Overhaul Malaysian laws and judicial efficiency


TYPICAL desire of parents is to treat their children equally but usually not necessarily the same as being fair. The same applies to society.

There is a legal principle in modern democratic society allowing for the use of discretion and fairness bearing in mind social justice, equality and solidarity in a society.

Lately there have been cries of unfairness in our laws towards justice.

Laws are sometimes seen to be unfair because they are made by people and people are not perfect.

Even if laws seem fair on face value, they can be unfair in practice. It is a contrast between ideals and reality.

A person who stole petai is sentenced to more than a year’s jail but high-profile cases of money-laundering were discharged.

There were also cases of prison terms and fines not commensurable with the offence. It is socially wasteful to imprison the petai guy where he could be rehabilitated. 

Article 8 of the Federal Constitution provides that punishment and sentencing must embody some form of equality and consistency and Article 8(1) provides that “all persons are equal before the law and entitled to the equal protection of the law”.

Professor Shad Saleem Faruqi said: “The legal system is built on the traditional but artificial distinction between public law and private law, crimes and civil wrongs, contract and tort, municipal and international law. These distinctions do not always serve us well”.

Our Parliament should relook at some of the more insidious, antiquated and draconian laws to be in tune with current values and expectations.

We should purge archaic, outdated and redundant provisions in all laws rather than producing new ones but lacking in enforcement.

Further, we should review the powers of the attorney-general (A-G). In a democracy, the person has unfettered powers where even our beloved Agong do not have.

I would also suggest for a parliamentary select committee to vet before forwarding the name of the candidate for the post to the Agong for appointment.

We should also consider taking action if the A-G misuses power or taking actions that are unnecessary and are socially wasteful as being discussed in a recent discharge case.

Next is the appointment and effectiveness of judges. There should also be a special committee to vet their appointments.

We know they are not properly remunerated and their heavy workload.

We heard cases of overbearing, intolerant, and high-handed executives and we also hear cases of fast-track promotions and corrupt judges.

We need judges who makes decisions without fear or favour and selfless devotion to the law.

Professor Shad also said: “The ideals of rule of law, separation of powers, openness and accountability in government, protection of human rights and the ideals of constitutionalism have not taken roots in our legal system. A large number of lawyers, judges, law teachers and students are legal technicians and lack a social conscience and a social perspective”.

Maybe we need more judges like Francesco “Frank” Caprio whose judicial work is televised on Caught in Providence.

I guess members from the legal fraternity and many others would have written on these matters and trust the “wakil rakyat” will give some serious attention to these calls.

It seems politicians are good at formulating laws for self-enrichment such as APs and workers permit and not looking at critical issues like political funding. Just look at the mess we are in now.

Verily! Allah commands that you should render back the trusts to those to whom they are due; and that when you judge between men, you judge with justice. Verily, how excellent is the teaching which He (Allah) gives you! Truly, Allah is Ever All-Hearer, All-Seer. (Quran An-Nisa: 4:58)

A friend said, all lawyers go to hell because lawyers are needed to help people appeal for heaven. – June 14, 2020.

* Saleh Mohammed reads The Malaysian Insight.

* This is the opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insight. Article may be edited for brevity and clarity.



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Comments


  • If it involves theft of petai the wheels of justice move swiftly and efficiently. But apparently not for some cases that involve fortunes many times over. The former stinks the nose, the latter stinks to high heavens.

    Posted 3 years ago by Jeyakumar Sundralingam · Reply