| Cabinet must prove Mahathir 
    wrong that it is “half-past six” by establishing a wide-ranging and 
    unfettered Royal Commission of Inquiry on Wednesday to deal with the 
    root-and-branch problem of 19-year crisis of confidence in the judiciary and 
    not just deal with the “tip of the iceberg” of the Lingam Tape 
    _______________Media Conference (2)
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 __________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Monday):  
      The Cabinet must prove Tun Dr. 
      Mahathir wrong that it is “half-past six’ by establishing a wide-ranging 
      and unfettered Royal Commission of Inquiry on Wednesday to deal with the 
      root-and-branch problem of the crisis of confidence in the judiciary going 
      back for 19 years and not just deal with the “tip of the iceberg” of the 
      Lingam Tape.
 International Islamic University constitutional law expert Professor Dr. 
      Abdul Aziz Bari is right in his interview with New Sunday Times yesterday 
      in describing the Lingam Tape as “just the tip of the iceberg” after the 
      state of the judiciary after 1988.
 
 This led to the question – “If the video clip is the tip, what is the 
      iceberg?” and the following answer:
 
    
    
      “A: How the people are 
      selecting the judges, how the judges are having behind-closed-door 
      relationships with lawyers, and how lawyers manage to predict or determine 
      the outcome of cases.
 “This is something very serious when it comes to suits. If this is the 
      case, then people won’t have confidence in the judiciary.
 
 “The judiciary’s strength is the public’s confidence. In law, you don’t 
      have to establish bias: if the person cannot convince you of his or her 
      integrity, then he’s got to disqualify himself.
 
 “The mere likelihood (of bias) is good enough to establish a real bias. 
      The moment it (the confidence) is lost, it is difficult to get it back.”
 
      Earlier in the interview, there 
      was a specific Q & A on the “scope of the inquiry”, viz: 
    
    
      “Q: What should be the 
      scope of the inquiry? 
      “A: Since the matter is very much connected to independence, integrity and 
      corruption, then these are the things that should be looked at, not just 
      to establish whether the video clip is authentic.”
 
      The de facto Law Minister, 
      Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz has stated his position many times that he saw 
      nothing wrong with the judiciary apart from the isolated case of the 
      Lingam Tape incident. 
 It would appear that Nazri had been sleeping for 19 years about the state 
      of the judiciary in the country.
 
 The question is whether all the other Ministers in the mega-Cabinet of 33 
      are of the same mind as Nazri, also sleeping through the past 19 years of 
      the two-decade-long crisis after crisis over the independence and 
      integrity of the judiciary, completely unaware or dared not be aware of 
      the repeated plunge in national and international confidence in Malaysian 
      judiciary?
 
 Furthermore, will the Cabinet on Wednesday limit the Royal Commission of 
      Inquiry just to the Lingam Tape instead of giving it completely unfettered 
      powers to deal with the branch-and-root problem of the 19-year crisis of 
      confidence in the judiciary, confirming beyond a shadow of doubt 
      Mahathir’s condemnation of it as a “half-past six Cabinet”?
 
 
      (26/11/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |