A+ | A- | Reset
Home

ALERT

Resist interference, CJ tells judges PDF Print
Posted by admin   
Thursday, 10 April 2008 15:18

R. Surenthira Kumar

(The Sun) PUTRAJAYA (April 9, 2008): Chief Justice Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad today said judges should be strong enough to resist any attempt to interfere with their independence if such an occasion arises, to give meaning to the doctrine of separation of powers.

Raja Nazrin arrives to deliver a keynote address at the annual judges conferences. He is accompanied by Abdul Hamid (left). 

He said the Executive (government) should also not interfere with the decisions of judges, or appear to interfere.

"Once the public is convinced that there is no interference by the Executive in the decisions of the judges, half the battle is won," Abdul Hamid said in the annual judges conference here.

In his call for the legislature, the Executive and the judiciary to respect each other’s area of jurisdiction, Abdul Hamid said they must subscribe to and practise the doctrine of separation of powers as provided for by the federal constitution.

He said the negative perceptions of the public towards the judiciary are not caused by factors from within the judiciary alone but also from without.

"So, to redeem the situation, both factors must be addressed," he said.

Abdul Hamid said next comes the role played by the judges themselves. "If the public is convinced that the judges are independent, incorruptible, hard-working, fair and free from any vested interest, then, we are in the right direction in redeeming the situation."

In this respect, he said, the choice of persons to be appointed as judge is important. "We should apply the correct criteria in choosing them, such as integrity, knowledge, incorruptible, hard-working, fair, of good character and able to ‘buat kerja’ (work)."

He said there are members of the public whose only concern is their personal interests. As far as they are concerned, the court is right if it decides in their favour and wrong if it decides against them, irrespective of the law and the evidence adduced in court.

"The moment a judge decides against them, they write malicious complaints against the judge, accusing him of corruption and bias," he added.

The three-day conference is being attended by judges nationwide.

Abdul Hamid also addressed other matters in his speech:

> On the proposed Commission or Committee to vet candidates for the appointment of judges.

He said this is a policy decision for the Executive branch to make. "If the Executive, in its wisdom, believes that it will help in identifying the right candidates, if it will help redeem the negative perception of the judiciary, if it will help to redeem the negative perception towards the Executive in the appointment of judges, if it will help to regain the confidence of the public in the judiciary and the Executive in relation to the judiciary, why not?," he said.

> On the proposed apology to the former lord president Tun Salleh Abas and the other two former Federal Court judges for the 1998 judicial crisis.

"Again, it is a policy decision for the Executive to make. As far as I am concerned, if the Executive, again, in its wisdom, believes that it is the proper thing to do, I welcome it. After all, in that episode, the judiciary was on the receiving end."

> On writing judgments

Judges who fail to write their own judgments are committing a misconduct, he warned. He said it is a dereliction of duty for a judge to ask someone, including his or her research officer, to draft the judgment.

He said when a judgment is written for them, there is a great temptation for them to merely place their signature to reduce the statistic of unwritten judgments.

"It may even encourage corruption on the part of the officers who put up the judgments," said Abdul Hamid.

Citing the practice in the United States, in which the judges’ clerks draft the judgments, he said he did not think it is a practice that the judges here should adopt.

He said judgments are something very personal that every judge should be proud of, but that of late, more and more cut-and-paste judgments have surfaced.

"Passages are lifted up and pasted on the judgment without considering the facts and ratio of the case."

On the issue related to job performance, he said the nature of work of a judge is very difficult to measure.

"Statistics may not tell a lie but may not tell the whole truth. But when statistics are intentionally manipulated, it will never tell the truth."

> On arbitration

Judges should take a robust stance on enforcement of arbitral awards to discourage unmeritorious parties from delaying and abusing the processes of court and bringing the arbitration process into disrepute.

He said one of the most common complaints by parties who have experienced arbitration is the long process the winning party must go through again in court to realize the sum awarded.

"Efficient handling of arbitration cases will also help project Malaysia’s image and the image of our judiciary in the international arena," said Abdul Hamid.

Singapore and Hongkong have made their mark and are becoming preferred centres for arbitration, he said.

He said a major factor considered by international parties when negotiating arbitration clauses in their contracts is the quality and speed of judgments delivered by judges in the country which is chosen and whether those judgments support the arbitral process.

