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        Speech (3) by Lim Kit Siang in Parliament on the Royal Address on 
        Tuesday, 6th May 2008: 
        Victims of the 1988 Mother of Judicial Crisis and the ensuing two 
        decades of judicial darkness  The Prime Minister recently announced reform proposals for the 
        judiciary and in the fight against corruption.Many were disappointed by the Prime Minister’s speech on “Delivering 
        Justice, Renewing Trust” at a special dinner hosted by the Bar Council 
        on April 17, 2008, as more, much more, than what was announced to 
        restore public and international confidence in the independence, 
        impartiality and quality of the judiciary had been expected, viz:
 
        • Ex-gratia payment for “the pain and loss” suffered by the late Tan 
        Sri Eusoffe Abdoolcader and Tan Sri Wan Suleiman Pawanteh and their 
        families, Tun Salleh Abas, Tan Sri Azmi Kamaruddin, Tan Sri Wan Hamzah 
        Mohamed Salleh and Datuk George Seah in the 1988 Judicial Crisis;
 • A Judicial Appointments Commission;
 
 • Review of the judiciary’s terms of service and remuneration to ensure 
        that the Bench can attract and retain the very best of the nation’s 
        talent.
 The thunderous and prolonged applause at the Bar Council dinner which 
        greeted Abdullah’s recognition of the “contributions of these six judges 
        to the nation, their commitment towards upholding justice” and 
        acknowledgement of “the pain and loss they have endured” in the 1988 
        judicial crisis cannot hide the general disappointment that the Prime 
        Minister had fallen far short of expectations to ensure a fair and just 
        closure to the Mother of Judicial Crisis in 1988. It is precisely because the “contributions, pain and loss” of the six 
        wronged judges cannot be equated with mere currency that the ex gratia 
        payment is grossly inadequate. The six wronged judges deserve a full and 
        proper recompense.In his speech, the Prime Minister skirted the "rights and wrongs" and 
        the "legality and morality" of the Mother of Judicial Crisis which 
        plunged the country into two decades of judicial darkness.
 
 The victims of the 1988 Mother of Judicial Crisis and the ensuing two 
        decades of judicial darkness, with three of the four chief justices 
        during the period, Tun Hamid Omar, Tun Eusoffe Chin and Tun Ahmad Fairuz 
        compounding the travesties of justice by the judicial system, were not 
        just the six wronged judges in 1988 but also included innocent, 
        high-minded, idealistic and patriotic Malaysians who want the best for 
        the country. In fact, whole generations of Malaysians were victims of 
        the 20 years of judicial darkness!
 
 Will the Prime Minister extend goodwill ex gratia payments to the other 
        victims of the two decades of judicial darkness like former Deputy Prime 
        Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng 
        and former High Court judge Datuk Syed Ahmad Idid Syed Abdullah Idid 
        (the first whistleblower from the judiciary with his 112 allegations of 
        corruption, abuses of power and misconduct against 12 judges in 1996) as 
        well as to the 106 Internal Security Act (ISA) detainees in the 1987 
        Operation Lalang?
 
 The goodwill ex gratia payment to the six wronged judges are welcome 
        though belated but they are grossly inadequate in clearing the name and 
        reputation of the six and in providing a full and proper closure to the 
        1988 Mother of Judicial Crisis and the ensuing two decades of judicial 
        darkness under three Chief Justices.
 
 The statement the next day by Deputy Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib 
        Razak that the ex gratia payment for the six former judges in the 1988 
        judicial crisis is not a form of apology to them but merely "our way of 
        addressing some of the personal considerations and some of the personal 
        experiences, hardships that they have gone through" raised questions 
        about the real worth and meaning of the ex gratia payment.
 
 The payment of goodwill ex gratia payment without revisiting the 1988 
        Judicial Crisis on its rights and wrongs is already unsatisfactory 
        enough but it becomes quite unacceptable when its whole basis is stemmed 
        from pity or compassionate grounds to address "some personal experiences 
        and hardships" suffered by the six wronged judges!
 
 Najib is in fact directly contradicting Abdullah's statement that "the 
        contributions, pain and loss" of the six wronged judges cannot be 
        equated with mere currency by implying that these wrongs and injustices 
        could be dealt with solely in monetary terms.
 
