Friday, 23-Nov-2001 1:57 PM
Malaysiakini
- Wednesday November 21
No
puppet AG and puppet judges, please
Kim Quek
The
promotion of Abdul Gani Patail as the new attorney general is a
slap on the face of all Malaysians, as the appointment came after
the Federal Court (highest court) has practically crucified him
for his alleged role to fabricate evidence against the former deputy
prime minister Anwar Ibrahim in the latter’s trial.
In a recent
Federal Court judgment (June 28) quashing a ‘contempt’ of court
conviction on Anwar’s lawyer Zainur Zakaria, the judges have repeatedly
questioned the propriety of Abdul Gani’s conduct in relation to
his alleged role to use the death penalty to extort false evidence
from Anwar’s tennis pal for the purpose of convicting Anwar.
As a leading
prosecutor in the Anwar trial, Gani should have been swiftly investigated
and brought to justice for his alleged criminal activities. Instead,
to the horror of this country, he is now promoted to be the all-powerful
attorney general, a position that has been vested with the sole
discretion to prosecute or not to prosecute anyone.
This horror
appointment, coming on the heel of two highly dubious appointments
in senior judicial positions, is a clear signal that the ugly head
of executive interference in the judiciary is once again raised
in combat readiness to face off the much acclaimed judicial reforms
initiated by Chief Justice Mohd Dzaiddin Abdullah.
The two judicial
appointments concerned are the Chief Judge of Malaya Ahmad Fairuz
and Federal Court Judge Mohtar Abdullah.
Justice Ahmad
in his capacity as an Appellate Court judge had earlier dismissed
Zainur’s appeal against the ‘contempt’ conviction, which was subsequently
quashed with severe reprimand for its many irregularities and improprieties
by the Federal Court on June 28. Justice Ahmad’s confidence-sapping
performance as a judge, as well as his promotion over another judge
of higher seniority and more illustrious records have been subjects
of heavy criticism in a recent Bar Council journal Insaf.
Mohtar Abdullah
was the attorney general who led the prosecuting team in the Anwar
trials. Apart from his highly questionable conduct in the infamous
Anwar trials, including his involvement with Abdul Gani in the evidence-fabricating
scandal mentioned above, he was criticised on numerous occasions
in his tenure as attorney general for practising selective prosecution,
waiving criminal charges including rape and corruption against senior
Umno leaders while quick in unjustly prosecuting opposition leaders
for exposing criminal activities of government leaders.
To a country
like Malaysia, which has already lost all checks and balances of
a functioning democracy, the battle to revive judicial independence
is a matter of life or death. A truly independent judiciary will
be able to restore justice to the people, and return a level playing
field of contest for power between the incumbent and the challenger.
A practical
example is Anwar’s final appeal against his conviction in the first
trial, which was scheduled to be heard in the Federal Court on Nov
12, but was postponed, we were told, due to the illness of a judge.
If Anwar succeeds in this appeal, as well as in all his subsequent
appeals against his conviction in the second trial, he will be set
free from prison.
Similarly,
reformasi leaders currently detained without trial under the Internal
Security Act, have also made their final appeal to the Federal Court
against previous dismissal of their habeas corpus application.
This hearing, scheduled on Nov 19, has also been postponed due,
we were told again, to the illness of a judge. If these reformasi
leaders succeed in their appeal, this would have meant the court
has stepped in to put a stop to the current rampant and reckless
abuse of the ISA to crush legitimate political dissent.
The above scenario
is no dream, but a distinct reality, if the Chief Justice succeeds
in restoring the judiciary as an independent and efficient institution,
expeditiously fulfilling its functions under the Constitution.
An honorable
judiciary is our last line of defence against the prime minister’s
incessant encroachment on whatever little human rights that is still
left to us. Let us draw a line here and now that the prime minister
must not cross in his insatiable quest for more powers to enslave
us.
Let us reject
his puppet AG and his puppet judges.
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