| Abdullah must be mindful that 
    a greater constitutional crisis than the one that will erupt with the 
    extension of Ahmad Fairuz’ term as Chief Justice from Nov. 1 will be the 
    appointment of an UMNO Chief Justice, namely Tan Sri Zaki Azmi ________________Media Statement
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ___________________
 
      (Parliament,
      Saturday):  
      There is growing concern that 
      to avoid a grave constitutional crisis that will erupt with the extension 
      of Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim as Chief Justice after Nov. 1, the 
      country may be plunged to another equally grave crisis of confidence in 
      the independence and integrity of the judiciary – the appointment of an 
      UMNO Chief Justice for the first time in the 50-year history of Malaysia, 
      namely Tan Sri Zaki Tun Azmi.
 The appointment of Zaki as Federal Court Judge in early September, which 
      involved an unprecedented “triple jump” without first serving as judge of 
      High Court and Court of Appeal, was the first in the nation’s 50-year 
      history, raising the question whether the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri 
      Abdullah Ahmad Badawi was paving the way to appoint Zaki as a future Chief 
      Justice.
 
 Nobody questions the legal qualifications and capabilities of Zaki but 
      there are many legitimate questions as to the suitability of his judicial 
      appointment, in particular as Chief Justice.
 
 Is the country going to start the second half-century of nationhood with 
      an UMNO Chief Justice, when for five decades, there had never been any 
      judge who could be said to be an UMNO judge in terms of his party 
      membership and his long services to UMNO as a political party.
 
 For the past 22 years, Zaki was an active UMNO member and lawyer, 
      representing UMNO in many controversial and even dubious UMNO cases, 
      culminating variously as head of UMNO legal advisor; head of UMNO 
      disciplinary committee panel and in 2001 as Deputy Chairman of UMNO 
      Disciplinary Board of Appeal.
 
 Is Zaki still an UMNO member? If he had resigned from UMNO, when did he 
      resign from UMNO?
 
 Even if Zaki had resigned from UMNO, at a time when the greatest challenge 
      of the judiciary is to restore national and international confidence in 
      the independence and integrity of the judiciary after two decades of 
      erosion and devastation, will Zaki’s further elevation in the judiciary to 
      become the Chief Justice be conducive to such an uphill task which had 
      been the bane of Malaysia’s world standing and international 
      competitiveness?
 
 After his appointment to the Federal Court in early September, Zaki said 
      that he was given less than 24 hours to decide whether he would accept the 
      appointment, and he described it as a “national service”.
 
 What is even more important is whether public perception, both national 
      and international, will regard it more as “UMNO service” rather than 
      “national service”.
 
 In the circumstances, it would be a major faux pas of the Prime Minister 
      to plunge the country from one judicial crisis of confidence to another, 
      re-opening anew the urgency for the establishment of a Judicial 
      Appointments and Promotions Commission to remove extraneous considerations 
      and factors in judicial appointments which could only undermine public 
      confidence in the judiciary.
 
 
      (27/10/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |