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: Malaysia
Two rulings from a servile Malaysian judiciary on the Anwar
case
By John Roberts and Peter Symonds
29 May 2000
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this version to print
Two legal decisions in the case of former Malaysian deputy
prime minister Anwar Ibrahim last month demonstrate the blatantly
political character of the country's judiciary, which acts as
little more than a rubber stamp for the needs of the government
headed by Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
The most significant took place on April 29 in the Appeals
Court in Kuala Lumpur, when three judges rejected Anwar's appeal
against his conviction in April last year on corruption charges
and reaffirmed his six-year prison sentence. Anwar's lawyers took
nine days to argue their case but the three judges announced their
decision in a matter of minutes despite the vocal protests of
Anwar. The reasons contained in the 59-page written version of
the Appeal Court judgement defy logic and any conception of justice.
The case itself involved claims that the deputy prime minister
had used his position to prevail upon the Special Branch police
to force two individualshis former driver Azizan Abu Bakar
and Ummi Halfilda Ali, the sister of his former private secretaryto
withdraw their accusations against him. The allegations of sexual
misconduct only emerged in late 1997 as sharp divisions were opening
up in the leadership of the ruling United Malays National Organisation
(UMNO) over the direction of economic policy.
As the political antagonisms intensified the lurid details
of what amounted to little more than vindictive gossip were circulated
at the UMNO conference in June 1998 in the form of a book
50 Reasons Why Anwar Cannot Become Prime Minister. When
the political brawl came to a head in September 1998, the prime
minister tried to use the accusations to blackmail Anwar into
resigning. When that failed Mahathir sacked his deputy then had
him and his supporters expelled from the party.
Anwar was only arrested after he made it clear that he would
not go quietly and began to organise anti-government demonstrations
accusing Mahathir and his ministers of corruption. He was taken
into custody after a large protest in the centre of Kuala Lumpur.
Even then he was arrested not on the present charges of corruption
and sexual misconduct but rather under the country's draconian
Internal Security Act which allows for lengthy detention without
trial on security matters.
All of the above is common public knowledge in Malaysia and
it points to a political fit-up aimed at eliminating a political
opponent. But both for the trial judge Augustine Paul and his
learned colleagues in the Appeals Court it was all completely
irrelevant to the case. They obviously understood what was required
of them and simply turned a blind eye to the most glaring deficiencies
in the prosecution case while repeatedly blocking defence attempts
to prove that Anwar was the victim of a political conspiracy.
Appeal court ruling
The appeals court judgement included the following points:
* According to the appeals court judges, the heavy sentence
imposed on Anwar was justified because he failed to offer anything
in the way of mitigation and continued to maintain his innocence
and to point to the political motives for his prosecution. Commenting
on the political nature of the defence case, the judgement states:
Instead the appellant delivered a speech not in mitigation
but far from it."
* One of the grounds of appeal was that the presiding judge
had arbitrarily amended the charges to suit the prosecution. Originally
the prosecution had sought to prove that Anwar had engaged in
homosexual activities and then used his position to have the police
special branch force retractions. But as the defence began to
demolish the accusations and undermine the case against Anwar,
the presiding judge ruled that the prosecution did not have to
prove the allegations of sexual misconduct, only that Anwar had
approached the police. He then expunged all the evidence of Anwar's
alleged sexual activities from the court record.
According to the appeals court, the judge's actions assisted
the defence and protected Anwar's good name. In fact the reverse
was the case. Judge Paul allowed the prosecution to present the
lurid testimony of Azizan and Ummi, which was then seized upon
by the government-run media to attack Anwar and his supporters.
But he then denied the defence adequate opportunity to rebut the
evidence and lowered the legal requirements necessary for the
prosecution to prove its case.
* Anwar's appeal also challenged the credibility of the prosecution
witnesses. But in its judgement the appeals court refused to even
consider the issue and ruled that the trial judge had "first
hand impression of them and he was fully aware of the various
tests to be applied in ascertaining the veracity of witnesses".
Like the rulings of Judge Paul, the appeals court decision rests
on the assumption that there was no political conspiracy against
Anwar and that the evidence of prosecution witnesses should be
accepted on face value.
Yet there was plenty of indications that the allegations against
Anwar were not bona fide. Ummi, a businesswoman whose advertising
agency depended on a government contract, has close connections
with the ruling United National Malays Organisation (UNMO). Prior
to sending her allegations to Mahathir, she met with Mahathir's
close associate and Anwar's arch rival Daim Zianuddin.
It was at Ummi's instigation that Azizan, Anwar's former driver,
claimed to have been made a sex slave by his employer.
A week prior to Anwar's sacking, on August 24, 1998, Mahathir
held a private meeting with Azizan and the director of the police
special branch. Azizan's testimony is central to the current case
against Anwar on charges of sodomy. Others, who earlier alleged
that Anwar had engaged in homosexual activities with them, have
since retracted their statements and accused the police of intimidation
and torture.
In a particularly revealing comment, the appeals court judges
in considering the evidence of Azizan simply declared that they
could not believe that anyone would admit to being sodomised in
writing to the prime minister unless it had been true. In other
words, evidence that pointed to Azizan being a liar who had colluded
with Anwar's political enemies was simply dismissed as irrelevant.
* Perhaps the most crucial point in the appeals court judgement
was its uncritical acceptance of the evidence of former police
special branch chief Mohamad Said Awang. The prosecution depended
on Said's testimony to prove its assertion that Anwar had approached
the police to force Ummi and Azizan to retract their statements.
But under cross-examination, Said openly admitted he would lie
in court under oath if ordered to do so by "someone higher
than the deputy prime minister"a clear reference to
prime minister Mahathir.
The appellate judges simply declared that even though Said
had admitted to being willing to lie under oath he had not in
fact done so. Of course no evidence was offered to back up the
claim. The judgement simply stated: "From the sum total of
evidence, we are not convinced that they have told lies on material
matters. Maybe they are guilty for obeying unlawful superior orders
because of their failure to assert their professionalism. But
that does not mean they were telling lies."
Ruling protects Mahathir
A ruling on April 21 by judge Arifin Jaka in Anwar's current
trial is further confirmation of the highly political character
of the Malaysian judiciary. Anwar's defence lawyers had called
for Mahathir to be put in the witness box to answer questions
about the case. The attempt to subpoena the prime minister was
opposed both by the prosecution and by Mahathir himself, who wrote
a 14-page statement to the court arguing why he should not be
a witness.
Arifin simply declared: "There is not an iota of evidence
by any witnesses so far to show that Dr Mahathir is involved in
a political conspiracy to topple Anwar. Under these circumstances
it is futile to call Dr Mahathir to give evidence in this trial."
Natural justice dictates that an accused be able to call witnesses
to establish the case. But according to Arifin, Anwar would only
be able to subpoena Mahathir if he would prove that the prime
minister had been involved in a political conspiracy. In other
words, the defence would have to prove its case before being able
to call a key witness to prove the necessary testimony.
As well as the circumstances of Anwar's arrest and the close
connection of key prosecution witnesses with his political enemies
in UMNO ruling circles, there are further indications of the involvement
of Mahathir and others. Firstly, Mahathir was also home minister
at the time and thus would certainly have been consulted by top
police before Anwar was detained. Moreover, Mahathir would also
have had to approve the use of the Internal Security Act that
allows the home minister to order indefinite detention without
trial. Finally no lesser figure than the then Inspector General
of Police Abdul Rahim Noor was directly involved in the arresta
fact that emerged only later when it became clear that Noor had
physically assaulted Anwar in police custody.
But if Arifin was after direct evidence of a political conspiracy
then it was provided on February 11, by a former UMNO member,
Raja Kamarudin Raja Abdul Wahid. He testified that as head of
a UMNO local branch, he had been called into the office of Mahathir's
political secretary Aziz Shamsuddin in 1998 and told to organise
the political destruction of Anwar and his supporters. Raja Kamarudin
also said in court that Aziz admitted that he was responsible
for the circulation of 50 Reasons Why Anwar Cannot Become Prime
Minister. Aziz is now deputy education minister and was one
of the witnesses the defence team wanted to call after Mahathir
had given evidence.
Clearly Mahathir was deeply concerned at the prospect of taking
the stand and being subject to questioning by Anwar's lawyers.
As a close political confidante of Mahathir for many years, Anwar
was in a position to know in which closets all of the prime minister's
skeletons are to be found. The potential for politically embarrassing
surprises in court was obvious. Thus Arifin's decision had little
to do with the norms of justice but was to protect the prime minister
of the day. An appeal by Anwar's lawyers against the ruling is
due to be heard on June 5.
The Malaysian judiciary
The judiciary in any country plays a very political role on
behalf of the ruling class and their political parties. But in
most cases there is an attempt at least to dress up the proceedings
with a semblance of impartiality, legal precedent and due process.
In the Anwar trials the judicial decisions have been blatantly
political onesall the more significant as there is no jury
to decide a verdict. The rulings point to both the acuteness of
the political crisis provoked by Anwar's sacking and arrest, and
also to the politically servile character of the country's judges.
The present judiciary is descended from the colonial judges
who presided under the British and in particular enforced a whole
battery of anti-democratic laws used to suppress the Malayan Communist
Party guerrilla insurgency during the so-called Emergency from
1948 to 1957. Unlike the ruling elites elsewhere in Asia, those
in Malaysia can claim no involvement at all in any anti-colonial
struggle. UMNO and its conservative coalition allies were handed
independence and power on a platter after the Emergency
was ended.
