The Court of Appeal today allowed Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor’s application for temporary release of her passport to enable her to travel to Singapore to visit her daughter and a grandson who is unwell.
A three-member panel of judges comprising Justices Datuk Seri Kamaludin Md Said, Datuk Hadhariah Syed Ismail and Datuk Azman Abdullah made the decision after deputy public prosecutor Poh Yih Tinn did not object to her application.
Justice Kamaludin said that since there was no objection by the prosecution to the application, the court, unanimously grant the order in terms.
Earlier, Rosmah’s lawyer, Datuk Jagjit Singh, informed the court that the wife of former Prime Minister Datuk Najib Tun Razak sought leave of the court for the release of her international passport to enable her to travel to Singapore to visit her daughter, her son-in-law and two grandchildren of whom one is unwell.
He said she will be leaving for Singapore on March 23 and will be in the republic for six weeks, as well as spend the Hari Raya celebration there, before returning on May 5.
“We will give an undertaking to return her (Rosmah’s) passport (to the court) within one week upon her return,” said Jagjit Singh.
Poh then suggested that Rosmah return her passport on or before May 10.
Rosmah is currently out on bail pending an appeal to the Court of Appeal in her corruption case.
Surrendering the passport is one of the bail conditions imposed to her by the court.
On September 1 last year, the Kuala Lumpur then High Court judge Mohamed Zaini Mazlan (now Court of Appeal judge) found Rosmah guilty of three corruption charges involving RM1.25 billion in connection with a hybrid solar project for schools in Sarawak.
Rosmah, 71, was sentenced to 10 years in jail on each charge to be served concurrently, which means she will only serve 10 years in jail. She was also fined RM970 million, in default 30 years in jail.
The High Court, however, granted Rosmah a stay of execution of the prison sentence and fine pending her appeal at the Court of Appeal.
Rosmah’s appeal against her conviction, 10 years imprisonment and RM970 million fine for corruption involving the hybrid solar project for 369 rural schools in Sarawak is fixed for hearing at the Court of Appeal for four days beginning July 11.