Malaysian Sirul Azhar Umar, ex-bodyguard of Najib Razak, who murdered a Mongolian translator free after Australian detention
- Sirul Azhar Umar, convicted of the murder of a Mongolian woman, is free after a ruling by Australia’s High Court that outlawed indefinite immigration detention
- Altantuya Shaariibuu was killed outside Malaysia’s capital in 2006, according to court records, but the question of who ordered the killing has never been answered
A Malaysian former bodyguard convicted in the 2006 murder of a Mongolian translator has been released after eight years in Australian immigration detention, his lawyer said on Monday.
Sirul has long insisted the killing was ordered by “important people” but has refused to say who directed the hit.
“As the media has reported, he is in Canberra staying with his son,” Sirul’s lawyer, William Levingston, said in a statement, declining to comment further.
The Australian government would not comment on “individual cases”, said a spokesperson for the Department of Home Affairs, when asked about Sirul’s case.
The department was coordinating with government and border authorities on non-Australians who “need to be released” after the High Court ruling, the spokesperson said.
He was one of two bodyguards convicted of shooting Altantuya and then blowing up her body with military-grade explosives near Kuala Lumpur.
The press linked her death to the scandal around the submarine deal, on which she had worked as a translator for a close associate of Najib.
The former prime minister was questioned over the deal after his government was ousted in the 2018 elections, but he has denied any wrongdoing.
Australia’s immigration minister Andrew Giles declined to comment on Sirul’s case but said 80 people had been released from detention so far following the High Court ruling.
“We have been required to release people almost immediately in order to abide by the decision the High Court has required us to make, as any government would,” he told national broadcaster ABC.
Giles said those released were given temporary visas with conditions that could include them having to report regularly to authorities.
“We’ve taken every step to ensure community safety,” he said.
The High Court ruled last week that indefinite detention was “unlawful” if deportation was not an option.
The judgment, delivered in the case of a stateless Rohingya man who had served time in jail for child sex offences, overturned laws that had formed the bedrock of Australia’s strict immigration system for decades.
Australia’s solicitor general said in court that 92 people were being held in similar circumstances – most of them unable to get a visa due to criminal or national security concerns but also unable to be deported.
Additional reporting by Reuters