Doctor: Anwar accuser showed no evidence of rape
The Associated Press
Published: September 4, 2008
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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: A doctor who examined the man who accused Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim of sodomy stood by his claim Thursday that he found no evidence of the alleged rape.
Mohamed Osman Abdul Hamid spoke in public for the first time since Internet news portals leaked a medical report in which he wrote that he discovered no signs that Anwar's 23-year-old former aide had been sodomized.
"Please be assured that I had merely done my job as a doctor," Mohamed Osman told a news conference. "I am not involved in politics. I will always tell the truth."
Anwar, who has pledged to seize power from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's administration by mid-September, was charged in court last month with allegedly sodomizing Saiful Bukhari Azlan.
Anwar has said Mohamed Osman's findings proved the accusation was false, though hospital authorities have claimed that the doctor was not qualified to make any conclusions on sodomy.
Mohamed Osman examined Saiful at a private hospital June 28, two days after Saiful claimed the incident occurred. Independent news Web sites later published his medical report, followed by a sworn statement by the doctor affirming the contents of the report.
Mohamed Osman reiterated Thursday that his statement was "correct." He said he had gone on leave away from Malaysia following the release of the medical report because "there was a lot of pressure" on him.
Mohamed Osman said he did not know how the medical report leaked, stressing that he respected his patients' confidentiality and had "never at any time breached my professional ethics."
Mohamed Osman's lawyers said he could not elaborate on details of the case because Anwar's trial had not begun.
Mohamed Osman said in a previous statement that he had advised Saiful to go to a government hospital for a second examination. It is not clear what transpired there, but Saiful went to a police station and filed a complaint against Anwar the same day.
It was the second sodomy accusation in a decade for Anwar, a former deputy prime minister who was ousted in 1998 amid charges that he sodomized his family driver and abused his power to cover up his actions. He denied those charges but was imprisoned until Malaysia's highest court overturned the sodomy conviction in 2004.
Despite battling the latest charge, Anwar re-entered Parliament last month through a landslide victory in a by-election. He has vowed to topple the ruling coalition by Sept. 16 by luring government lawmakers to defect to his three-party opposition alliance.
Anwar faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of sodomy, a crime in this Muslim-majority nation. He claims the charge is part of a conspiracy against him after the opposition prevented the government from retaining its two-thirds parliamentary majority in March general elections.
The Associated Press
Published: September 4, 2008
document.writeln('');
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: A doctor who examined the man who accused Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim of sodomy stood by his claim Thursday that he found no evidence of the alleged rape.
Mohamed Osman Abdul Hamid spoke in public for the first time since Internet news portals leaked a medical report in which he wrote that he discovered no signs that Anwar's 23-year-old former aide had been sodomized.
"Please be assured that I had merely done my job as a doctor," Mohamed Osman told a news conference. "I am not involved in politics. I will always tell the truth."
Anwar, who has pledged to seize power from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's administration by mid-September, was charged in court last month with allegedly sodomizing Saiful Bukhari Azlan.
Anwar has said Mohamed Osman's findings proved the accusation was false, though hospital authorities have claimed that the doctor was not qualified to make any conclusions on sodomy.
Mohamed Osman examined Saiful at a private hospital June 28, two days after Saiful claimed the incident occurred. Independent news Web sites later published his medical report, followed by a sworn statement by the doctor affirming the contents of the report.
Mohamed Osman reiterated Thursday that his statement was "correct." He said he had gone on leave away from Malaysia following the release of the medical report because "there was a lot of pressure" on him.
Mohamed Osman said he did not know how the medical report leaked, stressing that he respected his patients' confidentiality and had "never at any time breached my professional ethics."
Mohamed Osman's lawyers said he could not elaborate on details of the case because Anwar's trial had not begun.
Mohamed Osman said in a previous statement that he had advised Saiful to go to a government hospital for a second examination. It is not clear what transpired there, but Saiful went to a police station and filed a complaint against Anwar the same day.
It was the second sodomy accusation in a decade for Anwar, a former deputy prime minister who was ousted in 1998 amid charges that he sodomized his family driver and abused his power to cover up his actions. He denied those charges but was imprisoned until Malaysia's highest court overturned the sodomy conviction in 2004.
Despite battling the latest charge, Anwar re-entered Parliament last month through a landslide victory in a by-election. He has vowed to topple the ruling coalition by Sept. 16 by luring government lawmakers to defect to his three-party opposition alliance.
Anwar faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of sodomy, a crime in this Muslim-majority nation. He claims the charge is part of a conspiracy against him after the opposition prevented the government from retaining its two-thirds parliamentary majority in March general elections.