Anwar Ibrahim’s December 14 failure of the final
appeal to overturn his sodomy conviction and a five-year jail term is regarded
by critics as little more than a subterfuge to keep him in prison for at least
another 16 months and blocking him from competing in the next general election,
which must be held by the middle of 2018.
Malaysia’s opposition believe the next polls are their best chance to
unseat Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is mired in a huge financial scandal
involving the state-backed 1Malaysia Development Bhd. and an unaccounted US$1
billion found in his personal bank account. The US Justice Department in July
detailed the theft of hundreds of millions of dollars from the fund, which is believed
to have lost RM50 billion through theft and mismanagement.
The last time Anwar emerged from prison on what human rights
organizations called trumped-up charges of sodomy and corruption was in 2004.
He immediately galvanized the opposition, which made dramatic gains against the
ruling Barisan Nasional in 2008 elections and won a majority of votes in 2013,
although gerrymandering and the first-past-the-post electoral system kept them
in opposition.
The ruling is thus a blow to Anwar’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat and a nascent
coalition that includes his old boss Mahathir Mohamad. The coalition is showing
unexpected strength, particularly in Johor, the home base of ousted former
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, analysts say. Mahathir’s new Parti Pribumi
Bersatu was formed after the former prime minister was also driven from the
United Malays National Organization.
Bersatu, as the party is known, is also showing strength in Kedah, where
Mahathir’s son Mukhriz was chief minister until engineered his ouster earlier
this year, and in the East Malaysia state of Sabah, the home of Shafie Apdal,
who was fired from the cabinet after he questioned where Najib got US$681
million that was deposited in his personal account in 2013.
With Anwar in prison and the party’s secretary general, Rafizi Ramli,
threatened with prison over violation of the Official Secrets Act, the
opposition is mostly in disarray. The rural-based Parti Islam se-Malaysia, or
PAS, last year split into two camps. Nonetheless, a political analyst
said, if an election is called soon, the scandal could cost an additional 10 or
two seats – not enough to dislodge the Barisan, but enough to cost considerable
pain.
“You can never underestimate the power of the kampong people,” a source
said. “People are suffering. Things are expensive. People live on one meal a
day. They are losing jobs. Mamak restaurants – the lowest denominator in the
food chain – are closing down. Forget about the glut in high end property.
Forget about the glut in commercial space. If interest rates keep rising – as
they will with Trump’s proposed spending spree and rising yields of US dollar
debt – interest rates here will go up and the property market will collapse.
Finally – and I don’t say it with glee – Malaysians are having a real issue
filling their stomachs. All the ingredients point towards a Malaysian spring.”
The Barisan has survived a long string of similar predictions of
disaster, however, and it is likely to do so again, given its electoral
organization and the money to buy votes. With the opposition also in disarray,
it is neither a healthy or pretty picture.
The New York-based Human Rights Watch criticized the ruling against
Anwar, calling it politically motivated and involving trumped up charges in
trials that were plagued by fundamental problems in procedure and evidence.
“The Federal Court’s decision which maintains the conviction of Anwar
Ibrahim is a real tragedy for justice in Malaysia,” said Phil Robertson, the
Southeast Asia deputy director of Human Rights Watch. “More than anything, this
outcome shows that the Malaysian courts were no match for Prime Minister Najib
Razak’s political vendetta against Anwar.
“With this final decision running roughshod over Anwar’s rights and
sending him back to prison, Najib and the ruling UMNO party have just fired the
starting gun on the expected 2018 election by permanently sidelining the
political opposition’s most capable leader,” he said.
Some 400 of Anwar’s supporters gathered outside the cordoned-off Palace
of Justice to get news of the ruling but were unsurprised and unfazed when they
heard the apex court had rejected the opposition leader’s appeal.
“It is our time we make it matter. We’ll make sure the kleptocrat can
never sleep at night,” Anwar’s eldest daughter, the lawmaker Nurul Izzah Anwar,
said after she came out of the court building in the country’s administrative
capital Putrajaya.
Her kleptocrat comment referred to the United States Kleptocracy Asset
Recovery Initiative, which referred to a figure called Malaysian Official 1 who
allegedly facilitated the 1MDB scandal that saw the state fund go in some US$11
billion in debt. The US Department of Justice complaint said some of the
money was found in the accounts of Malaysian Official 1, whom a minister had confirmed
was Najib.
Unanimous ruling
Amnesty International issued a statement naming Anwar a “prisoner of
conscience” and said the ruling “raises concerns about the Malaysian
judiciary’s independence from political insurance.” The human rights
organization said Anwar was “jailed solely for peacefully exercising his right
to freedom of expression, and he must be immediately and unconditionally
released.”
Nonetheless, the five-man bench ruled unanimously. In its 62-page
decision, the Chief Judge of Malaya Justice Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin said it
was a review of Federal Court’s decision and the appellant had raised the issue
of miscarriage of justice.
Zulkefli raised the point that Article 128 of the Federal Constitution
does not provide the Federal Court to review its decision, thus dismissing
Anwar’s application to set aside his sodomy conviction and five-year sentence
for sodomizing his former aide Mohd Saiful Bukhari Azlan.
The other three judges present in court were Justice Hasan Lah, Justice
Abu Samah Nordin and Justice Zaharah Ibrahim, while the Chief Judge of Sabah
and Sarawak, Justice Richard Malanjum, was absent as he had to attend a
funeral.
On January 9, 2012, the High Court acquitted and discharged Anwar of the
sodomy charge on the grounds that the court could not be 100 percent certain on
the integrity of samples taken for DNA testing from the alleged victim. The
court had ruled that the samples could have been compromised before they
reached the Chemistry Department for analysis.
On January 9, 2012, the High Court acquitted and discharged Anwar of the
sodomy charge on the grounds that the court could not be 100 percent certain on
the integrity of samples taken for DNA testing from the alleged victim. The
court had ruled that the samples could have been compromised before they
reached the Chemistry Department for analysis.
However, the
Court of Appeal overturned the High Court judgment and found Anwar guilty of
sodomizing Saiful and held that the trial judge had erred in his findings about
the samples which were based on the evidence of two expert witnesses called by
the defense.
The Federal Court said it upheld the conviction and the sentence imposed
by the Court of Appeal after taking into consideration the seriousness of the
offence and Anwar having allegedly taken advantage of his position as the
employer of a young victim.
This entry was posted in Democracy, Governance, Human Rights, Justice, Kleptocracy, Malaysia, Pakatan Harapan, PAS,
Poliitics, Politics, Rule of Law, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, UMNO.
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