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September 30, 2007

'They shoot monks, don’t they?'

From Wong Chun Wai's column today:

It took a while but the government that shot monks in Vietnam was eventually toppled. We hope the same happens in Myanmar.

If that's the consistent wish, the government that shot at civilians in Batu Buruk will ultimately go.

The Star also talked about civil uprising in Myanmar triggered by fuel price increase, and the blanket media blackout.

Same theme, same disquiet, but it's so much easier to point to faults beyond our own backyards.

Some things never change. Instead, they repeat themselves. Do you also know of police officer Nordin bin Ahmad? I am concerned when the candle winks its last blink.
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UPDATES: They should stop shooting protesters, so said Razali Ismail, who was former UN secretary general Kofi Annan’s emissary to Myanmar.

Judiciary must be protected

TAKE 1: The government has to set up a Royal Commission with the necessary powers to thoroughly investigate the entire judiciary, as there is a desperate need to clean house and to do so comprehensively, law academic Azmi Sharom said.

TAKE 2: Anwar Ibrahim said at a forum yesterday that the remaining part of the Lingam video clip will be released at “a right time”.

Was the name of Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim explicitly mentioned in the second part of the infamous ‘judicial appointment fixing’ video clip?

According to Malaysiakini, although the PKR supremo did not explain in what context Ahmad Fairuz’s name was brought up in the second part, he however appeared to suggest the revelation will confirm that the person on the other end of the phone conversation was the CJ.

We will see how Haidar's 3-man panel does the job to authenticate the first-part of the released tape.

RAW CUT: Now, go back to read why Azmi Sharom said we need a Royal Commission ultimately.

Singapore Straits Times said Malaysia's Judiciary is on trial again.

September 29, 2007

'Plagiarism row': BBC settles case with NSTP

The issue of The NSTP group threatening to sue BBC for a report relating to the departure of its former Group Editor Brendan Pereira has been settled.

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SOURCE: BBC World, November 2, 2006

Screenshots was informed that, in settling the case, the BBC will pay no costs nor damages to The NSTP.

In addition, the original BBC story, filed by Kuala Lumpur-based correspondent Jonathan Kent on November 2 last year, will stay on the website with a small note.

BBC is represented by Dato’ Muhammad Shafee Abdullah in Malaysia.

For context, read The Star report on November 4, 2006. Then, the BBC was quoted as saying that:

“We are aware of the New Straits Times’ feelings regarding our report on their editor and his planned departure. We feel it was entirely legitimate to report on the controversy surrounding the departure of their aforementioned editor."

In an unrelated development, Kent will be relocating to the UK at the end of next month.

September 28, 2007

Oct 3: ALL-BLOGS public forum on 'Blogs & Digital Democracy'

The National Alliance of Bloggers (ALL-BLOGS) will hold a public forum on Blogs and Digital Democracy next Wednesday.

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David Sasaki (picture above), head of Global Voices Outreach ( Rising Voices ) -- an off-shoot project of a project initiated at Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Harvard Law School -- will talk about blogs and how governments around the world engage digital democracy.

DATE: October 3, 2007 (Wednesday)
TIME: 7.00pm (Buaka Puasa) 8.00pm (Forum starts)
VENUE: Kuala Lumpur Golf & Country Club

Discussants:
1 ) Datuk A Kadir Jasin, Group Editor-in-Chief, Berita Publishing Group
2 ) Ahirudin Attan (Rocky's Bru), President, National Alliance of Bloggers

Moderator:
Jeff Ooi, ALL-BLOGS Vice President and Head of Ttaining & Development Committee

The forum is by Invitation Only

Seating capacity is limited to 70 people. We have reserved about 10 seats for the public. If you are interested to attend the Forum, which will be preceeded by a Buka Puasa dinner, please email ALL-BLOGS exco members at:

1 ) jeffooi.screenshots AT gmail.com
2 ) tony.yew AT gmail.com

by Monday, October 1, 2007.

To those who have confirmed attending, please be there or your seat will be wasted as there are some who are put on waiting list.

It's not yet another bloggers' meet

The forum is not yet another gathering of bloggers. On the contrary, we attempt to EMBRACE and ENGAGE people who don't understand blogs and digital democracy -- or for that matter, citizen journalism or civil media -- and want to learn more about the topic.

So, this round, we won't be singing to the choir or talking to those already "converted" to blogs. Instead, we will focus on reaching out to advocates of freedom of expression, up-coming bloggers especiially those from outside the Klang Valley, and even opinion-shapers in various fields.

Among the audience are Malaysian bloggers of all genres, online auteur and cyberactivists, journalists, lawyers, academics, NGOs, political analysts and researchers, and members of the diplomatic corp.

Backgrounder

Backdropped against recent development in the public opinion space exemplified by the online sphere, there appears to be subtle attempts to muzzle bloggers through a variety of tactics, including police remands (Nathaniel Tan); civil suits (Jeff Ooi and Rocky); investigations under a cocktail of laws (Raja Petra Kamarudin of Malaysia-Today).

The ALL-BLOGS Public Forum, themed “Blogs & Digital Democracy”, will be given the Malaysian context when Datuk A Kadir Jasin and Ahirudin Attan share their experiences as veteran journalists who have now “successfully migrated" from print to online, and have found a huge following among Malaysians capable of critical thinking.

The Forum is also positioned from the viewpoint of the Guest Speaker, David Sasaki, as a researcher on citizen journalism and digital democracy. It is to provide a global perspective on how democracies around the world handle the challenges posed by the emerging new media.

