Malaysia commutes death sentence of ex-PM Najib’s former bodyguard

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Azilah Hadri (right) was convicted for the 2006 murder of Ms Altantuya Shaariibuu (left), a Mongolian model allegedly linked to Najib and one of his former advisers.

Azilah Hadri (right) was convicted for the 2006 murder of Ms Altantuya Shaariibuu (left), a Mongolian model allegedly linked to Najib and one of his former advisers.

PHOTO: THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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Malaysia has commuted the death sentence of an ex-police guard of former premier Najib Razak, after the country changed its law on capital punishment.

Azilah Hadri, one of two former security officials for Najib convicted over

the 2006 murder of Ms Altantuya Shaariibuu

, a Mongolian model allegedly linked to Najib and one of his former advisers, will instead serve a sentence of 40 years’ imprisonment and 12 strokes of the cane, Chief Justice Maimun Tuan Mat said in federal court in Putrajaya on Oct 10.

Malaysia abolished the mandatory death penalty

in 2023 while keeping capital punishment as an option for some offences ranging from drug trafficking and terrorism to murder.

After that, prisoners on death row were allowed to apply to have their sentences reviewed.

While Azilah has been imprisoned in Malaysia, the other convicted murderer, Sirul Azhar Umar, left the country for Australia, which will not extradite him because Malaysia upholds the death penalty.

Najib’s former adviser Abdul Razak Baginda was acquitted in 2008 of abetting the killing. Ms Altantuya, a linguist who spoke Russian and Chinese, had an affair with Dr Abdul Razak, he has said.

According to witnesses in the murder trial in 2007, she worked with him as a translator on Malaysia’s purchase of Scorpene-class submarines in France, which is now subject to investigation in both countries.

She died in Malaysia after being led to a secluded spot in a forest by the two convicted men.

Police reports show she was shot and then blown up with explosives. While the two men were convicted of the crime, questions have swirled for years about the motive and who ordered the killing.

Azilah called for a retrial in 2019, penning a sworn statement saying that former prime minister Najib instructed him to covertly arrest and destroy her because she was a foreign spy and a threat to national security. Najib has denied involvement.

In a civil trial in 2022, a Malaysian court awarded Ms Altantuya’s family RM5 million (S$1.52 million) in damages over her death.

The suit, which was filed in 2017, named four defendants, Azilah, Sirul, Dr Abdul Razak and the Malaysian government. Dr Abdul Razak and the state have filed appeals.

In court on Oct 10, Azilah’s counsel read out a letter from Ms Altantuya’s father supporting the commuting of the death sentence.

The lawyer argued Azilah was only carrying out orders and would not be a threat to society if released after serving a life sentence.

Azilah has already served more than 16 years in prison, his lawyer said. The 40-year sentence is from 2006, the Chief Justice later said.

The prosecutor contended that while these were mitigating factors, the gruesome manner of the murder meant it was in the public interest to uphold the death sentence.

Najib is currently in prison after being convicted of criminal breach of trust, abuse of power and money laundering in relation to 1MDB, the fund that became the centre of a multibillion-dollar scandal that spawned probes across continents.

He had his

sentence halved to six years

earlier in 2024. BLOOMBERG

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