| Special Complaints Commission 
    – totally different creature from the proposed IPCMC and the very negation 
    of the external oversight agency for the police recommended by Royal Police 
    Commission _____________Media Statement
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Friday):  
      The Special Complaints 
      Commission proposed in the bill tabled for first reading in the Dewan 
      Rakyat yesterday is a totally different creature from the Independent 
      Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) and the very negation 
      of the independent external oversight agency for the police recommended by 
      the Royal Police Commission.
 No wonder the Chairman of the Royal Police Commission, Tun Mohamed 
      Dzaiddin Abdullah said yesterday that he was “very disappointed” as the 
      proposed Special Complaints Commission was not what the Royal Police 
      Commission had in mind. Dzaiddin described the Special Complaints 
      Commission as “something entirely different from what we recommended”.
 
 Another member of the Royal Police Commission, Tunku Abdul Aziz, former 
      Transparency International Malaysia President, is also a disappointed man.
 
 He said: “The whole purpose was to ensure that no only were the police 
      protected against unfair criticism and allegations but also that there 
      would be a return of public confidence in an organization that had lost 
      it. If the new bill is watered down, obviously we are not going to achieve 
      this purpose.”
 
 How can the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and the 
      Cabinet expect the 26 million Malaysians to have confidence in the 
      proposed Special Complaints Commission when the leading lights of the 
      Royal Police Commission like Tun Dzaiddin and Tunku Aziz are totally 
      disgusted by the breach of faith and the complete watering-down of the 
      IPCMC proposal to produce something quite nonsensical?
 
 For instance, the Royal Police Commission had proposed that IPCMC 
      commissioners should not be serving or former members of the police force. 
      But the whole idea of an independent external oversight mechanism to 
      ensure that police officers keep to the straight and narrow path of the 
      law, steering clear of abuses of power and corrupt practices, was 
      overturned with the proposal that the Inspector-General of Police is a 
      permanent member of the seven-man Special Complaints Commission!
 
 With the IGP as a permanent member of the Special Complaints Commission, 
      how could the function of independent external oversight of the police 
      from abuses of power and corruption is exercised?
 
 Are the Prime Minister and Cabinet seriously suggesting that members of 
      the public would have confidence to complain against top police officers 
      or even against the IGP himself with the IGP as a member of the Special 
      Complaints Commission?
 
 On initial cursory reading of the Special Complaints Commission Bill, it 
      not only falls far short of the IPCMC proposal of the Royal Police 
      Commission, it is so weak and flawed that it is most unacceptable if the 
      government is serious about wanting to create an efficient, accountable, 
      incorruptible and professional world-class police service.
 
 
      (14/12/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |