| No signs that the triple 
    targets of the 1987 Ops Lalang onslaught, viz human rights, press freedom 
    and an independent judiciary, are better safeguarded two decades later on 
    the fourth anniversary of Abdullah’s premiership ________________________________________________Speech at public forum “Remembering Operation Lalang (1987-2007)”
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 ___________________________________________________
 
      (Kuala 
      Lumpur,
      Wednesday):  
      The 1987 Operation Lalang mass 
      Internal Security Act (ISA) dragnet of 106 detainees representing a wide 
      spectrum of dissent, including MPs, civil rights leaders, Chinese 
      educationists and social activists, was not only a black day for human 
      rights in Malaysia, but set the scene for a triple onslaught on the 
      fundamental basis of a democratic Malaysia – human rights, press freedom 
      and an independent judiciary.
 What stemmed from a 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 turned into the most 
      relentless assault on democracy in Malaysia in the nation’s 50-year 
      history – and the country is still paying the consequences of that assault.
 
 And what is worse, there are no signs that the triple targets of the 1987 
      Ops Lalang onslaught, viz human rights, press freedom and an independent 
      judiciary, and are better safeguarded two decades later on the fourth 
      anniversary of Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s premiership.
 
 I am very disappointed that the Attorney-General Tan Sri Gani Patail had 
      decided to appeal against the High Court decision awarding Abdul Malek 
      Hussin RM2.5 million in damages for having been unlawfully arrested, 
      detained and beaten up while in police custody under the ISA in 1998.
 
 In Parliament last week, an UMNO MP even attacked High Court judge Datuk 
      Mohd Hishamudin Mohd Yunus for being a “problem judge” for his judgment 
      and RM2.5 million award for Malek.
 
 The Hishammuddin judgment had been long in coming, as human rights abuses 
      in the form of physical violence and other forms of torture had been 
      common treatment meted out to ISA as well as non-ISA detainees – which 
      must be condemned in no uncertain terms and stopped forthwith.
 
 The Internal Security Act in allowing indefinite detention without trial 
      is itself a gross violation of human rights and should be repealed without 
      delay – as there are adequate laws to deal with national security and law 
      and order in the country.
 
 I had called on the Attorney-General to take the policy decision not to 
      appeal against the Hishamuddin judgment to send a clear message that the 
      era of human rights has arrived in Malaysia and that the government will 
      not countenance any violation of human rights by public servants.
 
 The appeal by the Attorney-General challenging the RM2.5 million awards by 
      Hishamuddin for Malek is an unmistakable signal that the Malaysian 
      government remains rooted in the old mind-set where human rights occupy a 
      very low place in the national order of priorities.
 
 The recent atrocious rating of Malaysia in the Freedom Without Borders (RSF) 
      2007 press freedom index, plunging 32 spots as compared to last year to 
      the nation-worst ranking of 124th placing in the RSF annual worldwide 
      press freedom ranking since it was started in 2020 should drive home the 
      sad point that press freedom in Malaysia have not been able to get out of 
      the manacles which shackled it during Operation Lalang, which saw the 
      closure of four newspapers.
 
 The saddest story, however, is the failure in past four years of the 
      Abdullah premiership to restore the doctrine of separation of powers which 
      was subverted by Operation Lalang with the judiciary subordinated as a 
      subservient organ of the Executive.
 
 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 signaled the worst 
      devastation of the rule of law and an independent judiciary.
 
 For the past two decades, the country has been reeling from one judiciary 
      crisis to another, 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 and whether Malaysia will have an UMNO Chief Justice for 
      the first time in 50 years.
 
 Tonight, we are gathered here to remember the “black day” for democracy in 
      Malaysia with its triple assault on human rights, press freedom and an 
      independent judiciary, must take cognizance that the situation today on 
      all these three fundamentals of a democratic nation are even worse today 
      than before Ops Lalang 20 years ago.
 
 Malaysian citizens must dare to exercise their constitutional and 
      political rights particularly in the next general election to hold the 
      present government to account for its failures in the past four years to 
      “walk the talk” to restore to Malaysians the three democratic fundamentals 
      of human rights, press freedom and the independence of the judiciary which 
      succumbed to Executive assaults during Operation Lalang.
 
 
      (31/10/2007)   
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |