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Missing journo's brother testifies via Skype

For the first time in the country's history, Criminal Court on Thursday heard a witness testimony via Skype as a family member who lives abroad testified in the trial over missing journalist Ahmed Rilwan.

The Maldives Independent reporter Rilwan went missing nearly four years ago and his disappearance remains arguably the biggest unsolved mystery in the archipelago.

Prosecutors have charged two men - Ahmed Aalif Rauf and Mohamed Nooraddeen with terrorism. Both however, had denied the charges.

Investigators believe that Rilwan had been forced into a red car owned by Aalif where the victim's DNA had been found which had been matched to Rilwan's mother.

But in order to tie the evidence to Rilwan, prosecutors needed to prove that none of his immediate family members had been inside the car.

Police had carried out a mitochondrial DNA test of one of the five hairs found in the car.

A mitochondrial DNA test traces a person's matrilineal or mother-line ancestry using the DNA in his or her mitochondria which is passed down by the mother unchanged, to all her children, both male and female.

The nature of the DNA test meant there was no conclusive way to prove that the hair had belonged to the victim as the particular DNA strand would be present in any of her children.

So far Rilwan's four sisters and three brothers along with his mother had testified that they had never been inside the car. However, during their testimonies, it emerged that Rilwan had a fourth brother who was living in Malaysia.

During the hearing on Thursday, the court had heard Moosa Rilwan's testimony who was in Maldives embassy in Malaysia in the presence of an embassy official.

When prosecutors showed a picture of the red car linked to the suspects, Moosa denied recognizing or ever getting into the car.

With Rilwan's brother testimony, the trial is nearing an end. The closing arguments would now be heard in a week's time.

Both Aalif Rauf and Nooraddeen have been previously apprehended on suspicions of links to the case. However they were released back then, when summoned to court for remand extension.