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There was international pressure on the government this time too, Anwar said. "They can ill-afford another case of Anwar being sent to prison ... To assume the judiciary is independent is a bit far-fetched," Anwar told The Associated Press. Still, he said he was "pleasantly shocked" by the verdict, which upended his worst-case scenario of a 20-year prison sentence. After his release in 2004, Anwar led a three-party opposition alliance to unprecedented gains in 2008 elections, but his future was thrown into jeopardy some months later when Saiful Bukhari Azlan, a 26-year-old former aide, accused Anwar of forcing him to have sex in an apartment. Government supporters insisted that the allegations proved that Anwar was morally unfit to lead. The case hinged mainly on Saiful's testimony and semen samples found on his body that investigators said matched Anwar's DNA. The defense insisted Saiful's claims were full of inconsistencies and that the DNA samples were mishandled. Thousands of opposition supporters outside the court building cheered when they heard news of his aquittal. Inside, Anwar's wife and children wept and hugged him, while his friends burst into shouts of "Allahu Akbar," or "God is great." Phil Robertson, deputy director of New York-based Human Rights Watch's Asian division, said Anwar should never have been charged in the first place, adding that the case had been "politically motivated and plagued with irregularities." Saiful did not attend the hearing, but wrote on Twitter that he respected the decision and would "remain calm, continue praying and be patient." But "I will not admit defeat," he wrote. Anwar planned to travel to India and Turkey this week for speaking engagements before returning for his alliance's national congress, in which the opposition will plan its strategies for elections widely expected within months. "I am confident, God willing, that we will win if the elections are free and fair," Anwar said. The opposition now has more than one-third of Parliament's seats and hopes to win power by pledging to curb graft, racial discrimination and restrictions on civil liberties. Najib has announced high-profile measures recently to tackle those problems in a bid to ensure the political survival of his National Front coalition, which has governed since 1957.
[Associated
Press;
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