| Haidar as Chairman of Royal 
    Commission of Inquiry into Lingam Tape and the restricted terms of reference 
    most disappointing and great letdown _____________Media Statement
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Wednesday):  
      The appointment of Tan Sri 
      Haidar Mohd Noor as Chairman of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the 
      Lingam Tape scandal and the commission’s restricted terms of reference are 
      most disappointing and a great letdown for Malaysians who had looked 
      forward to a new page for Malaysia’s judiciary and administration of 
      justice.
 Haidar, who was former Chief Judge of Malaya, is clearly not acceptable or 
      suitable to be Chairman of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam 
      Tape scandal in view of his disgraceful role in the 1988 Judicial Crisis 
      which saw the arbitrary and unconstitutional sacking of Tun Salleh Abas as 
      Lord President and two Supreme Court judges, Datuk George Seah and the 
      late Tan Sri Wan Sulaiman Pawanteh – the “mother” of a string of judicial 
      crisis in the past 19 years which rocked the country with repeated erosion 
      and ravages of the independence, impartiality and integrity of the 
      judiciary.
 
 In drawing up very restricted terms of reference strictly confining the 
      Royal Commission of Inquiry to the Lingam Tape, the Prime Minister Datuk 
      Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has missed the golden opportunity to put right 
      what had been wrong and rotten with the system of justice for nearly two 
      decades.
 
 What Abdullah should have done is to frame the widest and most 
      comprehensive terms of reference to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into 
      the Lingam Tape with the l mandate to restore national and international 
      confidence in the independence and integrity of the judiciary.
 
 The missed golden opportunity – which can come only once-in-a-lifetime - 
      is felt most acutely with the brave admission by the new Chief Justice, 
      Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad on the rot in the administration of justice and 
      his vow for a “house-cleaning” of the judiciary.
 
 A Royal Commission of Inquiry with the widest ambit to restore national 
      and international confidence in the Malaysian judiciary would be a great 
      ally for the new Chief Justice’s vow of “house-cleaning” of the judiciary.
 
 Why is Abdullah backing off from such an objective – when there is a Chief 
      Justice who has pledged to clean up the judiciary?
 
 
      (12/12/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |