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Tan Sri Salleh's Open Letter to Dr.M PDF Print E-mail
Written by fuqaha   
Wednesday, 30 July 2008

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Tun Salleh  Saga - an open reply to Dr Mahathir


Dr Mahathir, I read  with considerable interest your blog on the Tun Salleh Saga. To a  certain degree, I must confess, I am happy for you have obviously  regained your memory after having a momentary lapse of the same  during the proceeding of the Royal Commission on the Lingam  tape.

I must  confess that I was not moved to post anything about the Tun Salleh  issue as everybody and his dog has apparently written about it.  However, after having read your latest boot-leg version, I am  compelled to write this reply, just to put things on record and in  proper perspective.
It is quite obvious that you have  mastered the fine art of manipulation. When everything else fails,  what better way than to stoke racial sentiment in order to gain  support. That was what you were doing in Johore Bahru recently  when you quite irresponsibly pointed out that the Malays are the  ones who would lose out if the IDR project were to continue. You  then quickly followed it up in Japan when you again reminded the  Malays to unite and be strong because, according to you, other  races are now asking for many things and questioning Malay rights.  Samuel Johnson's 'patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel'  would normally be a cliche to repeat, but in your case, I would  make an exception. Just change the word 'patriotism' to  'racialism' and you would, hopefully, catch my  drift.
 
When the issue of an apology to Salleh Abas  was started by Zaid Ibrahim, I remember you were quoted as saying  that Salleh Abas was sacked by the tribunal and so an apology  should be sought from the tribunal.
 
How very  convenient of you, Dr M. Of course you had conveniently overlooked  the fact that the tribunal was established at your advice as the  then Prime Minister.  And so now, in your blog, you have  revealed the truth.  The truth, according to you, is that the  King had wanted Salleh Abas removed because His Majesty was angry  with Salleh Abas' letter complaining about His Majesty's  renovation work. So, are you now blaming the King, may I ask? That  is the first question which came across my mind while reading your  post.
 
The second question is this. Since when have  you become a Royalist so much so that you were almost paralysingly  subservient to the King? The King had wanted Salleh Abas, the Lord  President, sacked because of a letter over some noises made in a  renovation work, and you followed it up with a tribunal  established under our primary law, the Federal Constitution? You  wanted us to believe that you, the then Prime Minister, the very  same Prime Minister who amended the Federal Constitution to curb  the powers of the King and the Malay Rulers, had agreed to  establish the tribunal at the behest of the King? Since when has  Dr Mahathir Mohamad, the fearless Prime Minister, who took away  the necessity for Royal assents to any bill of law before it could  effectively be the law of the country by amending the Federal  Constitution, had suddenly become so subservient to the King in  relation to the sacking of Salleh Abas?
 
The third  question is glaring to people in the know.  It is, of course,  not there for every supporters of yours to see, as we could well  surmise from the majority of the comments made in your blog on the  issue. The question is this. Why was it that Salleh Abas was not  charged over THAT letter? If what you said was true, why wasn't  Salleh Abas charged for writing such a letter to the King and  carbon copying it to all the Rulers? WHY?
If the King had  wanted Salleh Abas sacked for being rude to His Majesty, why is it  that Salleh Abas not charged for being rude to our King? W.H.Y.???  Why is it that only now, 20 years later, suddenly, this letter has  appeared and becomes an issue? Is it a case of you forgetting  about that letter in 1988, just as you have forgotten about some  events during the Lingam tape hearing, and suddenly rediscovering  your memory last week about the same letter?

Coincidently,  your former secretary, Matthias Chang, has spoken about this  letter in his blog sometime in the past weeks.
By the way,  during the constitutional crisis caused by your belligerent  attitude towards the King and the Malay Rulers, I remember the  state mass media, that is the newspapers and RTM, had even  belittled the King and the Malays Rulers. The whole propaganda  machine was used to smear the King and the Malay Rulers. Pictures  of their palaces and mansions were shown on TV and in the  newspapers. Stories about their wrongdoings were splashed in  newspapers.
 
Even Sultan of Kedah's house in Penang  did not escape your propaganda machine. RTM would proceed to air  old Malay movies about how stupid the Malay Rulers in ancient days  were. Films like Nujum Pak Belalang, Hang Tuah and Dang Anum were  aired just to shape the people's thoughts about how bad the King  and the Malay Rulers were or could be.
And yet, you now want us  to believe that you were just doing what the King had wanted you  to do by establishing the tribunal against Salleh Abas? Stretching  your argument that Salleh Abas had to go because the King said so,  why didn't you sack yourself, your whole cabinet and everybody  else who had then partaken in the whole process of smearing the  good name and dignity of our King and the Malay Rulers? Why only  Salleh Abas?
Dr M, sometimes, one's stupidity is most glaring  in one's thought that everybody else is stupid! You then mention  in your blog that it was your opinion that Salleh Abas had  committed wrongdoings and that he was not fit to be a Judge. If  that was the case, may I respectfully ask why is it that you had  not deemed it fit to establish a tribunal against a certain Lord  President who was photographed with a certain lawyer overseas?  Wouldn't that constitute a wrongdoing?
 
That fact was,  I am sure, known to you as it was widely discussed in the media  during your premiership.  It was even investigated by the  ACA. Or how about the ACA investigation which showed that a  certain lawyer had written a certain judgment for a certain Judge?  Wouldn't that be a wrongdoing which would, if substantiated,  render the Judge unfit to continue be a Judge? Why only Salleh  Abas? Why not these Judges? Or is it a case of you having  forgotten what they did just as you have forgotten several events  during the Linggam tape proceedings, again?
 
You now  charge, as you have always charged, that the judiciary, had  interfered in the administration of the country. Your disdain for  the law, lawyers and judiciary is well documented. Dr M, I  remember clearly in one speech, you likened the lawyers to  vultures. But of course, you would now say it was all in  jest.
 
Your contempt for the law and judiciary, every  time the judiciary made a decision against you or your government  is almost peerless. You would deem such decision as interference  with the administration. Although you know that the administration  consists of 3 different, but essential, arms, namely, the  legislature, executive and judiciary, you failed miserably to  understand their respective functions and duties. The phrase  'check and balance' was missing from your administrative lexicon  which was probably reprinted with an express instruction from you  to delete the same.
 
Thus, history will show that you  were so upset and angry with the judiciary that you had instigated  another Constitutional amendment to take away 'judicial powers'  from the judiciary! May I point out Dr M, that Malaysia would be  the only country in the whole Commonwealth (I say Commonwealth  because I am not accustomed to non-Commonwealth systems) whose  judiciary does not have judicial powers unless the legislature  says so. Coincidentally of course, who controlled the legislature?  That was, and I surmise, still is, your idea of a  democracy.
 
Remember what I said above about  stupidity? Let me repeat it. One's stupidity is most glaring in  one's thought that everybody else is stupid! You somewhat deny  that the sacking of Salleh Abas had anything to do with the UMNO  11 appeal which was then fixed by Salleh Abas to be heard by a  full bench of 9 Judges on 13.6.1988. Events will show, at least on  a balance of probability, otherwise.
 
Salleh Abas was  served with a letter of suspension on 27.5.1988. Abdul Hamid Omar  became the Acting Lord President. I will come back to this  character later in this post.
On that very day, namely,  27.5.1988, on which Salleh Abas was suspended, Abdul Hamid Omar,  as Acting Lord President, acting without any application by any  party named in the UMNO 11 appeal, adjourned the appeal to a date  to be fixed later. Why? For what reason? Why the haste? Nobody  knows. That appeal was later fixed for hearing on 8.8.1988 before  only 5 judges comprising of 3 Supreme Court Judges, including  Abdul Hamid Omar himself and 2 High Court Judges. Not 9 as  originally fixed by Salleh Abas.
 
How could a valid  decision by a Lord President, which was made prior to his  suspension, be reversed by an Acting Lord President is quite  beyond me or my intellect to comprehend, let alone answer. And  quite why the appeal was to be heard by a corum of 3 Supreme Court  Judges and 2 High Court Judges, instead of all Supreme Court  Judges, is also beyond my tiny brain's ability to understand. I am  sure you wouldn't remember this fact Dr M. Otherwise, I am sure  you would have stated it in your post.
 
If the sacking  had nothing to do with the UMNO 11 appeal, why, may I ask, is that  the first official act of the Acting Lord President was to  postpone the hearing of that particular appeal? Why did he then  proceed to overturn a valid act of the Lord President, who was  then still a Lord President, albeit the fact that he was  suspended? Why?
 
Salleh Abas made a statement to the  press after his suspension. In the statement, he alluded to a  meeting on 25.5.1998 with you, in the presence of the Chief  Secretary, Salehuddin Mohamad, where you allegedly told him  (Salleh Abas) that he was to be removed because, among others, of  his bias in the UMNO 11 appeal. Salehuddin Mohamad was a witness  at the tribunal. He said he was taking notes during the said  meeting. While he could remember writing down only 2 matters in  the note book during the meeting, namely, Salleh Abas' speech and  his letter to the King (about your attack of the judiciary and not  about the renovation issue), he only managed to say that he cannot  remember that you had mentioned the UMNO case during the meeting  when asked by the tribunal members. If he was so sure that he only  took down notes about the aforesaid 2 matters in his notebook, why  then he could not EXPRESSLY deny that you had mentioned about the  UMNO case during the said meeting? Why can't he remember? And, in  a show of embarrassing shallowness on the part of the tribunal, it  FAILED to ask Salehuddin to produce the notebook! Why? It would  appear that your Chief Secretary was clearly suffering from the  same disease as yours namely, partial and momentary lapse of  memory.
On the balance of probability therefore, your  contention that the sacking of Salleh Abas did not have anything  to do with the UMNO case under appeal is flawed, to say the least.  Why don't you state all these facts in your blog Dr M? And let the  people who read it judge the matter after having been fed with all  relevant facts. Not with facts which you think are relevant. Not  with facts which you choose to remember for your own purpose and  objectives.
 
I have reserved my comment about Abdul  Hamid Omar. Now is the time for me to say something about him.  This was the man who was effectively Salleh Abas' subordinate. He  became Acting Lord President when Salleh Abas was suspended. He  was also next in line to be the Lord President, in the event  Salleh Abas was sacked. History will show that he did replace  Salleh Abas after his sacking. How could he then head the  tribunal? He was obviously conflicted out from being in the  tribunal. Justice must not only be done, but must also be seen to  be done. Haven't you heard of that? Or have you forgotten about  it? Or is it a case that you did not really  care?
 
Salleh Abas was then charged, among others, for  writing a letter to the King date 26.3 1988. For the benefit of  those readers who don't really know the facts, this was not the  letter complaining about the renovation. As I had said it, the  renovation letter was never mentioned in any of the charges. The  letter dated 26.3.1988 was a letter by Salleh Abas to the King to  inform the King that Dr M had been attacking the judiciary. I will  not touch on the merit or demerit of this letter. But what Dr M  had failed to realise, or rather, what Dr M had ignored was the  fact that this letter was written by Salleh Abas after all the  Judges had a meeting on 25.3.1988. Even the Chairman of the  tribunal, the aforesaid Abdul Hamid Omar, was present during the  said meeting. In more ways than one, the said letter was a  collective result of the Judges' meeting, including that of Abdul  Hamid Omar, the Chairman of the tribunal.
 
Two  questions arise here Dr M. Firstly, stretching your contention  that Salleh Abas had to be removed because of that letter as well  as the renovation letter to its own logical conclusion, why didn't  you suspend all the Judges who attended the meeting of 25.3.1988  and institute the same proceeding, with a view of dismissing all  of them? That would be its reasonable conclusion as the letter was  a collective result. Secondly, how could Abdul Hamid Omar, be a  part of the tribunal, let alone its Chairman when he was obviously  a potential witness? But then again, the 2nd question is borne out  of a legal point, and so I don't expect you to understand it, let  alone grasp it.

Allow me  to also set out the exact facts and events around the same time  Salleh Abas was charged. In 1986, you, as Home Minister cancelled  the work permit of 2 Asian Wall Street Journal journalists in  Malaysia. They brought the matter to the Court and the Supreme  Court held that your action was illegal and therefore invalid. You  were upset. IN TIME magazine (issue of 24.11.1986), you expressed  your displeasure. Contempt proceedings were brought against you by  the opposition. You escaped as the proceedings were dismissed by  the Court. However, the learned Judge remarked in his judgment  that you were confused at the doctrine of separation of  powers.
 
Later, in a speech to law students, the same  Judge said that the process of appointing senators should be by  way of an election. You mistook, as usual, this speech as a  challenge and interference in politics when all the learned Judge  was doing was expressing his own personal opinion over a matter  which was not entirely political but also legal as well. Of course  you then had to accuse 'certain Judges' as interfering with  politics. You then began a series of unwarranted attacks against  the judiciary at a level and intensity as yet unseen in Malaysian  history.  What would you do if you were Salleh Abas, the Lord  President? Take all the attacks lying down while waiting for  pension?
 
You failed to appreciate his duty as the  Lord President. He was the chief of the judiciary, an essential  branch of the country's administration system. As much as you were  the head of the executive, so was Salleh Abas the head of the  judiciary. He had to defend the very institution which he then  headed. He convened a meeting of Judges on 25.3.1988 and  collectively they decided to write a letter to the King about all  the attacks leveled against the judiciary. What was so wrong with  that? Why, you wanted him to lodge a police report over the  matter?
 
By the way, in the present climate when every  other Malay politician is trying to be more Islam than every other  Malay and his pussy cats, you, of course, forgot to mention one of  the charges against Salleh Abas in your blog for obvious reason.  The charge was that Salleh Abas had advocated the acceptance of  the Islamic legal system in Malaysia and had re-stated the law  along Islamic legal principles against the multi-racial and  multi-religious character of our country. Why didn't you mention  this in your blog? You forgot? Or is it simply a case of you being  afraid of losing the Malay support among your Malay readers if  that was published by you in your blog?
 
Dr M, I am  not your supporter. Nor am I Anwar Ibrahim's or Abdullah Badawi's  supporter. I am a supporter of truth. In this matter, nobody would  know the truth. But if you are persuading people that your version  is the truth, I would at least, expect you to lay out the whole  story. And let the people, and history, be the  judge.
 
Do you know what the beauty of the Common Law  (which we practise)? The beauty is that it is a set of laws common  to all the people. That means, when a matter is wrong or right,  ultimately, the common people would know. The common people. Me,  and your readers.
 

Kind  regards

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