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HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH: Criminal suspects locked up indefinitely in Malaysia PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 02 September 2006 08:48am

Lee Siew Tin cries for his son

FLASHBACK: Lee Siew Tin breaks down in tears as she pleads for the release of her son who was banished by police to Simpang Renggam on April 21. Full Report...

Parliament should repeal Emergency Ordinance

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 24, 2006 --
The Malaysian government is holding more than 700 criminal suspects indefinitely without trial or charge under the Emergency Ordinance, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The Malaysian parliament should repeal this law and instead rely on the country’s criminal law to prosecute ordinary criminal offences. (Click here to download the report)

The 35-page report, “Convicted Before Trial: Indefinite Detention Under Malaysia’s Emergency Ordinance,” documents how the Malaysian government has detained criminal suspects indefinitely without charge or trial, subjected them to beatings and ill treatment while in detention, and rearrested them upon court-ordered release.

The Emergency Ordinance was enacted in 1969 as a “temporary measure” to respond to ethnic riots. But for nearly four decades the government has used the law to detain criminal suspects without trial for lengthy periods when it finds it difficult to prosecute them.

“Emergency Ordinance detainees live in a world of uncertainty, never knowing when they will be released,” said Sahr MuhammedAlly, researcher in the Asia division of Human Rights Watch and author of the report. “Once released, there is no guarantee that they will not be rearrested and detained for the same alleged offence. This practice must end.”

Emergency Ordinance detainees are held at Simpang Renggam detention centre in Johor in inhumane and degrading conditions. Former detainees told Human Rights Watch about the overcrowded cells, poor hygiene, inadequate light and ventilation, and inedible food at Simpang Renggam. After visiting the detention centre, the Malaysian Bar Council and the Parliamentary Caucus on Human Rights similarly concluded that conditions in Simpang Renggam were overcrowded and congested.

Fracas at the Simpang Renggam Detention CentreBy law, Emergency Ordinance detainees are denied the ability to challenge the merits of their detention and are limited to court review of the procedural grounds for detention. The government, however, fails to respect court orders when procedural challenges are successful, and often rearrests detainees after they are released. In June, the Malaysian press reported that the police rearrested 11 Emergency Ordinance detainees as the detainees attempted to walk out of the Simpang Renggam detention centre after their release.

Some criminal suspects are detained under the Emergency Ordinance after having initially been detained under successive pretrial detention orders. Although Malaysian criminal procedure code allows pretrial detention for only 15 days, the police - in a practice referred to as “chain-smoking orders” or “road shows” - obtain successive remand orders for a suspect from different judges and jurisdictions for alleged involvement in different cases in order to continue detaining a suspect. Having failed to collect evidence to charge a suspect, the police then seek an Emergency Ordinance order to continue detention of a suspect for an additional 60 days and then up to two years.

“It is a fundamental principle that guilt or innocence must be decided by an independent court, not by executive fiat,” said MuhammedAlly. “Malaysia must repeal the Emergency Ordinance and use the normal criminal law to try suspected criminals.”

Last year, the government-appointed Royal Commission to Enhance the Royal Malaysia Police recommended the repeal of the Emergency Ordinance, concluding that, “it had outlived its purpose and violated the right to liberty.” But the Malaysian government has given no indication that it will repeal this draconian law.

“The government should listen to its own commission and repeal this draconian and outdated law,” said MuhammedAlly. “Otherwise, the country’s claim that it operates on the rule of law will be exposed as nothing more than a pretence.”

*The above report is reproduced from Human Rights Watch.

Comments (1)Add Comment
TIME ACOMING TO REPEAL DRACONIAN LAWS
written by Stephen Tan Ban Cheng, Saturday, September 02 2006 11:06 pm

Malaysians as a collective body must desire liberty and freedom enough to secure the repeal of such laws that deny our fellow Malaysians of their dignity as human beings.

Our Malaysian Government leaders must also find sufficient confidence in themselves and their ability to rule this country before they can repeal such repulsive laws. So far, the succession of leaders we have had have unfortunately not shown such a level of confidence.

Such laws put us effectively into the Fourth World, if ever there was one! The First World are the countries that comprise the so-called victorious powers after the Second World War. The Second World is the former Union of Socialist Soviet Russia while the Third World are countries that use a mix of capitalist and socialist methods. China is in the Third World. The distinction was made by countries such as Britain and the United States.

Having lived abroad for more years than I care to remember, I know for a fact that being a First Worlder is only a STATE OF MIND, and nothing else. I have seen Third Worlders living in a so-called First World country. However, as we Malaysians near the 50th year of our Merdeka, we Malaysians and our leaders must find it in ourselves and our ability to strip away such draconian laws that denyour humanity and that cause so much distress for the families affected.

Otherwise, there will come a day when being an ISA detainee is no longer a shame but a badge of honour. My prayer is that that arrival of that sad day will be forestalled by the repeal of these obnoxious laws.


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