| Lingam Tape – Another Three 
    No’s added to Haidar Panel’s “Five No’s” of not knowing whether Ahmad Fairuz 
    at end of the phone, whether Lingam was real and not knowing whether video 
    clip is genuine! ________________Media Statement (3)
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ___________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Friday):  
      How pathetic! After three 
      weeks, no one has come forward to give information to the Haidar Panel on 
      the Lingam Tape!
 This itself speaks louder than anything about the confidence the Haidar 
      Panel commands among the Malaysian public concerning its credibility, 
      independence, authority and legitimacy – which is zero!
 
 The Haidar Panel has proved to be very “creative” in interpreting its 
      month-long duration to complete its narrow term of reference to establish 
      the authenticity of the Lingam Tape from Sept. 27 to 30 working days 
      rather than 30 calendar days – stretching its tenure to November 8, after 
      the retirement of Tun Ahmad Fairuz as Chief Justice unless he gets an 
      extension.
 
 The Haidar Panel had started with the infamous “Five No’s” – no power to 
      administer oaths, no power to compel witnesses to come forward, no power 
      to commit anybody for contempt, no power to provide immunity and no power 
      to protect witnesses.
 
 It appears to have acquired another Three No’s after three weeks - not 
      knowing whether Chief Justice Tun Ahmad Fairuz was at end of the phone, 
      not knowing whether senior lawyer V.T. Lingam who appeared in the tape was 
      the real one and not knowing whether the video clip is genuine!
 
 We are now told that the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) is sending the 
      Lingam Tape to experts in Hong Kong to determine its authenticity.
 
 Why did the ACA waste one whole month since the public expose of the 
      Lingam Tape by Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim on Sept. 19 before seeking expert 
      help to determine its authenticity?
 
 Why the Haidar Panel didn’t simply asked Lingam and Ahmad Fairuz to state 
      whether they admitted or denied the veracity of the Lingam Tape?
 
 Or the Haidar Panel didn’t even have such powers to ask?
 
 Today, the Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri 
      Aziz, who seemed to have been assigned a new portfolio of being the 
      Minister responsible for the Lingam Tape, disclosed a new gem of 
      information.
 
 Nazri said: “The panel does not have the power to investigate unless it 
      gets the consent of the attorney-general”.
 
 Nazri made this statement when he said that the Haidar Panel would have to 
      depend on ACA investigations if no one volunteers to provide information 
      on the authenticity of the video clip.
 
 This is a most ludicrous situation. The Haidar Panel is appointed as an 
      Independent Panel, but one attribute it clearly does not possess is being 
      “independent”.
 
 Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak had publicly said that the 
      Haidar Penal was not to call any witness. Now it is revealed that the 
      Haidar Panel does not have the power of investigations unless it gets the 
      consent of the Attorney-General.
 
 What are its other limitations or “un-doubles” which have not been 
      revealed?
 
 What is the role of the Police in the Haidar Panel inquiry, as the 
      Inspector-General of Police, Tan Sri Musa Hassan also turned up at the 
      first meeting of the panel, apart from the Attorney-General and the ACA’s 
      No. 2.
 
 It is ridiculous that the Haidar Panel’s job is reduced to accepting or 
      rejecting the ACA’s investigations on the authenticity of the tape. The 
      ACA is supposed to be an independent and professional body, working 
      according to the highest standards of investigation.
 
 It is a serious aspersion on the professionalism of the ACA that its 
      investigations should be subject to the second-guessing of the three-man 
      Haidar Panel whose members enjoy no expertise whatsoever in the field.
 
 The rigmarole of feet-dragging over a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the 
      Lingam Tape and the pressing issue of restoration of confidence in the 
      independence, integrity and meritocracy of the judiciary had been dragged 
      out for too long and in the national interest, the Prime Minister should 
      establish a Royal Commission of Inquiry without any further delay.
 
 
      (19/10/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |