High Court Justice Syed Ahmad Helmy Syed Ahmad ruled that Raja Petra's detention under the Internal Security Act (ISA) was illegal and that the Home Minister had acted beyond his authority when he sentenced the blogger to two years in prison, according to news reports. It was unclear if the government would appeal the court's decision.
"We welcome the release today of Raja Petra Kamarudin but
reiterate that he never should have been imprisoned in the first place," said
Bob Dietz, CPJ's
Raja
Raja
CPJ was among the various local and international press freedom groups that advocated for Raja Petra's release. In an October 14 report, "Malaysia's Risk Takers," CPJ detailed the tribulations Raja Petra has faced since launching his blog in 2004.
The blogger still faces additional charges for sedition and criminal defamation over articles and commentaries posted to his popular news site. On May 6, he was detained and charged under the Sedition Act for linking Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Najib Abdul Razak to the murder of a Mongolian interpreter. The charge carries a three-year prison sentence.
He was also arrested and charged on July 17 when the attorney general's office brought three criminal defamation charges against him for a sworn court statement he made in June implicating Najib's wife and two military officials in the same murder. Each charge carries a potential two-year jail term.
In a separate case on August 15, a court ordered Ragja Petra to reveal sources for three articles that accused lawyer Muhammad Shafee Abdullah of conspiring with police in relation to sodomy charges filed against opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, and remove the articles from his site, according to news reports. He declined to do that.

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