The Borneo Post

Bar Council files suit against police, govt for stopping walk for justice

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LUMPUR: The Malaysian Bar Council has filed a lawsuit against the Royal Malaysia Police (PDRM), the Malaysian government, and several other parties for allegedly obstructin­g the assembly and march for judicial independen­ce (Walk for Judicial Independen­ce) in June.

The assembly and march were to protest the actions of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption

Commission (MACC) which publicly announced an investigat­ion into a Court of Appeal judge Datuk Mohd Nazlan Mohd Ghazali, which was considered an interferen­ce with the judiciary’s independen­ce and a violation of the basic principle of separation of powers.

Bar Council president Karen Cheah Yee Lynn, 54, vicepresid­ent Mohamed Ezri Abdul Wahab, 52, secretary B. Anand

Raj, 50 and treasurer Murshidah Mustafa, 52, as the first to fifth plaintiffs filed the suit through Messrs AmerBON at the High Court here on Oct 20, and the case is set for case management on Jan 12, 2023, before Deputy Registrar Nor Afidah Idris.

In the suit, the plaintiffs named Dang Wangi district police chief ACP Noor Dellhan Yahaya, its head of Criminal Investigat­ion Division DSP

Nuzulan Mohd Din, PDRM, Inspector-General of Police, the Home Minister and the Malaysian government as the first to sixth defendants.

In the statement of claim, the plaintiffs claimed that all the defendants had violated their rights under the Peaceful Assembly Act 2012 by preventing them and their 500 members and interns from holding a rally at the Padang Merbok parking lot, Jalan Parlimen to the main entrance of Parliament building on June 17, 2022 from 7.45am until 10am to submit a memorandum to then Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob or his representa­tive.

All the plaintiffs claimed that the defendants had committed misconduct in public office (misfeasanc­e) by arresting them wrongly, causing them to lose their freedom and damage their reputation due to wrongful arrest in addition to a loss of RM19,449 for the Bar Council for the cost incurred for the march.

The plaintiffs are demanding special damages amounting to RM19,449, general damages, and excessive and exemplary costs in addition to seeking a declaratio­n that the plaintiff’s rights have been violated and a declaratio­n that their detention was illegal and wrong in law.

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