| Royal Commission of Inquiry on 
    Lingam Tape – grave concern that there has been no consultation process 
    although Cabinet is to decide on Wednesday while all indications point to a 
    very restricted terms of reference which is going to spark a new outcry _______________Media Conference (2)
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 __________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Monday):  
      Although the Cabinet last week 
      decided on the establishment of a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the 
      Lingam Tape scandal, and it is to decide on its terms of reference on 
      Wednesday, I am very concerned that there had been no consultation process 
      whatsoever on its terms of reference and composition in the past five 
      days.
 This is a matter of grave concern as all indications point to a very 
      restricted terms of reference which is going to spark a new outcry, as 
      Ministers are still in thick denial of the need for far-reaching judicial 
      reforms to check the rot in the past two decades to restore national and 
      international confidence in the independence and integrity of the 
      judiciary.
 
 This could be fathomed from the statements of two of the three Ministers 
      who had been appointed to study the Haidar Report on the authenticity of 
      the Lingam Tape.
 
 Home Affairs Minister Datuk Seri Radzi Sheikh Ahmad gave very clear 
      indication that the terms of reference will be a very restricted one when 
      he said that the royal commission would have the power to call anyone to 
      assist in its inquiry.
 
 He said: “In this case, the lawyer seen in the video clip is the primary 
      suspect.
 
 “Once the royal commission is established, and based on its governing 
      enactment and instruments, it has the power to call anyone as a witness.”
 
 He added: “The royal commission can summon anyone it wants – the person 
      who recorded the video, the actor, or the people mentioned in the clip.”
 
 Was Radzi signifying that the terms of reference of the Royal Commission 
      will be tightly limited to the Lingam Tape events rather than the 
      fundamental question of the rot in the judiciary because of the prolonged 
      and protracted crisis of confidence in the independence and integrity of 
      the judiciary which had lasted some two decades?
 
 From Radzi’s statement, there are legitimate grounds of concern as to 
      whether the major series of crisis of confidence in the independence and 
      integrity of the judiciary, starting with the “mother” of judicial crisis 
      in Malaysia – the sacking of former Lord President Tun Salleh Abas and two 
      Supreme Court judges Datuk George Seah and the late Tan Sri Wan Suleiman 
      Pawanteh – would be completely out-of-bounds for the Royal Commission of 
      Inquiry unless and until they had been explicitly featured in the Lingam 
      Tape?
 
 Such concern has been reinforced by the public stand of the Minister in 
      the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz’s stand that there 
      is no need for judicial reforms.
 
 Such official attitude was best reflected in the “On The Beat” column of 
      Star’s Wong Chun Wei, “Let the royal panel do its job”, who 
      said he agreed with Nazri that “there is not much wrong with our 
      institutions, except that wrong decisions have been made”.
 
      Wong did not realize that he is caught in a maze of contradiction, as he 
      had earlier admitted that “No one will argue that the judiciary needs an 
      overhaul because its credibility has taken a bashing”, that “the rot” 
      began when Tun Salleh Abas was sacked as Lord President in 1988 following 
      moves to subjugate the judiciary and that politicians who did not know 
      about the rot in the judiciary “must be hypocritical or living on another 
      planet”.
 
      Yet even Wong was not prepared to support a Royal Commission of Inquiry 
      into the Lingam Tape with the additional mandate to make recommendations 
      for judicial reforms to ensure that such rot in the judiciary spanning two 
      decades cannot happen again because of institutional defects in the 
      system.
 
 I call on the Prime Minister and Cabinet on Wednesday not to be so 
      pusillanimous and lacking in vision as to miss the golden opportunity to 
      put right what had been wrong and rotten with the system of justice for 
      nearly two decades by giving the widest and most comprehensive terms of 
      reference to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam Tape with the 
      additional mandate to restore national and international confidence in the 
      independence and integrity of the judiciary.
 
 The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Lingam Tape should be empowered not 
      only to investigate into every aspect of the issues featured in it, but 
      also all aspects affecting the independence and integrity of the judiciary 
      in the past two decades, starting with the 1988 judicial crisis, the 
      33-page anonymous letter of former High Court judge, Syed Ahmad Idid Syed 
      Abdullah in 1996 containing 110 allegations of corruption, abuses of power 
      and other improprieties against 10 named judges, as well as the 
      revelations of “corruption” of judges resurfaced by V. Thirunama Karasu, 
      younger brother of lawyer Datuk V.K. Lingam through a media conference by 
      former MP Wee Choo Keong yesterday.
 
 
      (19/11/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |