Harun Hashim ISA inquiry will be acid test whether Suhakam has retreated to a narrow restrictive interpretation of its powers or whether it stands firm and square on its statutory remit to protect and promote human rights


Media Statement
by Lim Kit Siang

(Penang,  Friday)The Harun Hashim Internal Security Act (ISA) inquiry will be the  acid test whether Suhakam has retreated to a narrow restrictive interpretation of its powers or whether it stands firm and square on its statutory remit to protect and promote human rights.  

The three-member Suhakam inquiry, to be headed by Suhakam Deputy Chairman Tan Sri Harun Hashim together with Prof Mohd Hamdan Adnan and Asiah Abu Samah, is scheduled to begin a three-day hearing into the conditions of the six ISA reformasi activists currently detained at the Kamunting detention camp on Tuesday. 

In my 80-minute meeting  with the Suhakam Chairman, Tan Sri Abu Talib Othman at the Suhakam headquarters in Kuala Lumpur yesterday,  I expressed the general disappointment of the civil society at the narrowing of the scope of the Suhakam  probe into the detention  conditions  of the six  ISA reformasi activists, Mohamad Ezam Mohamad Nor, Hishamuddin Rais, Chua Tian Chang, Saari Sungib, Badrulamin Bahron and Lokman Noor Adam at the Kamunting Detention Camp when the inquiry should deal with the central issue of the human rights violations of their ISA detention.  

Abu Talib held that Suhakam is bound by the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia Act 1999 which defined “human rights” as referring to the fundamental liberties enshrined in Part II of the Federal Constitution, which allowed for preventive detention laws. 

I pointed out Section 4(4) of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia Act 1999 which states that “For the purpose of this Act, regard shall be had to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the extent that it is not inconsistent with the Federal Constitution”, maintaining that while preventive detention laws are  provided for under the Constitution, it does not mean that Suhakam is prohibited from inquiring  into the human rights violations of ISA or from discharging its overarching responsibility to promote and protect human rights in calling for the repeal of the ISA. 

Otherwise, Suhakam would have acted ultra vires when it decided at an emergency meeting on April 11, 2001 that the ISA is a fundamental violation of human rights and called for the immediate release of the reformasi activists detained under the ISA, or  they should be charged and tried publicly for any offences under the law.  

Even the Suhakam statement of May 24 this year, compromising the earlier Suhakam stand calling for the immediate repeal of ISA by expressing the hope for its repeal “in the long term” as a direct result of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, would be ultra vires by such a narrow and restrictive interpretation of the powers and duties of Suhakam. 

Abu Talib said the Harun Hashim Inquiry team was studying into all the legal aspects of this question, and I hope that the Suhakam inquiry beginning in Kamunting on Tuesday would not fail the acid test to stand  firmly and squarely on its overarching responsibility to promote and protect human rights.  

In our discussion, Abu Talib said that when he was Attorney-General for 14 years from 1980 to 1993, his primary concern was on the legality of the government’s actions.  Now that he is the Suhakam Chairman, his primary focus and statutory responsibility must change  – not whether laws and government actions  are legal but whether they run afoul of human rights, as spelt out in the Federal Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. 

A law like the ISA is legal as being provided for by the Constitution but because it so run afoul of all elementary notions of human rights that Suhakam must take  a categorical and unequivocal stand that it should be repealed forthwith.  

The Harun Hashim ISA Inquiry would be judged as to whether Suhakam has retreated to a narrow restrictive interpretation of its powers or whether it stands firm and square on its statutory remit to protect and promote human rights.  

In my discussion with Abu Talib, I asked Suhakam to stick to the April 2001 decision to call for the immediate repeal of ISA as it had been massively abused against legitimate political dissent and to propose an anti-terrorism law instead to deal specifically with terrorism.  

In the past four decades, the massive abuse of the ISA had damaged the civil and political rights of the people of Malaysia, and it had long outlived its original purpose to  deal with the communist armed uprising when it was enacted in 1960.

 

I conceded that after September 11 attacks in the United States, terrorism had become both an international and national problem which must be addressed frontally.

 

However, all elements of the civil society must be involved in the fight against terrorism. It is not a fight to be conducted by the police and army alone. Instead, it must be fought at the political level, at the economic and social level, and at the level of ideas.  But above all, it must be fought in a manner that respects human rights.  

I suggested that  Suhakam convene a conference on “Human Rights and Terrorism” to propose a law on anti-terrorism which would address the problem of terrorism while at the same time ensure that it would not be exploited or abused by the government to launch crackdowns on their political opponents or stifle legitimate dissent.

I also suggested that Suhakam conduct a full  review into the  42-year history  of the ISA, particularly the rampant abuses of fundamental freedoms and the undermining of political dissent through the abuse of  ISA, in line with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established  in South Africa to probe  into the dark days of rampant human rights abuses in the years of apartheid.

(14/6/2002)


*Lim Kit Siang - DAP National Chairman