This Week in Asia

Johor's Sultan Ibrahim picked as Malaysia's next king, calls incumbent Sultan Abdullah a symbol of unity

Malaysia's hereditary Malay rulers on Friday picked the influential sultan of Johor, Ibrahim Ismail, as the nation's next king, or Yang di Pertuan Agong.

The sultan, 64, known for being one of the most outspoken among the nation's nine Malay rulers, will succeed the incumbent Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah on January 31 and serve a five-year term.

"The Conference of Rulers in its 263rd meeting [today] agreed to promulgate that Sultan Ibrahim of Johor has been picked as the 17th Yang di Pertuan Agong, for a term of five years from Jan. 31, 2024," said Syed Danial, the Keeper of the Rulers' Seal in a statement. The council met for three days since Wednesday to discuss this and other relevant matters.

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Sultan Abdullah, the head of the royal household of Pahang, is Sultan Ibrahim's brother-in-law. He took over as king in 2019 following the sudden abdication of Sultan Muhammad V of Kelantan for personal reasons.

Observers say the role of the Malaysian king has steadily gained political influence, especially during the reign of Sultan Abdullah. The monarch presided over one of the most tumultuous times in the nation's politics - having seen four prime ministers during his term.

On two occasions, in 2020, and again last year, he played a key role to mediate between political factions and facilitate the appointment of a prime minister with adequate legislative backing.

Sultan Ibrahim will be the second sultan of Johor to be appointed Yang di Pertuan Agong. His father Sultan Iskandar served in that position from 1984 to 1989.

His great-grandfather, the previous Sultan Ibrahim, declined the offer to be Malaysia's first king in 1957 despite being the most senior monarch at the time.

Nine of Malaysia's 13 states have royal courts dating back centuries. These households are mandatorily led by a male who is a Malay and a follower of Islam.

Of these, seven leaders are styled "sultans", like Arabic sovereigns, while the ruler of the state of Perlis bordering Thailand is a raja. In Negeri Sembilan, the monarch is appointed for life by four chieftains and is called Yang di Pertuan Besar, or grand ruler.

The heads of the nine royal households take turns serving five years as Yang di Pertuan Agong. They, along with the appointed governors of the country's four non-royal states, make up the Conference of Rulers.

The governors are not eligible for the role of king. While largely a ceremonial position, the king does have constitutional powers that he largely has to exercise on the advice of the federal cabinet. This involves decisions on the appointment of senior public officials, including the prime minister.

As head of state, he is also able to issue full royal pardons - as in the case of the current Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in 2018, when the former king Sultan Muhammad V wiped his record clean of multiple convictions of sodomy and corruption.

In a rare insight into the opaque process of the Conference of Rulers at the National Palace, the Keeper of the Rulers' Seal - as secretaries to the monarchs - publicly released the text of Sultan Abdullah's speech in the meeting to his fellow royals where he stressed that the institution is not merely symbolic.

"The institution of the Yang di Pertuan Agong is the defender of democratic practices, the central pillar to national peace and the heartbeat of national unity," said Sultan Abdullah on Thursday.

Sultan Ibrahim, in his remarks, paid tribute to the role the incumbent king had played not just as a political stabilising force but as a symbol of unity.

Sultan Abdullah earned plaudits during the Covid-19 pandemic and during other crises - including massive floods in 2021 - for rolling up his sleeves to engage the public on the ground, oftentimes doing away with the usual formalities when it comes to such royal engagements.

This was acknowledged by Sultan Ibrahim, who chaired the Conference of Rulers' meeting, in his response to Sultan Abdullah's speech.

"Your success is not only in solving political crises but also in the way you interacted with the people," he said.

Sultan Ibrahim raised the example of Sultan Abdullah and Queen Tunku Azizah Aminah Maimunah Iskandariah's 2,154km tour of the nation's two Borneo territories of Sabah and Sarawak. The couple were flocked by hundreds of people throughout the 11-day trip in September.

"[The tour] succeeded in bringing the relationship between the king and the people closer, and increasing the loyalty of the people to the King and the State," Sultan Ibrahim said.

Malay sociologist Awang Azman Awang Pawi described Sultan Abdullah's rule as the most consequential in the country's history.

"Facing political turmoils under his reign, he succeeded solving all these issues well and responsibly," he said.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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