MERDEKA!!

MERDEKA!!

Khamis, 1 November 2007

Ketu Hakim Letak Jawatan


Ketua Hakim Negara Letak Jawatan –Majlis Raja-Raja tidak bincang isu Tun Ahmad Fairuz
Oeh:ANAKomak : www.suaralantangjejaka.blogspot.com
Dipetik dari: www.utusan.com.my

Tandatanya mengenai kedudukan Ketua Hakim Negara Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim,66 kini terjawab.

Presiden Mahkamah Rayuan, Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad akan memangku jawatan Ketua Hakim Negara mulai hari ini sehingga pengisian jawatan dibuat, demikian menurut satu kenyataan dikeluarkan Jabatan Perdana Menteri (JPM) hari ini.

Ini berikutan persaraan Ketua Hakim Negara, Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim semalam.
Ahmad Fairuz, yang genap 66 tahun hari ini, umur persaraan wajib bagi hakim di Malaysia, dilantik memegang jawatan tertinggi dalam sistem kehakiman negara itu pada 17 Mac 2003.

Kedudukan Ketua Hakim Negara, Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim, yang tempoh perkhidmatannya tamat semalam, tidak dibincangkan pada mesyuarat Majlis Raja-Raja ke-212 di sini hari ini.

Jurucakap Penyimpan Mohor Besar Raja-Raja memberitahu bahawa isu itu tidak disentuh, malah tiada dalam agenda mesyuarat itu.
Beliau dilaporkan telah memohon kepada Yang di-Pertuan Agong pada Julai lepas untuk menyambung perkhidmatan selama enam bulan lagi.

Beliau menyertai perkhidmatan undang-undang dan kehakiman pada April 1967 dengan menjadi majistret di Pulau Pinang dan kemudian memegang beberapa jawatan penting seperti Penasihat Undang-undang negeri Kedah/Perlis, Johor dan Selangor, Pesuruhjaya Kehakiman dan Hakim Mahkamah Tinggi.

Ahmad Fairuz dilantik menjadi Hakim Mahkamah Rayuan pada 1995, Hakim Mahkamah Persekutuan pada tahun 2000, Hakim Besar Malaya pada 2001 dan Presiden Mahkamah Rayuan pada 2002.

Mesyuarat Majlis Raja-Raja itu diadakan di Istana Negara dan dipengerusikan oleh Sultan Perak Sultan Azlan Shah.
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin menghadiri mesyuarat itu dengan diiringi Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

Penyimpan Mohor Besar Raja-Raja, Engku Tan Sri Ibrahim Engku Ngah dalam satu kenyataan berkata, mesyuarat itu telah membincangkan perkara berkaitan pertahanan, keselamatan, kedudukan semasa ekonomi negara dan pendidikan.

Pada mesyuarat itu, Yang Dipertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan diwakili Pemangku Tunku Datuk Seri Utama Naquiyuddin Tuanku Ja’afar, Sultan Pahang diwakili Pemangku Raja Tengku Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, Sultan Johor diwakili Tunku Mahkota, Tunku Ibrahim Ismail Sultan Iskandar.
Manakala Sultan Kelantan diwakili Tengku Mahkota Tengku Muhammad Faris Petra Sultan Ismail Petra dan Pemangku Raja Terengganu diwakili Yang Dipertua Majlis Penasihat Pemangku Raja Tengku Baderulzaman Sultan Mahmud.

Satu kenyataan Jabatan Perdana Menteri mengumumkan Presiden Mahkamah Rayuan Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad,65 akan memangku jawatan Ketua Hakim Negara mulai Khamis sehingga pengisian jawatan dibuat.
Sementara itu sumber akhbar melaporkan jurucakap Penyimpan Mohor Besar Raja-Raja memberitahu soal Ahmad Fairuz tidak dibincangkan pada mesyuarat Majlis Raja-Raja ke-212 Khamis.

"Apa yang dilaporkan sebuah akhbar mengenai Raja-Raja akan membincangkan kedudukan Ketua Hakim Negara adalah spekulasi semata-mata," katanya.
Sumber: Bernama

10 ulasan:

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Pak Lah has been derelict in his duty and appears to be incompetent.

Current events in Malaysia speak of a government that is out of control because of Pak Lah's lack of leadership. Each time something of major public concern occurs, he hides behind the scene and lets his ministers or some other person manage the problem.

A good leader will come out in the open and lead from the front not the back.

It is not proper for the government to tell the Bar Council, the country's best legal brains, what to do when its so-called law minister does not even understand the basic notion of natural justice.

