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Media Statement by Lim Kit Siang in Petaling
Jaya on Wednesday, 16th April 2008:
DAP welcomes developments indicating that Abdullah is finally prepared
to carry out long-overdue judicial reforms to take the first step to
restore national and international confidence in the independence,
impartiality, integrity and quality of the judiciary
The DAP welcomes developments indicating that the Prime Minister,
Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is finally prepared to carry out
long-overdue reforms to take the first step to restore national and
international confidence in the independence, impartiality, integrity
and quality of the judiciary.
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 with the
arbitrary sacking of Tun Salleh Abas as Lord President and two Supreme
Court Judges, the late Tan Sri Wan Suleiman Pawanteh and Datuk George
Seah as Supreme Court judges, 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”;
• Restoration of the doctrine of the separation of powers by reinstating
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.
*
Lim
Kit Siang, MP for Ipoh Timor & DAP Central Policy and Strategic
Planning Commission Chairman
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