Malaysia’s Jailed Ex-PM Najib Withdraws Appeal on House Arrest, Local Media Reports

KUALA LUMPUR, April 27 (Reuters) – Jailed former Malaysian Prime ⁠Minister ⁠Najib Razak has withdrawn his ⁠appeal against a court ruling denying his request to serve ​the remainder of his sentence at home, local media The Edge reported on Monday, citing court documents.

Najib ‌was found guilty of a ‌string of graft offences in connection to his role in the multibillion-dollar 1MDB scandal.

• ⁠Najib has ⁠been serving a six-year jail sentence since August 2022 after being ​convicted of graft and money laundering in one of several cases linked to the alleged theft of billions of dollars from 1Malaysia Development Berhad – a state fund he helped establish in 2009 ​while he was premier.

• The ex-premier launched a legal bid for home detention ⁠after his ⁠sentence was halved by ⁠a pardons ​board decision chaired by Malaysia’s former king in 2024.

• Najib insists the board’s decision ​was accompanied by an addendum ⁠order issued by the king that allowed him to serve the remainder of his jail term at home, which he alleges was ignored by authorities.

• The Kuala Lumpur High Court denied Najib’s house arrest bid on December 22, a decision that Najib subsequently appealed.

• Najib ⁠has since withdrawn the appeal without liberty to file a fresh appeal, with ⁠the Court of Appeal acknowledging the withdrawal, The Edge reported on Monday, citing letters from Najib’s lawyers and the court, dated April 3 and April 6 respectively.

• Najib’s lawyers and the Attorney General’s Chambers did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

• The withdrawal of his appeal for home detention would mark yet another setback for Najib, after he was jailed a further 15 years and fined $2.8 billion for abuse of power and money laundering in ⁠December following the biggest trial yet involving the 1MDB saga.

• Malaysia and U.S. investigators say at least $4.5 billion was stolen from the 1MDB state fund, with more than $1 billion allegedly making its way into accounts linked to Najib.

• Najib ​has consistently denied wrongdoing and has apologised for mishandling the scandal.

(Reporting ​by Danial Azhar; Editing by David Stanway)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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