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Independent panel to probe Lingam tape |
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Tuesday, 25 September 2007 03:01pm |
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 • Panel
bebas siasat klip video • Panel
bebas ditubuh -- Siasat kesahihan video perbualan telefon peguam dengan hakim
kanan
• Bar
Council welcomes Independent Panel to probe video clip
• Govt sets
up panel to probe damning video clip featuring senior lawyer
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Independent panel set up to probe authenticity of video clip - Najib
©Malaysiakini
(Used by permission)
A former Chief Judge of Malaya will head a three-member independent panel to
probe and determine the authenticity of the VK Lingam video clip, said Deputy
Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak today.
The government has appointed Haidar Mohd Noorto look into the eight-minute
edited video that showed senior lawyer VK Lingam talking on the phone,
apparently brokering the appointment of judges with Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz
Sheikh Abdul Halim.
National Service Council chairperson Lee Lam Thye and former Court of Appeal
Judge Mahadev Shankar are the other two members of the panel. Both were also
former commissioners of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia.
Haidar retired from his position in 2004 and is currently the Bumiputra-Commerce
Bank chairperson.
Najib said that the three panel members had accepted their appointments and
would soon start investigating the matter with the support and cooperation of
all agencies concerned.
“This decision was made as the allegations and speculations on the video clip
can arouse doubts on the credibility and integrity of the country’s judicial
system,” he told a press conference in Putrajaya.
Their findings, expected to be known in a few weeks, would be made public later,
he added.
To a question if the people implicated in the video would be called up by the
panel, Najib said the panel would do whatever necessary.
Bar Council's march
He also reiterated the government’s stand that a royal commission of inquiry
would not be set up to investigate the matter.
He added that the government felt the three-member panel was sufficient to look
into the matter.
Previously many quarters, including opposition parties and the Bar Council, had
urged the government to set up a royal commission of inquiry to look into the
state of the judiciary in light of this latest scandal.
The Bar Council is planning a march from the Court of Justice in Putrajaya to
the Prime Minister’s Department tomorrow morning to submit a memorandum to
demand the setting up of a commission of inquiry.
When asked to comment on the Bar Council’s decision to stage the protest march,
Najib said it was up to the Bar Council and the authorities to decide on such
actions.
Last week Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi himself had ruled out the setting
up on such a commission, stating that a police investigation on the matter was
sufficient.
De facto law minister Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz had issued a denial on behalf of
Ahmad Fairuz in relation to the explosive ‘Lingam tape’ revelations on Sunday.
However Ahmad Fairuz, who was the Chief Judge of Malaya in 2002 when the
recording was said to have been made, has remained silent on the issue. He had
issued a two-paragraph ‘No comment’ statement to Malaysiakini last
Friday.
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