Monday, May 5, 2008

Raja Petra: "Do you think I do not have evidence?"

Malaysian blogger faces sedition charge over article accusing deputy PM of hand in killing

The blogger, Raja Petra Raja Kamaruddin, pleaded innocent to the charge.

Dozens of opposition members and bloggers gathered to show support for Raja Petra outside a Kuala Lumpur magistrate's court where police summoned him to be charged.

His supporters slammed the charge, which carries a maximum punishment of three years in jail, as a blow to freedom of speech.

"Raja Petra has done a lot to raise people's awareness of issues," said Nurul Izzah Anwar, an opposition member of Parliament and daughter of opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim.

"This is an attempt to clamp down on all sorts of freedom. We would have thought that after the elections, things would have changed," Nurul Izzah said, referring to the huge losses the ruling National Front coalition suffered in the March 8 elections.

The sedition charge stems from an April 25 article titled "Let's Send the Altantuya Murderers to Hell" that Raja Petra posted on his popular Web site Malaysia Today.

Prosecutors say the article implies that Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife, Rosmah Mansoor, were involved in the 2006 killing in Malaysia of Altantuya Shaariibuu, a 28-year-old Mongolian interpreter.

Abdul Razak Baginda, a close associate of Najib, is charged with abetting the murder. Two policemen have been accused of killing her and destroying her body with explosives in a jungle clearing. The trial of the three men began in June 2007 and is under way.

The prosecution contends that Abdul Razak had the woman killed because she pestered him for money after he ended their affair.

Prosecutors said in the written charge that Raja Petra "published a seditious article ... which contains seditious sentences."

It said the sentences include allegations that Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi "is covering up evidence implicating Najib in the murder."

Raja Petra said he was not worried by the sedition charge.

"I am happy. I want to challenge the government. We bloggers have declared war on the government. We are not scared of the government. The government should be scared of us," he told reporters before going into the court.

"Is it seditious to influence people against corrupt leaders? There is nothing seditious," he said. "Do you think I do not have evidence?"

Some of Malaysia's most popular blogs offer strongly anti-government commentaries and present themselves as a substitute for mainstream media, which are controlled by or political parties or closely linked to them.

The government has taken many bloggers to court and accused them of spreading lies and undermining public stability.

Police questioned Raja Petra last July over articles he wrote that criticized the government.

In March a court ordered him to pay 4 million ringgit (US$1.25 million; €800,000) to the state-run Universiti Utara Malaysia and its vice chancellor for publishing a defamatory article. Raja Petra has refused to pay.

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