Malaysian Islamic Party

The Malaysian Islamic Party also spell Pan-Malaysian Islamic Parti (Malay: Parti Islam Se-Malaysia; Jawi: ڤرتي إسلام سمليسيا) summary as PAS is an Islamist political party in Malaysia. As the party focused on Islamic fundamentalism,[4] PAS's electoral base are largely in Peninsular Malaysia's rural and conservative northern and eastern coasts, particularly in the states of Kelantan, Kedah, Perlis, Terengganu & Pahang. They also gain significant support in the rural area of Penang, Perak, Selangor & Malacca in the last 2022 Malaysian general election.

Malaysian Islamic Party
Malay nameParti Islam Se-Malaysia
ڤرتي إسلام سمليسيا
AbbreviationPAS / ڤاس
PresidentAbdul Hadi Awang
Secretary-GeneralTakiyuddin Hassan
SpokespersonKhairil Nizam Khirudin
Spiritual LeaderHashim Jasin
Deputy President

Vice-President
Tuan Ibrahim

1. Idris Ahmad
2. Mohd Amar Abdullah
3. Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar
Dewan Ulamak's ChiefAhmad Yahaya
Dewan Muslimat's ChiefNuridah Mohd Salleh
Dewan Pemuda's ChiefAhmad Fadhli Shaari
FounderAhmad Fuad Hassan
Founded24 November 1951 (as Malayan Islamic Organisation)
Legalised31 May 1955 (as a 'Political Party')
Split fromUnited Malays National Organisation (UMNO)
HeadquartersNo. 318-A, Jalan Raja Laut, 50350 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
NewspaperHarakah
Think tankPusat Penyelidikan PAS Pusat
Youth wingDewan Pemuda PAS
Women's wingDewan Muslimat PAS
Cleric's wingDewan Ulamak PAS
Non-Muslim's wingDewan Himpunan Penyokong PAS
Student wingSiswa PAS
Ideology
Political positionFar-right
ReligionSunni Islam
National affiliationAlliance (1971–73)
Barisan Nasional (1973–78)
Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah (1990–96)
Barisan Alternatif (1999–2004)
Pakatan Rakyat (2008–15)
Gagasan Sejahtera (2016–20)
Muafakat Nasional (2019–22)
Perikatan Nasional (since 2020)
International affiliationMuslim Brotherhood[1][2]
Colours  Green and White
SloganIstiqamah Sehingga Kemenangan
Islam Memimpin
AnthemBerjihadlah
Dewan Negara:
7 / 70
Dewan Rakyat:
43 / 222
[3]
Dewan Undangan Negeri:
118 / 607
Chief minister of states
4 / 13
Election symbol

except PAS Kelantan and Terengganu

PAS Kelantan and Terengganu only
Party flag
Website
www.pas.org.my

The party was a component party of the then governing Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition which came to power as a result of the 2020–21 Malaysian political crisis. The party governs either solely or as coalition partners in the states of Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah, Perlis and Sabah. In the past, it was a coalition partner in the state governments of Penang and Selangor as part of the federal opposition between 2008 and 2018.

Since the 2022 Malaysian general election, the party holds 43 of the 222 seats in the federal Dewan Rakyat, being the largest individual party, and has elected parliamentarians or state assembly members in eight of the country's 13 states. Internationally, PAS is affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood.[1]

History

Origins

The post-World War II period, while Malaya was still under British colonial rule, saw the emergence of the country's first formal Islamic political movements. The Malay Nationalist Party (MNP), a left-wing nationalist organisation, was formed in October 1945 and led by Burhanuddin al-Helmy, who would later become the president of PAS. Out of the MNP arose the Pan Malayan Supreme Islamic Council (Majlis Agama Tertinggi Sa-Malaya or MATA) in 1947, and MATA in turn formed the party Hizbul Muslimin (Muslim People's Party of Malaya) in 1948. The central aim of Hizbul Muslimin was the establishment of an independent Malaya as an Islamic state.[5] However, the party did not live beyond 1948. The Malayan Emergency of that year, while a British–Communist dispute, saw the colonial administration arrest a number of the party's leaders, and the nascent group disbanded. Nevertheless, the party served as a forerunner to PAS, supplying both the ideology upon which PAS was formed and some of PAS's key leaders in its early years.[6]

Party formation

PAS was founded on 24 November 1951, as the Persatuan Islam Sa-Malaya (Pan Malayan Islamic Union) at a meeting in Butterworth, Penang. Shortly after it was renamed Persatuan Islam sa-Tanah Melayu (Tanah Melayu means "Land of the Malays" and was used by Malays to mean Malaya).[7] It became known as the Pan Malayan Islamic Party (PMIP) before the 1955 election as the registrar of society required it to incorporate the word "party" into its name.[8] Its acronym PAS, originally used in Malay but became more widely adopted in the 1970s, is based the written form in Jawi (ڤاس).[9]

The formation of the party was the culmination of a growing desire among Muslim clerics within the United Malays National Organisation to formalise a discrete Islamic political organisation. However, the lines between UMNO and the new party were initially blurred. PAS allowed dual membership of both parties, and many of its early senior leaders were also UMNO members. The party's first president was Ahmad Fuad Hassan, an UMNO cleric. He lasted in the position only until 1953, when he fell out of favour with the party, which was now developing a more distinct identity, and returned to the UMNO fold. Fuad's departure coincided with the end of dual membership.[10] The party turned to Abbas Alias, a Western-educated medical doctor, as its second president, although he did not play an active role in the party and was little more than a nominal figurehead.[11]

The party's first electoral test was the pre-independence 1955 election to the Federal Legislative Council, the body that preceded the national parliament. 52 single-member seats were up for election; PAS fielded 11 candidates. Hampered by a lack of funds and party organisation, PAS succeeded in having only one candidate elected: Ahmad Tuan Hussein, a teacher at an Islamic school in Kerian, Perak. He was the only opposition member of the council; the other 51 seats were won by members of the Alliance coalition between UMNO, the Malaysian Chinese Association and the Malaysian Indian Congress. PAS' performance in the election weakened its hand in negotiations with the British over the terms of Malayan independence. Its advocacy for the protection of Malay and Muslim rights, including the recognition of Islam as the country's official religion, was ignored. Alias stepped down from the presidency in 1956, handing it voluntarily to the radical nationalist Burhanuddin al-Helmy.[12] This change exemplified a broader trend among PAS's leadership in the late 1950s: the party's upper echelons gradually became filled with nationalists and long-time UMNO opponents, replacing the UMNO clerics who had initially led the party.[13]

