| The three ministers appointed 
    to study Haidar Report and all other ministers should be given a copy of 
    Rais Yatim’s “Freedom under Executive Power in Malaysia – A Study of 
    Executive Supremacy” to understand why the foot-dragging for judicial 
    reforms must end with a Royal Commission of Inquiry to restore independence 
    and integrity of judiciary _____________Media Conference
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Thursday):  
      Minister in the Prime 
      Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz announced yesterday that 
      three senior ministers have been appointed to study the three-man Haidar 
      Panel report on the Lingam Tape on the perversion of the course of justice 
      on fixing of judicial appointments and court judgments.
 Nazri said that the three Ministers, i.e. Home Minister Datuk Seri Mohd 
      Radzi Sheikh Ahmad, Culture and Arts and Heritage Minister Datuk Seri Dr. 
      Rais Yatim and he himself, were given the task by the Cabinet due to their 
      legal background and because all three had been in charge of law affairs 
      in their ministerial portfolios and to make recommendations on the 
      appropriate action to be taken at the next Cabinet meeting on Wednesday.
 
 The Cabinet had also decided that each minister be given a copy of the 
      report.
 
 Two questions immediately come to mind.
 
 Firstly, why wasn’t the Haidar Report made public immediately? Why must 
      Cabinet Ministers read the Haidar Report first, to find out whether it is 
      good or bad for the government, before deciding whether it should be made 
      public?
 
 We should follow the best international practices of countries which fully 
      practice accountability, transparency and integrity where such inquiry 
      reports, whether by Royal Commission or inquiry committees, are made 
      public at the same time they are submitted to the appointing authorities – 
      to show that the government has nothing to hide, regardless of the 
      findings.
 
 Secondly, why should there be another three-man Ministerial Committee to 
      study the Report of the three-man Haidar Panel on the Lingam Tape? One 
      does not need to have any legal background or experience in Cabinet in 
      charge of law affairs to decide what is right and proper to be done on a 
      question of accountability, transparency and integrity, not only about the 
      Lingam Tape revelations about the perversion of the course of justice on 
      fixing of judicial appointments and judicial decisions but the urgent need 
      for judicial reforms.
 
 The New Straits Times today reported that the three-man Haidar Panel into 
      “LingamGate” have all agreed that a Royal Commission of Inquiry should be 
      established to investigate although they have submitted separate reports.
 
 This follows the “scoop” by Sin Chew Daily yesterday that the three panel 
      members have separately recommended a Royal Commission of Inquiry.
 
 Why then is the Prime Minister and the Cabinet dragging their feet in 
      immediately announcing agreement in principle to establish a Royal 
      Commission of Inquiry, unless they have things to hide?
 
 I suggest that the three ministers of the Nazri Committee to study the 
      Report of the three-man Haidar Panel as well as all Cabinet Ministers 
      should be given a copy of Rais Yatim’s 1995 book “Freedom under Executive 
      Power in Malaysia – A Study of Executive Supremacy” to understand why the 
      foot-dragging for judicial reforms must end with a Royal Commission of 
      Inquiry to restore independence and integrity of judiciary.
 
 Let me quote three passages from Rais Yatim’s book:
 
    
    
      "Since merdeka the judiciary had by and large enjoyed its share of 
      independence and none of the previous three Prime Ministers, who had 
      incidentally received their legal training in England, as much as nudged 
      the judiciary let alone ‘assaulted’ it in Parliament as did Dr. Mahathir." 
      (page 302 - 7.2)
 "The period 1986-1989 could perhaps be summarized to be the finest hour of 
      the Malaysian Judiciary for it was during this short period that it handed 
      down those few judgments that gave freedom a boost. These judgments did 
      not go down well with the Prime Minister. His dissatisfaction with the 
      judiciary came into sharp focus when he was clearly stung by the various 
      decisions of the court." (p. 313 - 7.2)
 
 "Since the dismissals of the three Supreme Court judges in 1988, the 
      government has not taken steps to restore confidence in the Malaysian 
      judiciary. Instead, key judicial posts have been filled by judges who 
      participated in the government's administrative actions against the 
      judges. Recent legislation has eliminated judicial review of important 
      national security legislation. The government has been openly critical of 
      the Malaysian Bar Council, which has sought to defend judicial 
      independence in Malaysia. This criticism, in conjunction with a recent 
      action for contempt of court against the Secretary of the Bar Council, 
      indicates a continued willingness to maintain pressure against the 
      judiciary and those who seek to defend it."
 
      National and international confidence in the independence, integrity and 
      quality of the judiciary have undergone from one crisis to another since 
      Rais’ book, culminating in the latest LingamGate. 
        
      This should be the finest hour 
      of the Cabinet Ministers to prove that they are not “half-past six” and 
      are capable of doing the greatest service to the nation by establishing a 
      Royal Commission of Inquiry with full and untrammeled powers to delve into 
      the deep-seated causes for the decline and fall of the independence, 
      integrity and quality of the judiciary in the past two decades and to make 
      recommendations to re-establish a world-class judiciary as an important 
      element of Malaysia’s international competitiveness to face the challenges 
      of globalization.
 
      (15/11/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |