Bangkok Post

Anwar slams sodomy trial after censure

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim was forced to revisit his sodomy conviction­s, after opposition leaders in the Muslimmajo­rity nation took aim at his past during Monday’s confidence vote.

The sodomy trials were unjust and the king at the time, Sultan Muhammad V, had recognised this in 2018, Mr Anwar told parliament yesterday. Mr Anwar was eventually granted a royal pardon for his crimes.

“I didn’t apply for a pardon because I was punished. Make it clear on the record, in the Hansard,” Mr Anwar said in his first parliament speech as prime minister. Instead, the monarch took the initiative to offer him the pardon because of a “clear travesty of justice”, he said.

An opposition politician’s attempt to interrupt Mr Anwar was quickly rebuffed. “I know this statement is painful for you, because this is what you have played up,” said the prime minister, as backbenche­rs thumped their desks in support.

Mr Anwar’s rivals had made several references to the conviction­s as they debated the leader’s confidence vote on Monday. One MP spoke of the “rape and sodomy of democracy”, while another read aloud what he said was a news article headline “First Full-blown Homosexual Elected Prime Minister in an Islamic Country”.

Communicat­ions Minister Fahmi Fadzil later questioned the existence of such a news agency, called Itali Agenzia Nova.

Mr Anwar’s past has long been a sore spot for Malaysia’s majority Malay Muslims. While Mr Anwar won Monday’s confidence vote easily, his rise to power last month capped a 24-year-wait that included multiple stints in prison.

Shortly after his 1998 sacking from the cabinet, Mr Anwar was jailed for committing sodomy and abusing power, charges he denied. He was convicted in 2014 on a subsequent sodomy charge and jailed in 2015 when his appeal was denied. The royal pardon in 2018 allowed him to bypass a fiveyear ban on re-entering politics.

Mr Anwar yesterday cited multiple discrepanc­ies in his sodomy case, such as the accusation that the incident happened in a building he said had yet to exist at the time.

He also spoke of a person forced to become a witness, without going into details.

“We oppose a judiciary that goes against the principles of justice,” said the prime minister.

 ?? AFP ?? Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim leaves the lower house of parliament after receiving a vote of confidence, in Kuala Lumpur on Monday.
AFP Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim leaves the lower house of parliament after receiving a vote of confidence, in Kuala Lumpur on Monday.

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