David Sasaki

David Sasaki, who is making a visit to the region, will share his experience as regional editor of Global Voices Online (Latin America) and, among other things, he will talk about blogs and how governments around the world engage digital democracy.

David is the head of Global Voices Outreach ( Rising Voices ), which is an off-shoot project of Global Voices Online, another project initiated at Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Harvard Law School, Massachusetts.

Global Voices Online & Global Outreach

Rising Voices is an outreach initiative of Global Voices supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

It aims to extend the benefits and reach of citizen media by connecting online media activists around the world and supporting their best ideas through three main strategies: ( 1 ) Microgrants; ( 2 ) Outreach Curriculum and ( 3 ) Networking.

The KLGCC is located at Off Jalan Bukit Kiara, Kuala Lumpur. The forum is held at Function Room, 1st Floor, East Wing.

Judicial Crisis: From Nurin to Chief Justice...

There is an interesting forum on Judicial Crisis (that minister Nazri Aziz tried to deny) scheduled for this Saturday afternoon:

THEME: From Nurin to Chief Justice - A Collapse of Law and Order?
ORGANISER: Institut Kajian Dasar (IKD)
DATE: 29 Sept 2007
TIME: 2.15pm - 4.30pm
VENUE: Corus Hotel, Jalan Ampang, Kuala Lumpur

Speakers:
1 ) Anwar Ibrahim (Ketua Parti Keadilan, Former Deputy Prime Minister)
2 ) Tunku Abdul Aziz (Transparency International)
3 ) Lim Chee Wee (Bar Council Secretary)
4 ) Param Cumaraswamy (ex-UN Special Rapporteur)

September 27, 2007

Myanmar: CNN interview

CNN urgently needs to talk with someone about situation in Myanmar in the next couple of hours as I blogged this.

I hope this blog can reach someone in Thailand or closer vicinity to respond.

Please contact Emma Vaughn in USA, emma.vaughn @cnn.com or call her at (USA) 202 898 7606.

UPDATES: There will be peaceful march in protest of the on-going human rights crisis in Myanmar.

Sympathisers of our Burmese friends are urged to meet at Ampang Park LRT station at 9.15am tomorrow (Friday, September 28).

Dress Code: Red.

Walk (& Shoot) for Justiice

As I did something meaningful in life yesterday, fellow LensaMalaysia photog Alex Moi caught me on his camera.

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Now what?

Lame-ass Press & Malaysia's Chief Editor-in-Chief

Who says there isn't such a post -- Malaysia's Chief Editor-in-Chief?

Malaysiakini reported that editors had been told not to put the Bar Council's MARCH FOR JUSTICE news in the front page, back page or in the earlier editions.

However, the editors were also told that they could run the march stories from page four onwards.

An editor of a vernacular press has confirmed the instruction, Malaysiakini said.

Toe the line

Despite the promise of a freer media in Malaysia, what it now takes is just for the instruction to come through telephone calls from an unnamed officer at the Internal Security Ministry to reach the editors of the main dailies.

Evidently, all our Group Editors-in-Chief had toed the line, without fail, when the papers hit the streets today.

The Star, New Straits Times and Utusan Malaysia all carried the news on Page 4, while Berita Harian placed it on Page 5.

However, the lead story on NST is about ACA purportedly intended to record a statement from lawyer VK Lingam.

Centre-spread in Chinese Press

Interestingly, the Chinese Press had dedicated the centre-spread to give the march news maximum highlight -- Sin Chew on pages 17 and 18, with more news items flowing pages 20 and 21. Whereas, Nanyang Siang Pau on pages ran it on pages 12 and 13, and Guang Ming on its full-colour centre-spread.

Sinar_070927cover.jpgOriental Daily News ran it on pages 4 and 5.

Surprisingly, Tamil press Malaysia Nanban and Tamil Nesan both defied the instruction and ran the story on Page 2.

Makkal Osai, whose publishing permit was suspended for one month recently, obediently ran it on Page 4.

Sinar Harian, the East Coast originated Malaysia tabloid owned by Kumpulan Karangkraf that sees tiny-winy circulation, ran a march picture of substantial size on the front page of its Pahang and Klang Valley editions today (see picture left).

Never freer media?

More recently, newspapers were told not to publish any debates on two issues: ( 1 ) the polemic of Islamic state sparked off by DPM Najib Abd Razak; and ( 2 ) the Namee's Negaraku-ku video.

A bureaucrat by the name of Che Din Yusof had gone on record by saying that the two issues could only be published as news if they contained comments from the prime minister or his deputy.

I am pleased to announce that the ministry is helmed by none other than Abdullah Badawi and his two deputies, FAK and Johari Baharum.

For the record, when Anwar Ibrahim first exposed the Lingam Tape om September 19, all the mainstream media self-muzzled by reporting the most skimpy of journalistic details, though their reporters were shown the video in the same format it was submitted as evidence to the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA).

There's never been a freer media in Malaysia?

'Do you want an independent Judiciary, Nazri?'

Bar Council's Amer Hamzah Arshad posed the question to minister Nazri at the end of this video clip via Malaysiakini.tv.

Amer was responding to Abdullah Badawi's de facto law minister who said Bar Council is like the Opposition political parties.

Walk for Justice... A recap

"Lawyers don't walk everyday. Not even every month. Not even every year. But when they walk, then something must be very wrong."

March(a)_Ambiga_0085.jpgSo said Chairman of the Bar Council Ambiga Sreenevasan (picture left) when addressing a strong crowd of more than 1,000 members of the Malaysian Bar and concerned citizens at the Palace of Justice yesterday.

The participants of the WALK FOR JUSTICE then marched to the Prime Minister's office to hand over two memoranda from the Bar:

1 ) Memorandum urging the government to set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe the state of judiciary consequent to the expose of the Lingam Tape; and

2 ) Memorandum on the establishment of a judicial appointments and promotion commission.

The Bar Council official website has also uploaded a recap of the historic event, and a picture gallery.

Bar secretary Lim Chee Wee, who was on board one of the seven coaches barred by Police from entering Putrajaya, and walked 5km alongside 200 passengers to join the main group at the Palace of Justice yesterday, has written an Op-Ed: The Great and Mighty Spirit of the Malaysian Bar.

This has been the third walk, also the longest and the biggest, in the Bar's history.

The first was in 1978, while the second was in 1998, when Anwar Ibrahim's defence counsel Zainur Zakaria was cited for contempt of court.

Bloggers, too, walked for justice

Among the ALL-BLOGS exco members who participated in the march and blogged about the event were:

1 ) Rocky's Bru: The March in Pictures
2 ) Nuraina A. Samad: Walk for Justice
3 ) Patrick Teoh: A Walk for Justice
4 ) Soon Li Tsin: I Marched - All 8km of it!
5 ) Tony Yew: Justice! We Want Justice!
6 ) Bernard Khoo: Today I salute our Malaysian lawyers
7 ) Elizabeth Wong: Long walk to freedom
8 ) Jeff Ooi: Memos submitted, pressing for Royal Commission

Other blogs scanned include:

1 ) Raja Petra Kamarudin: Lawyers march to the PM's office - PIC GALLERY
2 ) Haris Ibrahim: A walk for justice
3 ) Shanghai Fish: The Penguins Walk ...!!!
4 ) Jules: Today I "behave like the Opposition"
5 ) Elviza Michelle: The Walk of Justice

Media reports scanned thus far:

1 ) MySinchew.com: Nazri ticks off lawyers
2 ) Bernama: Judiciary not facing crisis, says Nazri
3 ) theSun: 2,000 back Bar Council's memo to PM
4 ) Malaysiakini: United in a demand for justice
5 ) Malaysiakini: Walk for Justice ends with memo submission
6 ) Malaysiakini: Bar: We’ll give inquiry panel a chance
7 ) theSun: Haidar: I’m aware many think it’s V.K. Lingam
8 ) NST: Lawyers' march unbecoming, says Nazri
9 ) Straits Times, Singapore: Lawyers march in KL for justice
10 ) The Star: Lawyers walk for justice

Meanwhile, there is a change in the venue for the Bar Council EGM to follow up on the issue that was scheduled for October 6, will now be held at the Crown Princess Hotel, Kuala Lumpur.

Read "Return the judiciary to the rakyat : A petition to His Majesty the Yang DiPertuan Agung" by the People's Parliament: Part 1 and Part 2.

September 26, 2007

Wee Choo Keong

The man who was mentioned by VK Lingam in the video-clip was there at the MARCH FOR JUSTICE today.

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LensaPress photo by Jeff Ooi

Wee is a former DAP member who was the Member of Parliament for Bukit Bintang. In 1995, then High Court judge and current Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim made a controversial decision sitting as an Election Judge, and dismissed Wee as MP and declared the BN candidate as the new MP instead of calling for fresh election.

In the Lingam Tape, this conversation from VK Lingam was heard:

No don’t worry, Datuk, I know how much you suffer for Tun Eusoff Chin. And Tun said Datuk Ahmad Fairuz 110% loyalty. We want to make sure our friends are there for the sake of the PM and the sake of the country.

Not for our own interest, not for our own interest. We want to make sure the country come first. Well, you suffered so well, so much you have done. For the election, Wee Choo Keong, everything. How much, no body would have done all these.

Yes, you know. Good lah. Don’t worry. I am constantly working on this.

Ahmad Fairuz is now Malaysia's Top Judge safeguarded at the Palace of Justice.

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How will Wee act now?


All LensaPress photos by Jeff Ooi.

Bar Council buses barred from entering Putrajaya;
Memos submitted, pressing for Royal Commission.

AN EXCLUSIVE PICTURE STORY
In anticipation of a blackout or a downplay of the turnout in the mainstream media, Screenshots decided to let the pictures do the taking. There are in total 53 pictures posted in this blog entry. Go over the pictures and you will feel the magnitude of the lawyers' outrage over the rot in the Judiciary.

Broadband recommended for seamless downloading. Feel free to forward this URL and download the pictures to spread the true message across the Internet. The Save the Judiciary campaign has just begun.

Malaysiakini.tv: Police cause longer walk for lawyers


5KM WALK BEFORE THE REAL WALK. Seven buses chartered by Bar Council were barred from entering Putrajaya and caused the delay to the peaceful march this morning.

On board were the MARCH FOR JUSTICE coordinators Edmond Bon (picture below), Amer Hamzah Arshad and council secretary Lim Chee Wee.

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GOT THROUGH... Bon looking relieved after they started a march before the March as police barred their buses were barred from entering Putrajaya


However, the passengers made up of lawyers and members of public, decided to abandon the comfort of the air-conditioned coaches and take the 5km walk to join others who have assembled at the steps of Palace of Justice.

They were given a big round of applause on arrival.

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SWELLING CROWD. By then, the crowd had swelled to over 1,000 made up mostly by lawyers in their black-and-white court attire.

