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Malaysia blogger's joy at release | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
A prominent critic of the Malaysian government, blogger Raja Petra Kamaruddin, has been freed from jail on the orders of a judge. | |
Mr Raja Petra, 58, editor of the website Malaysia Today, has been held without trial for eight weeks under a draconian security law, the ISA. | |
He had been accused of causing ethnic tensions by ridiculing Islam. | |
"I'm really glad it's over," a tearful, haggard Mr Raja Petra said as he hugged his family and greeted supporters. | |
"I'm really tired. The judge's decision proves that there was no justification for my detention. | |
"We have to fight all-out and get the ISA abolished," he told reporters, referring to the Internal Security Act, which allows detention without charge for an initial two years, with indefinite extensions possible. | |
Mr Raja Petra was garlanded by supporters and then driven home in a maroon Rolls Royce which one of them had provided, said one report from the scene. | |
Critical | |
Mr Raja Petra was freed from a notorious prison camp in northern Malaysia on the orders of the high court in Shah Alam city near Kuala Lumpur. | |
It ruled that Interior Minister Syed Hamid Albar had overstepped his authority when he ordered the detention. | |
Mr Raja Petra has increasingly angered the Malaysian authorities with his critical Malaysia Today website, the country's best-known political blog. | |
He still faces charges of sedition for an article he published which linked Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak to the 2006 murder of a Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu. | He still faces charges of sedition for an article he published which linked Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak to the 2006 murder of a Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu. |
Mr Najib, who has consistently denied any involvement, is widely expected to take over as prime minister when incumbent Abdullah Badawi agrees on a transition date. | Mr Najib, who has consistently denied any involvement, is widely expected to take over as prime minister when incumbent Abdullah Badawi agrees on a transition date. |
'Great day' | |
Raja Petra's lawyer, Malik Imtiaz, described Friday's ruling as "historic", saying it was the first time a court had ordered the release of an ISA detainee since the government banned such rulings in 1989. | |
It was "definitely a wonderful step in terms of civil liberties in Malaysia", he said. | |
His words were echoed by Malaysia's human rights commissioner, Denison Jayasooria, who called it a "great day for human rights and fundamental liberties", according to AFP news agency. | |
He called for the ISA to be used only "where there is a real threat to national security". | |
Mr Raja Petra was arrested on 12 September under the ISA as part of a government clampdown on opposition voices. | |
He was arrested along with opposition deputy Teresa Kok and journalist Tan Hoon Cheng, both of whom have since been released. |