Left-wing Islamism

Burhanuddin al-Helmy, a prominent anti-colonialist, steered PAS in a socialist and nationalist direction and set about strengthening the party's internal structure and geographic reach. In the 1959 election, Malaya's first since independence, the party's focus on rural constituencies, especially in the north, paid off. Thirteen PAS candidates were elected to the 104-member House of Representatives, and the party took control of the legislative assemblies of the northern states of Kelantan and Terengganu.[14][15]

However, Burhanuddin's leftist Pas-Islamism, under which PAS sought greater ties between the Muslim peoples of Malaya and the Indonesian archipelago, soon led the party into a wedge. The Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation of 1963–66 turned popular Malayan opinion against Indonesia. PAS's attacks on Tunku Abdul Rahman's Alliance government for seeking Western assistance during the confrontation, and the party's continued support for Southeast Asian PAS-Islamism, led to a loss of support in the 1964 election. The party's parliamentary cohort was reduced to nine.[16] The party became further marginalised the following year, when Burhanuddin was detained without trial under the Internal Security Act on allegations that he had collaborated with Indonesia.[17]

Political circumstances in the country had changed by the 1969 election. The Konfrontasi had ended, Burhanuddin had been released from custody although was too ill to campaign actively, and the Alliance coalition was suffering from internal division as well as unpopularity. PAS' vote rose to over 20 percent of the national electorate, netting the party 12 seats in Parliament.[18] However, the parliament would not convene until 1971 as the 13 May race riots resulted in the declaration of a state of emergency. The country would be run by a National Operations Council for the following two years. In the meantime, Burhanuddin died in October 1969 and was replaced as PAS' president by his deputy, Asri Muda.[19]

Pivot to Malay nationalism

Asri came to the presidency having been PAS's de facto leader during Burhanuddin's long illness.[20] But this did not mean a seamless transition for the party. While Burhanuddin had been sympathetic to left-wing causes and parties in Malaysia, Asri was first and foremost a Malay nationalist, and was hostile to leftist politics. One of his first acts as President of PAS was to part ways with the party's opposition allies on the left, such as the Malaysian People's Party. Ideologically, Asri's presidency would see the party shift markedly away from the Pas-Islamism of Burhanuddin. The party became principally concerned with the protection and advancement of the rights of ethnic Malays.[21] The party's activities also became solely focused on party politics, as reflected in the change of its name in 1971 from the "Persatuan Islam Se-Malaysia" (Pan-Malaysian Islamic Association) to the "Parti Islam Se-Malaysia" (Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, but commonly referred to as Parti Islam, or PAS).[22]

However, Asri's most radical change was still to come. In January 1972, he announced that PAS would be joining the Alliance Party coalition (which would soon rebrand itself as Barisan Nasional) as a junior partner to its main rival UMNO. The move was controversial within PAS, and some of its members and senior leaders either left the party or were purged by Asri. Asri's principal justification for joining UMNO in a coalition government was that after the 1969 race riots, Malay unity was paramount, and that this required a partnership between the country's two ethnic-Malay political parties. Asri himself was given a ministerial position in the cabinet of prime minister Abdul Razak Hussein.[23]

The 1974 election saw PAS competing under the Barisan Nasional banner for the first and only time. The party won 14 parliamentary seats to UMNO's 62, cementing PAS's position as the junior of the coalition partners. PAS also found itself governing in coalition in Kelantan, which it had previously governed in its own right. PAS's vote in its northern strongholds was weakened by a loss of support to both its former opposition allies and renegade PAS candidates running on anti-Barisan Nasional tickets.[24] Ultimately, it was Kelantan, Asri's home state and the base of political power, that would trigger the downfall of the UMNO–PAS partnership. After a conflict between Asri and the UMNO-favoured chief minister of the state, Mohamed Nasir, over investigations that Nasir initiated into Asri's financial dealings, Asri mobilised the PAS members of the Kelantan State Legislative Assembly to move a no-confidence motion against Nasir. The UMNO assemblymen staged a walk-out, abandoning Asri, driving an irreparable wedge through the coalition and causing a political crisis in the state. The Prime Minister Hussein Onn declared an emergency in the state, allowing the federal government to take control. Asri withdrew PAS from Barisan Nasional in December 1977.[25]

The 1978 election underscored how disastrous PAS's foray into the Barisan Nasional had been. The party was reduced to five parliamentary seats and, in separate state-level elections in Kelantan, was routed by UMNO and the Pas-Malaysian Islamic Front (BERJASA), which Nasir had founded after leaving PAS. The party's fortunes in the Kelantan election were not helped by a ban on public election rallies; while the Barisan Nasional was able to campaign through a compliant mass media, public talks were the principal way in which PAS could reach voters.[26] PAS fared little better in the 1982 election. In the face of a new prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, and the decision of the popular Islamist youth leader Anwar Ibrahim to join UMNO instead of PAS, the party was unable to improve on its five parliamentary seats and failed to regain government in Kelantan. Meanwhile, the 1978 to 1982 period coincided with the rise of a new generation of leaders within the party, including foreign-educated Muslim clerics (or "ulama") such as Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat and Abdul Hadi Awang. This group sought to reorient PAS as an Islamist party and were fundamentally hostile to UMNO, whose Malay nationalist focus they saw to be at the expense of Islam.[27] In 1980 the group succeeded in electing Yusof Rawa to the deputy presidency of the party, ousting the Asri loyalist Abu Bakar Omar.[28] By the time of PAS's 1982 assembly, it was clear to Asri that the ulama faction had the numbers to defeat him. He resigned on the floor of the assembly, and subsequently attacked the party through the media, leading to his expulsion and the formation of splinter party, Parti Hizbul Muslimin Malaysia (HAMIM) by Asri in 1983.[29] The following year, in 1983, Yusof was elevated to the presidency, unopposed.[30]

