The Borneo Post

Malaysia seeks to extradite cop convicted in Mongolian model murder

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia may revoke the death sentence on fugitive policeman Sirul Azhar Umar, who was convicted in the 2006 murder of a Mongolian model, to facilitate his extraditio­n from Australia, Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said yesterday.

Sirul and another police officer Azilah Hadri were sentenced to death after being found guilty in the murder of 28-year- old Altantuya Shaariibuu, who was linked to a former associate of former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak. Sirul was arrested and has been held in an Australian immigratio­n detention centre since January 2015, after fleeing Malaysia shortly before the verdict was handed down.

“Sirul cannot return to Malaysia because Australia won’t allow someone facing capital punishment to return home,” Mahathir told reporters at a press conference.

“We may revoke the death sentence, but replace it with a jail term,” he said, adding that they have not yet asked Australia officially to extradite Sirul.

A spokesman for the Australian Attorney- General said in a statement the government would not comment publicly on extraditio­n cases.

However, Australian law would allow extraditio­n in cases where there is an undertakin­g that the death penalty will not be imposed, he said.

Civil society groups have alleged Altantuya’s murder was linked to her role as an interprete­r and associate of Razak Baginda, a former associate of Najib, in Malaysia’s purchase of two Scorpene- class submarines from French shipbuildi­ng giant DCNS in 2002.

Sirul and Azilah were serving as Najib’s personal security detail at the time of the murder, but the question of who ordered the killing has yet to be answered.

Najib has denied allegation­s of links to Altantuya or corruption in the purchase.

Sirul told a news portal last month he would cooperate with any new probe into the murder if he was given a full pardon. Mahathir said the Malaysian government was considerin­g reopening investigat­ions into the case.

“We are being asked to look into it again and we are looking into it,” he said.

Najib is facing renewed scrutiny after he was ousted by Mahathir, his former mentor, in a shock election defeat in May. — Reuters

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