagement and corruption at the debt-laden state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad had discovered the transfer into Najib's account. The country's anti-corruption agency has said the funds were a donation from an unidentified Middle East donor. Najib, who says he did not take any money for personal gain, sacked his deputy and ministers who had questioned him as he sought to contain the scandal. The attorney-general who had been investigating 1MDB was also replaced. Authorities also suspended two newspapers and blocked access to a website that had reported extensively on 1MDB. Najib retains significant support from the long-ruling Barisan Nasional coalition and his party, UMNO. The coalition, in power since 1957, lost the popular vote for the first time in 2013 to an opposition alliance that split earlier this year. However, he is under pressure over his handling of the economy, which has been hit by a slump in energy prices that threaten oil and gas revenues, and Malaysia's currency plummeted this month to 17-year lows against the dollar. Najib said in his speech at a convention center that some people with an agenda had tried to spread lies that "Malaysia would become bankrupt like Greece". "It is clearly proven that Malaysia is not a failed state, as claimed by some," he said. "It is far from a bankrupt nation. We are still in a stable condition, with solid fundamentals, and remain competitive." (Additional reporting by Angie Teo, Al-Zaquan Amer Hamzah, Christophe Van der Perre and Ebrahim Harris; Writing by John Chalmers; Editing by Alison Williams)