The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Political parties cannot sue individual­s for defamation, Federal Court rules

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PUTRAJAYA: The Federal Court seven-member bench has ruled that political parties cannot sue individual­s for defamation.

Court of Appeal President Tan Sri Rohana Yusuf, who chaired the bench, said the court had answered in the negative a legal question posed by Kepong Member of Parliament Lim Lip Eng to strike out a defamation lawsuit which was filed against him by MCA.

The question is whether a political party can maintain a suit for defamation in the light of the decision in Goldsmith v Bhoyrul (1998), an English case law which provided that political parties cannot be claimants in defamation suits.

In allowing the appeal by Lim, Justice Rohana, set aside the decisions of the High Court and Court of Appeal which dismissed Lim's applicatio­n to strike out the suit.

When handing down the decision, Justice Rohana said the court agreed with the submission­s by Lim's counsel Datuk Seri Gopal Sri Ram.

She also said the court would give the grounds of judgment in the case.

In the proceeding­s, conducted via video conferenci­ng, Sri Ram submitted that following the decisions in the Goldsmith v Bhoyrul and Rajagopal v Jayalalith­a, political parties could not sue for defamation.

He said both the government and political parties, being registered societies, cannot maintain a cause of action in defamation as Societies or Government have no reputation.

He said the law of defamation protects the reputation of persons.

Sri Ram also said the court had wrongly decided in the case involving the Sarawak government against Sarawak DAP chairman Chong Chieng Jen, where the Federal Court had ruled that the government could sue individual­s for defamation.

In July 2017, the then MCA secretary-general Ong Ka Chuan, on behalf of MCA, filed a defamation suit in his capacity as a public officer, against Lim over remarks he made at a press conference at Parliament building in 2016 over allegation­s that the political party had used government funds allocated for Chinese vernacular schools.

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