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Dear Prime Minister
In our proclamation of independence, our first Prime Minister gave voice to the
lofty aspirations and dreams of the people of Malaya: that Malaya was founded on
the principles of liberty and justice, and the promise that collectively we
would always strive to improve the welfare and happiness of its people.
Many years have passed since that momentous occasion and those aspirations and
dreams remain true and are as relevant to us today as they were then. This was
made possible by a strong grasp of fundamentals in the early period of this
nation. The Federal Constitution and the laws made pursuant to it were well
founded; they embodied the key elements of a democracy built on the Rule of Law.
The Malaysian Judiciary once commanded great respect from Malaysians and was
hailed as a beacon for other nations. Our earlier Prime Ministers, Tunku Abdul
Rahman, Tun Razak and Tun Hussein Onn were truly leaders of integrity, patriots
in their own right and most importantly, men of humility. They believed in and
built this nation on the principles and values enunciated in our Constitution.
Even when they had to enact the Internal Security Act (ISA), 1960 they were very
cautious and apologetic about it. Tunku stated clearly that the Act was passed
to deal with the communist threat. “My cabinet colleagues and I gave a solemn
promise to Parliament and the nation that the immense powers given to the
Government under the ISA would never be used to stifle legitimate opposition and
silent lawful dissent”, was what the Tunku said. Our third Prime Minister Tun
Hussein Onn reinforced this position by saying that the ISA was not intended to
repress lawful political opposition and democratic activity on the part of the
citizenry.
The events of the last three weeks have compelled me to review the way in which
the ISA has been used. This exercise has sadly led me to the conclusion that the
Government has time and time again failed the people of this country in
repeatedly reneging on that solemn promise made by Tunku Abdul Rahman. This has
been made possible because the Government and the law have mistakenly allowed
the Minister of Home Affairs to detain anyone for whatever reason he thinks fit.
This subjective discretion has been abused to further certain political
interests.
History is the great teacher and speaks volumes in this regard. Even a cursory
examination of the manner in which the ISA has been used almost from its
inception would reveal the extent to which its intended purpose has been
subjugated to the politics of the day.
Regrettably, Tunku Abdul Rahman himself reneged on his promise. In 1965, his
administration detained Burhanuddin Helmi, the truly towering Malay
intellectual, a nationalist who happened to be a PAS leader. He was kept in
detention until his death in 1969. Helmi was a political opponent and could by
no stretch of the imagination be considered to have been involved in the armed
rebellion or communism that the ISA was designed to deal with. This detention
was an aberration, a regrettable moment where politics had been permitted to
trump the rule of law. It unfortunately appears to have set a precedent and many
detentions of persons viewed as having been threatening to the incumbent
administration followed through the years. Even our literary giant, ‘sasterawan
negara’ the late Tan Sri A. Samad Ismail was subjected to the ISA in 1976. How
could he have been a threat to national security?
I need not remind you of the terrible impact of the 1987 Operasi Lalang. Its
spectre haunts the Government as much as it does the peace loving people of this
nation, casting a gloom over all of us. There were and still are many unanswered
questions about those dark hours when more than a hundred persons were detained
for purportedly being threats to national security. Why they were detained has
never been made clear to Malaysians. Similarly, no explanation has been
forthcoming as to why they were never charged in court. Those detainees included
amongst their numbers senior opposition members of parliament who are still
active in Parliament today. The only thing that is certain about that period was
that UMNO was facing a leadership crisis. Isn’t it coincidental that the recent
spate of ISA arrests has occurred when UMNO is again having a leadership crisis?
In 2001, Keadilan ‘reformasi’ activists were detained in an exercise that the
Federal Court declared was in bad faith and unlawful. The continued detention of
those that were not released earlier in the Kamunting detention facility was
made possible only by the fact that the ISA had been questionably amended in
1988 to preclude judicial review of the Minister’s order to detain. Malaysians
were told that these detainees had been attempting to overthrow the Government
via militant means and violent demonstrations. Seven years have gone and yet no
evidence in support of this assertion has been presented. Compounding the
confusion even further, one of these so-called militants, Ezam Mohamad Noor,
recently rejoined UMNO to great fanfare, as a prized catch it would seem.
At around the same time, members of PAS were also detained for purportedly being
militant and allegedly having links to international terrorist networks. Those
detained included Nik Adli, the son of Tuan Guru Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat the
Menteri Besar of Kelantan. Malaysians were made a promise by the Government that
evidence of the alleged terrorist activities and links of these detainees would
be disclosed. To date no such evidence has been produced.
The same formula was used in late 2007 when the HINDRAF 5 were detained.
Malaysians were told once again that these individuals were involved in efforts
to overthrow the Government and had links with the militant Liberation Tiger of
Tamil Eelam of Sri Lanka. To date no concrete evidence have been presented to
support this assertion. It would seem therefore that the five were detained for
their involvement in efforts that led to a mobilisation of Malaysian Indians to
express, through peaceful means; their frustration against the way in which
their community had been allowed to be marginalised. This cause has since been
recognised as a legitimate one. The HINDRAF demonstration is nothing
extraordinary as such assemblies are universally recognised as being a
legitimate means of expression.
In the same vein, the grounds advanced in support of the most recent detentions
of Tan Hoon Cheng, Teresa Kok and Raja Petra Kamarudin leave much to be desired.
The explanation that Tan Hoon Cheng was detained for her own safety was
farcical. The suggestion that Teresa Kok had been inciting religious sentiments
was unfounded as was evinced by her subsequent release.
As for Raja Petra Kamarudin, the prominent critic of the Government, a perusal
of his writings would show that he might have been insulting of the Government
and certain individuals within it. However, being critical and insulting could
not in any way amount to a threat to national security. If his writings are
viewed as being insulting of Islam, Muslims or the Holy Prophet (pbuh), he
should instead be charged under the Penal Code and not under the ISA. In any
event, he had already been charged for sedition and criminal defamation in
respect of some of his statements. He had claimed trial, indicating as such his
readiness and ability to defend himself. Justice would best be served by
allowing him his day in court more so where, in the minds of the public, the
Government is in a position of conflict for having been the target of his
strident criticism.
The instances cited above strongly suggest that the Government is undemocratic.
It is this perspective that has over the last 25 plus years led to the
Government seemingly arbitrarily detaining political opponents, civil society
and consumer advocates, writers, businessmen, students, journalists whose crime,
if it could be called that, was to have been critical of the Government. How it
is these individuals can be perceived as being threats to national security is
beyond my comprehension. The self-evident reality is that legitimate dissent was
and is quashed through the heavy-handed use of the ISA.
There are those who support and advocate this carte-blanche reading of the ISA.
They will seek to persuade you that the interests of the country demand that
such power be retained, that Malaysians owe their peace and stability to laws
such as the ISA. This overlooks the simple truth that Malaysians of all races
cherish peace. We lived together harmoniously for the last 400 years, not
because of these laws but in spite of them.
I believe the people of this country are mature and intelligent enough to
distinguish actions that constitute a ‘real’ threat to the country from those
that threaten political interests. Malaysians have come to know that the ISA is
used against political opponents and, it would seem, when the leadership is
under challenge either from within the ruling party or from external elements.
Malaysians today want to see a Government that is committed to the court process
to determine guilt or innocence even for alleged acts of incitement of racial or
religious sentiment. They are less willing to believe, as they once did, that a
single individual, namely the Minister of Home Affairs; knows best about matters
of national security. They value freedom and the protection of civil liberties
and this is true of people of other nations too.
Mr Prime Minister, the results of the last General Election
are clear indication that the people of Malaysia are demanding a reinstatement
of the Rule of Law. I was appointed as your, albeit short-lived, Minister in
charge of legal affairs and judicial reform. In that capacity, I came to
understand more keenly how many of us want reform, not for the sake of it, but
for the extent to which our institutions have been undermined by events and the
impact this has had on society.
