©The
Sun (Used by permission)
by Param Cumaraswamy, Kuala Lumpur
PETALING JAYA (April 1, 2008): This is a letter by lawyer Param Cumaraswamy who was a United Nations Special Rapporteur on Independent Judges and Lawyers.
I read with interest, though much to my amusement, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s letter (theSun, March 28). The former prime minister, among others, referred to lack of public faith in domestic enforcement agencies and called for credible foreign agencies “to carry out investigations here to clear the name of the government”. He even volunteered to subject himself to investigation by foreign agencies for any misdeeds by him during his 22 years premiership.
There is one alleged misdeed of Mahathir which needs investigation. In 1998
Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim was investigated for interference with police
investigations. He was charged with corruption under Section 2(1) of the
(Emergency Powers) Ordinance 1970 for the alleged interference. He was found
guilty and sentenced to six years imprisonment.
During Anwar’s second trial in June 2000 before Justice Arifin Jaka, the then
director of the Anti–Corruption Agency, Datuk Shafee Yahya, gave sworn
testimony. In the course of his testimony Shafee was asked about an
investigation the ACA earlier carried out on the then director–general of the
Economic Planning Unit. The transcript of the notes recorded by the judge of
this part of the testimony reads as follows:
Counsel: Adakah Datuk menggeledah pejabat
Ketua Pengarah EPU di Jabatan Perdana Mentri?
Witness: Ada.
Counsel: Was a big sum of money found in the drawer of the
Pengarah EPU for which he could not explain?
Court: What is the relevancy? No need to answer.
Counsel: Did Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim direct you to raid the
office of the Ketua Pengarah EPU?
Witness: Tidak.
Counsel: Did Datuk Seri Anwar ask you to close the case against
the director?
Witness: No.
Counsel: Did anyone ask you to close the case?
Witness: Yes, the Prime Minister did.
Counsel: Narrate the circumstances under which the PM asked you
to close the investigation.
Counsel: Were you called up by the PM?
Witness: Yes. I was told off, "How dare you raid my senior
officer’s office?" I was taken aback and I replied. "This was based on official
complain (sic) by an aggrieved party." I did what was officially required under
the law. He accused me of trying to fix the former D–G of EPU. I replied that is
totally wrong because it is wrong in law to fix anybody. As a Muslim it is a big
sin to fix anybody. He asked me, "Did Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim ask you to raid
the office?” I said, “no”. It was based on an official complain and to be fair
to Datuk Seri Anwar when I mentioned the complain against the EPU Chief. I
inform Datuk Seri Anwar of my intention to raid but he said, "Have you cleared
this with the PM?" I said, "I mentioned this to PM, the PM kept quite (sic).”
Counsel: What was the tone of PM when he asked you whether
Datuk Seri Anwar asked you to raid. Was it in an angry tone or normal
conversation tone?
Witness: The tone was rather accusatory.
Counsel: The EPU was directly under the PM’s Department.
Court: No more questions on the investigation on the EPU
Chief. I am not satisfied of the relevancy of such evidence.
Counsel: Was the EPU responsible for awarding privatisation of
projects.
Witness: As far as I know it is.
Counsel: After you were scolded by the PM did you inform
anybody about this?
Witness: I informed the Chief Secretary to the Government.
Counsel: What was your reaction when the PM scolded you and
told you to close the case against the D–G of EPU?
Witness: I was highly dissolution (sic) and when I went home I
told my wife I wanted to resign. But in view that I have two or three months to
finish my extension – my wife persuaded me not to resign.
Counsel: Why did you feel dissolution (sic) decide to resign?
Witness: In my whole carrier (sic) with the government, this
was the first time my boss accused me of trying to fix somebody and also my
dissolution (sic) in the way the PM was interfering with my duty.
– t.t. Dato’ Hj. Arifin bin Hj. Jaka
The following day on June 13, 2000, the media reported these
proceedings and in particular Shafee’s testimony. Thereafter concerned
personalities lodged police reports calling for Mahathir to be investigated for
interference with the ACA’s investigations. Nothing was heard of the
investigations.
The alleged interference was sometime in June 1998. In response to Shafee’s
reported testimony Mahathir was reported in the media to have said that he could
not remember the incident.
Here was a clear and glaring situation where the head of the ACA gave sworn
testimony of Mahathir’s interference on an ongoing investigation by the agency.
Yet to date the public do not know what happened to not only that investigation
of the Ketua Pengarah EPU but investigation of Mahathir for interfering with the
ACA’s investigation. Yet, earlier, the deputy prime minister was investigated,
charged, prosecuted, convicted and sentenced for interferences with police
investigations.
Now, if there was no truth in the evidence given by Shafee in court then Shafee
should have been charged with perjury. That never happened.
Hence, what happened to the investigations on Mahathir? It certainly is not too
late to reopen the file if at all one was opened after Shafee’s revelation in
Court in June 2000. Otherwise fresh investigations should commence. As Mahathir
may not be confident with the ACA investigating him the present government
should invite a credible foreign agency to investigate him for the alleged
interference with ACA investigation in June 1998.