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WHEN LAWYERS WALK... Bar Council chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan (picture below) gave a short speech before the march started at 12.00 noon.

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She said the lawyers didn't march together for a video-clip.

"The march is a 'walk for justice' as we deserve a first-class judiciary," she said..

“When lawyers walk, that means there is something wrong. We want changes in the judiciary,” she said to thunderous applause.

Ambiga recited that this was the third time Bar Council had taken a walk for justice.


FOREIGN PRESS. While waiting for the 7 bus loads of marchers to arrive, wire agencies and foreign press were seen busy interviewing lawyers and political leaders who were there to lend support to the march.

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DAP Sec-Gen Lim Guan Eng (top) talking to Reuters TV, and lawyer Malik Imtiaz Sarwar being interviewed by Reuters & KyodoNews

Members of the diplomatic corp were seen mingling among the corwd, some taking pictures and videos of the scene.


INTIMIDATING SECURITY. On the other hand, heavy security was present throughout the assembly for the march. There was the usual grim faces of anti-riot police and a police helicopter. Ambiga described them as "an act of intimidation".

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SOURCE: Malaysiakini.tv

READ ON... and more pictures.

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PEACEFUL WALK. Despite the size of the crowd, the ‘Walk for Justice’ went on peacefully.

The marching crowd took about 30 minutes to reach the gate to the Prime Minister's Office at the head of Persiaran Perdana.

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'SAVE THE JUDICIARY'. They chanted "We want justice" as they marched, holding placards stating "Selamatkan Badan Kehakiman" (Save the Judiciary).

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Two memos submitted

The march sponsored by the Bar Council ended with the submission of two memoranda to the Prime Minister’s Department calling for the establishment of a royal commission of inquiry to stem the rot in the Judiciary.

The first memorandum called for a royal commission of inquiry to be set up to examine the claims made in the video clip, as well as the state of the judiciary.

Whereas, the second memorandum urged the establishment of a judicial appointments commission for the appointment and promotion of judges.

The memoranda were submitted by a four-member delegation from the Bar Council, led by Ambiga. The other members were vice-president K Ragunath, secretary Lim Chee Wee and treasurer George Varughese.

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The crowd braved the rain, not thwarted by the presence of the FRU trucks, four at the main gate of the Prime Minister's Office.

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ROYAL COMMISSION. The two memoranda to the Prime Minister were received by the premier’s political secretary, Wan Ahmad Farid Wan Salleh, about 12.45pm.

“Wan Farid assured us that they would look into the memo and that he will try to arrange a meeting for us to meet the PM (who) is away at the moment,” said Ambiga after the 30-minute meeting.

PM Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is currently in New York attending the United Nations 62nd session of the General Assembly.


Let pictures do the talking

At 9.30am

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By 11:00am

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All LensaPress photos by Jeff Ooi

Anti-spoofing? Macro Kiosk again... and again!

This blog is meant for Mr MCMC, Dr Halim Shafie -- if he thought he has found the solution to protect the consumers from SMS Scammers.

Another Screenshots reader, after reading an earlier blog (Macro Kiosk shortcode 33340), is providing us fresh evidence claiming that he, too, had been scammed by a Maxis external content provider (ECP) in the months of August and September.

This time, it involved Macro Kiosk shortcode 32996.

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SOURCE: Maxis online itemised bill. (Click the JPG to launch larger image)

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SOURCE: Maxis online itemised bill. (Click the JPG to launch larger image)

Both these two cases are being discussed with the National Centre for Consumer Complaints (NCCC) for their further action.

We have to review the entire mitigation process as Maxis chief operating officer Jon Eddy Abdullah has gone on record that his companyt has operated "the platform (that) was designed to block unsolicited short messaging services (SMS) -- such as spam and spoof SMS -- from reaching the operator's postpaid and prepaid customer base".

MCMC, apparently, has been given assurance by the celco concerned of anti-spam/spoof measures, as reported in this blog on September 19.

Meanwhile, let the G and Halim have one more night of sound sleep. Details, together with the victim's testimony, are to come soon.

September 25, 2007

Anti-spoofing? Macro Kiosk again!

Has Maxis stopped anything?

A Screenshots reader provides fresh evidence claiming that he had been scammed by a Maxis external content provider (ECP) in the months of August and September.

To be exact, unsolicited SMS still happened on September 18, one day after Maxis chief operating officer Jon Eddy Abdullah announced that it has operated "the platform (that) was designed to block unsolicited short messaging services (SMS) -- such as spam and spoof SMS -- from reaching the operator's postpaid and prepaid customer base".

SMS-SCam_MacroKiosk_Sep07.jpgSOURCE: Maxis online itemised bill. (Click the JPG to launch larger image)

The ECP involved, evident from the online itemised bill above, is listed among the Maxis Elite 18 ECP partners that Nikolai Dobberstein announced in June.

Let the G and Halim Shafie have one more night of sound sleep. Details, together with the victim's testimony, are to come soon.

How governments engage blogs

The Australian Government is now embracing blogging as a way of seeking the views of the public.

A discussion paper, titled Australian Government Consultation Blog, was released by Special Minister of State Gary Nairn recently.

It is to canvass comment on setting up a "citizens' blog". Download PDF here.

Oct 3: ALL-BLOGS Public Forum

The National Alliance of Bloggers (ALL-BLOGS) will hold a public forum on Blogs and Digital Democracy, featuring David Sasaki, head of Global Voices Outreach ( Rising Voices ). It's about how governments, from repressive regimes to emerging democracies, manage blogs and citizen media. Details tomorrow.

Dr M on recovery mode

Kill the rumours. This is the latest update on Dr Mahathir received from his aide, Sufi Yusoff, at 1;23pm:

YABhg Tun Dr Mahathir bin Mohamad continues to remain stable into the third-day of his second surgical procedure on Saturday for wound debridement at the Intensive Care Unit.

IJN doctors are happy that his vital parameters continue to be stable. Tun Dr Mahathir is also conscious as doctors gradually ease on his support medication.

Tun Dr Mahathir is able to receive visitations confined to his immediate family members.

IJN will continue to issue statements on Tun Dr Mahathir as and when there are significant changes to his condition.

Mind you, Marina is banned from visiting her Dad in IJN. She has a mild fever and that's enough to get her excluded at the doctors' command.

Infection, remember?

September 24, 2007

Stop the rumours about Dr Mahathir

Marina Mahathir has been getting condolence SMSes and inquiries all night long, asking if her father has passed on.

This is very cruel. Those who started the rumours and those who spread them. These people are very cruel.

So much so, I am also the one getting similar inquiries as if I am Dr Mahathir's next of kin.

Marina has been in contact with bloggers, the last one being a while ago. She asked us bloggers to help dispel the rumours about her Dad.

She said her Dad remains in ICU, heart beating away and very slowly mending again.

"It's still early days after a major op but he is doing fine according to the doctors," she said. "I know there are wild rumours about but as I said, please check here. We would never hide anything very major from you."

She also asked us to point the readers to her blog, which has just been updated at 8:03pm.

Earlier today, Marina informed us that her dad does wake up from time to time and "he can hear us and respond to what we say".

"I told him I was there and he did a typical Dad thing: he winked! I wanted to both laugh and cry," Marina said in her blog, which was precisely picked up by AFP.

Dr M is doing fine. He needs no rumours. Prayers, yes. Rumours, no.

Terumbang ambing perintah Putrajaya... ( 2 )
Nazri: "I AM HIS MINISTER!"

UPDATED VERSION. Believe it or not, a black-and-white from Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim seemed to hold true for less than 24 hours.

September 21, the CJ issued a two-paragraph fax through his special assistant Arleen Ramly, which reached Malaysiakini office at 4:55pm, stating that the top judge “has no comments” to the Lingam Tape that Anwar Ibrahim exposed.

September 22, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz revealed that CJ Ahmad Fairuz had contacted him to deny as being the person at the end of a telephone conversation with prominent lawyer VK Lingam to broker the appointment of judges.

Nazri, however, did not state when Ahmad Fairuz called him to make the denial.

Reporters followed up on the minister, and this is what they got:

QUESTION: Why did you, Minister Nazri, have to issue a denial on behalf of the chief justice?

ANSWER:I am his minister. I am the minister in charge of legal affairs. He is clever enough to know that the reporters will ask me for a response."

On the other hand, Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang said today that he was not prepared to believe the denial issued by Minister Nazri on behalf of the CJ.

Firstly, Kit Siang said there was no proof that Ahmad Fairuz had actually denied that he was the person lawyer VK Lingam was talking to in the controversial Lingam tape.

Secondly, the denial sound far-fetched as only “some 24 hours earlier Ahmad Fairuz had in ‘black-and-white’ through his special assistant Arleen Ramly written to Malaysiakini to give a two-paragraph “No comment” response” (see picture left).

Hence, Lim said Nazri’s claim that Ahmad Fairuz had called him to deny that he was the one talking to Lingam was “full of holes”.

Nazri: 'Lawyers behaving like opposition'

Earlier, according to Malaysiakini, Nazri also branded the Bar Council’s plan to hold the WALK FOR JUSTICE march on Wednesday to press for investigation into the scandal as an attempt to display ‘hostility’ and as support of the opposition.

“Lawyers are officials of the court - they have a place in the society. They shouldn’t behave like the opposition,” argued the clearly annoyed minister.

Saying that the Bar should remain an independent body, he equated lawyers joining the march to the conduct of opposition politicians Lim Kit Siang and Anwar.

“Why do they want to lower their standard, unless they want to show they are hostile (to the government) and (that they) support the opposition?”

Meanwhile, here are some responses from Civil Society recorded on Bar Council website :
- Opposition Leader: Fairuz's denial is of zero value!
- PKR: More questions on Nazri's response regarding video scandal
- Aliran: Why is the Chief Justice whispering to Nazri?

Beneath the stupidity lies the Umnoputra arrogance. They no longer have to submit to the tenets of parliamentary Democracy. The Judiciary is now in the Executive's pockets.

Walk with the Lawyers

However, to the lawyers and members of (concerned) public, the WALK FOR JUSTICE march is on this Wednesday.

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Gathering Place: 10:30am Palace of Justice, Putrajaya (Map courtesy sobnation blog)

Blogger Bernard Khoo (Zorro Unmasked) has a context on this:

Several months ago, the Bar Council pledged to give support to bloggers should any be forthcoming. It is time now to reciprocate this magnanimous gesture. March with our good lawyers.

The Bar Council-sponsored WALL FOR JUSTICE march is open to lawyers and members of the public to participate.

You in?

Deal with the Rot, Not the Tape

It's time I started a series called Terumbang-ambing perintah Putrajaya.


GUEST BLOGGER

Deal with the Rot, Not the Tape
M. Bakri Musa

If Chief Justice Ahmad Feiruz has any sense of personal honor and professional integrity left, he should resign immediately. If Prime Minister Abdullah has even the slightest responsibility for leadership and moral duty to the citizens, he should not extend the Chief Justice’s contract, due to expire this October. If the Malaysian Bar Council has any credible principle of societal obligation and self-policing ethics of a profession, it would disbar the lawyer making that phone call shown in the infamous video clip exposed by former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

Alas, judging from past performances, expect none of these. That is the unfortunate reality of Malaysia today. What remains then would be for the King to withhold consent for extending Feiruz’s contract, thereby precipitating an unnecessary and distracting constitutional crisis the nation could ill bear.

The Bar Council had an Emergency Meeting, but instead of initiating the necessary disciplinary proceedings on the involved lawyer (which would definitely be within its power) it decided instead to march at Putrajaya and hand a petition to the Prime Minister demanding for a Royal Commission. Next those lawyers would be demonstrating on the streets. So Third World, a la Pakistan! I would have thought those smart lawyers would have concocted some novel legal theory on which to sue the government into action.

Meanwhile Abdullah Badawi was “disappointed,” not at the explosive contents of the video but the fact that it was released. Wake up, Mr. Prime Minister! The rot is the Malaysian judiciary, not the taping. If Abdullah does perk up from his slumber, he would probably order the arrest of Anwar Ibrahim!

Chief Justice Feiruz, taking a leaf from the Prime Minister’s notorious “elegant silence,” issued a terse, “No comment!” It was neither elegant nor silent; instead it was ugly and spoke volumes.

Motive for Taping

The quality of the recording is such that it is unlikely to be a fake. With today’s forensic capabilities, it would be foolish for anyone to even attempt this. The lawyer concerned was speaking on his cell phone, meaning, there will be the inerasable digital trail. My monthly cell phone bill details my outgoing and incoming calls. Because of the quality, the video could not be shot surreptitiously as with a cell phone a la the earlier “nude ear squat” episode. Besides, such a device was probably unavailable back in 2002.

The intriguing question then is why the taping was made in the first place. Dispensing with the most common and obvious reason – stupidity – I posit a few.

One is that basic human emotion: vanity. The bragging rights of accumulating the next million after you have already acquired a few declines very rapidly. You need some other trophies, like an embellished royal title or additional wives (for Muslims). If you already have those, or cannot acquire them, then the next intoxicating fantasy would be to a kingmaker, or fancying yourself as one.

For a lawyer to be able to brag that you could “handle” senior judges must be the ultimate high. If also considerably enhances your ability as rainmaker. Years later in your old age, your skeptical grandchildren might attribute your boasts to nothing more than the rambling of a senile mind, unless of course you have the video to prove it!

Closely related to vanity is arrogance. Humility is when you could manipulate the nation’s judiciary and have the quiet satisfaction; arrogance is when you flaunt it. This lawyer Lingam was certainly flaunting it!

Alternatively, I do not put it below this shyster to put on this monologue with an imagined targeted senior judge at the other end, a la Lat’s old cartoon, and then purposely “leaked” the tape out. It would certainly be a headline grabber. As for a motive, rogues are known to do this to each other when they have a falling out. There is one quick way to check this: examine the tape to determine when it was manufactured.

The last possibility is that this could be an insider’s job, perhaps an employee’s scheme to get even with his or her boss just in case he would get nasty in future. Knowing how law firms’ employees are treated in Malaysia, this is a real possibility.

Judicial Commission No Remedy to Judiciary Rot

After much delay and amidst speculations, Abdullah finally appointed, apparently at the Ruler’s insistence, Justice Hamid Mohamed as President of the Court of Appeal, and Justice Alauddin Sherif as Chief Justice of Malaya. The two are highly regarded for their integrity as well as for being apolitical and independent minded. No wonder they were not Abdullah’s initial choice!

Abdullah also appointed a private lawyer Zaki Tun Azmi directly to the Appeals Court. He was on UMNO’s “Money Politics” disciplinary board. Lately he was known more for dumping his young Thai bride (his second, third, fourth?) and then asking her to burn their wedding certificate that was issued in Southern Thailand. Such personal integrity! The surprise is that the Council of Rulers consented to the appointment.

Perhaps Zaki Azmi was Abdulalh’s ideal choice for a future Chief Justice. That would of course reflect on Abdullah.

The rot in the judiciary predates Abdullah. However, he had the opportunity to reverse the trend or at least stem the decline with these new appointments, but as with the massive electoral mandate he received in 2004, he squandered it.

Many are advocating for an independent Judicial Commission to deal with judges’ appointments and promotions. I disagree. Judges and the judiciary generally must be accountable to the public. While I would not have judges be elected, as in some jurisdictions in America, the current system with judges appointed by the Prime Minister and consented to by the Council of Rulers is a good substitute. There is no point wasting time and effort tinkering with the current system.

What is needed instead is for the Prime Minister to be wise in his appointments and to open the field as wide as possible. In America, federal judges are nominated by the President and then consented to by the Senate, after a public confirmation hearing. If the president were stupid enough to nominate someone equally stupid, the Senate would not hesitate to deny the confirmation, after the appropriate public humiliation of the hearings. Additionally, the Bar Associations, legal scholars, and editorial boards would never shy from voicing their opinions.

The Prime Minister cannot abdicate his responsibility in selecting judges. If Abdullah needs guidance (he obviously does!), I suggest that he reads Lee Kuan Yew’s memoirs. If he finds the volumes too thick and tedious, I can help Abdullah by referring him to the relevant few pages.

