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Lokman, let’s set the record straight PDF Print
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Wednesday, 14 October 2009 17:22

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I still maintained contacts with Lokman Noor Adam long after he had left the opposition and joined Umno. I even met up with him for dinner a few times. Today, he has raised a five-year old issue and has accused me of being unjust to him. Maybe I need to remind him about what I wrote more than five years ago on 26 February 2004 to set the record straight.

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

Raja Petra afraid to face trial, says Lokman

Malaysia Today editor Raja Petra Raja Kamarudin does not dare return to Malaysia and face his sedition trial, a former PKR supreme council member claimed.

Lokman Noor Adam, who is currently an Umno Youth exco member, alleged that Raja Petra tended to post articles on his news portal without verifying facts and now that he is facing several civil suits, he had to flee the country.

“He is the kind of person who often criticises without considering if it is true or not. That is why his news portal churns out such allegations,” he said when contacted yesterday.

Lokman Noor, who has known Raja Petra for more than 10 years, cited an example in 2004, when he was lambasted by Raja Petra in the news portal.

“Raja Petra reprimanded me in his news portal when I exposed the alleged wrongdoings of senior PKR leaders back then. Later, when former PKR Youth chief Ezam Mohd Nor joined Umno, he (Raja Petra) changed his stance and praised me for my earlier criticism.

“This shows that he is not consistent,” he said.

In 2004, PKR expelled Lokman for allegedly bringing disrepute to the party by making wild claims against leaders through the media, wanting to rejoin Umno and getting party members to follow him.

On another matter, Lokman Noor said Barisan Nasional’s recent big victory in the Bagan Pinang by-election showed that the Prime Minister’s hard work had paid off.

“The Opposition will give all kinds of negative comments to divert attention from the fact that the people’s support is back with Barisan,” he said.

The Star, 14 October 2009

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“Justice must not only be served; it must also be seen to be served”

Raja Petra Kamarudin

The developments in Parti Keadilan Nasional (keADILan) over the last couple of weeks have certainly been an eye opener, if not a wakeup call. Two very significant happenings are the crossover of the 12 grassroots leaders (mostly from the Youth Movement or Pemuda keADILan), and the sacking of its Executive Secretary, Lokman Noor Adam.

Let me first touch on the Lokman episode. To be absolutely honest, I both support and do not support the sacking, and I will explain why in due course.

I believe in the age-old adage that “justice must not only be served, it must also be seen to be served.” In the Lokman sacking, the nagging question would be then: was justice seen to have been served?

Now, this is crucial to the whole episode. No one would even want to talk about whether he did or did not get a fair trial if in the first place there was no appearance of a trial. In politics, appearances are everything and the only thing. Therefore, keADILan, of all parties, should be most sensitive about this point seeing that the very name of the party means ‘justice’ in English.

I am not saying that there was no inquiry or that the impartiality of the panel set up by the party to conduct the inquiry is suspect. The inquiry members are, after all, leaders of some standing in the party -- the Deputy President Abdul Rahman Othman, Vice President Tian Chua and Treasurer Datuk Kamarul Baharin Abbas. But the very fact that they ARE party leaders, whether of integrity or otherwise, would start tongues wagging. And this is most unfortunate as I feel these leaders should have been insulated and isolated from this whole episode and not put in a situation where they would get dragged into the whole affair.

Anyway, what is done is done and it is too late to lock the stable door once the horse has bolted. What keADILan now needs to do is to ensure that such an episode can be avoided in future. Maybe keADILan should establish a permanent disciplinary committee that can act as judge and jury for future incidences of this nature. Maybe this committee can comprise of a retired judge and some practicing lawyers (say like Zainur Zakaria) who hold no party positions and have no political ambitions whatsoever -- people who can interpret the party constitution and the legal ramifications of any action or decision.

All complaints of indiscipline or breach of the party constitution should be brought directly to the attention of the disciplinary committee, which would then decide whether the complaint is legitimate and serious enough to warrant some form of action. Some indiscretions may only require a warning, others a show-cause, while only the more serious and blatant ones would warrant sacking.

This disciplinary committee would of course be set up with the endorsement of the Supreme Council (Majlis Pimpinan Tertinggi or MPT). However, once it is set up, the MPT should no longer interfere in its work or try to influence its decision. After all, is this not what keADILan is fighting for, an independent judiciary? The members of the disciplinary committee can be appointed for two-year terms after which their tenure can be extended if the MPT is satisfied with their work and if those due for reappointment are prepared to continue serving on the committee.

The independence of the disciplinary committee would be to the extent that all cases should not be ‘filtered’ by the MPT before they are sent to them. This will avoid ‘selective prosecution’, like what the opposition has accused the government of practicing. Further to that, the disciplinary committee should be above the MPT in that it can take action against any MPT member, the President included. Technically, therefore, Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail can be sacked from the party if a legitimate and serious complaint against her is brought to the committee’s attention and if it finds her guilty of breaching party discipline or violating the party constitution.

The setting up of such a committee, and a totally independent one at that, would probably make keADILan the first political party in Malaysia to practice what it preaches. And dare the party leaders put their fate in such a committee that will maintain party discipline and decorum without fear or favour? This is the true test of the pudding. And, as they say, charity starts at home. So keADILan should reform this shortcoming before it shouts at others to reform.

Actually, Lokman brought the problem upon himself when he chose to boycott the hearing, citing the three-men panel set up to hear his case as biased. Lokman may be entirely out of line here but he managed to raise enough doubts, though still only an allegation and which he was not able to prove at that. But then he managed to recruit many sympathisers who share his view that he was unfairly sacked. People no longer talk about what he did and whether what he did was detrimental to the party. They focus on the manner he was sacked and, unfortunately, this has now become the issue instead of what the real issue should be, and that is the damage he has done the party.

Now, on the positive aspects of this whole episode, it is good that the party took this stern action. In the past, the main complaint about the party is that it is indecisive and appears reluctant to act lest the members merajuk (sulk) and leave the party. This was interpreted as a weak leadership. For some time now, the members have been saying, if these people want to merajuk, let them merajuk. And if they choose to leave the party, then good riddance. Whatever the consequences, the party should never kowtow to any particular individual and no individual should be allowed to hold the party to ransom.

Take the case of the one-time state chief of Melaka, Omar Jaafar. In late 2002, he raised hell at the party’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Sungai Petani, Kedah. In a huff, he led a group of about 100 to stage a walkout in protest against the proposed keADILan-PRM (Parti Rakyat Malaysia) merger. Outside the hall he shouted at all and sundry and accused the party leaders of being munafik (hypocrites). That same afternoon he called a press conference and slammed the party.

What Omar and his gang of merry men and women did was worse than what Lokman did. The AGM was ‘open’ and witnessed by the entire media, the mainstream media included, which without a doubt is anti-opposition. As if it is not enough the government-controlled media twists everything the opposition says and does, did we need to give it even more ammunition?

Some people tell me Omar then conducted a campaign to oppose the merger. Many who in the beginning supported the merger now oppose it, all because of the success of this anti-merger campaign conducted by the party’s own leaders. Yet no action was taken against Omar and his anti-merger campaigners.

The growing anti-merger sentiment resulted in some Pemuda keADILan leaders resisting the plan to merge keADILan’s and PRM’s Youth Movements into a new entity called Angkatan Muda. And the reason cited was that PRM’s Youth Movement is not all male but has females as well. Is this a valid and genuine reason to oppose the merging of the two Youth Movements or it is just an excuse concocted to justify opposing the merger?

Anyway, the fallout from all this was most damaging indeed. Some who felt that the party was bulldozing the merger and was not allowing the members to voice their opinions quietly left the party and went into retirement. Luckily they did not join Umno. Others went into confrontation with the keADILan Youth Leader, Ezam Mohd Nor, and the bad blood soon turned ugly. Finally, they too left the party, and this included some of those in the group of 12 who recently joined Umno.

Maybe they were paid to join Umno. I seriously do not know. But even if they were, my deep suspicion tells me that the money was a by-the-way thing. It was not the main inducement. What prompted them to take that leap was the irreconcilable differences with Ezam, and this was brought about by the strong anti-merger sentiments.

Can we now say that Omar did not commit a major crime, maybe worse than that committed by Lokman?

And this is my bone of contention. The party should have acted much earlier, and acted tough, but it did not. And that resulted in chaos. Now, in the Lokman case, the party did just that, it acted tough. So, I suppose, I, who have criticised the party for non-action in the past, will have no choice but to support the tough action against Lokman. And, my only complaint now would have to be; too little too late.

If Omar had earlier been made an example of and the anti-merger campaign nipped in the bud, we might not have seen the exodus of those 12. Even if we did, it would not have been 12 but probably less than half a dozen.

