| Cabinet on Wednesday should 
    release the IPCMC Bill to be made public so that MPs and the civil society 
    would have at least two weeks to study and give input before Parliamentary 
    debate ____________Media Statement
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 _______________
 
      (Parliament,
      Saturday):  
      The current 42-day budget 
      meeting of Parliament scheduled to end on Dec. 13 has been extended by 
      three days till Dec. 19 to debate a spate of bills, seven of which had 
      been presented for first reading while several others have yet to be 
      brought to the House.
 One of the bills which have yet to be presented for first reading but 
      which the Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri 
      Aziz has promised would be debated before the end of the current 
      parliamentary meeting is the long-delayed Independent Police Complaints 
      and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) Bill proposed by the Royal Police 
      Commission as the most important of its 125 recommendations to create an 
      incorruptible, efficient, professional world-class police service.
 
 The Royal Police Commission had proposed the IPCMC as the centre-piece of 
      its police reform proposals to achieve what it recommended should be the 
      three core objectives of the Police - to keep crime low, eradicate 
      corruption in the police force and uphold human rights.
 
 The Royal Police Commission placed such importance and priority on its 
      IPCMC proposal that it even took the trouble to include a draft IPCMC Bill 
      in its Report to facilitate its establishment, which it envisaged should 
      begin to be operational by May 2006.
 
 However, the Police mounted a strong opposition to the IPCMC proposal 
      threatening even an open revolt in the initial stages, with some top 
      police officers blatantly displaying insubordination to the political 
      masters of the day.
 
 More than 18 months have elapsed from the timeline proposed by the Royal 
      Police Commission for the establishment of the IPCMC, and we are still 
      waiting for the proposed IPCMC bill to surface into the public domain.
 
 The question is whether the final IPCMC Bill when presented to Parliament 
      will still be recognized as basically constituting the external oversight 
      mechanism to check police abuses of power as proposed by the Royal Police 
      Commission or so shorn of the substantive features and “teeth” of the 
      IPCMC proposed by the Royal Police Commission as to be a completely 
      different creature altogether.
 
 The protracted delay in implementing the most important recommendation of 
      the Royal Police Commission in establishing an IPCMC symbolizes widespread 
      and deep-seated public disillusionment with the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri 
      Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s failures in the past four years to “walk the talk” 
      to honor his reform pledges for the public service and national 
      institutions.
 
 As a result, the three core functions for the police highlighted by the 
      Royal Police Commission had suffered the worst.
 
 Firstly, crime and the fear of crime have worsened since the Royal Police 
      Commission Report two-and-a-half years ago in May 2005, becoming endemic 
      and a nightmare to Malaysians, tourists and investors.
 
 Even Malaysian angkasawan Mej Dr. Faiz Khaleed was not spared when he 
      sustained injuries requiring more than 100 stitches from two parang-wielding 
      men during a robbery outside his house in Cheras, Kuala Lumpur on 
      Wednesday.
 
 The Chinese press today highlighted two crimes illustrating the tragedy 
      that nobody in Malaysia today is safe or could feel safe anymore – the 
      irony of lawyer and KL-Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall Wanita chief, Lee 
      Sok Wah, being a victim of snatch theft herself after repeatedly warning 
      the public to be on the lookout for such crime. In Johor Bahru, a female 
      undergraduate was nearly abducted by two Indonesian males while waiting at 
      a bus stop in Skudai for her family to pick her up on her return home from 
      Malacca.
 
 Crime index has continued to soar since the publication of Royal Police 
      Commission Report, although the report in May 2005 had expressed alarm at 
      the “high incidence of crime” – which “increased dramatically in the last 
      few years, from 121,176 cases in 1997 to 156,465 cases in 2004, an 
      increase of 29 per cent”.
 
 The Royal Police Commission Report said this increase “seriously dented 
      Malaysia’s reputation as a safe country” and called on the police to 
      “allot the highest priority to the campaign against crime”, proposing an 
      immediate crime-reduction target of a minimum of 20 per cent decrease in 
      the number of crimes committed for each category within 12 months.
 
 The reverse had however taken place in the past 30-months – as there was 
      not only no reduction in the crime index, there was galloping crime 
      instead!
 
 In the first nine months of this year, the crime index stands at 163,802 
      cases – which already exceed the crime statistics for the whole of 2004, 
      i.e. 156,465 cases, which the Royal Police Commission had found “alarming” 
      and unacceptable. For the whole of 2007, the crime index would gallop and 
      soar to exceed 200,000 cases for the first time in the nation’s history.
 
 Just to give one illustration to show the gravity in the deterioration of 
      crime - there were nine reported cases of rape a day in the first nine 
      months of this year as compared to four cases a day in 2003 and 6.7 cases 
      a day in 2006!
 
 This is one price being paid by ordinary Malaysians for the delay in the 
      establishment of the IPCMC, which would have the power to hold the Police 
      to account for such failure in crime control.
 
 As for the other two core police functions recommended by the Royal Police 
      Commission - to eradicate corruption and protect human rights – police 
      records in the past two-and-a-half- years are sorry tales of going 
      backwards instead of charting progress.
 
 The Cabinet on Wednesday should not sit on the IPCMC Bill any longer but 
      release it to the public for the fullest public discussion and debate, as 
      it would also involve a review of the success and failure of the 125 
      recommendations of the Royal Police Commission to create an incorruptible, 
      efficient, professional world-class police service.
 
 If the decision to make the IPCMC Bill public is not taken next Wednesday, 
      there are only two other Cabinet meetings left, Dec. 6 and 13, before the 
      end of the current parliamentary meeting - which will mean that MPs and 
      the civil society may get only a matter of days to study and discuss the 
      IPCMC Bill before it is debated and passed in Parliament. This will make a 
      full mockery of the public consultation process and the meaning of 
      participatory democracy.
 
 
      (24/11/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |