التصنيف: estaql

estaql

  • Man convicted in murder case that rocked Malaysia claims paid for silence | Politics

    Man convicted in murder case that rocked Malaysia claims paid for silence | Politics

    Man convicted in murder case that rocked Malaysia claims paid for silence | Politics

    Canberra, Australia – For the past nine years, Sirul Azhar Umar, 52, was locked up in an Australian detention centre for overstaying a tourist visa.

    On November 8, 2023, Australia’s High Court ruled it was illegal to indefinitely detain non-citizens who couldn’t be deported.

    The former policeman was one such detainee and was subsequently freed. Sirul was sentenced to death in his homeland of Malaysia for the brutal murder of a 28-year-old Mongolian translator in 2006, but Australian law forbids the return of foreigners to countries where they face the death penalty.

    Now living in Australia’s capital, Canberra, with his 23-year-old son, for the first time, Sirul talks about the murder he was convicted of in an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera’s 101 East.

    Mongolian translator Altantuya Shaariibuu and Abdul Razak Baginda, an adviser of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak. Shaariibuu was abducted from her home and brutally murdered in 2006 [101 East/Al Jazeera]

    The murder

    One night in October 2006, Mongolian translator Altantuya Shaariibuu was abducted from her former lover’s home, and driven to a jungle on the outskirts of the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, where she was shot and blown up with military-grade explosives.

    The kidnappers were Sirul and his superior officer, Azilah Hadri, both members of the elite security detail for Malaysia’s then-deputy prime minister, Najib Razak.

    “Azilah told me this [was a] special operation for … Mr Najib,” Sirul says. “And I just obey because he is my superior.”

    Shaariibuu’s ex-lover was Abdul Razak Baginda, an adviser and confidant of Najib.

    Baginda brokered an allegedly corrupt billion-dollar submarine deal between Malaysia and France that was signed off by Najib when he was defence minister in 2002.

    Shaariibuu had accompanied Baginda to Paris, and in 2006, was allegedly pushing for the $500,000 she was owed for assisting with the deal.

    “Azilah told me, ‘This girl is disturbing Razak’,” Sirul recalls, insisting he was never at the murder scene and that the last time he saw Shaariibuu she was still alive.

    “I didn’t do murder. But yes, I’m involved. I get [her] from Razak Baginda’s house,” he says. “And then I gave [her] to Azilah … and then … I don’t know nothing.”

    Sirul Azhar Umar, right, and his superior officer Azilah Hadri were found guilty of Altantuya Shaariibuu’s murder in 2009 [101 East/Al Jazeera]

    No motive

    The bodyguards were found guilty of Shaariibuu’s murder in 2009 and sentenced to death but no motive has ever been established.

    According to a police statement, which the Malaysian court deemed involuntary and, therefore, inadmissible, Sirul confessed to shooting Shaariibuu in the left side of her head.

    But in an unsworn statement to the court, he said he was a “scapegoat to protect … those who were not in court”.

    Baginda was charged with abetting the murder but never stood trial, a committal court finding he had no case to answer.

    In 2013, Sirul’s conviction was overturned but when it was reinstated on appeal two years later, he was in Australia staying with relatives.

    Days later, Sirul sent an SMS message seen by 101 East to a politically connected businessman in Malaysia, Abdul Salam Bin Ahmad, demanding millions of dollars.

    “Greetings boss. I am in difficulties here. I want 2 million Australian dollars before boss [you] come to meet me. I need to guarantee the future of my child here, after that I want 15 million…. Australia. I will not return to Malaysia not ever boss. I won’t bring down the PM,” he wrote.

    But Sirul now says the SMS was not his idea, claiming, “I had instructions from Mr Salam”. In his response, Salam wrote, “They will discuss”. According to Sirul, he was referring to Najib. “The point is to get some money or something from Najib,” he says.

    Sirul claims to have been manipulated for political purposes ever since the murder.

    Najib Razak was prime minister of Malaysia between 2009 to 2018 and is currently serving a 12-year sentence after being found guilty of corruption [Ahmad Luqman Ismail/EPA-EFE]

    Paid for silence

    In 2016, while in an Australian immigration detention centre, Sirul recorded and circulated a video absolving Najib of any involvement in Shaariibuu’s murder.

    “Dato’ Seri Najib Razak was not involved and has no relevance to the case,” he said in the video.

    Now, he claims, he wants to “tell the truth”.

    “This is Australia. Anybody can talk, isn’t it?” he says. “I want to expose and [tell] the truth now.”

    Sirul claims he received more than $200,000 to make the video. “My solicitor was offering me a lot of money,” he says.

    “So they offered and gave me some money. I spent for my son, because I love my son. My son is going to grow up here … spend a lot of money, study here [in Australia], everything. And my daughter, as well.

    “Until now, I have somebody [who] controls me. ‘Umar, you don’t talk. You keep silent’.”

    He claims he is unaware who paid him the money, adding that he’d never paid his lawyers in Malaysia or Australia.

    But he is clear about who he was supposed to protect with his silence.

    “Honestly, I’m going to tell you specifically, to protect … prime minister at that time, Mr Najib.”

    Sirul says he’s unsure exactly why the hush money was paid, but suggests what he could reveal about his conversations with Azilah would have had political consequences for Najib. Despite Najib’s denials of any involvement in the murder, widespread speculation linking him to Shaariibuu’s killing plagued his political career.

    Sirul asserts that evidence presented to the court was all “planted”, denying any knowledge of Shaariibuu’s jewellery found in his jacket in his wardrobe and bloodstained slippers found in his car.

    He cites the appeal court’s decision in 2013 to overturn his 2009 conviction as proof the evidence against him was weak and goes on to speculate that Najib interfered in the court to ensure the conviction was reinstated in 2015. “They have nobody guilty,” he says.

    Sirul was released from immigration detention in Australia on November 11 and feels that his life would be at risk if he were sent back to Malaysia [101 East/Al Jazeera]

    Perilous freedom

    Two days after his release from immigration detention on November 11, he tells 101 East, he had already had meetings with a Malaysian police intelligence officer attached to Malaysia’s high commission and was told that it had reassured Australia’s foreign minister that he posed no threat to the Australian community.

    He claims to be in regular contact with the intelligence officer and his former police colleagues. “I’m still in contact with my group. I have a WhatsApp group, around 300 people. My friends all from special unit,” he explains.

    While there is debate in Malaysia about the possibility of extraditing him and debate in Australia about the threat to the community after the release of a number of convicted criminals from detention, Sirul’s freedom is fragile.

    Soon after the High Court’s decision, the Australian parliament rushed through emergency laws to allow authorities to use electronic ankle bracelets and curfews to monitor the freed detainees.

    Opposition immigration spokesman, Dan Tehan, says that’s not enough.

    “I think he [Sirul] needs to go back to Malaysia. And so, I would ask the Malaysian government to drop the death penalty so that we can send him back.”

    But that’s the last thing Sirul wants to happen, claiming, “I feel in danger there because I’m aware that it’s truly unsafe for me to return there … Whatever happens, I want to build a life with my child here in Australia.”

    Shaariibuu’s father told Al Jazeera in 2015 that his daughter was ‘executed’ and ‘someday those people who did this crime will be punished’ [101 East/Al Jazeera]

    Apology

    And he had this to say to Shaariibuu’s family: “I’m going to apologise to the family of the deceased. You know, Altantuya. Please forgive me.”

    Shaariibuu’s two sons grew up without their mother. One of them, who was severely disabled, is now dead. Meanwhile, her father continues to fight for justice.

    “Nothing can replace a mother’s love and care for her children – nothing. Altantuya’s life was taken away; she was executed. Someday, those people who did this crime will be punished,”  Shaariibuu Setev, Altantuya’s father, told Al Jazeera in 2015.

    In December 2022, a Malaysian civil court ordered the government, Abdul Razak Baginda and the two convicted policemen to pay $1m in damages to Shaariibuu’s family, but the government and Baginda have appealed the decision. Shaariibuu’s family have also filed an appeal for greater compensation having originally asked the court for more than $20m.

    101 East approached Sirul’s lawyer, Hasnal Rezua Merican, businessman Abdul Salam bin Ahmad, as well as the Australian foreign minister and the Malaysian High Commission for comment on the former bodyguard’s claims, but received no responses.

