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Manohara: ‘I Was Drugged and Abused’
Nurfika Osman | November 10, 2009

Manohara Odelia Pinot was reunited with her mother, Daisy Fajarina, after escaping from her Malaysian husband with the help of Singapore police. (Photo: Yudhi Sukma Wijaya, JG) Manohara Odelia Pinot was reunited with her mother, Daisy Fajarina, after escaping from her Malaysian husband with the help of Singapore police. (Photo: Yudhi Sukma Wijaya, JG)
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WebEd
4:57pm Jun 1, 2009

Thanks for your note re: the order of succession, A. Asmeth. I've fixed the online version.


Anon
4:34pm Jun 1, 2009

Incredibly sad - my thoughts are with her


A.Asmeth
5:21am Jun 1, 2009

1. If Manohara's allegations are true, then the Tengku Temenggong of Kelantan must face the music like any other Malaysian citizen who has committed a crime. Technically, Malaysian law allows the public prosecutor to press charges against the Tengku. If at all he is protected under royal immunity, which he probably is not, he can still be charged in a special court provided for by the Malaysian constitution. In reality, however, it is difficult to say whether this will take place unless there is a great diplomatic row forcing the political masters of Malaysia to give the PP the green light to prosecute.

2. Manohara also has the option to bring civil suits under the law of tort against the Tengku for assault, battery and false imprisonment. Again, if the Tengku invokes royal immunity, the constitution allows for him to be sued under his personal capacity.

3. The Malaysian media is known to be the mouthpiece of its oppressive government and as such, I am not surprised that it chose not to put a member of the royalty in a bad light. This is nothing new to Malaysians, many of whom have chosen to boycott and ignore the mainstream media. You will, however, find stories about Manohara being reported by the internet media in Malaysia.

4. While the incompetence of the Indonesian embassies are despicable, it is also hardly surprising.


A.Asmeth
5:09am Jun 1, 2009

Tengku Temenggong Muhammad Fakhry is not the crown prince of Kelantan. He's the third son of the Sultan of Kelantan and at the moment he is third in line to the throne. His title of Tengku Temenggong speaks of this fact as it is bestowed upon the third son of the Sultan, after Tengku Mahkota (the crown prince) and Tengku Bendahara.


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Safe again on Indonesian soil, teenage model Manohara Odelia Pinot outlined a horrific story of sexual abuse, confinement and torture at the hands of her Malaysian prince husband after returning to Jakarta on Sunday, following a dramatic weekend escape from him in Singapore.

The photogenic 17-year-old said that Singapore police helped her leave her husband Tengku Temenggong Muhammad Fakhry, a prince of Malaysia’s Kelantan State, at a hotel there. They were in the city state with Fakhry’s father, Sultan Ismail Petra Shah II, who is undergoing medical treatment.

“I am still traumatized by all that happened and it has left an impact on me,” she told a press conference after flying back to Jakarta with her mother Daisy Fajarina, sister Dewi Sri Asih and a staff member of the Indonesian Embassy in Singapore.

The plight of Manohara and her fairy-tale marriage that turned into a nightmare began with disturbing news reports in April that she had apparently been kidnapped by Fakhry and his family while in Saudi Arabia in February and taken by private jet back to Malaysia. The media coverage included complaints Manohara made to her mother last year of sexual abuse, and became an international incident after the Malaysian government and Kelantan royal family refused to respond to inquiries.

During a mid-day press conference, and later in an interview with TV One, Manohara confirmed the stories of abuse.
“Sexual abuse and sexual harassment were like a daily routine for me, and he did that every time I did not want to have sexual intercourse,” she said. “I could never think a normal man could do such things.”

Manohara was only 16 at the time of her wedding and her American father, Reiner Pinot Noack, was said to have disapproved of the marriage. The seemingly blissful life of a Malaysian princess soon became a living hell, Manohara said, as she was constantly guarded and spent most of her time in her bedroom in the palace. “Every time I went out for events, they forced me to smile and would torture me if I did not do what they said,” she said.

Manohara said she tried to escape, but was caught by royal family staff and injected with drugs that made her vomit blood. “I was injected twice,” she said.

When confirming a reporter’s question about whether her husband had cut her nipples, she was reluctant to give details. “Yes it is true. Some parts of my body were cut by a razor,” Manohara said.

She said she was in Singapore as Fakhry’s father had suffered a heart attack and needed treatment. While staying at the Royal Plaza Hotel, Manohara secretly called the Singapore police on Saturday night requesting help.

Police responded and confronted the royal family, telling them they couldn’t prevent Manohara from leaving, according to Teuku Faizasyah, spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jakarta. He said police then called the US and Indonesian embassies for assistance.

“After Manohara was secured by the Singaporean police, our embassy staff in Singapore processed all her documents at the hotel within only four hours from 12 a.m. to 4 a.m. on Sunday so she could go back to Indonesia immediately,” Teuku said.

Manohara confirmed that the police had helped her escape.

“The police told Fakhry that he would be held in jail if he did not let me go. No one could force me against my will in Singapore and I knew I had a chance to escape here,” she said, adding that she wanted a divorce and would file a police report against her estranged husband.

Manohara also claimed that Indonesian Ambassador for Malaysia Da'i Bachtiar had previously lied about her condition.

“They made it worse by telling lies, saying that I was fine while I was suffering in Kelantan,” she said, adding that no media in Malaysia had reported on her plight.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied allegations that its embassy in Malaysia had lied.




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