 This is why I maintain what is imperative to start a new chapter in 
        Malaysian judiciary to turn our back on the 20 years of judicial 
        darkness is to have a Judicial "Truth and Reconciliation" Commission to 
        find out the lessons to be learnt from the 1988 Mother of Judicial 
        Crisis and the series of one judicial scandal and crisis after another 
        which rocked Malaysia in the past 20 years, not out of vindictiveness or 
        vengeance, but to prevent any such recurrence in the future – focusing 
        also on why the various national stakeholders, the judiciary, 
        Parliament, political parties, mass media, civil society failed the 
        critical test to defend the cardinal Constitutional principles of the 
        doctrine of separation of powers and an independent, impartial and 
        competent judiciary for two decades.
 I have been calling for judicial reforms both in and outside Parliament 
        in the past two decades when the country reeled from one judiciary 
        crisis to another since the “Mother of Judicial Crisis” in 1988 and the 
        victimization of independent-minded judges.
 
 Abdullah should not take half-hearted measures but must initiate 
        far-reaching judicial reforms to restore the Malaysian judiciary to its 
        world-class pedestal which it had enjoyed since Independence in 1957 
        until two decades ago.
 
 To ensure that Malaysia move out of the “judicial darkness” in the past 
        two decades, the elements of a far-reaching judicial reform programme 
        must include:
 
        • A Royal Commission of Inquiry on Judicial Reforms to make detailed 
        recommendations after a probe into the “judicial darkness” of the past 
        two decades; • A just and proper closure to the 1988 judicial crisis over the 
        sacking of Tun Salleh Abas as Lord President and Datuk George Seah and 
        the late Tan Sri Wan Sulaiman Pawanteh as Supreme Court judges, bearing 
        in mind that the victims of the “Mother of Judicial Crisis in Malaysia” 
        were not confined to the three top judges sacked, the three other judges 
        who were persecuted and hauled before a Judicial Tribunal but also the 
        Malaysian people and nation who suffered for two decades the 
        depredations of a deepening “judicial darkness”;
 • Upholding the doctrine of the separation of powers through 
        constitutional re-amendment of Article 121(1A) to restore the inherent 
        judicial powers of the judiciary as entrenched in the Merdeka 
        Constitution but which was taken away in a constitutional amendment in 
        1988 as part of the 1987-88 Operation Lalang crackdowns on fundamental 
        liberties.
 • A Judicial Appointment and Promotions Commission; and
 • Overhaul of the Judges’ Code of Ethics to restore public confidence in 
        judicial independence, impartiality and integrity, and to provide for a 
        satisfactory and accountable mechanism for public complaints against 
        judges, including the Chief Justice, for breaches of the Judges’ Code of 
        Ethics.
 It is most disappointing that legislative proposals for judicial reforms 
        will not be ready for the current meeting of Parliament.
 When will the necessary constitutional amendments for judicial 
        reforms, like the establishment of t6he Judicial Appointments 
        Commission, be presented to Parliament and come into force?
 Will the Prime Minister be bound by the recommendations of the Judicial 
        Appointments Commission as not to submit any judicial nomination which 
        has not received the approval of the Commission or will the Judicial 
        Appointments Commission be another toothless tiger like Suhakam?
 
 Will the Judicial Appointments Commission be formed in time to influence 
        the appointment of the next Chief Justice in less than six months to 
        ensure that the country does not have another infamous first, in having 
        the first Umno Chief Justice?
 
 In the last Parliament, I had questioned the fast-track elevation of Tan 
        Sri Zaki Tun Azmi in the judiciary, with his unprecedented triple jump 
        to become Federal Court judge last September without ever being a High 
        Court or Court of Appeal judge, then quadruple jump in three months as 
        Court of Appeal President, and whether this is to be followed by his 
        quintuple jump in a matter of a year to become the next Chief Justice 
        when Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamed steps down from the topmost judicial post 
        in October?
 
 Is the Prime Minister prepared to make a public commitment that the 
        appointment of the next Chief Justice will be first referred to the 
        Judicial Appointments Commission which he has agreed to set up?
 
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      Lim 
    Kit Siang,  DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
        Planning Commission Chairman & MP for Ipoh Timor  |  |