The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Let accused review AG’s discretion if law misapplied — Federal Court

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PUTRAJAYA: An accused person ought to be given the opportunit­y to review the A orney-General’s prosecutor­ial discretion if the law had been misunderst­ood or misapplied as the decision to prosecute can have enormous consequenc­es on the person.

Chief Justice Tun Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat, in her 55-page judgment said the consequenc­es of being charged include the irretrieva­ble loss of reputation, distress and disruption of work and family relations.

“The A orney-General’s decision to prosecute could have enormous consequenc­es on the accused persons, the injured party and society at large,” she said.

She said in an appropriat­e, rare and exceptiona­l case, the A orney-General’s prosecutor­ial discretion is amenable to judicial review.

She said an accused person ought to be given the opportunit­y to have the A orney-General’s prosecutor­ial discretion reviewed by way of judicial review if the law has been misunderst­ood or misapplied by the A orneyGener­al, who is also a public prosecutor.

Justice Tengku Maimun said this in the court’s judgment which ruled that the former director of the Asian Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n Centre (AIAC) Datuk Prof Dr N. Sundra Rajoo, was entitled to immunity from prosecutio­n for acts commi ed while in office.

In the court’s judgment, Justice Tengku Maimun said the court has the responsibi­lity to prevent the criminal justice system from being arbitraril­y used against an individual and to prevent an innocent person from going through criminal proceeding­s if the A orney-General had failed to exercise his discretion in accordance with the law to prosecute.

“To allow a ma er without merit to be pursued through criminal court would have huge impact on the accused’s life and career and would cause unnecessar­y expenditur­e of time and effort and would place extra costs on the public purse,” she said.

She said in appropriat­e and exceptiona­l cases, it would be be er to quash the decision to prosecute before the criminal proceeding­s commence so that unnecessar­y suffering of the accused caused by improper prosecutio­n can be minimised.

On April 30, this year, the seven-member Federal Court bench led by Justice Tengku Maimun had allowed Sundra Rajoo’s appeal and granted him a declaratio­n that he was immune from prosecutio­n for acts done within his official capacity.

Sundra Rajoo, 65, who was the head of AIAC from 2010 until late 2018, won his case in the High Court but the Court of Appeal overturned the decision a er allowing the appeal by the Foreign Ministry, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), the government and the A orney General.

He subsequent­ly obtained leave to appeal to the Federal Court.

On Jan 22, last year, Sessions Court judge Azura Alwi struck out the three criminal breach of trust charges involving AIAC funds amounting to more than RM1 million against Sundra Rajoo a er ruling that she was bound by the High Court decision that he (Sundra Rajoo) was entitled to immunity from prosecutio­n for acts done in his official capacity.

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