While formally a democracy, Malaysia has all the trappings
of an autocratic stategovernment-controlled media, a gerrymandered
electoral system, a series of draconian laws limiting everything
from the unions to the rights of students and public servantsand
a politically pliable judiciary. From the outset the judges were
hand-picked political appointments whose main qualification for
office was political loyalty to the ruling UMNO political machine.
Despite the fact that non-Malaysethnic Indian and Chinesedominate
the legal profession, the majority of the country's judges are
Malay.
According to one writer on Malaysian politics: On the
whole, the judges shared the broad conservative outlook of the
rest of the Malay elite. Although from time to time the courts
handed down decisions unfavorable to the government, in general
the judges rarely showed interest in reinterpreting the law in
ways that might restrict the prerogatives of the government and
its bureaucracy. For example, the courts rarely questioned the
government's powers under the emergency provisions or the ISA
[Internal Security Act] and hardly ever found legislation to be
in conflict with the constitution (Harold Crouch, Government
and Society in Malaysia, p. 138).
The ISA is one of the country's most repressive laws, allowing,
in practice, the government to detain anyone it sees fit without
trial for lengthy periods of time. The judiciary have not only
supervised the law but extended its application to suit the government.
In one key case in 1969, for example, the highest Malaysian court,
the Federal Court, ruled that it was entirely up to the state
executive to determine if a detention was reasonable under the
ISAessentially making arbitrary detention under the ISA
unchallengeable in court.
On the isolated occasions that the courts have mildly challenged
police actions under the ISA or other repressive laws, the government
has made either the law or the constitution even more anti-democratic.
UMNO-led governments have used their two-thirds parliamentary
majority to amend the constitution 34 times between 1957 and 1994.
As a result the judiciary, even if it had any pretensions to independence,
has been fenced in even further
The political subservience of the judiciary became even more
pronounced following the elevation of Mahathir to prime minister
in 1981. Mahathir's regime has been characterised by government-promoted
economic development in which the contracts typically went not
to the best bid but to those companies or individuals with closest
links to the UMNO leadership. More and more the state apparatus
and its sweeping powers have been used to prevent any close scrutiny
of the government and its business cronies and to suppress any
political opposition.
In the mid-1980s, a series of court rulings irritated the Mahathir
leadership. In one case the Supreme Court ruled that two journalists
of the Asian Wall Street Journal were denied "natural
justice" because they had had their work permits revoked
without being allowed to defend themselves. The decision had clearly
been taken as a warning to foreign correspondents to toe the government
line.
In October 1987, much to the annoyance of the UMNO leadership,
the high court issued an injunction against a large contract awarded
to a company connected to UMNO on application of opposition Democratic
Action Party (DAP) leaders Karpal Singh and Lim Kit Siang. Although
the ruling was overturned by the Supreme Court and the two DAP
members were arrested, the Mahathir leadership initiated a campaign
to further tame the judiciary.
In a parliamentary speech in 1987, Mahathir attacked the very
conception of judicial independence and natural justice as being
derived from Britain and having no place in the Malaysian legal
system. "Judicial review gives unlimited power to the interpreters
of laws who can obstruct the implementation of any laws at all,
he complained, adding: "Natural justice can be interpreted
in various ways according to the discretion of the judge"
(quoted in Crouch, p. 141).
The judiciary was further disciplined in 1988 when a split
that opened up in the UMNO leadership developed into a bitter
legal battle over the control of the party and its assets. When
the president of the Supreme Court, Tun Salleh Abas, got in Mahathir's
way, the prime minister simply had the king dismiss him. When
a panel of five judges issued a ruling in favour of Tun Salleh,
Mahathir had them all suspended. Two were eventually thrown off
the bench. With such a precedent it is little wonder that few
of the Malaysian judges are prepared to do anything other than
hand Mahathir the rulings he wants.
Given the nature of the Malaysian judiciary, it is perhaps
more pertinent to ask not why Anwar is in jail but rather why
the entire affair has not been legally wound up and buried long
ago. The fact that the trial has been strung out for so long,
and indeed a second trial was instituted in the lead-up to last
year's national elections, is further indication that the sacking
of Anwar reflected deep-seated divisions in the Malaysian ruling
class and a broader political crisis that cannot simply be willed
away by autocratic diktat or judicial fiat.
See Also:
A stifled leadership challenge
in Malaysia points to continuing rifts in UMNO
[28 April 2000]
Extensive police crackdown
against opposition rally in Malaysia
[19 April 2000]
Malaysia: Anwar's resumed trial
produces further evidence of a political frame-up
[14 February 2000]
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