Altantuya’s father backs her convicted killer Azilah’s bid to replace death sentence with jail time, caning

· Borneo Post Online
Shaariibuu has backed the application to reduce and replace the death sentence with life imprisonment. — Malay Mail photo

PUTRAJAYA (Oct 10): The father of Mongolian model Altantuya Shaariibuu who was murdered in 2006 today unexpectedly backed former police commando Azilah Hadri’s application for his death sentence to be reduced to imprisonment and caning.

Azilah’s lawyer J Kuldeep Kumar read out the letter by Altantuya’s father Shaariibuu Setev which backed the application to reduce and replace the death sentence with life imprisonment.

Lawyer Sangeet Kaur Deo, who was holding a watching brief for Altantuya’s father Shaariibuu Setev in this case, this morning informed the Federal Court that she had the original copy of the letter and verified it.

Today is the Federal Court’s hearing of Azilah’s application for a review of his death sentence over Altantuya’s murder, where he was seeking for the Federal Court to reduce or replace his sentence with jail time and caning instead.

The hearing is ongoing.

The Federal Court panel hearing Azilah’s application is chaired by Chief Justice Tun Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat, and is composed of President of the Court of Appeal Datuk Abang Iskandar Abang Hashim and Federal Court judge Datuk Nordin Hassan.

Azilah, now 48, has been on the death row in prison for the past nine years, after the Federal Court in 2015 decided to uphold his conviction.

Azilah was aged 30 and the chief inspector with the police’s special action unit (UTK) when he was charged in 2006 with the murder, and was aged 39 when the Federal Court decided that both he and fellow police commando Sirul Azhar Umar are guilty of the crime.

At the time of Azilah’s conviction for murdering Altantuya, the punishment under the Penal Code’s Section 302 was a mandatory death sentence. This means the courts had no discretion to hand down alternative sentences.

After Malaysia changed its laws last year, the courts can now choose to decide whether to sentence a person who committed murder with either the death penalty; or between 30 to 40 years of jail and at least 12 strokes of the cane.

Following the changes to Malaysian law, prisoners in Malaysia who were sentenced to death for murder — including Azilah — had applied to the Federal Court to review their sentences and to consider replacing it with a minimum 30-year imprisonment and caning. — Malay Mail