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Haidar to head royal panel on Lingam tape |
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Wednesday, 12 December 2007 03:10pm |
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• Haidar
heads six-man Royal Commission on Lingam Tape
• Haidar
appointed Royal Commission Chairman
• Lim Kit Siang's
press statement
©Malaysiakini
(Used by permission)
A five-member royal commission headed by former chief judge of Malaya Haidar
Mohamed Noor has been announced today by the government to look into the Lingam
tape.
Other members of the commission are former chief judge of Sabah and Sarawak
Steve Shim, former Court of Appeal judge Mahadev Shankar, former
solicitor-general Zaitun Zawiyah Puteh and historian and Suhakam commissioner
Khoo Kay Kim.
Prime Minister Deparment's Legal Affairs Division head Abdullah Sani Hamid will
act as the commission secretary.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced the members of this commission in
a statement today. He had previously announced the setting up of the commission
on Nov 16.
The full official name of the royal panel is 'Commission of Enquiry of the Video
Clip Recording of Images of a Person Purported to be an Advocate and Solicitor
Speaking on the Telephone on Matters Regarding the Appointment of Judges.
The commission is established following a report submitted to the government by
a three-member panel on the authenticity of the video clip.
The three-member panel, which was also headed by Haidar, had concluded the clip
- featuring senior lawyer VK Lingam purportedly brokering judicial appointments
with a top judge - was authentic and should be investigated further by a royal
commission.
The panel, which also included Mahadev, took one month to look into the
authenticity of the clip and was criticised for its narrow terms on reference.
The panel had no powers to look into the alleged ‘judicial appointment fixing’
that caused public outrage.
Terms of reference
The terms of reference given to the commission will be restricted to the matters
raised in the video clip. It will also include establishing the authenticity of
the video clip.
These are:
1) to enquire and ascertain the authenticity of the video clip
2) to enquire and identify the speaker, the person he was speaking to in the
video clip and the persons mentioned in the conversation
3) to enquire and ascertain the truth or otherwise of the content of the
conversation in the video clip
4) to determine whether any act of misbehaviour has been committed by person or
persons identified or mentioned in the video clip
5) to recommend any appropriate course of action to be taken against the person
or persons identified or mentioned in the video clip, should such person or
persons be found to have committed any misbehaviour.
The royal commission will have three months from today, or until mid-March, to
complete its inquiry.
The eight-minute video clip showed lawyer VK Lingam in a telephone conversation
purportedly with then chief judge of Malaya Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim,
discussing the appointment of judges to the Court of Appeal and Federal Court.
Ahmad Fairuz was appointed chief justice in 2003. He retired from the post on
Oct 31.
Ahmad Fairuz has indirectly denied any links with the phone conversation while
Lingam has only said that he would cooperate with the royal commission on his
alleged role in the appointment of ‘friendly’ judges to the higher courts.
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