    Najib is serving a 12-year jail sentence for corruption and abuse of power and could not be reached for comment.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Man convicted in murder case that rocked Malaysia claims paid for silence | Politics

  • Derek Chauvin, police officer who killed George Floyd, stabbed in prison | Crime News

    Derek Chauvin, police officer who killed George Floyd, stabbed in prison | Crime News

    Derek Chauvin, police officer who killed George Floyd, stabbed in prison | Crime News

    BREAKING,

    Floyd’s death in 2020 sparked worldwide protests against police brutality and racism.

    Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd, has been seriously injured in a stabbing, US media has reported.

    Chauvin was stabbed by another inmate at the Federal Correctional Institution in Tucson, Arizona on Friday, the Associated Press, the New York Times, and ABC News reported, citing unnamed sources.

    The Federal Correctional Institution in Tucson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Floyd’s death in 2020 sparked major protests against police brutality and racism in the US and other countries.

    The Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed that an inmate at the Tucson prison was stabbed, without identifying the inmate by name, and that no other inmates or prison staff were injured.

    Chauvin, who was filmed kneeling on the Black man’s neck for more than nine minutes, was sentenced to 22 and a half years in prison after being found guilty of murder and manslaughter charges in April 2021.

    In June 2022, Chauvin was sentenced to 21 years in prison for violating  Floyd’s civil rights in separate case.

    On Monday,  the US Supreme Court declined to hear Chauvin’s appeal of his conviction for second-degree murder.

    Chauvin’s lawyers had argued he was denied his right to a fair trial because of publicity before the trial and concerns public safety could be threatened if he was acquitted.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Derek Chauvin, police officer who killed George Floyd, stabbed in prison | Crime News

  • Truce is an inflection point in Gaza conflict – but could Hamas be on the verge of gaining the initiative? | World News

    Truce is an inflection point in Gaza conflict – but could Hamas be on the verge of gaining the initiative? | World News

    Truce is an inflection point in Gaza conflict – but could Hamas be on the verge of gaining the initiative? | World News

    Truce is an inflection point in Gaza conflict - but could Hamas be on the verge of gaining the initiative? | World News

    The temporary truce between Israel and Hamas is an inflection point in the Gaza conflict.

    Although Hamas is no match militarily for the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), is it on the verge of gaining the initiative?

    Hostage negotiations appear to have borne fruit. The truce could see the release of 10 Israeli hostages a day, subject to agreement.

    Since the release of hostages was stated as a core objective of Israel, at face value this is a positive step for the IDF campaign.

    The Israeli military operation to destroy Hamas and liberate hostages is ongoing, but despite more than 13,000 Palestinian deaths and a growing humanitarian crisis, those objectives have yet to be achieved.

    Israel-Gaza latest – follow live

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    0:56

    Moment Hamas transfer hostages

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    0:55

    The children released by Hamas

    However, despite the public rhetoric, Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will have known that the primary reason Hamas seized hostages in the first place was to enable them – at some stage – to seize the initiative.

    Therefore, despite growing domestic and international concern over the fate of the hostages, Netanyahu knew he had a diminishing window of opportunity to “solve the Hamas problem” – his primary objective – and his military has responded accordingly with a high-intensity kinetic air and ground offensive.

    In addition to Israeli citizens and soldiers, Hamas also seized several foreign nationals as hostages, including a number of US citizens.

    As Israel’s primary ally, the US has been applying intense pressure to secure their release and a month ago two US hostages were the first captives released by Hamas.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    1:09

    ‘End this cycle of violence’, says Biden

    Image:
    A gate at the Rafah border opening during hostages release

    This symbolic act demonstrated that the fate of hostages was negotiable and as the Israeli military offensive failed to liberate hostages, pressure has been mounting on Netanyahu to negotiate with Hamas.

    Although both Hamas and Israel want to see the hostage release process proceed, they have very different motivations.

    Read more:
    Who are the first 13 Israeli hostages released by Hamas?

    Jubilation in the West Bank as Palestinian prisoners freed
    Israel now occupies Gaza having completely destroyed it

    Israel knows that every day of a truce will be exploited by Hamas to focus attention on the plight of the Palestinians in Gaza, the humanitarian crisis and the devastation that probably still conceals more bodies, making it more and more difficult for Netanyahu to re-start the military operation.

    Hamas know they only have to avoid “destruction” and retain a handful of hostages, and Israel will have been denied the victory they seek.