Ulama takeover

The ulama who took over PAS in 1982 drew from the 1979 Iranian revolution for inspiration in establishing an Islamic state; Yusof Rawa himself had served as Malaysia's Ambassador to Iran in the years preceding the revolution. Yusof openly rejected the Malay nationalism that characterised both UMNO and PAS under Asri Muda, considering it a narrow and ignorant philosophy that was contrary to the concept of a Muslim ummah.[31] As if to exemplify the shift in the party's ideological outlook under Yusof and his ulama colleagues, the party's new leaders adopted a more conservative and religious form of dress, abandoning Malay and western clothing for traditional Arab religious garb.[32] Politics between UMNO and PAS became increasingly religious in nature. The Barisan Nasional government tried to counter the possible electoral appeal of PAS's Islamisation by creating a number of state-run Islamic institutions, such as the International Islamic University of Malaysia. PAS leaders responded by labelling such initiatives as superficial and hypocritical, UMNO leaders as "infidels", and UMNO as the "party of the devil".[33]

The increasingly divisive rhetoric between UMNO and PAS produced deep divisions in Malay communities, especially in the northern states. Sometimes the divisions became violent, the most infamous example being the 1985 Memali incident, in which the government sanctioned a raid on a village led by the PAS cleric Ibrahim Libya, which left 14 civilians and four policemen dead.[34] It was against this backdrop that the PAS ulama faced their first general election in 1986. The result was a whitewash for the Barisan Nasional coalition. PAS recorded its worst-ever election result, retaining only one seat in Parliament. PAS, in recovering from the defeat, had no choice but to retreat from its hardline Islamism and pursue a moderate course.[35] By 1989, Yusof had become too ill to remain as PAS's president, and was replaced by his deputy, Fadzil Noor, another member of the ulama faction that now dominated the party.[36]

Electoral revival in the 1990s

Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat became the Menteri Besar (Chief Minister) of Kelantan in 1990, and remained in the post for 23 years.

While not abandoning PAS's ideological commitment to the establishment of an Islamic state, Fadzil Noor moderated the party's rhetoric. He also set about infusing the party's membership with young urban professionals in an attempt to diversify the leadership ranks beyond religious clerics.[20] The 1990s also saw PAS engage in international Islamist movements. Abdul Hadi Awang became active in a number of international Islamic organisations and delegations, and Islamist parties abroad sent delegations to Malaysia to observe PAS.[37]

The first electoral test of Fadzil's presidency was the 1990 election, which occurred against the backdrop of a split in UMNO out of which the Semangat 46 opposition party was formed. PAS joined Semangat 46 and two other Malay parties in the United Ummah Front ("Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah"), and won seven parliamentary seats. The new coalition swept the Barisan Nasional from power in Kelantan, winning all of its state assembly seats. Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat, a cleric who played a leading role in the 1982 takeover of the party, became Kelantan's Chief Minister, and would remain in the position until his retirement in 2013.[38] One of the first acts of the PAS-led government in Kelantan was to seek to introduce hudud, a criminal punishment system for particular Islamic offences. The move was abandoned after it became clear that the law could not be enforced over the objections of the federal government.[39]

PAS retained its seven parliamentary seats and the government of Kelantan in the 1995 election while all other opposition parties lost ground.[40] By the time of the next election in 1999, circumstances external to PAS had changed its fortunes for the better. The 1997 Asian financial crisis split the Barisan Nasional government between supporters of the Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad, and his deputy, Anwar Ibrahim. Mahathir's sacking and subsequent detention without trial of Anwar in 1998 provoked widespread opposition, which PAS capitalised on more than any other opposition party. The party ran a sophisticated campaign for the 1999 election, taking advantage of the internet to bypass restrictions on print publications and managing to woo urban professional voters while retaining its traditional rural support base. For the first time, PAS joined the centre-left and secular Democratic Action Party in the Barisan Alternatif coalition which included the new party Keadilan, which was formed by Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, the wife of the now imprisoned Anwar. It resulted in PAS's second best electoral performance (behind those of 2022 general election). The party took 27 of 192 parliamentary seats and had landslide state-level victories in Kelantan and Terengganu.[41]

PAS in the Pakatan Rakyat

The death of Fadzil Noor in 2002, and his replacement by the conservative cleric Abdul Hadi Awang, coincided with a period of division within the party between its younger and professional leaders, who sought to make PAS's Islamist ideology more appealing to mainstream Malaysia, and its conservative, and generally older, clerics. The party was unable to reconcile the views of the two factions with a coherent definition of the "Islamic state" that the party's platform envisioned.[20] The debate itself caused the DAP to break with the Barisan Alternatif coalition; as a secular party with mainly an ethnic Chinese support base, it could not support the vision of an Islamic state propagated by PAS's conservatives. PAS also found itself losing Malay support following the replacement of Mahathir as Prime Minister with Abdullah Badawi, a popular and moderate Muslim, and post-September 11 fears among the electorate about radical Islam in Southeast Asia.[42] If the 1999 election had been the party's zenith, the 2004 poll was one of the lowest points in its history. In an expanded Parliament, PAS was reduced to seven seats. Abdul Hadi not only lost his parliamentary seat but saw the government he led in Terengganu thrown from office after one term.[43]

The response of PAS to the 2004 election, like its response to the similar 1986 wipeout, was to abandon the hardline image that had contributed to its defeat. By now, the urban professional wing of the party's membership, brought into the party by Fadzil Noor in the 1990s, was ready to take charge. While Abdul Hadi's presidency was not under threat, the moderate faction, known as the "Erdogans" after the moderate Turkish Islamist leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan, had its members voted into other key positions in the party's 2005 general assembly.[20][44] PAS was now able to attack Abdullah Badawi's government from both the right and the left: on the one hand, it criticised Abdullah's promotion of Islam Hadhari as a watered-down version of Islam; on the other, it attacked the government for its human rights record and promoted the causes of social and economic justice, including for non-Muslims. The party also capitalised on the growth of the internet and social media in Malaysia to bypass the pro-government mass media.[45]

Ahead of the 2008 election PAS joined the DAP and Anwar Ibrahim's Keadilan, which was now known as People's Justice Party (PKR) in a new coalition, Pakatan Rakyat. The coalition handed the Barisan Nasional its worst-ever election result. Barisan Nasional lost its two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives, disabling it from passing constitutional amendments without opposition support. PAS won 23 seats; the Pakatan Rakyat as a whole won 82. At state level, decades-old Barisan Nasional governments fell in Kedah, Perak and Selangor. PAS now governed Kedah and Kelantan (led respectively by Azizan Abdul Razak and Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat) and supplied the Chief Minister of Perak (Nizar Jamaluddin) in a Pakatan Rakyat coalition government.[46]