Elsewhere I commented on the intellectual and experiential insularity of Malaysian judges. They are almost exclusively drawn from the civil service, with minimal or no outside experience in academia, private sector, or elsewhere. They follow directives only too well.

I was stunned that Chief Justice Feiruz, when confronted with the evidence that he had promoted judges who had been delinquent with their written judgments, would write to the Prime Minister instead of handling the issue himself. Presumably Feiruz was awaiting arahan (directive) from the Prime Minister. So much for his appreciation and understanding of the concept of separation of powers!

That more than anything reflects the caliber of Feiruz. Don’t get me started on the quality of his legal writings and commentaries!

In the end it does not matter what system you have if those responsible for selecting our judges do not do the job responsibly. The rot in our judiciary is not with the system but with the personnel. The system has produced such judicial luminaries as Tun Suffian and Raja Azlan Shah. It could do it again.

September 23, 2007

That famous, sad white-faced clown

French mime artist Marcel Marceau, that familiar sad white-faced clown in a striped pullover with a battered hat, passed away at 84 today..

MARCEAU_marcel_UN.jpg

A master of the art of mime, Marceau, and the character Bip he created in 1947, was a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations.

"Mime, like music, knows neither borders nor nationalities," he once said.

In mime, Marceau said, gestures express the essence of the soul's most secret aspiration.

"To mime the wind, one becomes a tempest. To mime a fish, you throw yourself into the sea." So Zen-like.

I'll remember him for the famous words he so well said: "Do not the most moving moments of our lives find us all without words? "

Walk With Us; March With Them

In helping us fend off our defamation suits, our lawyers have decided to Walk With Us.

Now that the lawyers themselves are taking on a Peaceful March to Save Judiciary, we -- Rocky and I -- will march with them this Wednesday, peacefully.

Dr M onto recovery after post-op op

Dr Mahathir Mohamad went on another surgery last night, on the 18th day after his heart bypass operation.

The former Prime Minister was advised to undergo surgical wound debridement because of wound infection.

The surgery commenced at 11.30pm last night and ended at 2.30am this morning.

"He is currently stable and has been put under routine post-cardiac surgery support," said Dr Mahathir's aide, Sufi Yusoff.

Mahathir is expected to remain on support for at least 36-hours for post-operative care and will be put under close monitoring and observation by IJN doctors and nurses at the Intensive Care Unit.

Nevertheless, as in all major operations, the next 72-hours will be the crucial period in his post-operative care.

Dr Mahathir, who had a successful second heart bypass on September 4, was transferred out of the ICU on the first day of Ramadan. However, he was transferred back to the ICU on September 14 after doctors detected he had a fever.

According to Marina, doctors at the IJN had finally found what was causing her Dad to be so slow in recovery and to constantly feel weak.

"There was an infection at his wound (where they had cut him to do the bypass) which is quite normal for operations of this type," she said. "But to get rid of it, they needed to operate again. It was the only option. And they wanted to do it last night itself."

Dr M was operated by the same team that performed the bypass surgery on September 4, with the exception of Dr Schaff of Mayo.

My prayers for him.

UPDATES: Marina has just put up a new update on her blog.

Sprintcuts @ Waitless.org

July 11, US celco Sprint came up with an indigenous way of using YouTube to market its advertising messages: Turn tedious tasks into fleeting moments. Or simply straight to the point, Cut the wait, make life less stressful.

Try Instant Shirt Removal, feel a life:

Do this Instant Baby Soothe -- save 3 weeks of your life -- that complies 100% to human rights:

But don't do this, turbo parking -- save one week of your life -- if you wink a little.

I suggest you try this time-saving calculator on Waitless.org. And watch the various Sprintcuts -- fast-cuts of video clips -- on YouTube-Sprintcuts channel.

Tapping into Web2.0, readers/Sprint customers can summit their own Sprintcuts for universal sharing. Leveraging user-generated content, the advertiser (Sprint) minimises production cost to maximise consumer reach.

There are 8 videos on YouTube-Sprintcuts (but I have seen all 11 in the collection) as of now. No. 9 is my favourite. I have just learned how to peel a hard-boiled egg in three steps and in 10 seconds, waitless.

I've tried to get Lingham to watch it, wait... he's still on the phone.

September 22, 2007

SAVE JUDICIARY: Lawyers to march to Putrajaya
Sep 26: From Palace of Justice to PM's Office

THE SHOCK-A-LINGAM TAPE. The Bar Council emergency meeting today called for a royal commission to look into the rot in the judiciary since 1988.

"In the meeting, the general feeling of Council members is one of outrage, and Council members felt that it is now in the national interest that members of the Bar rally together to save the judiciary," Bar Council reported on its official website soon after the meeting.

Two events will take place in the following weeks:

September 26, 2007 (Wednesday): The Putrajaya March
A Bar Council-sponsored March from the Palace of Justice to the Prime Minister's Office in Putrajaya will be held on the coming Cabinet Meeting Day.

The Purpose: To give a memo to the Cabinet calling for the setting up of a Royal Commission to investigate issues jeopardising the Judiciary.

The March:
- 09:00am: Chartered buses to leave Bar Council (for those who need transport)
- 11.00am: Meet at the staircase of Palace of Justice.
- Attire: Black-and-white attire, with jacket

The march is open to the Public to take part.

Also read: People's Parliament on this.

October 6, 2007 (Saturday): Bar Council EGM

At the meeting today, the council also ruled that an emergency general meeting (EGM) would be held for its members at 3pm on Oct 6 at the Legend Hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

The main purpose of the meeting is on the state of the judiciary.

