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: Malaysia
Scant media coverage as Malaysia keeps Anwar in jail
By John Roberts
4 September 2003
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On August 19, Malaysias Court of Appeal issued a 206-page
judgment rejecting a legal appeal by former Deputy Prime Minister
Anwar Ibrahim against his conviction in 2000 on charges of sodomy.
Anwar, who has just completed the mandatory portion of a six-year
sentence for a corruption conviction, must now serve a further
nine years on the sodomy charge.
When Anwar was first arrested in September 1998, bashed by
police and then hauled before the courts on trumped-up charges,
these blatantly anti-democratic measures provoked a furore in
the international media and in foreign capitals. The latest legal
decision against Anwar and its contrived character have been all
but ignored.
The written judgment was issued on a Saturday outside normal
court sitting time, four months after the court rejected the appeal.
At the close of the hearing in April, the judges refused to give
their reasons for denying Anwars appeal, stating these would
be given in a written form at an unspecified later date.
When the appeal was rejected in April, several hundred demonstrators,
a relatively large number given Malaysias repressive public
order laws, reacted angrily. The out-of-hours release of the appeal
judges arguments, designed to thwart further protests, indicates
that Anwars jailing remains a highly sensitive political
issue for the government of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
The reasons for Anwars arrest were not his alleged corruption
or sexual misconduct but deep divisions over economic policy in
the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) following
the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.
In dismissing the appeal, the three judges used a provision
of Malaysias Courts of Judicature Act, which states that
in exceptional cases that the Court of Appeal may, notwithstanding
that it is of opinion that the point raised in the appeal might
be decided in favour of the appellant, dismiss the appeal if it
considers that no substantial miscarriage of justice has occurred.
In other words, the judges threw out Anwars appeal even
though the points raised in his petition might have been factually
correct and legally valid. Their judgment on particular points
raised by Anwars lawyers simply confirmed the political
character of the decision to keep one of Mahathirs rivals
in jail.
The judges insisted that the trial judge, Arifin Jaka, had
done everything possible to test the credibility of Anwars
driver Azizan Abu Bahar, the principal prosecution witness and
alleged victim of the sodomy. Azizan only made his allegation
in 1997 after rifts began in UMNO and did so at the urging of
Ummi Halfilda Ali, a businesswoman with close ties to Anwars
political rivals.
Justice Pajan Singh Gill, the presiding judge in the appellate
court, rejected the defence allegation that Azizan had rehearsed
the detail of his evidence from a movie he had seen. According
to Gill, no one, and certainly not a mere driver,
could have withstood the cross-examination during the trial or
the trial judges scrutiny of the witnesss demeanour.
The Court of Appeal judges simply ignored defence evidence pointing
to bribes and incentives offered to Azizan, including a company
directorship with his own driver.
In the course of the trial, the date of the alleged offence
was changed three times. At first, it was May 1994, then May 1992.
When defence lawyers proved that the apartment building where
the sodomy was alleged to have occurred, had not been built at
that time, trial judge Arifin allowed the prosecution to make
another change to a three-month period between January and March
1993. As part of his defence, Anwars lawyers accounted for
his whereabouts at the time in question7.45 p.m. for
every day over that period.
Justice Gill dismissed the changes of time as being of no real
consequence. The appeal court also found nothing wrong with the
fact that the charges were amended after the trial began. The
underlying issuethat the changes of time exposed the trumped-up
character of the case against Anwarwas ignored.
The political character of the decision was highlighted by
the promotion of Justice Gill to Malaysias top court. During
the appeal hearings, the Mahathir government announced that Gill
had been appointed to the Federal Court, ahead of five more senior
Court of Appeal judgesa move that was denounced by the Malaysian
Bar Association.
The international response to the Court of Appeal decision
is in sharp response to the protests that erupted in 1998 to Anwars
arrest. Then US Vice President Al Gore and the European Union
were among those that went on record condemning the political
nature of the charges and demanding his release. The scant attention
paid to the latest proceedings reflects a sharp shift in political
priorities, particularly of the Bush administration in Washington.
The real concern of Gore and others was never about democratic
rights as such. In the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis,
democracy was a convenient means to press for an end
to corruption and the opening up of economies to foreign
investment. In Malaysia, these moves cut directly across business
interests associated with UMNO, provoking growing opposition to
Anwar, who championed the IMFs restructuring policies.
In 1998, Anwar, who was finance minister and heir apparent
to Mahathir, was sacked from his positions and expelled from UMNO
after opposing the imposition of capital and currency controls.
His subsequent public campaign against government corruption and
nepotism gained growing popular support, culminating in an unprecedented
demonstration of 50,000 in Kuala Lumpur in September 1998. That
evening around 200 riot police surrounded Anwars house and
arrested him.
Anwars detention and trials was widely covered in the
international media, including comments on the anti-democratic
character of Malaysias Internal Security Act (ISA)colonial-era
legislation that provides for indefinite detention without trial.
Five years later, the continued detention of Anwar and the continuing
abuse of democratic rights in Malaysia are skipped over with barely
a mention.
In the name of the global war on terrorism, the
Bush administration has introduced measures that provide for detention
without trial. Hundreds of alleged terrorists have
been held in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba for months and years in circumstances
that make the Malaysia ISA seem like a model of due legal process.
Moreover, the autocratic Mahathir government has, despite its
muted criticisms of the US invasion of Iraq, forged close ties
with the Bush administration.
In May 2002, Mahathir was warmly received at the White House
and praised for his cooperation in the war on terrorism.
The co-operation includes information extracted from
dozens of suspects detained without trial under the ISA and much
needed political support for Washington by a government in a predominantly
Muslim country. As a result, the previous concerns about the treatment
of Anwar were dropped.
Following the loss of the appeal, Anwars lawyers intend
to take his case to Malaysias highest courtthe Federal
Court. But this body has already rejected his appeal on the corruption
charge, and, unless there is a dramatic change in the political
winds, will no doubt back the appellate courts latest ruling.
See Also:
The Bush administration
embraces Malaysian autocrat
[28 May 2002]
Behind the US reaction
to the Anwar conviction in Malaysia
[5 September 2000]
Malaysias Anwar
Ibrahim found guilty in second frame-up trial
[9 August 2000]
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