PAS's 2009 general assembly saw latent fissures within the party come out into the open. The incumbent deputy president Nasharudin Mat Isa, a Malay nationalist who promoted greater co-operation between PAS and UMNO, was challenged by two moderate candidates.[47] Nasharudin survived with the backing of the conservative ulama faction; his two opponents had split the moderate vote. But at the 2011 assembly, Nasharudin was not so lucky: Mohamad Sabu, a leading moderate close to Anwar Ibrahim, commanded the support of the "Erdogan" wing and toppled him. Sabu's election was a significant defeat for the ulama faction. He was the first non-cleric to serve as the party's deputy president in over 20 years.[48]

The Pakatan Rakyat coalition went into the 2013 election facing Najib Razak, who had replaced Abdullah as Prime Minister in 2009 but failed to improve the government's fortunes, especially among urban voters. PAS made a concerted effort to expand its voter base beyond the northern peninsula states, and campaigned heavily in Johor, where it had never won a parliamentary seat. The election witnessed a significant degree of cross-over ethnic voting: Chinese voters in Malay-majority seats decided in large numbers to support PAS, to maximise the chances of a national Pakatan Rakyat victory. Pakatan Rakyat garnered 50.8 percent of the national popular vote but could not win a majority in parliament.[49] PAS, however, suffered a net loss of two parliamentary seats. This was principally attributable to a swing against the party in Kedah, where the party was removed from state government after one term and lost four parliamentary seats.[50]

Leaving Pakatan Rakyat and forming Gagasan Sejahtera

When PAS saw its share of seats shrink in the 2013 election, it started to reassert its Islamic agenda.[51] DAP criticised its president Abdul Hadi Awang for pushing a bill on hudud without consulting his opposition partners. This incident led to the DAP announcing in March 2015 that it would no longer work with the PAS leader. The rift worsened after conservatives captured PAS leadership, as progressive leaders were voted out of office in party elections, characterised by the media as an intentional wipe out and purge,[52][53] led to an exodus and the subsequent formation of Parti Amanah Negara by Mohamad Sabu. The party accepted a motion by its conservative ulama wing to sever ties with DAP.[54] In response, DAP's Secretary-General Lim Guan Eng said that the Pakatan Rakyat coalition no longer exists as a result of the violation of the coalition's Common Policy Framework, of which PAS had violated by intentionally severing ties with DAP.[55] The coalition was replaced by Pakatan Harapan, which the newly formed Parti Amanah joined as a founding member.

The party formed Gagasan Sejahtera with Malaysia National Alliance Party (IKATAN) in 2016,[56] with BERJASA joining the coalition the same year. The coalition entered the 2018 Malaysian general election using the PAS logo and contested 158 seats, with PAS contesting 155 of them.[57] The coalition was able to win 18 parliamentary seats as well as wrangle control of the state of Terrenganu from BN, which PAS had last ruled in 2004, in addition to retaining control of Kelantan. However, PAS was the only party to win any seats as both BERJASA and IKATAN remained without representation.

Renewed co-operation with UMNO and joining Perikatan Nasional

In September 2019, UMNO decided to form a pact with PAS called Muafakat Nasional. Its express purpose was to unite the Malay Muslim communities for electoral purposes.[58] However, this co-operation did not cover the rest of Barisan Nasional, which UMNO was member to, despite calls for a migration to the new alliance.[59][60] Barisan Nasional continued to function as a separate coalition of four parties comprising UMNO, MCA, MIC and PBRS.

During the Tanjung Piai by-election, PAS vice-president Mohd Amar Nik Abdullah stated that PAS would support the candidate nominated by Barisan Nasional,[61] which was reaffirmed by PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang.[62]

On 23 February 2020, PAS held an extraordinary meeting Janda Baik, Pahang together with the UMNO in the lead up to the 2020-21 Malaysian political crisis. PAS President Hadi Awang was among the entourage of then-opposition political leaders as well as members of government that visited the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to discuss the formation of a new government on 23 February.[63]

On 24 February, Mahathir announced his resignation as prime minister, followed by the withdrawal of Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (BERSATU) as well as 11 PKR MPs led by Azmin Ali from Pakatan Rakyat's successor coalition, Pakatan Harapan. This led to the collapse of the government as the remaining three parties, the DAP, PKR, and Amanah did not have enough seats for a majority. PAS along with UMNO declared their support for Mahathir to remain as prime minister.

On 25 February, UMNO and PAS revealed that they had withdrawn their prior support for Mahathir to continue as prime minister, and instead called for the dissolution of parliament.[64] It was previously reported that as all political factions voiced their support for Mahathir, he was intent on establishing a "unity government", which the two parties could not agree with.[65][66] Annuar Musa, UMNO's secretary-general, said the basis of negotiations with Mahathir was that UMNO and PAS would lend their support to form an alternative coalition without DAP. Therefore, both PAS and UMNO instead announced their support for a snap election.[67]

On 28 February, PAS then released a statement announcing their support for the BERSATU president, Muhyiddin Yassin to be appointed as the 8th Prime Minister, with every Muafakat Nasional MPs also signing statutory declarations in support of Muhyiddin.[68]

On 29 February, BERSATU President Muhyiddin Yassin and his allies including party leaders from UMNO, PAS, Gabungan Parti Sarawak, Parti Bersatu Rakyat Sabah, and the Homeland Solidarity Party had an audience with the Agong to discuss the formation of a government.[69][70] He announced that his coalition consisting of BERSATU, UMNO, PAS, PBRS, GPS, and STAR would be called Perikatan Nasional,.[71] and claimed that they had majority support in parliament to elect a Prime Minister and to form a government.[72]

In the Muhyiddin cabinet, which was formed on 10 March 2020, three PAS MPs became were given ministerial positions and five PAS MPs were afforded the position of deputy ministers.

Ideology and policies

Alternative flag of PAS, occasionally flown along the official full-moon-on-a-green-field flag

According to Farish A. Noor, a Malaysian academic who has written a complete history of PAS:

From the day PAS was formed, in November 1951, the long-term goal of creating an Islamic state in Malaysia has been the beacon that has driven successive generations of PAS leaders and members ever forward. What has changed is the meaning and content of the signifier 'Islamic state'[73]

From time to time, PAS's pursuit of an "Islamic state" has involved attempts to legislate for hudud—an Islamic criminal justice system—in the states that it governs.[74] Such laws would apply to all Muslims and would not apply to non-Muslims. PAS-dominated state assemblies in Kelantan and Terengganu passed hudud laws in the early 1990s and early 2000s respectively, although neither has ever been enforced due to opposition from the federal government.[75] PAS returned to its pursuit of hudud laws after the 2013 election, signalling that it would table bills in the federal Parliament to allow the laws, still on the statute books in Kelantan, to be enforced. The bills would require a two-thirds majority in the Parliament as they involve constitutional amendments.[76]

After PAS's electoral rout in 2004, the party sought to broaden its policies beyond Islamism. Among other things, the party focused on calling for improved civil liberties and race relations. However, these policy shifts have proven controversial within the party; conservatives have considered them part of a dilution of PAS's commitment to an Islamic state.[77][78]

When PAS was defeated in Terengganu, enforcement of female dress codes was reduced. The state PAS government in Kelantan bans traditional Malay dance theatres, banned advertisements depicting women who are not fully clothed, and enforced the wearing of headscarves, although they allowed gender segregated cinemas and concerts. Some government-controlled bodies pressure non-Muslims to also wear headscarves, and all students of the International Islamic University of Malaysia and female officers in the Royal Malaysian Police are required to wear headscarves in public ceremonies.[79]

The PAS party wishes that the death penalty be enacted for Muslims who attempt to convert, as part of their ultimate desire to turn Malaysia into an Islamic state.[80] The party is also against the government-backed wave of Anti-Shi'a persecution.[81]

Ties and linkages with the Muslim Brotherhood

PAS has also maintained close personal and ideological ties with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.[1] The party's relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood dates back to the 1940s when PAS's founders were exposed to the ideas and teachings of the Muslim Brotherhood while they were studying in Cairo during the 1940s. According to Wan Saiful Wan Jan of the think tank Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs, the Muslim Brotherhood regards PAS as a model for a successful Muslim political party; since PAS has governed the state of Kelantan continually since 1990. PAS representatives are often invited to Muslim Brotherhood speaking engagements overseas. In 2012, PAS President Abdul Hadi Awang spoke alongside Muslim Brotherhood scholar Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi at a speaking event in London.[82] That same year, PAS representatives met with Muslim Brotherhood leaders Sheikh Mahdi Akif and Dr Muhammad Badie in Cairo.[2]

According to Müller, PAS's current generation of leaders, the Ulama Leadership (Kepimpinan Ulama) were also influenced by Muslim Brotherhood ideology while studying in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and India during the 1980s. Muslim Brotherhood–inspired Islamic education methods (tarbiyah) and regular study circles (usrah/halaqah) were systematically introduced while networks were established with Muslim political parties and movements abroad.[83] In April 2014, Awang criticised the governments of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates for designating the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organisation.[2] In January 2016, former PAS leader Mujahid Yusof Rawa claimed that the Muslim Brotherhood's influence on PAS was limited to sharing the organisation's views on the role of Islam in society. Rawa also claimed that other local Muslim groups such as Angkatan Belia Islam Malaysia (ABIM; Muslim Youth Movement of Malaysia) and IKRAM were also sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood.[84]

Structure and membership

PAS's general assembly ("Muktamar") elects the party's president, Deputy President, three vice-presidents and a multi-member Central Working Committee. The assembly is held annually, but elections occur only once every two years. The assembly is composed mainly of delegates elected by individual local divisions of the party.[85] The day-to-day administration of the party is carried out by its Secretary-General, a position appointed by the party's leadership.[86] The Central Working Committee is ostensibly the party's principal decision-making body, although its decisions are susceptible to being overturned by the Syura Council, an unelected body composed only of Muslim clerics and led by the party's Spiritual Leader ("Musyidul 'Am").[87] The relationship between the different administrative bodies within the party occasionally causes conflict. In 2014, the Central Working Committee voted to support the nomination of Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, the President of the People's Justice Party, to be the Chief Minister of the Pakatan Rakyat government in Selangor. Abdul Hadi Awang, as PAS's president and with the backing of the Syura Council, overturned the decision and nominated different candidates.[88]

The party has three recognised sub-organisations for different categories of party members: an ulama wing (the "Dewan Ulama") for Muslim clerics, a women's wing (the "Dewan Muslimat") and a youth wing (the "Dewan Pemuda"). Each wing elects its own leadership at its own general assembly.[88] There is a fourth wing for non-Muslim supporters of the party, although it does not have the same recognised position in the party's structure as the other three wings.[85]

PAS has approximately one million members,[89] more than any other opposition party in Malaysia.[90] PAS members often distinguish themselves from UMNO members through cultural and religious practices. For Islamic headwear, males who support PAS tend to prefer the white, soft kopiah, while UMNO supporters tend to wear the traditional Malay songkok, a rigid black cap.[91] Some areas of Malaysia host rival mosques catering for the members and supporters of each party.[92]

Current office bearers

List of presidents

NameTerm of positionYears in position
Ahmad Fuad Hassan1951–19532 years
Abbas Alias1953–19563 years
Burhanuddin al-Helmy1956–196913 years
Asri Muda1969–198213 years
Yusof Rawa1982–19897 years
Fadzil Noor1989–200213 years
Abdul Hadi Awang2002–present20 years

Elected representatives

Senators

Members of Parliament of the 15th Malaysian Parliament

Currently PAS is the largest political party in the House of Representatives, having 43 members.

State No. Parliament Constituency Member Party
 PerlisP001Padang BesarRushdan RusmiPAS
P003ArauShahidan KassimPAS
 KedahP005JerlunAbdul Ghani AhmadPAS
P007Padang TerapNurul Amin HamidPAS
P008Pokok SenaAhmad YahayaPAS
P009Alor SetarAfnan Hamimi Taib AzamuddenPAS
P010Kuala KedahAhmad Fakhruddin Sheikh FakhruraziPAS
P011PendangAwang HashimPAS
P012JeraiSabri AzitPAS
P013SikAhmad Tarmizi SulaimanPAS
P016BalingHassan SaadPAS
 KelantanP019TumpatMumtaz Md. NawiPAS
P020Pengkalan ChepaAhmad Marzuk ShaaryPAS
P021Kota BharuTakiyuddin HassanPAS
P022Pasir MasAhmad Fadhli ShaariPAS
P023Rantau PanjangSiti Zailah Mohd YusoffPAS
P024Kubang KerianTuan Ibrahim Tuan ManPAS
P025BachokSyahir Che SulaimanPAS
P028Pasir PutehNik Muhammad Zawawi SallehPAS
P031Kuala KraiAbdul Latiff Abdul RahmanPAS
 Terengganu P033BesutChe Mohamad Zulkifly JusohPAS
P034SetiuShaharizukirnain Abdul KadirPAS
P035Kuala NerusAlias RazakPAS
P036Kuala TerengganuAhmad Amzad HashimPAS
P037MarangAbdul Hadi AwangPAS
P039DungunWan Hassan Mohd RamliPAS
P040KemamanChe Alias HamidPAS
 PenangP041Kepala BatasMastura MuhammadPAS
P044Permatang PauhFawwaz Md JanPAS
 PerakP057Parit BuntarMisbahul Munir MasdukiPAS
P058Bagan SeraiIdris AhmadPAS
P069ParitMuhammad Ismi Mat TaibPAS
P073Pasir SalakJamaludin YahyaPAS
 PahangP081JerantutKhairil Nizam KhirudinPAS
P083KuantanWan Razali Wan NorPAS
P086MaranIsmail Abdul MuttalibPAS
P087Kuala KrauKamal AshaariPAS
P088TemerlohSalamiah Mohd NorPAS
 SelangorP094Hulu SelangorMohd Hasnizan HarunPAS
P109KaparHalimah AliPAS
P112Kuala LangatAhmad Yunus HairiPAS
 MalaccaP136Tangga BatuBakri JamaluddinPAS
P139JasinZulkifli IsmailPAS
TotalPerlis (1), Kedah (9), Kelantan (9), Terengganu (7), Penang (2), Perak (4), Pahang (4), Selangor (3), Malacca (2)

Malaysian State Assembly Representatives

PAS has 110 members of state legislative assemblies. It has representatives in every assembly other than those of Negeri Sembilan, Malacca and Sarawak. The party holds a majority in the Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah and Perlis State Legislative Assemblies, and supplies all the members of the state's Executive Council (a body akin to a Cabinet), led by Menteri Besar, Ahmad Yakob.[93]

State No. State Constituency Member Party
 Perlis N2 Beseri Haziq Asyraf Dun PAS
N3 Chuping Saad Seman PAS
N4 Mata Ayer Wan Badariah Wan Saad PAS
N5 Santan Mohammad Azmir Azizan PAS
N6 Bintong Fakhrul Anwar Ismail PAS
N10 Kayang Asrul Aimran Abd Jalil PAS
N13Guar SanjiMohd Ridzuan HashimPAS
N14 Simpang Empat Razali Saad PAS
N15SanglangMohd Shukri RamliPAS
 KedahN4Ayer HitamAzhar IbrahimPAS
N7Kuala NerangMohamad Yusoff ZakariaPAS
N8PeduMohd Radzi Md AminPAS
N9Bukit LadaSalim MahmoodPAS
N10Bukit PinangRomaini Wan SalimPAS
N18TokaiMohd.Hayati OthmanPAS
N20Sungai LimauMohd.Azam Abd.SamatPAS
N23BelantekMad Isa ShafiePAS
N24JeneriMuhammad Sanusi Md NorPAS
N26Tanjong DawaiHanif GhazaliPAS
N27Pantai MerdekaAhmad Fadzli HashimPAS
N30BayuAbd Nasir IdrisPAS
N31KupangNajmi AhmadPAS
N32Kuala KetilMansor ZakariaPAS
N33Merbau PulasSiti Aishah GhazaliPAS
 KelantanN1Pengkalan KuborWan Roslan Wan MamatPAS
N2KelaboranMohd Adenan HassanPAS
N3Pasir PekanAhmad YakobPAS
N4Wakaf BharuMohd Rusli AbdullahPAS
N5KijangIzani HusinPAS
N6ChempakaAhmad Fathan MahmoodPAS
N7PanchorNik Mohd Amar Nik AbdullahPAS
N8Tanjong MasRohani IbrahimPAS
N9Kota LamaAnuar Tan Abdullah @ Tan Teng LoonPAS
N10Bunut PayongRamli MamatPAS
N11TendongRozi MuhamadPAS
N12Pengkalan PasirHanifa AhmadPAS
N13MerantiMohd Nassruddin DaudPAS
N14ChetokZuraidin AbdullahPAS
N15Gual PeriokMohamad AwangPAS
N16Apam PutraAbdul Rasul MohamedPAS
N17SalorSaiful Adli Abu BakarPAS
N18Pasir TumbohAbd Rahman YunusPAS
N19DemitMumtaz Md NawiPAS
N20TawangHassan MahmoodPAS
N21Pantai IramaMohd Huzaimy Che HusinPAS
N22JelawatAbdul Azziz KadirPAS
N24KadokAzami Mohd NorPAS
N26Bukit PanauAbd Fattah MahmoodPAS
N28KemahangMd Anizam Ab RahmanPAS
N29SelinsingTuan Mohd Sharipudin Tuan IsmailPAS
N30LimbonganMohd Nazlan Mohamed HasbullahPAS
N31SemerakWan Hassan Wan IbrahimPAS
N32GaalMohd Rodzi Ja’afarPAS
N33Pulai ChondongAzhar SallehPAS
N34TemanganMohamed Fazli HassanPAS
N35KemuningMohd Roseli IsmailPAS
N39MengkebangMuhammad Mat SulaimanPAS
N40GuchilHilmi AbdullahPAS
N41Manek UraiMohd Fauzi AbdullahPAS
N42DabongKu Mohd Zaki Ku HussienPAS
 TerengganuN2Kota PuteraMohd Nurkhuzaini Ab RahmanPAS
N5JabiAzman IbrahimPAS
N9TepuhHishamuddin Abdul KarimPAS
N10Buloh GadingRidzuan HashimPAS
N12Bukit TunggalAlias RazakPAS
N13Wakaf MempelamWan Sukairi Wan AbdullahPAS
N14BandarAhmad Shah MuhamedPAS
N15LadangTengku Hassan Tengku OmarPAS
N16Batu BurukMuhammad Khalil Abdul HadiPAS
N17Alur LimbatAriffin DeramanPAS
N18Bukit PayungMohd Nor HamzahPAS
N19Ru RendangAhmad Samsuri MokhtarPAS
N20Pengkalan BeranganSulaiman SulongPAS
N22ManirHilmi HarunPAS
N23Kuala BerangMamad PutehPAS
N24AjilMaliaman KassimPAS
N26Rantau AbangAlias HarunPAS
N27SuraWan Hapandi Wan NikPAS
N28PakaSatiful Bahri MamatPAS
N29KemasikSaiful Azmi SuhailiPAS
N31CukaiHanifah MatPAS
N32Air PutihAb Razak IbrahimPAS
-Nominated MemberZuraida Mohd NoorPAS
 PenangN1PenagaMohd Yusni Mat PiahPAS
 Perak N1 Pengkalan Hulu Mohamad Amin Roslan PAS
N3 Kenering Husaini Ariffin PAS
N5SelamaMohd Akmal KamaruddinPAS
N6Kubu GajahKhalil YahayaPAS
N8 Titi Serong Hakimi Hamzi Hayat PAS
N11Gunong SemaggolRazman ZakariaPAS
N12 Selinsing Sallehuddin AbdullahPAS
N14 Changkat Jering Rahim Ismail PAS
N15 Trong Faisal Abdul Rahman PAS
N16 Kamunting Mohd Fakhruddin Abdul Aziz PAS
N20 Lubok Merbau Azizi Mohamed Ridzuan PAS
N23 Manjoi Hafez Sabri PAS
N35 Manong Burhanuddin Ahmad PAS
N40 Bota Najihatussalehah Ahmad PAS
N50 Kampong Gajah Zafarulazlan Zan PAS
N51 Pasir Panjang Rosli Abd Rahman PAS
N58 Slim Muhammad Zulfadli Zainal PAS
 Pahang N4 Cheka Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man PAS
N9TahanMohd Zakhwan Ahmad BadarddinPAS
N10DamakZuridan Mohd DaudPAS
N11 Pulau Tawar Yohanis Ahmad PAS
N12BeserahAndansura RabuPAS
N15Tanjung LumpurRosli Abdul JabarPAS
N17 Sungai Lembing Mohamad Ayub Asri PAS
N19PanchingMohd Tarmizi YahayaPAS
N20 Pulau Manis Mohd Rafiq Khan Ahmad Khan PAS
N24LuitMohd Soffian Abd JalilPAS
N26ChenorMujibur Rahman IshakPAS
N29JengkaShahril Azman Abd HalimPAS
N31 Lanchang Hassan Omar PAS
N32 Kuala Semantan Hassanudin Salim PAS
N40 Bukit Ibam Nazri Ahmad PAS
 SelangorN51SijangkangAhmad Yunus HairiPAS
 JohorN15MaharaniAbdul Aziz TalibPAS
 Sabah-Nominated MemberAliakbar GunsalanPAS
TotalPerlis (9), Kedah (15), Kelantan (36), Terengganu (23), Penang (1), Perak (17), Pahang (15), Selangor (1), Johor (1), Sabah (1)

PAS state governments

PAS currently forms the state governments of Perlis, Kedah, Kelantan, and Terengganu.

Previously, when it was a part of Pakatan Rakyat, it was part of the Penang and Selangor state governments.

State Leader type Member State Constituency
 Perlis Menteri Besar Mohd. Shukri RamliSanglang
 KedahMenteri BesarMuhammad Sanusi Md NorJeneri
 KelantanMenteri BesarAhmad YakobPasir Pekan
 TerengganuMenteri BesarAhmad Samsuri MokhtarRhu Rendang

General election results

Election Total seats won Seats contested Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Election leader
1955
1 / 52
52 40,667 3.9% Increase1 seats; Opposition Abbas Alias
1959
13 / 104
77 329,070 21.3% Increase12 seats; Opposition Burhanuddin al-Helmy
1964
9 / 159
66 301,187 14.6% Decrease4 seats; Opposition
1969
12 / 144
39 495,641 20.9% Increase3 seats; Opposition,
later Governing coalition
(Alliance)
1974
13 / 154
29 148,386 7.0% Increase1 seats; Governing coalition
(Barisan Nasional)
Asri Muda
1978
5 / 154
60 537,720 15.5% Decrease8 seats; Opposition
1982
5 / 154
60 602,530 14.5% Steady; Opposition
1986
1 / 177
70 718,891 15.6% Decrease4 seats; Opposition Yusof Rawa
1990
7 / 180
79 391,813 7.0% Increase6 seats; Opposition coalition
(Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah)
Fadzil Noor
1995
7 / 192
79 430,098 3.3% Steady; Opposition coalition
(Angkatan Perpaduan Ummah)
1999
27 / 193
59 994,279 14.99% Increase 20 seats; Opposition coalition
(Barisan Alternatif)
2004
7 / 219
65 1,051,480 15.2% Decrease 20 seats; Opposition coalition
(Barisan Alternatif)
Abdul Hadi Awang
2008
23 / 222
70 1,140,676 14.05% Increase 16 seats; Opposition coalition
(Pakatan Rakyat)
2013
21 / 222
70 1,633,199 14.77% Decrease 2 seats; Opposition coalition
(Pakatan Rakyat)
2018
18 / 222
155 2,032,080 17.89% Decrease 3 seats; Opposition coalition
(Gagasan Sejahtera),
later Governing coalition
(Perikatan Nasional)
2022
43 / 222
(without BERSATU)
49 / 222
(+ BERSATU Kelantan & Terengganu)
61 2,259,353 14.56% Increase 25 seats; Opposition coalition
(Perikatan Nasional)

State election results

State electionState Legislative Assembly
PerlisKedahKelantanTerengganuPenangPerakPahangSelangorNegeri SembilanMalaccaJohorSabahSarawakTotal won / Total contested
1959
0 / 12
0 / 24
28 / 30
13 / 24
0 / 24
1 / 40
0 / 24
0 / 28
0 / 24
0 / 20
0 / 32
42 / 200
1964
1 / 12
0 / 24
21 / 30
3 / 24
0 / 24
0 / 40
0 / 24
0 / 28
0 / 24
0 / 20
0 / 32
25 / 158
1969
1 / 12
8 / 24
19 / 30
11 / 24
0 / 24
1 / 40
0 / 24
0 / 28
0 / 24
0 / 20
0 / 32
0 / 48
40 / 185
1974
2 / 12
5 / 26
22 / 36
10 / 28
1 / 27
3 / 42
1 / 32
1 / 33
0 / 24
1 / 20
0 / 32
0 / 48
1978
0 / 12
7 / 26
2 / 36
0 / 28
1 / 27
1 / 42
0 / 32
0 / 33
0 / 24
0 / 20
0 / 32
11 / 204
1982
1 / 12
2 / 26
10 / 36
5 / 28
0 / 27
0 / 42
0 / 32
0 / 33
0 / 24
0 / 20
0 / 32
18 / 223
1986
0 / 14
3 / 28
10 / 39
2 / 32
0 / 33
0 / 46
0 / 33
0 / 42
0 / 28
0 / 20
0 / 36
0 / 48
15 / 265
1987
1990
0 / 14
1 / 28
24 / 39
8 / 32
0 / 33
0 / 46
0 / 33
0 / 42
0 / 28
0 / 20
0 / 36
0 / 48
33 / 114
1994
0 / 48
0 / 3
1995
0 / 15
2 / 36
24 / 43
7 / 32
0 / 33
0 / 52
0 / 38
0 / 48
0 / 32
0 / 25
0 / 40
33 / 177
1999
3 / 15
12 / 36
41 / 43
28 / 32
1 / 33
3 / 52
6 / 38
4 / 48
0 / 32
0 / 25
0 / 40
0 / 48
98 / 234
2001
0 / 62
0 / 3
2004
1 / 15
5 / 36
24 / 45
4 / 32
1 / 40
0 / 59
0 / 42
0 / 56
0 / 36
0 / 28
1 / 56
0 / 60
36 / 265
2006
0 / 71
0 / 1
2008
1 / 15
16 / 36
38 / 45
8 / 32
1 / 40
6 / 59
2 / 42
8 / 56
1 / 36
0 / 28
2 / 56
0 / 60
83 / 232
2011
0 / 71
0 / 5
2013
1 / 15
9 / 36
32 / 45
14 / 32
1 / 40
5 / 59
3 / 42
15 / 56
0 / 36
1 / 28
4 / 56
0 / 60
85 / 236
2016
0 / 82
0 / 11
2018
2 / 15
15 / 36
37 / 45
22 / 32
1 / 40
3 / 59
8 / 42
1 / 56
0 / 36
0 / 28
1 / 56
0 / 60
90 / 236
2021
0 / 28
0 / 8
2021
0 / 82
0 / 1
2022
1 / 56
1 / 15
2022
9 / 15
17 / 59
15 / 42
41 / 56

References

Footnotes

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  7. Funston 1976, pp. 69–70
  8. Liow 2009, p. 25.
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  10. Farish 2014, pp. 36–43
  11. Funston 1976, p. 72
  12. Farish 2014, pp. 44–46
  13. Funston 1976, p. 73
  14. Farish 2014, pp. 47–56
  15. Liow 2009, p. 27
  16. Farish 2014, pp. 56–59
  17. Farish 2014, p. 60
  18. Farish 2014, p. 62
  19. Farish 2014, p. 63
  20. Chin Tong 2007
  21. Farish 2014, pp. 67–70
  22. Farish 2014, p. 78
  23. Farish 2014, pp. 82–84
  24. Farish 2014, pp. 88–89
  25. Farish 2014, pp. 92–94
  26. Sundaram & Ahmad 1988, p. 850
  27. Farish 2014, pp. 95–106
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  33. Farish 2014, pp. 129–132
  34. Liow 2009, pp. 37–39
  35. Liow 2009, p. 41
  36. Farish 2014, pp. 140–141
  37. Farish 2014, p. 154
  38. Farish 2014, pp. 143–144
  39. Stark 2004
  40. Farish 2014, pp. 153–154
  41. Farish 2014, pp. 155–159
  42. Function 2006, pp. 139–144
  43. Farish 2014, pp. 176–177
  44. Farish 2014, p. 178
  45. Farish 2014, pp. 187–188
  46. Farish 2014, pp. 188–192
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Cited texts

  • Daniels, Timothy P. (2005). Building Cultural Nationalism in Malaysia: Identity, Representation, and Citizenship. Psychology Press. ISBN 0415949718.
  • Farish A. Noor (2012). "Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS)". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought. Princeton University Press. pp. 408–409. ISBN 978-1400838554.
  • Farish A. Noor (2014). The Malaysian Islamic Party 1951-2013: Islamism in a Mottled Nation. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 9789089645760.
  • Function, John (2006). "The Malay Electorate in 2004: Reversing the Result". In Swee-Hock, Saw; Kesavapany, K. (eds.). Malaysia: Recent Trends and Challenges. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 132–156. ISBN 9812303391.
  • Funston, N. J. (1976). "The Origins of Parti Islam Se Malaysia". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 7 (1): 58–73. doi:10.1017/s0022463400010262. ISSN 0022-4634. JSTOR 20070163. S2CID 155087515.
  • Hooker, Virginia; Norani Othman (2003). Malaysia: Islam, Society and Politics. ISEAS series on Islam. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 9812301615.
  • Chin Tong, Liew (2007). "Pas Leadership: New Faces and Old Constraints". Southeast Asian Affairs. 2007 (1): 201–213. doi:10.1355/SEAA07J. ISSN 0377-5437.
  • Liow, Joseph Chinyong (2009). Piety and Politics: Islamism in Contemporary Malaysia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195377088.
  • Müller, Dominik M. (2014). Islam, Politics and Youth in Malaysia: The Pop-Islamist Reinvention of PAS. Routledge Contemporary Southeast Asia Series. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317912989.
  • Riddell, Peter G. (2005). "Islamization and Partial Shari'a in Malaysia". In Marshall, Paul (ed.). Radical Islam's Rules: The Worldwide Spread of Extreme Shari'a Law. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 135–160. ISBN 1461686903.
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