Abdullah: 'No need Commission of Inquiry'

September 19, former Deputy Prime Minister released an explosive video clip which showed one lawyer brokering the appointment of judges with the present Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim.

Yesterday, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said the question of setting up a Commission of Inquiry did not arise as the allegations in the Lingam video clip had yet to be proven as authentic.

Abdullah also threatened that if investigations revealed that the claims were false, action would be taken against those who were trying to undermine the judiciary.

Earlier, his deputy, Najib Razak said the authenticity of the video footage had to be determined first before the Government could decide on any action.

Responding to this, the Bar Council said it was disappointed with the official responses that sought to divert attention to the whistleblower, and threaten possible action against such person should the allegations turn out to be untrue. Quote Malaysiakini:

“To do so at this stage casts serious doubts on the willingness of the authorities to properly and impartially investigate the matter,” Ambiga said.

“It will instead be a case of shooting the messenger.”

She said that any hint of impropriety in the judiciary must be investigated swiftly and in a thorough and transparent manner, so that the public was assured that there was no cover up.

“The Bar Council calls upon the government to immediately appoint a royal commission of inquiry into the incident and into the state of the judiciary,” she added.

“Let us find out what really went on (and goes on) in the judiciary. Let us not continue to be in a state of denial,” she said.

She said that many questions raised by the video cry out for answers. Quote:

CJ-No-Commet_070921.jpg“It underscores the need for a judicial commission. If there is no truth in the allegations or inferences arising out of the video, then the parties concerned must be vindicated,” she said.

“If there is truth in the allegations (or in some of them), stern and appropriate action must follow,” she stressed.

She also said that the response of Ahmad Fairuz yesterday that he has no comment was “unacceptable but telling”.

She added that the council also felt that disciplinary charges should be levelled against lawyer VK Lingam for his role in ‘judge fixing’ as shown in the video clip.

TI presidents, past and present, call for independent commission

Yesterday, two former Transparency International Malaysia (TI-M) presidents -- Param Cumaraswamy and Tunku Abdul Aziz Ibrahim -- lodged a report with the Anti-Corruption Agency against Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz over allegations of corruption and professional misconduct found in a poison-pen letter which surfaced two months ago.


SOURCE: Malaysiakini.tv

Today, TI-M formally joined the Bar Council in calling for an independent commission to probe the video clip.

The clip "calls to question the independence of the judiciary" and "cries out for explanations and accountability to the Malaysian public," said TI-M president Dr Ramon Navaratnam in a statement.

"The integrity, accountability and transparency of our government and the judiciary will be open to speculation and even erosion of public confidence if this video clip is not treated with the seriousness and utmost priority that it deserves," Ramon said.

Kit Siang is convinced

Meanwhile, Parliamentary Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang is convinced that, in the video, senior lawyer VK Lingam was chatting with Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim. He listed out several reasons for this conclusion.

Quote Malaysiakini:

The most obvious being that although two days have passed since the video clip was exposed, there has been pin drop silence from both Lingam and Ahmad Fairuz.

“It would be the first reaction of anyone to a doctored video clip,” he said. “But Ahmad Fairuz has been in ex-communicado for the past two days, although he would have no difficulty accessing the video on the Internet.”

He said the person Lingam spoke to was referred to as ‘Datuk' and there were talks of the person getting a ‘Tan Sri-ship' in the same year.

Lim pointed out that Ahmad Fairuz was awarded the Panglima Setia Mahkota (PSM) by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in June 2002, making him a Tan Sri.

The video clip, revealed by PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim, was said to have been recorded in 2002.

Lim also noted that there were references making "Datuk Heliliah, Datuk Ramli and Datuk Maroop" as judges.

On Feb 8, 2002, former solicitor-general Heliliah Mohd Yusuf, former chief registrar Ramly Aliand, former commissioner of law revision Ahmad Maarop received their letters of appointment as High Court judges from the King. Their appointments were from Feb 1, 2002.

There was also reference that "in three months time" the person, whom Lingam was talking to, would be made Court of Appeal president and "six months time" he was going to be chief justice.

Ahmad Fairuz was sworn in as Court of Appeal president on Dec 1, 2002 and appointed chief justice on March 17, 2003.

It is noteworthy to highlight that Ahmad Fairuz was appointed Court of Appeal president in December 2002 - months after the telephone conversation. Dzaiddin stepped down as CJ in 2003 and he was replaced by Ahmad Fairuz. Mokhtar, however, could not take the No 3 post as he was in coma after suffering from a fall in August 2002. He died in 2003. Ahmad Fairuz' term as CJ will end in October 2007.


More quotes from Malaysiakini on today's Bar Council emergency meeting::

Speaking to reporters after the two-hour meeting, Bar Council chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan said the Bar, representing 12,000 lawyers in Peninsular Malaysia, would be submitting a memorandum to the prime minister next Wednesday calling for the royal commission.

She said that the task of the commission would be to look into the state of the judiciary since the unceremonious sacking of the then Lord President Salleh Abas in 1988.

Many critics have claimed that the judiciary has been on a free fall since then.

Ambiga also said that the council would propose that the commission, if formed by the government, should comprise of former senior judges and lawyers.


After Nurin... Who's next and what's next

Family resigned to fate. Teachers and classmates missed her. The imam cries. The PM says he's angry. Now the cops may charge the family that faced the corpse.

But why suddenly Kampung Baru? Why not beyond Kampung Baru?

Knee-jerk.

Dr M gaining muscle strength