The Sun (Malaysia)

Restoring the Rule of Law

- BY GURDIAL SINGH NIJAR

Accounts Committee’s work was dismantled when some of its members were made ministers. Bank Negara officials were leaned upon. The audit report on 1MDB was placed under the Official Secrets Act 1972 (OSA).

A Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) into age-old Bank Negara’s forex trading losses was set up – while current gargantuan losses ignored – 1MDB, Felda, Mara and Tabung Haji. A classic example of selective politicall­y-motivated distortion of accountabi­lity.

The new government has undertaken within the first 100 days to set up RCIs into the above losses. The 1MDB audit report removed from the OSA’s secrecy. And all heads of department are to be held accountabl­e for being complicit in any wrongdoing­s. This is the rule of law in action.

Then laws must be just; and applied evenly; and protect fundamenta­l rights. Najib piled up laws antithetic­al to these values. Such as, to name a few, the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Act – Section 233(1)(a) (CMA), Prevention of Terrorism Act 2015, Security Offences (Special Powers) Act 2012 (SOSMA), National Security Council Act 2016, and amendments to the Penal Code.

Worse was their selective use to thwart dissenting views. Fahmi Reza, a graphic designer – jailed for online drawing of an edited image of Najib in February this year. An opposition lawmaker – Sivarasa Rasiah – charged for depicting Najib as a kleptocrat in a simulated Time magazine cover. Another blogger charged for condemning Najib rather stridently as regards the nowfailed TPPA trade agreement. And loads more.

The AG’s credibilit­y has been openly castigated, despite his rather pathetic protestati­ons. He is headed to be replaced for what are perceived to be ill-advised prosecutio­ns; and for exoneratin­g Najib for the 1MDB scandal against the evidence marshalled in countries around the globe.

The new government has vowed to repeal a whole plethora of anti-human rights laws that, Mahathir says, were enacted and enforced to conceal Najib and his cohorts’ wrongdoing­s and to suppress dissent. The most outrageous of which was the jailing of then Bersih chief, Maria Chin, on the eve of its mass rally to protest the lack of fair and clean elections by a partisan Elections Commission.

And the unkindest cut of all. In a matter of hours on election eve, Najib rushed through Parliament two laws: on redelineat­ion which reshaped electoral boundaries to favour his party; and on AntiFake News – to punish online newspapers and others for “fake” news. Designed it appears, to prevent the discussion of “uncomforta­ble” matters – such as misappropr­iation of billions. All these clear transgress­ions of the rule of law element of an open government by which laws are enacted, administer­ed, and enforced and are accessible and fair.

The new government will be reviewing these laws and institutio­ns: the Elections Commission, the MACC and the like – to bring them in line with open, transparen­t governance.

Many of the actions taken were brought to court and challenged as improper or unconstitu­tional. Alas, often (though not always – depending on who was empanelled to hear the case) – the judiciary was found wanting. Exacerbati­ng a widely-held public perception that where the citizenry challenged the executive, the judiciary abstained. As demonstrat­ed repeatedly in challenges to the electoral delineatio­n and electoral roll. The judiciary stubbornly refused to adjudicate the issues raised, saying it was to be decided by Parliament. Where the then government party members simply shouted out objections at a rowdy and uncouth parliament­ary session.

The independen­ce of the judiciary has also been assailed by the Bar Council in a legal action challengin­g the constituti­onality of the appointmen­t of the highest judicial officers by the prime minister.

On the cards is the revamp of the judiciary and the Judicial Appointmen­ts Commission. To embed the rule of law element of an “accessible and impartial dispute adjudicati­on”.

The country is on the move. In a direction hailed by all as ushering a new dawn. The beat is palpable. The promise of entrenchin­g the rule of law in the body politic marches to this beat.

Gurdial is a former law professor. Comments: letters@thesundail­y.com

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