Comments (14)Add Comment
...
written by alan cheong, April 10, 2008 15:23:26
make it stick, Hamid, and sack 'em, then prosecute them !
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 7
...
written by chanatak, April 10, 2008 15:28:16
The Rakyat will be glad for the CJ to open up investigations against all those crooked judges and charge them. Put them in jail for corruption. Surely judges are not above the law?
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 13
...
written by justme bc, April 10, 2008 15:31:53
Do Chief Justice Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad has the guts to open up the files for his fellow judges who has abuse the trust gievn to them? let's see if his words can hold water.

cheers
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 17
...
written by netmiser88, April 10, 2008 16:29:14
WOW!!!!
Not only is Prince Nazrin handsome.....he is so TALL compared to CJ Ahmad.
SIX footer at least!!!!!......
report abuse
disagree 4
agree 4
...
written by netmiser88, April 10, 2008 16:31:19
sorry CJ Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad.
report abuse
disagree 1
agree 1
...
written by Kathy, April 10, 2008 16:34:40
This and Raja Nazrin's speech give me much hope for Malaysians seeking justice in their own courts. By the way, what news of the Lingam case?
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 5
...
written by cwy, April 10, 2008 16:46:48
Our Raja Muda of Perak ( next King-to-be) has so many admirers!
I admire his wisdom too!
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 3
...
written by babakl, April 10, 2008 17:17:14
Thankyou Your Highness Raja Nazrin. So MR. CJ, pLEASE MAKE SURE THAT THE PRESENT JUDGE ON MONGOLIAN MURDER GETS THISMESSAGE LOUD N CLEAR.The whole world is watching this case. Now do the walk.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 8
...
written by Debbie, April 10, 2008 17:20:37
Abdul Hamid ..just make whatever you have said, stick. Get this working on the right track, by starting with the top corrupted dick heads.
And it is anybody's guess, you know who we are talking about.
Shalom
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 5
...
written by singam, April 10, 2008 17:21:39
First, the rakyat. Then, the Sultans. Now, the CJ.

Freedom, freedom everywhere. The Second Merdeka.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 5
...
written by mikefonz, April 10, 2008 17:52:01
The acknowledgement by the CJ on this is the prove of truth that we have some judges that are corrupted. Get rid of these judges CJ if you have the guts. End of the day is still the same story. Malaysia ada WANG, apa pun BOLEH.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 2
...
written by POPEYE, April 10, 2008 18:02:01
This CJ is a JOKE. He was appointed by Bodowi and now he claims to be impartial and fair. Mark my words he hasnt done his job yet. Hey Mr CJ. Your boss expects you to be PARTIAL and to continuously INTERFERE with the judges. GET TO WORK !!!
report abuse
disagree 1
agree 4
...
written by mijoan, April 10, 2008 18:35:41
(Quote:Chief Justice Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad today said judges should be strong enough to resist any attempt to interfere with their independence if such an occasion arises, to give meaning to the doctrine of separation of powers).

"Isn't the above, proof of Executive Interference over the past 20 odd years?"
If AAB wants to project a clean image of himself, now is the time to investigate this issue fully and without biase. This is the only chance he has, if he so desires, to redeem himself of all accusations. If he remains quiet as he does usually, than we the Rakyat will know that he is just as much is guilty too.

.
report abuse
disagree 1
agree 4
...
written by omarkhayyam, April 10, 2008 20:54:23
Dear Abdul Hamid,

"walk the talk" ..... then we will see

cheers
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 2

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
 
The Silent Roar
 BUY THE BOOK HERE
 **STOCKS NOW AVAILABLE**
 
** SPONSORED LINKS **
Will NATO become a global army? More..

Sponsored Links

World Futures  Moscow's Middle East conference: Should the Muslims depend only on the US to solve the Palestine crisis?

Future Fastforward  A controversial analysis by a controversial analyst, Matthias Chang, the lawyer-writer who unabashedly calls a spade a spade and offers no apology for doing so.

Internet TV 3000+ Channels  Pick your favorite internet TV channels straight to your PC! Yay!

Some Images Hosted With
Thank You ImageShack!
 BLOGGERS AGAINST ISA
People's Declaration

Powered and Optimized for:
Malaysia Today by MT-TEAM