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FAC
News - Tuesday, March 25, 2003 9:37 PM
Day
two of the Anwar Ibrahim Appeal Hearing:
Ummi
confesses to being the architect behind the Anwar sodomy allegation;
a purely fabricated charge
In a new twist to the Anwar
Saga, it was revealed today - the second day of the Anwar Ibrahim
appeal hearing - that Ummi Hafilda Ali was the architect
behind the accusation that Anwar had sodomised Azizan Abu Bakar.
And, for this, she was disowned by her father just months before
he died of a broken heart.
Christopher Fernando, Anwar’s
lead counsel, told the Kuala
Lumpur Appeal Court
that Said Awang, the Director of the Special Branch, went to meet
Azmin Ali, Ummi’s brother, who was then
Anwar’s Chief Private Secretary, to solicit his (Azmin’s) assistance
to persuade Ummi to retract the allegation
that Anwar had sodomised Azizan.
What is most interesting by
this revelation is that:
1. Said Awang went to meet
Azmin BEFORE he met Anwar. Therefore, the allegation that Anwar
had abused his position by summoning the Special Branch, and that
he asked them to force Ummi and Azizan
to withdraw the sodomy allegation, is a fallacy. In fact, it was
not Anwar who summoned Said Awang to see him, but the Special
Branch Director who took the initiative to meet Anwar.
2. The idea to persuade Ummi
and Azizan to retract the sodomy allegation came from the Special
Branch and not Anwar. During the earlier trial, it was revealed
that the Special Branch tried to convince Anwar to “take action”
but that Anwar refused, until pressed further by the Director
who said it was “for the sake of national security” before Anwar
agreed that action be taken.
3. The Special Branch was
fully aware that it was Ummi who was
behind the sodomy allegation and that Azizan was merely the instrument
to the whole thing. That was why they wanted Azmin, her brother,
to try to persuade Ummi to retract the
allegation.
This sheds light on yesterday’s
proceedings where Fernando revealed that Azizan testified three
times, under oath, that Anwar never sodomised him – an admission
that took even the trial judge aback.
Fernando related how Said went
to meet Azmin to request a meeting with Anwar Ibrahim. In the meeting
with Azmin, Said asked him whether Ummi
is his sister and Azmin confirmed so.
Said Awang then asked Azmin
whether he was able to persuade his sister to withdraw the sodomy
allegation against Anwar but Azmin replied that would be impossible
as he no longer talked to his sister since the allegation surfaced.
The Special Branch was aware
that Ummi was behind the accusation and was, in fact, the plotter
of the whole thing. And, the period when this discussion with Azmin
was going on, the Special Branch had not met Anwar yet.
Azmin then called the family
together to discuss the issue. In all, three meetings were held
that included Ummi herself.
Ummi at first denied she had written the letter to the Prime Minister accusing
Anwar of sodomy. Azmin then advised his sister to steer clear of
the conspiracy, and that was when she admitted this would be impossible
to do as she had been promised money and contracts for her role
and, in fact, money had already changed hands.
Ummi later confessed to her father her involvement in the conspiracy and
that it was actually she who had written the letter to the Prime
Minister. The father, a religious teacher, then disowned her and,
soon after, died of a broken heart, never forgiving his daughter
for what she had done.
It was clear, from the testimony
in court, that Azizan’s letter to the Prime Minister had been written
by Ummi. Ummi had confessed to this.
Azizan, in turn, during the course of the trial, admitted that Anwar
did not sodomise him.
However, when the defence tried
to bring up this very crucial bit of evidence during the trial,
the trial judge disallowed it. The judge refused to allow the letter
to be admitted as evidence or to allow Ummi
to be called to court to testify.
Ummi’s role in this whole thing was clear and indisputable. The fact the
sodomy accusation against Anwar was false was apparent. Just before
he died, Ummi’s father wrote an open letter to Harakah, an opposition
newspaper, explaining the whole matter and, in no uncertain terms,
accused his daughter of involvement in the conspiracy to frame Anwar
and of being the person who wrote the letter to the Prime Minister.
Had the judge allowed this
crucial bit of evidence to be admitted, argued Fernando, it would
have changed the entire complexion of the case and the judge would
have been hard-pressed to find Anwar guilty.
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