| In keeping with his pledge to 
    be reformist and modern-day Justice Pao to uphold justice, Abdullah as Prime 
    Minister should redeem the two-decade old injustice and tender a public 
    apology to the 106 victims of Operation Lalang ISA dragnet _________________________________________Speech at public forum "Operation Lalang-20 
    Years Today"
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ____________________________________________
 
      
      (Malacca,
      Saturday):  
      At this hour on this day 20 
      years ago, Lim Guan Eng, who had been elected Member of Parliament for 
      Kota Melaka for just a year, had already been detained as the first of 106 
      detainees representing a wide spectrum of dissent, including MPs, civil 
      rights leaders, Chinese educationists and social activists in the 
      Operation Lalang mass arrests under the Internal Security Act (ISA).
 By this hour 20 years ago, Karpal Singh and I had also been detained; when 
      together with other DAP MPs we went to the High Street Kuala Lumpur Police 
      Station over Guan Eng’s detention.
 
 The 1987 Ops Lalang mass ISA detentions was not only a black day for human 
      rights in Malaysia, it also marked the most relentless assault on 
      democracy in Malaysia and we are still paying the consequences of that 
      assault – which stemmed from the fight for political survival of the then 
      Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad who was faced with the 
      greatest challenge to his power position from within UMNO.
 
 One upshot of Mahathir’s battle for his political life 20 years ago was 
      the Operation Lalang and 106 ISA detainees and another was the subversion 
      of the doctrine of the separation of powers, with Parliament and the 
      judiciary subordinated as subservient organs of the Prime Minister.
 
 The seeds for the 1988 judiciary crisis over the arbitrary and 
      unconstitutional sacking of Tun Saleh Abas as Lord President and Datuk 
      George Seah and the late Tan Sri Wan Suleman Pawanteh as Supreme Court 
      judges were sown at this period.
 
 Even before the Operation Lalang, there were moves by Mahathir to 
      subjugate the judiciary and I had publicly spoken up against a proposal to 
      move a substantive motion in Parliament to censure the then High Court 
      judge, the late Justice Harun Hashim, as a lesson to all judges to toe the 
      Executive line.
 
 Today, Malaysia is still paying a heavy price for the fateful decisions 
      taken 20 years ago to undermine the democratic fundamentals in the country 
      as represented by the doctrine of the separation of powers – with the 
      country reeling from one judiciary crisis to another in the past two 
      decades, the latest over the failure of judicial leadership of the Chief 
      Justice, Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim, the Lingam Tape scandal, 
      Ahmad Fairuz preposterous application for a six-month extension as Chief 
      Justice from Nov. 1 and whether Malaysia will have an UMNO Chief Justice 
      for the first time in 50 years.
 
 Although the doctrine of the separation of powers and the principle of the 
      independence of the judiciary had been subverted for nearly two decades, 
      the judicial landscape is not totally bleak and desolate as evidenced by 
      the courageous and path-breaking judgment by the Kuala Lumpur High Court a 
      week ago in awarding an ISA detainee, Abdul Malek Hussin RM2.5 million in 
      damages for having been unlawfully arrested, detained and beaten up while 
      in police custody in 1998.
 
 This landmark decision was made by High Court judge Datuk Mohd Hishamudin 
      Mohd Yunus – and this Hishamudin is not that Hishammuddin of the “Malay 
      keris” notoriety!
 
 On Thursday, the Barisan Nasional MP for Jerai, Datuk Badruddin Amiruldin 
      openly attacked Justice Hishamudin from the floor of Parliament during his 
      speech on the 2008 Budget, denouncing Hishamuddin as a “problem judge” for 
      his decision on the Malik Hussein case.
 
 It is sober reminder that Malaysia has still a long way to go before the 
      enlightened view of Justice Hishamuddin can find acceptance as mainstream 
      establishment opinion.
 
 Twenty years after the darks days of Operation Lalang, one thing is clear 
      and indisputable – not a single one of the 106 Ops Lalang detainees should 
      have been detained under the infamous and draconian detention-without 
      trial law, and Ops Lalang represented the most glaring example of the 
      blatant and flagrant example of the misuse and abuse of the ISA for 
      political purposes completely unrelated to any acceptable notion or 
      consideration of national security.
 
 For this reason, the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, in 
      keeping with his pledge when he acceded to the highest office of the land 
      to be reformist and modern-day Justice Pao to uphold justice, should 
      redeem the two-decade old injustice and tender a public apology to the 106 
      victims of Operation Lalang ISA dragnet as not a single one should have 
      been persecuted with the ISA 20 years ago. The ISA should also be repealed 
      and removed from the statute books.
 
 
      (27/10/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |