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    Parliament should start a new 
    breakthrough towards “First-World Parliament” with the formation of six 
    parliamentary select committees on foreign affairs, parliamentary reform and 
    modernization, information technology, economy and finance, education and 
    defense ________________________________
 
    
    Media Conference Statement  
    
    by  Lim Kit Siang  ________________________________
 
 (Parliament, 
    Thursday): 
    I welcome the new Ministerial attitude and Executive commitment to respect 
    the wishes of MPs not only on Parliamentary house-keeping and administration 
    but also in the decision-making and  management of parliamentary affairs, in 
    particular with regard to the establishment of parliamentary select 
    committees.
 In his reply 
    today during the 2006 Budget Committee stage of the Prime Minister’s 
    Department, Minister in the PM’s Department, Nazri Aziz 
    uncharacteristically, modestly but rightly said that it is up to MPs to 
    decide whether and what parliamentary committees, standing or select, that 
    they want – for the first time taking the correct and proper position that 
    the Executive will respect the wishes of MPs and that the Executive would 
    not interfere or intrude in any manner on this matter. 
 Are we glimpsing not only the birth of a parliamentary committee system at 
    along last in the 46-year history of the Malaysian Parliament, but another 
    first – the Executive upholding the doctrine of separation of powers 
    pertaining to Parliament, viz: parliamentary independence and autonomy to 
    run and manage parliamentary affairs by MPs themselves?
 
 Until yesterday, Nazri and his predecessors had resisted the idea that MPs 
    should have the final say to decide not only on the administration of 
    Parliament, but also how parliamentary affairs should be managed, including 
    whether to introduce the committee system and how to go about it.
 
 Twenty-five years ago, on June 17, 1980, in my speech when moving a motion 
    to form a Speaker’s Conference on Parliamentary Reforms, one of my proposals 
    was the introduction of the committee system.  I had said:
 
 “The Committee system is new and foreign to 
    Malaysia, and had been regarded 
    by some government leaders as an American system. In fact, it has become a 
    feature of most Commonwealth Parliamentary institutions.
 
 “I am not suggesting that we in Malaysia should introduce overnight a 
    full-fledged Committee System, where there is a Parliamentary Committee to 
    oversee each Ministry. We should however experiment with this system, and 
    for a start, establish Parliamentary Committees for selected Ministries, 
    like agriculture, education, defence and transport.
 
 “Such a Committee system will make a great difference in the effectiveness 
    of each individual Member’s work in Parliament, as members would gain real 
    knowledge of certain subjects and become truly effective in those spheres.” 
    (p. 326 - "Malaysia in the dangerous 80s" – Lim Kit Siang)
 
 The call for parliamentary reform and the introduction of a committee system 
    had been the consistent call of DAP parliamentarians in the past four 
    decades.
 
 In my first parliamentary speech after the March 2004 general election, I 
    underscored the importance of parliamentary reform and modernization by 
    describing them as first critical test whether there was political will for 
    Malaysia to become a first-world nation, not only in infrastructure, but in 
    mentality, mindset and culture starting with a First World Parliament.
 
 Among the many proposals for parliamentary reform and modernization which I 
    made in my speech on 20th May 2004 on the Motion of Thanks on the Royal 
    Address for the official opening of the 11th Parliament were:
 
 • some 30 specialist Parliamentary Select Committees with a Select Committee 
    for every Ministry;
 
 • about ten general Parliamentary Select Committees to produce annual 
    reports on progress, trends and recommendations on national integrity, IT, 
    women’s agenda, environment, mass media, corruption, etc.
 
 At the end of last year, the Barisan Nasional Back-Benchers Club (BNBBC) 
    appointed constitutional law expert Dr Shad Saleem Faruqi from Universiti 
    Teknologi Mara as consultant to advise on parliamentary reform and 
    empowerment, and one of his proposals was the introduction of the 
    parliamentary committee system.
 
 I spoke to Nazri after his speech in Parliament yesterday  and I was 
    pleasantly surprised that he seemed to be serious this time about leaving to 
    MPs to decide on whether and how to introduce the parliamentary committee 
    system.
 
 I have written to the Chairman of BNBBC, Shahrir Samad proposing a meeting 
    to discuss how such a parliamentary committee system could be introduced to 
    create a vibrant First World Parliament.
 If the 
    Malaysian Parliament introduces a vibrant and productive parliamentary 
    committee system, it will mark an outstanding achievement of the premiership 
    of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.  Parliament 
    should start a new breakthrough towards “First-World Parliament” with the 
    formation of six parliamentary select committees on foreign affairs, 
    parliamentary reform and modernization, information technology, economy and 
    finance, education and defence before the end of the current budget meeting 
    on December 8, which will probably have to be extended for a few days to 
    cope with the outstanding parliamentary business. Malaysian 
    Parliament is one of the few Commonwealth Parliaments which does not have 
    the committee system although it had been adopted in most parliamentary 
    systems in the past few decades.  Almost all the 
    ASEAN original-five countries except for Malaysia has the committee system 
    for their legislatures. Malaysia, 
    which will have the unique distinction of being  the triple Chair of three 
    international organizations, NAM, OIC and ASEAN, must be in the forefront in 
    adopting the best international practices, whether in good governance or 
    parliamentary practices.  (27/10/2005)
                                                       
      
    *  Lim Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP
                          Central Policy and Strategic Planning Commission 
                          Chairman |