| Open Letter to Chief Justice 
    Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim that for the national interest and to 
    restore public confidence in the judiciary, he should withdraw his 
    application for six-month extension and give full support for a Royal 
    Commission of Inquiry into Lingam Tape ________________Media Conference
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ___________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Tuesday):  
      I am calling this media 
      conference to issue an Open Letter to the Chief Justice, Tun Ahmad Fairuz 
      Sheikh Abdul Halim that for the national interest and to restore public 
      confidence in the judiciary, he should withdraw his application for 
      six-month extension on his retirement at the end of the month and to give 
      full support for a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam Tape.
 This is my Open Letter to Tun Ahmad Fairuz:
 
    
    
      Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim,Chief Justice of Federal Court,
 Malaysia.
 
 Dear Tun,
 
 Withdraw application for six-month extension and give full support for a 
      Royal Commission of Inquiry into Lingam Tape and to restore public 
      confidence in the judiciary
 
 I am taking this unprecedented step of issuing this Open Letter to ask you 
      to act in the national interest and to restore public confidence in the 
      judiciary by withdrawing your application for six-month extension on your 
      due retirement at the end of the month and to give full support for a 
      Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam Tape.
 
 Such an action on your part will avert a new constitutional crisis over 
      your controversial application for a six-month extension as well as a new 
      crisis of confidence in the judiciary.
 
 Former Lord President Sultan Azlan Shah in his postscript to his book 
      “Constitutional Monarchy, Rule of Law and Good Governance” (pp 399 – 401) 
      in April 2004 had written:
 
    
    
      “Sadly, over the past few years there has been some disquiet about the 
      judiciary. Several articles have been written, and many opinions 
      expressed, both internationally and locally, that the independence of our 
      judiciary has been compromised. It has been said that there has been an 
      erosion of public confidence in our judiciary.”
 “Concerns have been expressed that some judges were not writing judgments, 
      or that there were long delays in obtaining decisions or hearing dates in 
      certain instances. Further, the conduct of certain judges was being 
      questioned in public…”
 
 “Whether these allegations are true, is not for me to say. However, having 
      been a member of the judiciary for many years, it grieves me when I hear 
      of such allegations. Since Independence, the early judges have always 
      cherished the notion of an independent judiciary and had built the 
      judiciary as a strong and independent organ of government. The public had 
      full confidence of the judiciary and accepted any decision then made 
      without any question. Unfortunately, the same does not appear to be the 
      case in recent years.”
 
 “Whatever the situation, a judiciary may only be said to be independent if 
      it commands the confidence of the public – the very public it seeks to 
      serve. After all, statements made as to its independence by the judges, or 
      even the politicians, do not measure public confidence in the judiciary. 
      At the end of the day, it is this public perception that ultimately 
      matters.”
 
 “It is my earnest hope that the Malaysian judiciary will regain the 
      public’s confidence, and that it will once again be held in the same 
      esteem as it once was held. In democratic countries, it is an independent 
      judiciary that brings pride to the nation. Members of the executive and 
      the legislature come and go, but an independent judiciary must remain 
      steadfast forever, fulfilling the aspirations and ideals of the people. In 
      the judiciary, people place their trust and hope.”
 
      Sultan Azlan Shah’s critique of the parlous state of the judiciary is even 
      more pertinent today than when he wrote it in April 2004, with the entire 
      period falling your term as Chief Justice – a powerful reason why Tun 
      should avert a constitutional crisis and a new crisis of confidence over 
      the judiciary over the controversial application for a six-month 
      extension.
 Yesterday, the Bar Council website carried the following comparative data 
      on the number of reported judgments written by the current Chief Justice, 
      and his three predecessors, Tun Salleh Abas, Raja Azlan Shah (as HRH then 
      was) and Tun Mohamed Suffian when they sat at the High Court, Court of 
      Appeal and the apex court:
 
 
        
      
        | Court | Period | No. of years | No. of written 
        judgments/total no. of case |  
        | Tun Ahmad 
        Fairuz |  |  |  |  
        | High Court | 1988-1995 | 7 | 7 |  
        | Court of Appeal | 1995-2000 | 5 | 35/156 |  
        | Federal Court | 2000-2007 | 7 | 7/42 |  
        | Tun Salleh 
        Abas |  |  |  |  
        | Apex Court | 1979-1988 | 9 | 107/244 |  
        | Raja Azlan 
        Shah |  |  |  |  
        | High Court | 1965-1973 | 7 | 115 |  
        | Apex Court | 1973-1982 | 9 | 72 |  
        | Tun Mohamed 
        Suffian |  |  |  |  
        | High Court | 1961-1973 | 12 | 52 |  
        | Apex Court | 1973-1982 | 9 | 202/382 |  
      
 
      Without having to go into these comparative figures which reflects 
      adversely on Tun, or the latest crisis of confidence ensuing from the 
      Lingam tape scandal, the words of Sultan Azlan Shah reminding all that 
      public confidence in the judiciary in the past 55 months when Tun had been 
      Chief Justice had not only failed to improve so that “it will once again 
      be held in the same esteem as it once was held” but had significantly 
      taken a turn for the worse should be sufficient ground for Tun to save the 
      country from another bout of a twin crisis of the constitution and public 
      confidence in the judiciary.
 Thank you.
 
 
 Yours truly,
 
 
 (Lim Kit Siang)
 Parliamentary Opposition Leader
 23rd October 2007
 
 
      (23/10/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |