Kelantan Deputy Menteri Besar Datuk Mohd Amar Nik Abdullah said today PAS would be able to go it alone if it was expelled from the Pakatan Rakyat opposition pact.

Mohd Amar, who is a PAS Central Committee member, said PAS had gone through difficult times after leaving the Barisan Nasional (BN) and had captured Kelantan in the eighth general election in 1990.

"So, if our partners (DAP and PKR) are adamant of breaking up the pact, then we have no choice.

"We are more experienced and captured Kelantan on our own. We have a track record. We are not boasting," he told reporters after attending the weekly meeting of the state executive council at Kota Darul Naim here.

PAS has come under fire from DAP and PKR for going ahead with its plan to have the hudud law enforced in Kelantan despite objections from its partners.

READ: PAS president's rare interview with foreign media AFP on hudud

The Kelantan legislative assembly has approved the Syariah Criminal Code (II) (1993) 2015 Bill which will enable the state to implement the hudud law once the Federal Constitution and the Syariah Courts (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act 1965 are accordingly amended.

DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng had said the DAP would sever ties with PAS president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang as the latter had been adamant in wanting to implement the hudud law in Kelantan.

READ: DAP ends ties with PAS's Hadi over hudud - Lim

Sarawak DAP has announced its withdrawal from the opposition pact in the state while Sabah DAP and Sabah PKR have announced they had left the pact in that state.

READ: Sabah DAP plans new Pakatan Rakyat, without PAS

Mohd Amar said DAP and PKR should exercise tolerance in the hudud law matter, just like PAS did in the case of the DAP-proposed local government elections in Penang.

"Hitting out at the PAS president is not a wise thing to do. We never make personal attacks against DAP leaders," he said.

READ: Guan Eng's action to cut ties with Abdul Hadi undemocratic - Kedah DAP