Popular Malay blogger charged with sedition

KUALA LUMPUR -- A Malaysian blogger was charged Tuesday with sedition over an article he wrote linking a top government leader and his wife to the gruesome killing of a Mongolian woman.

Raja Petra Kamaruddin, founder and editor of the popular Malaysia Today site, had posted an article which allegedly implicated Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife, Rosmah Mansor, in the October 2006 murder.

The 57-year-old Raja Petra pleaded not guilty after the charge was read out to him over the article, which prosecutors say contained “sentences deemed seditious.”

“We bloggers have declared war on the government. Our final objective is to change the government,” Raja Petra declared before he was charged.

Supporters, including opposition lawmakers and other bloggers, thronged the court in a show of support.

Represented by seven lawyers, a defiant Raja Petra declined to post the 5,000 ringgit bail (US$1,600) set by judge Nurmala Salim, preferring to be jailed until his October 6 trial date.

“I am not going to post bail. I don’t have the money,” Raja Petra told reporters in the courtroom.

“I’ll be out for Christmas. Don’t worry,” he added, after hugging his tearful wife and close friends.

If convicted, he faces a three-year jail term or a fine of up to 5,000 ringgit.

The high-profile killing of the 28-year-old Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu — whose body was blown up with explosives — has been splashed across newspapers covering the murder trial, which began last June.

Najib, who is expected to take over from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahamad Badawi as the country’s next premier, has denied any involvement in her death.

Two police officers from the Special Action Force (UTK), whose duties included guarding Malaysia’s prime minister and Najib, were charged with the killing.

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Popular Malay blogger charged with sedition
Malaysian Internet journalist Raja Petra Kamarudin poses as he waits at a courthouse in Kuala Lumpur Tuesday. Malaysia charged Raja Petra with sedition on Tuesday after he allegedly implied the deputy prime minister had a hand in the murder of a Mongolian woman, his lawyer said. (Reuters)

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