|
•
Internal Security Act not cruel, says IGP
©Bernama
(Used by permission)
PUTRAJAYA, May 14 (Bernama) -- The five Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf)
leaders will continue to remain behind bars at the Kamunting detention centre in
Taiping, Perak.
This follows the Federal Court ruling today that their detention under the
Internal Security Act (ISA) is lawful.
A three-man panel led by Chief Judge of Malaya, Datuk Alauddin Mohd Sheriff
ruled that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, in his capacity as
the Internal Security Minister then, had rightly issued the two-year detention
order and complied with the procedural requirements under the act.
The Hindraf leaders are lawyers M. Manoharan, 46, who is also the MP for Kota
Alam Shah, P. Uthayakumar, 46, V. Ganabatirau, 40, R. Kenghadharan, 40, and
former bank officer K. Vasantha Kumar, 36.
The five men were detained last Dec 13 for their involvement in organising a
street protest in Kuala Lumpur on Nov 25, and for making inflammatory remarks
against the government.
They appealed to the Federal Court after they failed to secure an order from the
High Court for their release from what they claimed as unlawful detention.
In unanimously upholding the High Court's refusal to allow the five's habeas
corpus application, Alauddin said it (High Court) had carefully evaluated the
respondents' affidavits, including the affidavit by the prime minister when it
ruled that their detention was valid and in accordance with the law.
The five named the internal security minister and the Kamunting detention centre
commandant as respondents.
"The judicial commissioner, as appears in his judgment, has gone through the
affidavits of the respondents, paragraph by paragraph," said Alauddin.
The internal security minister, in his affidavit-in-reply, claimed that the
Hindraf leaders were attempting to gain international recognition for their
struggle by getting support from a terrorist organisation, Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Alauddin, in pronouncing the oral judgment, said Judicial Commissioner Zainal
Azman Ab Aziz had also held that the internal security minister's action to
issue the detention order on the five was not made in a mechanical manner or
without basis, but was based on investigation which was carried out.
"There is no misdirection of law by the judicial commissioner," said Alauddin
who presided, together with Federal Court judges Datuk Arifin Zakaria and Datuk
Hashim Yusoff.
Outside the court, lawyer Karpal Singh who represented the five Hindraf leaders,
expressed regret that the highest court in the country did not address the
issues of law which he had raised in the proceedings.
He said he would be filing for a review of today's decision.
Karpal hoped to file the review application by Monday, and would also write a
letter to the court requesting for a written grounds of judgment to be supplied
to them.
"We will call on Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar to seriously consider
revoking the detention order and set them (the five Hindraf leaders) free," he
said.
Karpal also said he would be filing a second habeas corpus application to secure
the five men's release on the grounds of procedural non-compliance by the ISA
advisory board chairman (Lembaga Nasihat).
He said he also intended to initiate an international appeal in order to have an
effective representation, particularly by Amnesty International and other human
rights bodies.
Trackback(0)
|
Mr IGP you are an idiot! Nothing more! What do you mean ISA detentions not cruel? Tell you what lets lock you up and throw away the keys for the next two years. Lets see if you think it is not cruel then!
Stupid people are running the police force I tell you!
Visvanathan Murugiah