KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIAN opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's sodomy trial has been postponed due to the illness of his lead counsel, the High Court decided on Wednesday.
Few rally for Anwar
KUALA LUMPUR - JUST a handful of people turned out to cheer Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim at his latest court appearance as new a poll said government reforms were popular, which may show Mr Anwar's influence is waning.
Mr Anwar denounced the trial that had been due to start on Wednesday as a 'despicable and desperate' move by the government to remove him from politics after the judge said he would delay it and hear applications from lawyers on July 15.
Judge Mohamad Zabidin Mohamad Diah accepted the defence request over the objections of the prosecution, which said other lawyers could handle the case in which Mr Anwar is accused of having sexual relations with a male aide.
The allegations, which carry a penalty of 20 years imprisonment, are the latest to hit Mr Anwar, who was sacked as deputy prime minister and jailed on separate sodomy and corruption charges a decade ago.
The judge said that on July 15 the court will hear a defence application for disclosure of evidence against Mr Anwar, and set a date for another application to strike out the case altogether.
'Until and unless we dispose of the application, we cannot start with the trial,' he told the court.
Defence lawyer Sivarasa Rasiah said that Mr Anwar's lead counsel Sulaiman Abdullah was in hospital after complaining of dizziness, and undergoing medical tests.
'We are hoping to complete the investigations by the end of the week. No doubt it has public interest - we do not see the need to be rushed along at an undue pace since the lead counsel is unwell,' he told reporters. -- AFP