It is not that we are forbidding freedom of speech. Of course one may speak out. But there is a proper forum for this and once the party has made its decision we all need to abide by it. You are also free to oppose any party decision if your views are opposite to that decision. But you must never conduct a sabotage exercise to undermine the party. At worst, if you feel the party no longer adheres to the principle it was set up for, you leave the party. Plain and simple!

http://www.freeanwar.com, 26 February 2004

Comments (17)Add Comment
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written by johnT, October 14, 2009 18:23:16
RPK should return to Malaysia and face his sedition trial, But only when the court is no more control by BN.
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written by Wakeupmsia, October 14, 2009 19:17:26
What trials are there for RPK to stand? In fact it's all rubbish and time wasting! On top of that, their salaries are paid by us, the tax payer.
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written by SamSan, October 14, 2009 19:47:51
RPK will return to stand trial only if V.K.Lingam represents him or better still if V.K. Lingam is appointed the next Chief Justice of Malaysia. We need people of such highly acclaimed intergrity and legal acument like V.K. Lingam to exude confidence in our judiciary and raise it to even higher standard and perhaps make it the highest in the world.
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written by takbolehtahan, October 14, 2009 21:05:32
Wakeupmsia is absolutely right. What trials? It is people like Ali Rustam and that Penang idiot, now what's his name, and many umno goons, who should be tried for sedition. And including TDM.
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written by Rohani Hitam, October 14, 2009 22:09:39
The kangaroo court has found him guilty before the trial and what happen in the court is only wayang hopping. Remain where you are RPK and write more. We want more of your revelation and we can judge better.
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written by Ghifarix, October 14, 2009 22:15:16
What sedition, why not charge the complainants for wasting public/police time and money. When a group of politicians thief RM12B that's high crime and what did Badwi and Nasbi called it; personal issues. Stay where you are brother and keep on jamin....Khomini was in exile too.
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written by johnT, October 14, 2009 23:14:41
I just want to make an imagination, If RPK fill up borang UMNO and join UMNO. I imagine all the charges agains RPK in the court will found not guilty. RPK may become Tan Sri RPK or be given a minister post or Senator. smilies/tongue.gif
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written by Flex65, October 15, 2009 08:44:55
Consider this a challenge to Najib, someone or everyone please convey to him. This is a challenge from a nobody to the PM of Malaysia. It will prove whether he has the balls or Rosmah is keeping them.

Drop all the charges and swear by the Quoran that ISA will not be used against Sir RPK. Sue Sir RPK for defamation for whatever amount. I am sure Sir RPK will return to defend himself. This will allow Sir RPK an opportunity to prove whatever he has written is true. Well, Najib this is the best opportunity to get rid of Sir RPK and Malaysia today. Imagine what will happen if you DARE to do it and Sir RPK still dare not turn up in court? He will lose all his followers. Isn't that what you want? Prove to me that you still have your balls with you.
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written by Rozlan, October 15, 2009 09:07:47
Whatever it was,Lokman had joined UMNO back.Truly opposite from his pledge to retire from politic.He was one of the guys whom UMNO had successfully turnover during ISA detention.

Whatever his justifications were, will not carry weight to us
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written by Ken Liew, October 15, 2009 09:41:08
if LAW is FAIR in Malaysia.... IF LAW will not accept lock u up without trail....

If LAW really are a Indepent and not control by UNMORAL politician.... If LAW are NOT control by Corrupted Judges....

So, why fear??
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written by malgal, October 15, 2009 10:23:01
lompat lokman, read properly.
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written by alpha1, October 15, 2009 11:55:13
I'll put my bet on you Pete, anytime! This Lokman is nothing but a traitor, good for UMNO only! Lokman? Lok-Chat or Lok-Kau suits you better! Go fly kite la, arsehole! smilies/cool.gif smilies/cool.gif smilies/cool.gif smilies/cool.gif smilies/cool.gif smilies/cool.gif
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written by Rock, October 15, 2009 12:11:29
Knowing him personally as ISA banduan in Kemta, his words 'tak boleh pakai punya mar'. Money is more important than anything else even he had to say nasty things/words to someone and groups. He got no moral standing. THank God he left keAdilan....he's nothing but an opportunist
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written by Susanna, October 15, 2009 15:00:18
Inconsistent? Look who is double talk. Lokman himself switch from PKR to BN... and maybe back again another day? how consistent are you?
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written by The Hammer, October 16, 2009 02:03:58
Dei, Lokman, it is easy for you to blabber from your comfortable chair but when was the last time you stayed at the "Zoo" at Sg Buloh or at our famous UK (Kamunting)?
Maybe when you had some experience like RPK, you will understand exactly how he felt when he was denied true justice!
So untill then, go blabber something else. Why not talk about the uniqueness of 1 TOILET!
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written by yoboleh, October 17, 2009 10:31:19
Flex65, dont waste time challenging najib, he is not ready to loose his PMship yet. Baru berapa bulan je, tak puas lagi. Surely he wont response.
One more thing, I think reserve the word 'SIR' from RPK yet. I mostly have same mind with RPK but we are just normal human being, and dont let him perasan before time.
As for Rentap, he himself is lame so dont hide his comment so other can value his lameness
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