Malaysian court finds Anwar not guilty of sodomy

KUALA LUMPUR, (Reuters) – A Malaysian court  acquitted opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim of sodomy charges last night, a surprise ruling that could accelerate the political  comeback of one of Asia’s most celebrated reformers ahead of an  expected election this year.

Anwar Ibrahim

Judge Zabidin Mohamad Diah found Anwar not guilty due to  doubts over whether the DNA samples tendered as evidence had  been contaminated.

“And because it was a sexual offence, the court is reluctant  to convict on uncorroborated evidence therefore the accused is  acquitted and discharged,” Zabidin told a packed courtroom in  the Malaysian capital.

Sex between males is a criminal offence in this mainly  Muslim country of 28 million people. A conviction would have  meant a jail term of up to 20 years, effectively ending Anwar’s  political career.

“In the coming election, voice of the people will be heard  and this corrupt government will be toppled from its pedestals  of power,” read a Twitter message from Anwar’s account, minutes  after the verdict.

The trial mirrors a 1998 case, in which Anwar was jailed on  sodomy and corruption charges after being sacked as deputy prime  minister and finance minister.

He was freed in 2004 when the  conviction was overturned.

Anwar has long contended the trial was a government plot to  prevent him from taking power at the next election that is not  due until 2013 but may be called this year before a potential  global downturn stalls Malaysia’s economic growth.

“Malaysia has an independent judiciary and this verdict  proves that the government does not hold sway over judges’  decisions,” the government said in statement that also praised  Prime Minister Najib Razak for “bold democratic reforms.”

Najib’s approval ratings have fallen over the year due to a  growing religious divide that has alienated minority non-Muslims  and fanned middle-class anger over inflation and the slow pace  of promised political reforms.

PROTESTS

Earlier, about 2,000 Anwar supporters had gathered outside  the court, chanting slogans and carrying banners under heavy  police presence.

Supporters chanted “reformasi” (reform) and held up placards  reading “People are the judge” and “We are against slander”.

Leaders from the three-party opposition alliance, which  include Islamists and an ethnic Chinese party, have said they  will continue to campaign for a change of government after Anwar  gets jailed.