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It is most
shameful for the Barisan Nasional to make the Selangor state legislature now
a laughing stock of the world. It is the ugliest episode in the history of
the Selangor State Assembly.
Teng Chang Khim (Selangor, Tuesday):
Preliminary The unprecedented motion passed by the Selangor State
Assembly yesterday adopting the proposal of the Committee of Privileges to
increase the penalty against me for allegedly committing contempt of the
State Assembly by throwing the Standing Order into a waste bin was the most
shameful premeditated political assassination and vicious political vendetta
against me by the Barisan Nasional. This was not the first time that Barisan
Nasional had tried to shut me up in the Assembly especially when I touched
on the malpractices of the administration, the corrupt practices of the
politicians and numerous scandals in the state administration under the
leadership of the Menteri Besar, Dato Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo. Throughout the years in the Assembly since
1995, I had been limited to speak for only 30 minutes in the capacity as the
Opposition Leader in my first term from 1995 to 1999 and in the third term
from 2004 even in the policy debates and the annual budget debates when my
counterparts in the Penang State Assembly, for instance, had been allowed to
speak without pre-set time limit over the years and the practice still
remains. Within the limited 30 minutes given to me,
the Barisan Nasional backbenchers had also recently decided to interrupt me
during my speeches by alleging that I had spoken out of the topic even
during the policy and budget debates when by convention everything under the
sun could be raised by the assemblymen participating in such debates. In
every such incidents, the Speaker of the House, Tan Sri Onn Ismail, would
blindly adopt their objection especially when I touched on the malpractices
of the executive and the corrupt practices of the Barisan Nasional leaders. During the 1999 budget session, I was even
assaulted by the Barisan Nasional backbencher, Dato Zakaria bin Deros, in
the Assembly lobby adjacent to the Chamber. The incident was certainly more
serious than throwing the Standing Order into the waste bin. However, since
he was a Barisan Nasional backbencher, no action was taken against him by
the House and even a police report lodged by me did not give rise to any
criminal prosecution against him. The Incident On 25.4.2005, before ending my frequently
interrupted speech on the policy debate, I raised my objection against the
Speaker痴 decision to reject my ordinary motion in his Chamber without
allowing the motion to be printed on the order paper (agenda) and circulated
to all members of the House as required by the Standing Order. There is no
provision under the Standing Order that empowers the Speaker to reject such
motion in his Chamber. An ordinary motion can only be rejected by the House
after it is tabled by the member giving due notice. However, the Speaker had invoked a provision
under the emergency motion which empowered him to reject an emergency motion
in his Chamber to reject my ordinary motion. This was a total disregard and
disrespect to the Standing order and blatant abuse of power by the Speaker.
The Speaker refused to listen and reason my
objection and could only cling on the provision of the Standing Order that
provided him the final say on the interpretation of the provision in case of
ambiguity when in the present case there was clearly none as the provisions
for ordinary motion in Rule 26 and 27 of the Standing Order were distinctly
separated from that of the emergency motion in Rule 17 of the Standing
Order. As a symbolic act of protest, I threw a
misprinted and void copy of the Standing Order into a waste paper bin after
explaining my reasons for attempting to do so. If my symbolic act of protest in throwing a
misprinted and void copy of the Standing Order was an offence, then the
total disregard and disrespect to the Standing Order and blatant abuse of
power by the Speaker must be a sin. The House should pass a more severe
sentence on the Speaker than on me. The only reason that the Speaker was so
adamant to prohibit me from moving the motion was that my motion proposed to
seek for a no-confidence vote against the Menteri Besar, Khir Toyo, for the
scandals in the indiscriminate clearing of forest reserve in U10 Bukit
Cherakah, Shah Alam, the construction of the RM21 million bungalow houses
for the State Executive members (EXCO) under the pretext of construction of
quarters for the state civil servants, the alleged impropriety in the
procedure of the land alienation in Gombak and allegations of corrupt
practices of the Menteri Besar in a published book. Multiple Jeopardy It is a cardinal rule in the laws of this
land that one should not be subject to double jeopardy which means one can
only be tried and punished once for an offence committed by him. However, I
had suffered multiple jeopardy for allegedly throwing the Standing Order
into the waste bin. The Speaker had repeatedly, for at least not
less than 4 times, pronounced in the House in the morning session of the
meeting on 25.4.2005 that I had been suspended for 3 days for the alleged
offence. However, immediately after the meeting resumed in the afternoon, he
announced that I had been suspended for 5 days. How could a judge pronounce
an increased sentence on an offender for the very same offence? It is also a
cardinal rule in law that a judge becomes functus officio after
pronouncing the sentence which means he ceases his function as a judge when
a sentence is passed. This is evidently another instance of disregard to
rule and abuse of power by the Speaker. Of course, under the Standing Order, if the
Speaker deems the suspension of 5 days on a member is not sufficient, there
is a provision under Rule 44(3) of the Standing Order that empowers the
Speaker to name the member (in the Assembly meeting, a member can only
ordinarily be called by the name of his constituency he represents) and
followed by the motion from the frontbenchers to suspend that member for a
period of time exceeding 5 days. This procedure was not complied with. Thus,
the increased suspension of 5 days was null and void. Inquiry of the Committee of Privileges in
breach of the rule of laws and rule of natural justice The subsequent motion by the State Exco
member, Dato Tang See Hang, to refer me to the Committee of Privileges was
