Clearly, pressure on their man whets his supporters' appetite for what may well be dubbed the 'Anwar Ibrahim 360' show: the PKR supremo's overall take, delivered in windmill fashion, on what is happening to the politics, economy, religion, and people of Malaysia.

Earlier in the week, police had dispersed a crowd at the Sultan Sulaiman Club in Kampong Baru, Kuala Lumpur. The crowd gathered to celebrate the second anniversary of the political tsunami that had gained for the opposition control of four states and enhanced standing in one.
There followed a gathering at an indoor stadium in Shah Alam which also drew sizeable support but the exhibition of popular sentiment at Rasah, in inclement conditions, was the surest indicator that Pakatan's taking public their case against undue BN harassment was catching on compellingly.

Earlier it had listened with applause, polite and intermittent, to supporting speakers, which included PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang, Penang deputy chief ministers P Ramasamy and Mansor Othman, Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng and Karpal Singh.

Justification for that position is tenuous now that defections have dropped Anwar's party, PKR, to second place in the tally of opposition MPs. The post normally goes to the leader of the party with the highest number of seats.
Guan Eng warms up crowd
At last night's gathering, the fact that a shower had cooled the heat of the earlier part of the evening helped reduce the people's discomfort at standing for long among concretions of parked cars, motorcycles and human beings.

Lim Guan Eng, who had preceded him at Sungai Chenaam and exited earlier to warm-up the crowd at Seberang Jaya, was speaking when Anwar arrived, pausing to allow the emcee to hail the PKR leader as 'wira negara' (nation's hero).

Anwar's now much-delayed turn at the podium meant he had to race through his speech, but not at the expense of his singular ability at mixing high flown speculation with street vernacular.
This saw him quote the Malay thinker Za'aba, fetching a counsel of this reformist intellectual uttered in 1920 no less, and dovetailing it with the necessity for imperative reform to Malaysia's political culture.
Anwar's ability to mix high and low on issues to do with religion and secular concerns, culture and politics, and also of his interactions with foreign and domestic leaders, was all on evidence in a fast-paced speech of about 45 minutes' duration.

That appeared to be what the crowd wanted to see from him, for many did not wait until the end to depart.
Having cooled their heels until his late arrival and been sufficiently gratified, they, near to midnight, began to straggle out of the sprawling grounds only to find people leaning on the guard rails in the distant periphery, still intent on the speaker's content, audible through strategically dispersed speakers.
The lure of Anwar's rhetorical magic is a thing of surprise, even to frequent listeners.
courtesy of Malaysiakini
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