    Image:
    Israeli military vehicles after leaving Gaza due to the temporary truce

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    1:52

    ‘We will not relent until hostages released’

    After 50 hostages are released there is the potential for 10 further hostages to be released each day if the truce can be extended.

    This will be very difficult for Israel to resist, particularly given the emotional torment facing the families of those yet to be released.

    Although Netanyahu has made clear the war will continue for “one to two months” after the truce has concluded, the second phase of the IDF operation is expected to be focused on southern Gaza.

    Even Israeli officials admit this will involve far more casualties – both military and civilian – than phase one in the north.

    Hamas will retain some hostages, it will not have been destroyed, and military action might yet fail to deliver.

    Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

    Meanwhile, the widespread sympathy for Israel’s plight immediately following the Hamas atrocities is fast being eroded.

    The release of hostages provides a unique opportunity for both sides to draw breath and review next steps.

    There remains no credible military solution to the political issues, so perhaps this temporary truce provides a rare opportunity to explore alternative options.

    “While seeking revenge, dig two graves – one for yourself” – Douglas Horton

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Truce is an inflection point in Gaza conflict – but could Hamas be on the verge of gaining the initiative? | World News

  • Israel-Hamas war: More hostages could be released from Gaza – as Joe Biden says ‘real chance’ of extended truce | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: More hostages could be released from Gaza – as Joe Biden says ‘real chance’ of extended truce | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: More hostages could be released from Gaza – as Joe Biden says ‘real chance’ of extended truce | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: More hostages could be released from Gaza - as Joe Biden says 'real chance' of extended truce | World News

    More hostages could be released from Gaza today – as the temporary truce between Israel and Hamas enters its second day.

    Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said it had received a list of hostages due to be released by Hamas on Saturday – though it has not said how many and who they are.

    It comes after 24 hostages were released from Gaza via the Rafah border crossing with Egypt on Friday, following the start of a four-day temporary truce to the fighting.

    Some 50 women and children being held by Hamas are due to be freed during the truce period, which is expected to last until Monday.

    As part of the deal – mediated by Qatar – Israel released 39 Palestinian women, teenagers and children, who were detained in Israeli jails accused of a range of offences, from throwing stones to attempted murder.

    Israel-Gaza latest – follow live

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    0:40

    Helicopter brings hostages to hospital

    Israel is expected to release 150 Palestinian prisoners over the four-day truce.

    On Friday, following the release of the hostages, an optimistic Joe Biden described it as “only a start”, adding: “So far, it’s gone well.”

    The US president said in a news conference: “We expect more hostages to be released tomorrow.”

    He also talked up a possible extension to the truce, saying: “I think the chances are real.”

    Image:
    President Joe Biden speaks to reporters in Nantucket on Friday

    Israel has already said it will stop its offensive on the Gaza Strip for an extra day for every 10 additional hostages released by Hamas.

    However, it has simultaneously vowed to continue its offensive on Gaza once the temporary truce ends.

    On Friday, Israel Defence Forces (IDF) spokesperson Daniel Hagari said the Israeli military would complete its preparations for the “next stage” of the conflict.

    Young children and their mothers among those released

    Among the 24 hostages released by Hamas on Friday, were 13 Israelis, 10 Thai nationals and one Filipino.

    IDF spokesperson, Mr Hagari, has said the Israel hostages would be “returning home” on Friday night following medical check-ups – having been held captive for 49 days.

    Image:
    The hostages enter Israel from its border with Egypt

    Ohad Munder, nine, and his 54-year-old mother Keren Munder, who were kidnapped together, were among the first group of released Israeli hostages.

    Doron Katz, 34, her two-year-old daughter Aviv and her four-year-old daughter Raz were also freed after they were kidnapped together.

    Three women – Adina Moshe, 72, Margalit Mozes, 78, and Channa Peri, 79 – were released by Hamas.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    1:15

    Dad of released children makes vow

    Israel’s ministry of health held a news conference at the Schneider Children’s Medical Centre in Petah Tikva where eight hostages were reunited with their families.

    A spokesperson said: “We all anxiously awaited their return and are elated to see the day that they have come home to us.”

    Dr Efrat Bron-Harlev, the CEO of the medical centre, added: “I was thrilled to be the one to receive four children, three mothers and a grandmother to the best and most caring hands here.

    “There are not enough words to express the emotion that we are feeling at this time, together with the families and the entire nation of Israel.”