also defective as it was not seconded by any other Exco member before it was
tabled for debate and decision. I had noticed it when I was watching the
proceeding via the circuit television at the lobby of the Assembly. I raised
it in my preliminary objection when ordered to put up a written
representation by the Committee of Privileges. A copy of the motion sent to
me by the Committee of Privileges in their letter dated 27.6.2005 also did
not indicate that the motion had been seconded. A draft copy of the Hansard
sent to all the members on 26.4.2005, for which any amendment to it must be
made within 14 days from the date thereof, also did not indicate that the
motion had been seconded before it was put up for debate and decision. The Committee of Privileges did not give any
attention to my objection because it obviously did not refer to the copy of
the motion that the committee sent to me and the draft Handsard that
circulated to all the members which indicated that the motion was not
seconded. The Secretary of the Assembly, Bakhtiar bin Hussin, sought to
explain in the committee meeting that draft Handsard was amended by the
seconder of the motion, Dato Ch地g Toh Eng. However, it could be easily noted from the
covering letter of the draft Handsard circulated to all the members on
26.4.2005 that any amendment to the draft must be made within 14 days
thereof, namely, by 10.5.2005. The Committee of Privileges had its first
meeting on 24.6.2005 and its letter ordering me to submit a written
representation was sent out on 27.6.2005. By 24.6.2005, the committee should
have had the knowledge of the alleged amendment by Ch地g if it really
existed and thereby sent a copy of the seconded motion to me but yet only
the unseconded copy was sent out to me. That means there was actually no
amendment to the unseconded motion as at 26.6.2005. The sequence of events
clearly showed that the Secretary of the Assembly had had the draft Handsard
tailored only after I raised the preliminary objection in breach of the rule
and procedure. The Secretary of the Assembly further sought
to explain to the committee that at the time when Ch地g attempted to second
the motion, 4 microphones were switched on simultaneously and the camera was
still on Tang, the proposer, when Ch地g seconded the motion and as such the
camera did not turn in time on Ch地g. Bakhtiar attended the meeting of the
committee in his capacity as the Secretary of the Committee and therefore he
should not be allowed to give statement in such a manner without calling
Ch地g and the cameraman or the technician to testify in the inquiry of the
committee. His statement evidence is only a piece of hearsay evidence. Besides the video camera recording the whole
proceeding of the Assembly, there was also audio recorder to record the
proceeding on which the Handsard recorder relied on to transcribe the
speeches verbatim in the Assembly. Both the video and audio recorder were
not produced in the inquiry of the committee to verify my preliminary
objection. The Committee of Privileges through its
letter dated 27.6.2005 together with the unseconded motion ordered that I
shall put up a written representation for their consideration within 7 days. I put up a preliminary objection citing 2
reasons, firstly, that the motion was not seconded and secondly that there
was no provision under the Standing Order that empowered the Committee of
Privileges to order for written representation without calling me to appear
before the committee. I had stated clearly that I would put up my defence
after the committee had dealt with my preliminary objection. The Committee of Privileges did not reply to
my preliminary objection but instead proceeded to deliberate on the charge
against me. I am surprised that the State Legal Advisor, Datin Paduka
Badariah bt Hassan, had advised the Committee of Privileges that my
objection was groundless, without first calling for proper evidence to
verify, and that I did not use the opportunity offered to put up my defence.
Even a chambering student would realize that this is obviously an utter
disregard of the rule of laws and rule of natural justice. It痴 most shocking that the Committee of
Privileges, being a committee set up by the state legislature, did not even
conduct a proper hearing to decide on the charge against me. The minutes of
meeting showed that not even a witness was called and not a piece of
evidence was adduced to prove the charge against me. The unseconded motion
at best was only a charge against me. The alleged Standing Order that I
threw was not even tendered. In short, no inquiry was actually held. The
committee deliberated on the matter without taking any evidence. The highest
law making body of the state itself did not even adhere to the basic rules
and procedures. Besides, there were many other defects and
irregularities in the whole proceeding as evident from the report put up by
the Committee of Privileges. The committee met on 24.6.2005, 7.7.2005 and
26.7.2005. The entire report of the committee was dated 26.7.2005 but the
minutes of the first meeting was only prepared and signed by the Secretary
on 27.7.2005, one day after the entire report was ready. This first minutes
of meeting was approved by the second meeting held on 7.7.2005, 20 days
ahead of the date when the first minutes was prepared and signed! Even the
third minutes of meeting was prepared and signed on 26.7.2005, one day
before the first minutes of meeting was prepared and signed. The most shocking part is that the committee
had meted out the penalty at its meeting on 7.7.2005 and subsequently the
third meeting was called to increase the penalty on 26.7.2005. But the final
proposal on the penalty had already been signed by all the members of
Committee of Privileges on 7.7.2005!
Numerous
breaches of rules, procedures, and crystal clear defects in the whole
episode have irresistibly pointed to one and the only one conclusion that it
was a Barisan Nasional conspiracy to mount a political assassination against
me at all costs to shut the opposition out of the Selangor State Assembly.
It is most shameful for the Barisan Nasional to make the Selangor state
legislature now a laughing stock of the world. It is the ugliest episode in
the history of the Selangor State Assembly
(02/8/2005)
*
Teng Chang Khim ,
DAP Central
Executive Committee and State Assemblyman for Sungai Pinang
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