With your blessing, I attempted to push for reform. High on my list of
priorities was a reinstatement of the inherent right of judicial review that
could be enabled through a reversion of the key constitutional provision to its
form prior to the controversial amendment in 1988. I need not remind you that
that constitutional amendment was prompted by the same series of events that led
not only to Operasi Lalang but the sacking of the then Lord President and two
supreme court justices. Chief amongst my concerns was the way in which the
jurisdiction and the power of the Courts to grant remedy against
unconstitutional and arbitrary action of the Executive had been removed by
Parliament and the extent to which this had permitted an erosion of the civil
liberties of Malaysians. It was this constitutional amendment that paved the way
for the ouster provision in the ISA that virtually immunizes the Minister from
judicial review, a provision which exemplifies the injustice the constitutional
amendment of 1988 has lent itself.
I also sought to introduce means by which steps could be taken to assist the
Judiciary to regain the reputation for independence and competence it once had.
Unfortunately, this was viewed as undesirable by some since an independent
Judiciary would mean that the Executive would be less ‘influential’.
I attempted to do these things and more because of the realization that
Malaysia’s democratic traditions and the Rule of Law are under siege. Anyway,
there is nothing wrong with giving everyone an independent Judiciary and the
opportunity to a fair trial. This is consistent with the universal norms of
human rights as it is with the tenets of Islam, the religion of the Federation.
Unchecked power to detain at the whim of one man is oppressiveness at its
highest. Even in Israel, a nation that is perpetually at war the power to detain
is not vested in one man and detention orders require endorsement from a judge.
If there are national security considerations, then these can be approached
without jettisoning the safeguards intended to protect individual citizens from
being penalised wrongfully. In other jurisdictions involved in armed conflicts,
trials are held in camera to allow for judicial scrutiny of evidence considered
too sensitive for public disclosure so as to satisfy the ends of justice. If
this can be done in these jurisdictions, why not here where the last armed
struggle we saw, the very one that precipitated the need for the ISA, came to an
end in the 1980s? Any doubts as to the continued relevance of the ISA in its
present form should have been put to rest by the recommendation by the National
Human Rights Commission (SUHAKAM) that the ISA be repealed and an anti-terror
legislation suited to the times enacted in its place. Containing as it did a
sunset clause in its original times, the ISA was never intended to be a
permanent feature on the Malaysian legal landscape.
Through its continued use in the manner described above and in the face of
public sentiment, it is only natural that the ISA has become in the mind of the
people an instrument of oppression and the Government is one that lends itself
to oppressiveness. Its continued use does not bode well for a society that is
struggling to find its place in the global arena. It does not bode well for the
democracy that is so vital for us to develop sustainably.
Mr Prime Minister, I remember very clearly what you once said; that if one has
the opportunity to do what is good and right for the country, then he must take
on the task. I respect you deeply for that and if I were confident that I would
have been able to do some good for Malaysia, I would have remained on your team.
Sir, you are still the Prime Minister and you still have the opportunity to
leave your footprint in Malaysian history. I urge you to do so by repealing the
ISA once and for all.
Let us attempt to fulfil that solemn promise made by our beloved first Prime
Minister to the people of this country.
Yours sincerely
ZAID IBRAHIM
Kuala Lumpur
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Thank you, Zaid, for sharing your concerns and reminding the Government about improving the ‘welfare and happiness of its people’. This reminds me about the ‘Singapore Pledge’- the contents of which are supported by their politicians - to be sincerely good for their nation.
The Singapore pledge, being continuously repeated by the people of Singapore all through the years, has today, enabled them to make their country successful worldwide, and by world standards too.
This tells us that it is only when a nation cares for and love all its citizens, irrespective of race, religion or creed, that it can ‘succeed’ by world standards. This is not ‘success’ by individual, personal, national assumptions. It is ‘success’ – as the world looks upon them. Do we aspire to attain such high standards of national success, or are the authorities choosing to put our ordinary Malaysians closely kept in their own cocoons - so as to allow them to retain power?
Our question now is, has our government succeeded thus far? Looking at the surrounding pettiness over almost every single issue in Malaysia, and in the Malaysian mass media where many opinions have been evidently swayed by the wrong criteria, and the hypocrisy portrayed by Malaysian politicians past and present, we wonder if we have succeeded.
To truth is, the ones in power have hardly allowed the best to be where they ought to be. Among Malaysians, the considerations are always ‘race’, ‘religion’ and ‘ties’. Will we ever change?
Tan Peek Guat