Malaysia: Ex-Spy Agency Chief Lodges Police
Report Over Leaked Letter To CIA
A former
chief of Malaysia’s spy agency asked police on Tuesday to trace the leak of a
secret letter she wrote to the CIA appealing for Washington’s support for the
government of Prime Minister Najib Razak days before it was ousted in the May
polls.
Hasanah Abdul Hamid, who wrote the letter to the director of the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency Gina Haspel when she was head of the Malaysian
External Intelligence Organization (MEIO), lodged a police report calling for
the investigation.
MEIO, officially known as the research division of the Prime Minister’s
office, is a covert intelligence agency set up in the 1960s.
The letter, dated May 4 – five days before the landmark election – was
classified as official secret, Hasanah said in her complaint to police.
She called for a probe to track down those who had violated the Official
Secrets Act by leaking it to the public, according to her lawyer, Shaharudin
Ali, who accompanied his client to the police headquarters in Kuala Lumpur
where she lodged the report.
If found guilty, violators of the law that protects official secrets
face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment..
Copies of the controversial letter began circulating on social media
earlier this month.
The three-page letter called for U.S. support for Najib’s government
“even if we win the election by a simple majority or just one seat,” saying
Najib would be a stronger ally to Washington compared with Mahathir Mohamad,
who became prime minister after his opposition coalition surprisingly won the
election.
The letter described Mahathir as “anti-West and anti-Semite.”
Najib has denied any knowledge of the letter, saying not all government
letters went through him when he was prime minister. He, however, added that
intelligence matters should remain secret.
Officials in Mahathir’s government had called for a probe into why such
a letter was sent to the CIA, saying the action may have violated Malaysia’s
sovereignty.
BenarNews
No comments:
Post a Comment