Najib Withdraws House Arrest Appeal After Sentence Reduction Controversy
Former Malaysian PM drops legal challenge to serve jail term at home, ending months of debate over royal pardons and executive accountability
Auf einen Blick
- Former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak has withdrawn his appeal for house arrest, ending a legal dispute over whether an addendum order from the Pardons Board allowed him to serve his reduced sentence at home.
- His lawyers filed a notice of discontinuance on April 2, giving no reason for the withdrawal.
- Najib, 72, is serving a six-year jail term in Kajang Prison after his original 12-year sentence for misappropriating 42 million ringgit from SRC International was halved by the Pardons Board in 2024.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Najib Razak was convicted in 2018 of misappropriating 42 million ringgit (US$10.6 million) from SRC International, a state-owned investment company. His 12-year sentence was halved by the Pardons Board in 2024, sparking controversy over whether an addendum order also granted him house arrest privileges.
Najib, 72, is serving a six-year jail sentence in Kajang Prison after his original 12-year term for the misappropriation of 42 million ringgit (US$10.6 million) from SRC International was halved by the Pardons Board in 2024. The house-arrest dispute centred on Najib's claim that an "addendum order" issued alongside his sentence reduction had allowed him to serve the rest of his jail term at home – an assertion that has fuelled debate in Malaysia over royal pardons, executive accountability and whether the former leader was receiving preferential treatment. According to court documents, lawyers from Shafee & Co informed the Court of Appeal on April 3 that Najib had filed a notice of discontinuance for the appeal. The notice, dated April 2, said Najib had decided not to pursue his appeal for house arrest, giving no reason for the withdrawal.
Offene Fragen
- What was the exact nature of the addendum order issued by the Pardons Board?
- Why did Najib decide to withdraw his house arrest appeal without providing a reason?
- Will the Malaysian public or opposition parties demand further investigation into the Pardons Board's decision?





