Indonesian radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakr Bashir (File Photo: Reuters)
Indonesia's government has reduced a radical Islamic cleric's prison sentence by three months to mark the country's Independence Day, an official said Wednesday.
Abu Bakar Bashir, the spiritual leader of the militant group Jemaah Islamiyah behind the 2002 Bali bombings, was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2011 after being convicted of funding a terror training camp in Aceh.
Bashir, who turned 78 on Wednesday, is serving the sentence at Gunung Sindur prison in Bogor, a West Java town near Jakarta. He was moved there in April from the maximum-security prison island of Nusakambangan off the Central Java town of Cilacap on health concerns.
Agus Toyib, head of correctional affairs at the West Java Justice and Human Rights Office, said Bashir deserved the reduction because he has served one-third of his sentence.
It was the second three-month reduction granted to Bashir.
Last month, the Supreme Court rejected a request by Bashir for a judicial review of his conviction, saying he had not presented any new evidence.
Indonesia has a tradition of reducing the sentences of prisoners on national holidays for good behavior, cooperation, or for serving one-third of their jail terms.
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