Media Statement
by Lim Kit Siang in Parliament on
Thursday, 18th December 2008:
MACC/JAC Bills – don’t count chickens
before they are hatched
The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad
Abdullah should not count the chickens before they are hatched as he did
yesterday following the passage of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption
Commission (MACC) and Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) Bills when
he indulged in the following hyperbole:
MACC – “They (foreign investors) will know
there is no corruption or very little of it”; and
JAC – “we will bring back the confidence of the public in the
judiciary”.
As I said during the debates on the MACC and
JAC Bills, nobody in Government really believe
(i) that the MACC could check the rot of
corruption in the country and catapult Malaysia into the
stratosphere among the world’s ten or twenty least corrupt nations,
with the MACC able to rival the Independent Commission Against
Corruption (ICAC) in Hong Kong or the Corrupt Practices
Investigation Board (CPIB) in Singapore; and
(ii) that the JAC could fully restore national and international
confidence in the independence, impartiality and integrity of the
judiciary after two decades of erosion and devastation or even to
prevent in future the repetition of controversial appointments like
the Zaki Azmi appointment as Chief Justice.
After the 1988 “mother of judicial crisis”
which saw the sacking of the Lord President Tun Salleh Abas and two
Supreme Court judges, the late Tan Sri Wan Suleiman Pawanteh and Datuk
George Seah, the country had seen the appointment of six heads of the
judiciary in the past 20 years, three of whom had brought shame and
scandal to the institution of the judiciary in the country and the world
spanning 17 years in the past two decades.
Could the JAC ensure that this long dark chapter of the Malaysian
judiciary could never happen again?
The MACC and JAC Bills should pave the way for the restoration of public
confidence in the independence, impartiality and integrity of key
institutions in the country, but the signs are not there that this will
be the case, with big question marks about the professionalism and
integrity of key institutions remain unanswered – including those
concerning the Inspector-General of Police and the Attorney-General.
In these circumstances, instead of counting the chickens before they are
hatched, what should concern Malaysians is chickens coming home to roost
as a result of the MACC and JAC Bills.
*
Lim
Kit Siang, DAP
Parliamentary leader & MP for Ipoh Timor
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