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    1:53

    ‘Our hearts are with the other captives’

    The Thai and Filipino hostages were released as part of a separate deal with Hamas mediated by Qatar and Egypt, a source told Reuters news agency.

    Palestinian teenage prisoners released

    On Friday, the Israeli military fired tear gas and stun grenades at crowds in the West Bank as they celebrated the release of the 39 Palestinian prisoners.

    The Israelis had issued orders banning celebrations for the homecoming – though the orders were comprehensively ignored.

    As crowds cheered, some of the released prisoners clambered on top of a bus to wave flags – some the Palestinian red, white, black and green, and others the bright green commonly associated with Hamas.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


    0:49

    Jubilation in West Bank as prisoners freed

    People warned not to return to northern Gaza during truce

    As part of the agreement, humanitarian aid is to be allowed into the besieged enclave, which has been gripped by a humanitarian crisis following weeks of Israeli bombardment, with fuel and medical supplies cut off.

    The UN has said its Palestinian refugee agency – UNRWA – received 137 trucks with goods on Friday.

    Israel has also pledged to halt surveillance in southern Gaza and curtail it to six hours a day in the north.

    Read more from Sky News:
    Met Police to hand pro-Palestinian protesters leaflets
    Why is Qatar involved in negotiations between Israel and Hamas?

    Meanwhile, the Israeli military has warned hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians who sought refuge in southern Gaza not to attempt to return to their homes in the northern half of the territory, which has been the focus of the ground offensive against Hamas, describing it as a “dangerous war zone”.

    Despite the cessation in hostilities, both sides have warned the war is far from over.

    Israel launched its onslaught on Gaza after insurgents stormed across the border fence on 7 October – killing 1,200 people and seizing about 240 hostages.

    Israel’s retaliation against the Hamas-ruled territory has killed some 14,000 Gazans, around 40% of them children, according to Palestinian health authorities.

    It is the bloodiest episode in the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Israel-Hamas war: More hostages could be released from Gaza – as Joe Biden says ‘real chance’ of extended truce | World News

  • Derek Chauvin: Former police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd stabbed in prison – report | US News

    Derek Chauvin: Former police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd stabbed in prison – report | US News

    Derek Chauvin: Former police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd stabbed in prison – report | US News

    Derek Chauvin: Former police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd stabbed in prison - report | US News

    A former Minneapolis police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd has been seriously injured after being stabbed in prison, according to the Associated Press.

    Derek Chauvin was attacked by another inmate while in prison in Arizona, according to the US news agency, which quoted an unnamed source.

    The US Bureau of Prisons confirmed an inmate had been assaulted at the Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) in Tucson at around 12.30pm local time on Friday.

    In a statement, the agency said prison staff performed “life-saving measures” before the inmate, who it did not name, was taken to a hospital for further treatment and evaluation.

    The FBI has said it was aware of an assault at the prison – though it also did not name anyone involved.

    Chauvin, 47, was sent to FCI Tucson from a maximum-security Minnesota state prison in August 2022 to serve a 22-year sentence for the second-degree murder of Mr Floyd.

    Image:
    Derek Chauvin was sentenced to 22 years in prison for the second-degree murder of George Floyd

    He was also sentenced to a concurrent 21-year sentence for violating Mr Floyd’s civil rights.

    Mr Floyd, 46, died in May 2020 after Chauvin pressed a knee on his neck for more than nine minutes on the street outside a convenience store in Minnesota, where he was suspected of trying to pass counterfeit money.

    The murder, which was recorded on a mobile phone by a passer-by, who filmed Mr Floyd saying “I can’t breathe”, sparked protests against racism and police brutality across the world.

    Three other former officers received lesser state and federal sentences for their roles in Mr Floyd’s death.

    Chauvin was mainly kept in solitary confinement during his time in prison in Minnesota, “largely for his own protection”, his lawyer wrote in court papers last year.

    Last week, the US Supreme Court rejected Chauvin’s appeal against his state murder conviction.

    Separately, he is attempting to overturn his guilty plea in the federal civil rights case, claiming new evidence shows he did not cause Mr Floyd’s death.

    This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

    Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

    You can receive Breaking News alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News App. You can also follow @SkyNews on X or subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Derek Chauvin: Former police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd stabbed in prison – report | US News