| The existence of another 
    six-minute sequel to the eight minutes of Lingam Tape released by Anwar 
    Ibrahim is true as I have seen it, where Lingam in a post-call conversation 
    said the person he was talking to was Ahmad Fairuz, at the time Chief Judge 
    Malaya ___________________2008 Budget Debate Speech
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ______________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Tuesday):  
      The three-man Haidar Panel to 
      determine the authenticity of the Lingam Tape has come out with a shock 
      decision to submit three separate reports to the government. 
 This is the explanation given by the Panel Chairman Tan Sri Haidar Mohd 
      Noor for this extraordinary turn of events: “In view of the time 
      constraints, it would not be fair to load one member with the task of 
      preparing the report. That is why we have decided to submit separate 
      reports instead.”
 
 Even a school-child can see that Haidar is not telling the truth, and that 
      the real reason is that the three-man panel cannot reach agreement on its 
      finding and recommendation.
 
 As no witness had appeared before the Haidar Panel, which had only the 
      report of the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) to go by, what is the heavy 
      task about preparing the report which Haidar is talking about? It must be 
      the easiest report in the nation’s 50 year history for any inquiry 
      committee to write, as there is very little to say – since all that is 
      required of the Panel is to determine whether the Lingam Tape is authentic 
      or not.
 
 There are only three possible answers to the very narrow and restricted 
      terms of reference of the Haidar Panel, that the Lingam Tape is authentic, 
      not authentic or no way to establish either way.
 
 If all the three members are agreed that the Lingam Tape agreed on anyone 
      of these three answers, and that is all they want to say, then there is no 
      need for three separate reports.
 
 It is only when there is disagreement among the three members that there 
      is need for three separate reports.
 
 I can envisage the following scenarios to warrant the writing of three 
      separate reports:
 
 Scenario One – The three-man Panel divided into two camps, whether two-one 
      or one-two, with one camp holding a position on these three variations 
      different from that of another.
 
 Scenario Two – The panel divided into two camps – one holding that 
      although the Panel cannot determine whether the tape is authentic, the 
      government should nonetheless, in view of overriding national interests, 
      establish a Royal Commission of Inquiry into it and the serious 
      allegations of perversion of the course of justice on fixing of judicial 
      appointments, particularly in view of the recent proceedings of the 14th 
      Law Conference and the opening speech by the former Lord President and 
      Perak Sultan Azlan Shah calling for return of the judiciary to its former 
      golden days. The other camp objection to such a recommendation.
 
 It is possible that there is a member of the Haidar Panel who felt that 
      the panel should not be used to justify any government “cover up” of the 
      Lingam Tape scandal, so as not to probe the shocking disclosures about the 
      perversion of the course of justice which had done so much harm in 
      undermining public confidence in the independence, integrity and quality 
      of the judiciary.
 
 It is ridiculous that those in authority are insisting on getting the 
      original copy of the Lingam Tape. Why isn’t a copy of the tape adequate 
      for the purpose? When Osama bin Laden occasionally emerged from his 
      hideout to issue dire warnings to the United States government in his 
      videotapes, no one from the White House, FBI or CIA would take the 
      position that unless Osama or some witness surface to vouch for their 
      authenticity, or unless the original tape is produced, the tapes concerned 
      would be regarded as fakes!
 
 As the MP for Bukit Glugor, Karpal Singh had pointed out in this House, a 
      copy of the Vijandran tape was adequate in the past and a Japanese expert 
      could testify in court as to its authenticity.
 
 In determining the authenticity of a tape, there should not only be 
      forensic investigation on voice and image matching, but also content 
      analysis as to whether it is consistent or reveals contradictions or 
      anomalies to show doctoring and tampering. Why was this not done with the 
      Lingam Tape? A content-analysis of the Lingam Tape will show that they 
      were consistent with the facts, whether with regard to Fairuz’s promotion 
      to Court of Appeal President and later Chief Justice of Malaysia or his 
      being conferred as a Tan Sri.
 
 Why didn’t the Haidar Panel undertake a content-analysis, including 
      calling up the witnesses including the senior lawyer involved, V.T. 
      Lingam?
 
 Questions have been raised whether the Lingam Tape revealed by Datuk Seri 
      Anwar Ibrahim really lasted 14 minutes, with six minutes not yet made 
      public, or whether there were only eight minutes.
 
 I can vouch the existence of another six-minute sequel to the eight 
      minutes of Lingam Tape released by Anwar Ibrahim is true as I have seen 
      it.
 
 In the six minutes, Lingam had finished the telephone conversation and it 
      recorded a conversation between Lingam and another person who asked who 
      was Lingam who he was speaking to on the phone, and Lingam distinctly 
      answered that he was talking to Ahmad Fairuz, at the time Chief Judge 
      Malaya.
 
 In the six-minute tape, Lingam mentioned that former Chief Justice, Tun 
      Dzaiddin had wanted Justice Abdul Malek Ahmad (who died on 31st May 2007 
      as Court of Appeal President) to be the Chief Judge of Malaya but this was 
      averted in a “power play” which resulted in Ahmad Fairuz being appointed 
      the Chief Judge of Malaya instead.
 
 Justice Abdul Malek was five years senior to Ahmad Fairuz in the 
      judiciary, as he was appointed High Court judge in January 1985 while 
      Ahmad Fairuz was appointed High Court judge only in August 1990.
 
 The government should be reminded that it should not procrastinate any 
      further and establish a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam Tape 
      and the crisis of confidence in the judiciary, or a judicial crisis will 
      become a crisis of confidence of the entire government.
 .
 
      (6/11/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |