Borders : Common Sense over Bad Faithby dinobeano |
MY Comment : On Saturday, I wrote about the Brave Tudung Judge Dato Zaleha Yusof's damning judgement against JAWI, the Minister of Home Affairs and the Minister of Religious Affairs. The Judge called a spade a spade and criticised all 3 Respondents for their mala fide conduct. I reproduced the Conclusion of that Judgement so that the public can see the printed word and feel the emotion of disgust in the words used by the Judge.
Yesterday, I was told another case came before Tudung Judge Zaleha. This time it involves Ezra Zaid, son of dissident politician Zaid Ibrahim. This time, the counsel was Malik Imtiaz Sarwar who echoed the Judge's own judgement in the Borders' case that then Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein Onn had abdicated his duty when he surrendered his decision making to JAKIM on whether a book is dangerous to the society.This point of Fatwa and its effects had been dealt with by Zainah Anwar in her piece entitled Malaysia: Fatwa cannot be challenged. Yet, we have moron Ministers like Zahid Hamidi making remarks that pre-empted the court which will be hearing the case on the word "Allah". That is contemptuous.Today, I was pleasantly surprised to read in the Malay Mail a well analysed article of what the Borders' Judgement is about. Kudos to my friend Rosli Dahlan who argued that case and who will appear on 28th August in the Syariah Court to seek Nik Raina's long deserved final release. See the Malay Mail article below:..."
In Borders case, common sense triumphs over bad faith
KUALA
LUMPUR, Aug 20 — In the face of Malaysia’s rising religious
conservatism, a civil court judge has boldly ruled on reason and common
sense to uphold a Muslim storekeeper’s constitutional right to sell a
book Islam’s gatekeepers here found offensive.
The
court case involving the local Borders’ sale of Canadian author Irshad
Manji’s book “Allah, Liberty and Love” has been closely-watched since it
hit national headlines last year after Islamic enforcement officials
seized the stock and charged the store manager Nik Raina Nik Abdul Aziz
with violating publication and distribution laws.
Five
months after pronouncing the Federal Territories Islamic Religious
Department (JAWI), the home minister and the minister in the Prime
Minister’s Department in charge of Islamic affairs guilty of abusing
their powers to illegally prosecute the bookstore’s Muslim manager,
Datuk Zaleha Yusof of the Kuala Lumpur High Court has finally released
her grounds of judgment.
Though
couched in the language of the court, the judge’s strongly-worded
explanation kept to a strict interpretation of the law that has given
hope to Malaysians that their civil liberties as laid down in the
country’s founding document remain as robust as the day they were
conceived half a century ago.
“I
am satisfied that the applicants have shown existence of illegality,
abuse of discretionary powers, irrationality, unreasonable exercise of
power, unconstitutionally and that there exists procedural impropriety
on the part of the respondents,” Zaleha wrote in her grounds of judgment
released last week.
“Looking at the whole scenario of the case, it is hard not to agree with the applicants that there are elements of mala fide in the handling and carrying out of the actions of the respondents,” she added.
Mala fide, meaning bad faith in Latin, carries a heavy meaning in law, as the judge noted.
“In law, mala fide can be inferred when there was absence of care, caution and a proper sense of responsibility.”
She
observed that JAWI — named the first respondent in the bookstore’s suit
— had acted in bad faith “when they exercised their dominant position
and enforcement powers for a collateral purpose by: (i) prosecuting the
3rd applicant, who is a Muslim, when they could not do so against the
1st applicant (as the corporate owner of Borders bookstore) or the 2nd
applicant (as the person responsible over the display and sale of the
Publications, and who as a non-Muslim could not be prosecuted under the
Act 559”.
Nik
Raina was the third applicant, while Borders’ assistant general manager
in charge of merchandising Stephen Fung Wye Keong was the second
applicant. The bookstore, which is licensed under the name Berjaya Books
Sdn Bhd, was the first applicant.
The home minister and the Islamic affairs minister were named the second and third respondents respectively in Borders’ suit.
The
religious enforcers had also acted in bad faith, the judge said, when
it raided the bookstore in popular shopping mall Mid Valley Megamall on
May 23, 2012 to seize copies of Manji’s books despite the Home Ministry
only banning them over a week later on May 29.
JAWI’s
arrest and prosecution of Nik Raina was also carried out in bad faith,
the judge said, “for what was a non-offence at the time of the raid”.
“It
can also be inferred when the 3rd applicant was deprived of her liberty
without due care, caution and responsibility, when the 1st respondent
arresting and prosecuting her despite knowing that she was neither the
owner of the bookstore; nor had control over the selection of
publications therein,” the judge wrote.
The
home minister — then Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein — had acted in bad
faith when he made an order in a “casual or cavalier fashion, in
rushing the Prohibition Order to prohibit the publications, almost as an
afterthought”, the judgment read.
Other highlights from the grounds of judgment:
On a state’s right to act against a Muslim, under state law:
“However,
I must again emphasize, clear reading of item 1 of List II of the Ninth
Schedule as I mention just now, shows that the state cannot enact laws
in regard to matters included in the Federal List.
“Since
matters pertaining to publications, printing and printing presses fall
within List I i.e. the Federal List, validity of section 13 of Act 559
is questionable as it seems to be ultra vires the Act 301 and the
Federal Constitution.
“Even
if it is a valid law, what amounts to ‘contrary to Islamic Law’ as
provided by that provision is also questionable as it is too wide.
Members of public must be made known what publication is contrary to
Islam law or precept of Islam.
“Otherwise,
as the learned counsel for the applicants has submitted, a Muslim
employee who works in a bookstore that also sells Christianity bibles,
books on Buddhism or Hinduism or any other religion besides other books,
we do have many such bookstores now, would be committing an offence.”
On the state’s discretion to ban books:
“Further
there is nothing in the said Act 559 which provides for any state
religious bodies to prohibit any publication. It only creates an offence
of publication. In order to follow and adopt a harmonious
interpretation of the laws, the only logical approach is for section 7
of the Act 301 to support section 13 of the Act 559 i.e. notification to
the public first than only the enforcement action.
“We
live in a multireligious and multiracial society. Such approach, in my
opinion, would be harmonious and avoids any tension, controversy and
conflict in our society and law.”
On JAWI’s action against Nik Raina because she is a Muslim:
“Applying
that principle, as it stands now, I am of the opinion that the criminal
charge against the 3rd applicant in the Syariah High Court is an
infringement of Article 7 which is a provision concerning fundamental
liberties, guaranteed by our Federal Constitution.”
On the home minister’s dereliction of duty by passing his job to JAWI without checking:
“I
also must state here that I agree with the learned counsel for the
applicant when he submits that the 2nd respondent, by the averments in
his affidavit, has abdicated his duties when he stated that the 1st
respondent can perform seizures without any prohibition order from the
KDN, as section 7 of Act 301 clearly states that the powers of
prohibition with respect to publication lies with the Honourable
Minister of Home Ministry. Hence, there is a procedural impropriety here
which warrants a judicial review.”
Next, the Syariah Court hurdle
Yau
Su Peng, the chief operating officer for Berjaya, voiced her relief
that the civil chapter of the court case involving the store and its
employees was nearing an end, but held reservations that the book on the
legal saga could finally be closed.
“We
are very appreciative of the commonsense approach taken by the Court
but personally I question why it has taken so long (the raid by JAWI on
our Borders outlet in Gardens occurred in May 2012) for justice to be
pronounced,” Yau told The Malay Mail Online in a recent email interview.
The
syariah charge against Nik Raina has yet to be withdrawn, she observed,
even as the Attorney-General’s Chambers had last month confirmed it had
asked the Federal Territory Syarie chief prosecutor and JAWI to do so.
“We
are still waiting though, since the decision was given in March 2013,
for JAWI to formally withdraw the charges in the Syariah Court against
Nik Raina,” Yau said.
She
said Borders, through its lawyers, had appealed to JAWI drop its
prosecution against Borders’ Muslim manager in the Islamic court before
the end of Ramadan so that Nik Raina could have a happy celebration with
her family without the charge hanging over her.
“Sadly,
this was not to be and we have been given the date of 28 August as the
date on which the parties are to return to the Syariah Court to have the
charges withdrawn formally,” Yau said.
Malaysia
practises a dual-track justice system where Muslims are bound by both
secular and Islamic laws but non-Muslims have legal recourse only in the
civil court.
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