Malaysia Today
Sultan Azlan Shah speaks out    
 
 The Sun
 
 A quick-take on what Perak's Sultan Azlan Shah, a former Lord President, has 
to say about the Judiciary today:
 
 Recently, there have been even more disturbing events relating to the 
judiciary reported in the press. 
 
 I found it necessary to speak at some length on matters (regarding judiciary) 
because it is my earnest hope that the Malaysian judiciary will regain the 
public’s confidence and it will once again be held in the high esteem as it 
once was held. 
 
 A judiciary loses its value and service to the community if there is no public 
confidence in its decision-making. 
 
 It is of the essence of a judge’s character that he must be a person of 
unquestionable integrity who brings an unbiased mind to his task. Like Caesar’s 
wife. He should be above suspicion. 
 
 There is no reason why judges with the assured security of tenure they enjoy 
under the Constitution should not discharge their duties impartially, 
confidently and competently.
 
 Judges must piously resist the lure of socialising with business personages 
and other well-connected people.They may discover at their peril that they have 
compromised themselves in the cases that come before them with the unedifying 
of recusal application. 
 
 Judging in a diverse society is not an easy task. Judges in many parts of the 
world face similar difficulties … Judges in Malaysia must be ever mindful that 
they are appointed judges for all Malaysians. 
 
 The inevitable consequence of incompetence is delayed judgments and backlog in 
cases would lead to all round of dissatisfaction … Surely, such a situation 
cannot be tolerated in any progressive nation.
 
 About lawyers today:
 
 The Bar and its leadership must ensure there is a high standard of integrity 
and ethics among its members. A Bar that is riddled with bad practices cannot 
assist the administration of justice. 
 
 Judges are supposed to be no respecters of persons who appear before them. 
This rule applies not only to litigants but also to lawyers. It’s not just a 
matter of prudence and good practice, but fundamentally one of ethics. 
 
 There have been allegations against some lawyers that in clear dereliction of 
their responsibilities, they have either misled the courts, or attempted to 
choose the judges or courts for their cases to be heard so as to obtain a 
favourable decision in their client’s favour. This is a serious interference 
with the administration of justice and the process of the court.
 
 Here is the full text of Sultan Azlan Shah's opening address at the 14th 
Malaysian Law Conference taken from the Bar Council website 
(www.malsyhaianbar.org.my):
 
 "50 Years of Constitutionalism and the Rule of Law"
 
 Assalamaualaikum Warahmatullahi Wabarakatuh. 
 Salam Sejahtera. 
 Bismillahi Rahmanir Rahim. 
 
 This year marks the 50th year of our nation’s Independence. It is also the 
50th year of our Merdeka Constitution.
 
 Malaysia and its people have every reason to celebrate this joyous occasion as 
the country prospers as a constitutional democracy with a constitutional 
monarchy in the form as established by the Merdeka Constitution in 1957.
 
 Not all countries that achieved their freedom at the end of the colonial 
period are today able to celebrate their independence with pride. Some are 
under military rule, whilst others have had their institutions undermined or 
even abolished.
 
 The 50th anniversary of our independence is therefore an appropriate moment 
for all of us to reflect upon the strength of our constitutional system. As we 
rejoice in our success, It is important to be alert to the pitfalls of failure 
if proper regard is not given to our constitutional mechanisms.
 
 We must ever be mindful that written constitutions are mere parchment pieces.
 
 It is important that there must be, in the hearts and minds of those who are 
entrusted to administer and uphold the constitution, a belief in the values and 
principles that animate the august document.
 
 I had occasion to observe when sitting in the Federal Court in 1977 that the 
"constitution is not a mere collection of pious platitudes". I spoke then of 
the 3 essential features of our constitution. I said: 
 
 "It is the supreme law of the land embodying three basic concepts: One of them 
is that the individual has certain fundamental rights upon which not even the 
power of the state may encroach. 
 
 The second is the distribution of sovereign power between the states and the 
federation,…
 
 The third is that no single man or body shall exercise complete sovereign 
power, but that it shall be distributed among the executive, legislative and 
judicial branches of government, compendiously expressed in modern terms that 
we are a government of laws, not of men."
 
 The prescription that "we are a government of laws, not of men" describes the 
basic principle that runs through our entire constitution-the principle of the 
Rule of Law.
 
 The Rule of Law is the defining feature of democratic government. In 
delivering the eleventh Tunku Abdul Rahman lecture in November 1984, I again 
defined it as follows:
 
 "The Rule of Law means literally what it says: The Rule of the law. Taken in 
its broadest sense this means that people should obey the law and be ruled by 
it.
 
 But in political and legal theory it has come to be read in a narrow sense, 
that the government shall be ruled by law and be subject to it.
 
 The ideal of the Rule of Law in this sense is often expressed by the phrase 
"government by law and not by man""
 
 In a speech delivered in Kuala Lumpur in April 2004, Lord Woolf spoke of the 
‘Rule of Law’,
 
 "The Rule of Law is the rule by the laws that govern a true democracy.
 
 They are the laws that provide for a proper balance between the protection of 
human rights and the interests of the State. Laws which an independent and 
responsible judiciary can enforce to protect all members of society from abuse 
of power."
 
 The reference by Lord Woolf to the role of the judiciary is highly 
significant. I wish to state with all fortitude that without a reputable 
judiciary-a judiciary endowed and equipped with all the attributes of real 
independence-there cannot be the Rule of Law. 
 
 All countries, including those that are totalitarian regimes, have courts. But 
as I observed previously:
 
 "The [mere] existence of courts and judges in every ordered society proves 
nothing; it is their quality, their independence, and their powers that matter."
 
 In matters concerning the judiciary, it is the public perception of the 
judiciary that ultimately matters. A judiciary loses its value and service to 
the community if there is no public confidence in its decision-making.
 
 In this regard the principal quality a judiciary must possess is 
"impartiality". Lord Devlin said of "judicial impartiality" that it exists in 
two senses-the reality of impartiality and the appearance of impartiality. He 
emphasized that the appearance of impartiality was the more important of the 
two.
 
 Impartiality also means that judges are not only free from influence of 
external forces, but also of one another. No judge however senior can dictate 
to his brethren as to how a decision should be arrived at. 
 
 It is of the essence of a judge’s character that he must be a person of 
unquestionable integrity who brings an unbiased mind to his task. Like Caesar’s 
wife, he should be above suspicion.
 
 It is said that public confidence in the judiciary is based on four evaluating 
criteria. They are:
 
 (1) the principle of independence of the judiciary;
 
 (2) the principle of impartiality of adjudication;
 
 (3) the principle of fairness of trial; and
 
 (4) the principle of the integrity of the adjudicator.
 
 How does our judiciary measure today against these criteria?
 
 Sadly I must acknowledge there has been some disquiet about our judiciary over 
the past few years and in the more recent past. In 2004, I had stated that it 
grieved me, having been a member of the judiciary, whenever I heard allegations 
against the judiciary and the erosion of public confidence in the judiciary.
 
 Recently there have been even more disturbing events relating to the judiciary 
reported in the press. We have also witnessed the unprecedented act of a former 
Court of Appeal judge writing in his post-retirement book of erroneous and 
questionable judgements delivered by our higher courts in a chapter under the 
heading "When Justice is Not Administered According to Law". There are other 
serious criticisms.
 
 I am driven nostalgically to look back to a time when our Judiciary was the 
pride of the region, and our neighbours spoke admiringly of our legal system. 
We were then second to none and the judgements of our courts were quoted 
confidently in other common law jurisdictions. As Tun Suffian, a former Lord 
President of the then Federal Court, said of the local judges who took over 
from the expatriate judges after Merdeka that the transformation was without 
"any reduction in standards".
 
 Admittedly society is more complex today and the task of judges may be more 
difficult then what it was before, but the values I speak of are universal and 
eternal.
 
 There is no reason why judges with the assured security of tenure they enjoy 
under the Constitution should not discharge their duties impartially, 
confidently and competently.
 
 Judges are called upon to be both independent and competent. In these days, 
judges must ever be mindful that the loss of independence can come from many 
sources, and not just from the executive. Therefore, judges must piously resist 
the lure of socializing with business personages and other well connected 
people. They may discover at their peril that they have compromised themselves 
in the cases that come before them with the unedifying spectacle of recusal 
applications.
 
 Nothing destroys more the confidence the general public, or the business 
community has in the judiciary than the belief that the judge was biased when 
he decided a case, or that the judge would not be independent where powerful 
individuals or corporations are the litigants before him.
 
 Confidence in the judiciary may also be eroded where the business community 
perceives incompetence in decision-making. A judgement in a banking or 
commercial transaction that is contrary to the established norms or which is 
incomprehensible in its reasoning is bound to give rise to suspicion and loss 
of confidence.
 
 It therefore becomes apparent, that our attempts to establish ourselves as a 
leading financial and commercial center will fail, if we do not have a 
competent judiciary to decide on complex commercial disputes. In this regard, 
it is utmost importance that the foreign investor have faith in the competence 
and integrity of our judiciary.
 
 The international foreign investor also expects a speedy resolution of their 
cases before the courts. Delays cause a loss of profits to the business 
community. In the recent World Bank survey on resolution of commercial 
disputes, Malaysia ranks poorly, 63 amongst 178 economies. A similar report by 
the US State Department warns American businessmen to be wary of the slow 
process of adjudication of cases before the Malaysian courts. This is indeed a 
poor reflection on our courts.
 
 Countries such as Singapore and Hong Kong, who have a similar legal system and 
who share similar laws, and whose judges and lawyers are trained as ours, are 
ranked in these surveys as amongst the best in the world (Hong Kong is placed 
first and Singapore ranks as fourth in the world).
 
 The reason is obvious: these countries have undertaken major reforms in their 
court structure and procedures and have introduced more efficient and 
transparent commercial courts so as to attract the foreign investor.
 
 Maybe it is also time for us to consider such changes in our legal system and 
introduce a strong central commercial court in Putrajaya as in London, with 
especially trained judges who are familiar with the new and ever changing 
commercial laws and their developments, so that we too can become the center 
for the resolution of commercial disputes in the region.
 
 I should point out that mere cosmetic changes alone would not suffice. If we 
wish to achieve this goal, it is imperative that major reforms are introduced. 
Many other countries have taken such steps to establish specialized commercial 
courts. Recently, the Dubai Commercial Court (where one of our own former Chief 
Judge has recently been appointed to sit as a judge in this new court), and the 
Qatar Commercial Court have been established.
 
 I know that judging is an arduous task calling for a good mind and a capacity 
for hard work. The inevitable consequence of incompetence is delayed judgments 
and backlog in cases leading to all round dissatisfaction.
 
 Only last week, I read in a latest Malaysian law report that a case of medical 
negligence involving a death of a lawyer took 23 years to reach the Court of 
Appeal. Similarly there have been reports that some judges have taken years to 
write their grounds of judgements involving accused persons who have been 
convicted and languishing in death row.
 
 Surely, such a situation cannot be tolerated in any progressive nation.
 
 It will also be appropriate for me to say a few words on lawyers.
 
 The administration of justice is not just the role of the judiciary. I had 
said previously in July 1984 on the occasion of a farewell dinner speech to the 
Bar Council on leaving office as the Lord President, that there cannot be an 
independent Judiciary without an independent Bar. I stated further that the 
judiciary cannot function without legal profession.
 
 This symbiosis calls for a proper understanding of the relationship between 
the Bench and the Bar. The Bar and its leadership must ensure there is a high 
standard of integrity and ethics among its members. A Bar that is riddled with 
bad practices cannot assist the administration of justice.
 
 In this respect the relationship between judges and lawyers must be a roper 
and correct one. As I have said earlier, judges are supposed to be no 
respecters of persons who appear before them. This rule applies not only to 
litigants but also to lawyers. It is not just a matter of prudence and good 
practice, but fundamentally one of ethics.
 
 As is often said, there are good lawyers and bad lawyers. Whilst the majority 
of the lawyers discharge their duties as officers of the court with 
professionalism and dedication, there have been cases of some others who have 
brought disrepute to the legal profession. There have been allegations against 
some lawyers that in clear dereliction of their responsibilities, they have 
either misled the courts, or attempted to choose the judges or courts for their 
cases to be heard so as to obtain a favourable decision in their client’s 
favour. This is serious interference with the administration of justice and the 
process of the court.
 
 There is one further important point that I feel compelled to say.
 
 This deals with a judge’s quality in decision-making. We in Malaysia live in a 
multi-cultural and multi-religious society. Our founding fathers accommodated 
this diversity into our Constitution that is reflected in the social contract, 
and saw this diversity as strength.
 
 Judging in a diverse society is not an easy task. Judges in many parts of the 
world face similar difficulties. Those of you who were present at the lecture 
delivered by Justice Albie Sachs at the Second Tun Hussein Onn Lecture last 
week will know how the Constitutional Court of South Africa, as the guardian of 
the constitution, wrestle to arrive at a just decision when dealing with the 
issues relating to diversity or discrimination.
 
 Judges in Malaysia must be ever mindful that they are appointed judges for all 
Malaysians. They must be sensitive to the feelings of all parties, irrespective 
of race, religion or creed, and be careful not to bring a predisposed mind to 
an issue before them that is capable of being misconstrued by the watching 
public or segments of them.
 
 I am reminded of the proud accolade of the late Tun Suffian in his Braddel 
Memorial Lecture in 1982, when speaking of the Malaysian judiciary to a 
Singapore audience he said:
 
 " In a multi-racial and multi religious society like yours and mine, while we 
judges cannot help being Malay or Chinese or Indian; or being Muslim or 
Buddhist or Hindu or whatever, we strive not to be too identified with any 
particular race or religion – so that nobody reading our judgement with our 
name deleted could with confidence identity our race or religion, and so that 
the various communities, especially minority communities, are assured that we 
will not allow their rights to be trampled underfoot."
 
 I have found it necessary to speak at some length on these matters because it 
is my earnest hope that the Malaysian judiciary will regain the public’s 
confidence and it will once again be held in high esteem as it once was held.
 
 In conclusion, I wish to say as I have said on previous occasion ‘in the 
judiciary, people place their trust and hope’.
 
 It now gives me great pleasure in officially declaring open the 14th Malaysian 
Law Conference.
 
 I wish all of you a fruitful and meaning full discussion and exchange of ideas.
 


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