The Election Commission is another tool of the government when it is supposed to be fair and neutral. How can it claim to be an election commission when everyone knows that the electoral boundaries are so biased and skewed against democracy? Is it any wonder that the Barisan always wins the elections?

The other crucial factor is the bureaucracy, those public servants who are under the people's payroll.

In Japan, for example, you see this separation of the bureaucrats and the politicians clearly. So no matter who forms the Japanese government, the bureaucracy is able to function effectively and smoothly and in fact there is even a joke that you don't need the politicians to run the country in Japan.

The government is so used to deceit and doublespeak that it is unable to think straight and that is why it is full of contradictions. Take for example, the shameful keris waving matter. Now they are coming out and saying that it will be a permanent part of their political culture.

Western kings and princes have a ceremonial sword as part of their attire but we don't see their politicians waving swords at their political meetings do we?

But in Malaysia, reminiscent of Hitler's Nazi youth groups, can do it and we know the outcome of such behaviour years later.

The country spends untold sums of money on religion, building mosques at taxpayers expense, spending millions and millions on religious schools, yet corruption is so rampant and it affects every echelon of the economy. For years, every Malaysian knows that the traffic police are corrupt. Yet the government has not done anything to stop the corruption.

Let us face it. Call an ace an ace and a spade a spade. The Malaysia government has been in power for too long and lost its moral compass. It is lost in the jungle of greed. The only thing worse than a corrupt government official is the people who support him.

The non-malays know that Pak Lah and his cronies tell them one thing and another to their own people. They are masters of doublespeak and politicians are renowned for speaking with a forked-tongue.

More and more malays now know that only a handful of cronies take the lion's share of the nation's wealth which is meant to be distributed among them more evenly. Mahathir duped them with his plan to establish a few super rich malay tycoons.

The state of the nation is not healthy. Pak Lah's administration has failed the moral test. He himself has failed the test that he established himself. Judged by his own standards and words, he has failed. Tell me the truth, work with me, yak, yak, yak, but what do we get? The opposite! And now that the Bar Council has told him the truth - he scolds them. Shish.

Let us face the truth. Politicians are not royalty born to lead. They are given the chance to lead. Take away Pak Lah's role and what is he? Look at the high and mighty Mahathir. Where is he now?

The Malay Dilemma was a myth created by Mahathir to exploit the psyche of a victim's complex innate in the malays of yesteryears. But cunning Mahathir made it out that the British and the Chinese put the malays at a disadvantage. And after 50 years of Umno rule, what have changed?

Malaysians should not be stupid but angry that their country is being exploited by the people they elected to benefit them. It took a long time to get 5000 people to sign the petition to the King. It should have taken five minutes! Or five days.

But if I announce a free porn video, be sure I will have 500000 people sign up. The young in Malaysia had better wake up and start to do something about their country, about their future.

Don't be fooled by the politicians who say the Chinese are the enemy, the Indians are the enemy, the Malays are the enemy. There is only one enemy. The one who is corrupt. Everyone else is your friend.

Save Malaysia and take part in every activity that you can and vote out the corrupt politicians to make your country a better place.

Remember your future is in your hands and don't blame anyone if you suffer because you made the wrong choice. The last time many of us were fooled - but once bitten, twice shy. Do I need to say more?

Tanpa Nama berkata...

I think if Lee Kuan Yew is given a free reign to govern Malaysia for just a single term, Malaysia will double its GDP, poverty will be cut by 50%, corruption will spiral down and our jail will be filled with Tun, Tan Sri and Datuk.

Of course it is just a dream but what a nightmare Malaysians are now suffering!

Tanpa Nama berkata...

This country has racist laws that discriminate against minority citizens. Over the last 3 decades the discrimination has gotten from bad to worse.

The policies of this government reminds us of South Africa's apartheid days which was condemned by all humanity.

I wonder how these racists can reconcile their actions with the tenets of their religion.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Badawi telling people to speak the truth is like an ugly woman asking her husband to tell her the truth about her looks. Any husband worth his salt would know you are asking for trouble if you listen to her.

And that is the problem, Badawi is not only similarly inconsistent, he is behaving similarly womanly, indulgent, poor in leadership, spoilt by the comforts of establish rule and structure, and still wanting more but not willing to pay the price, yet still think other people should do more and owe them more, i.e. entitlement.

It is given Badawi is not the leader to oversee great changes but rather a caretaker. The best Malaysians can hope for is that he does not mess things up worst than his predecessor would have.

And there is one danger that he will leave a legacy that could be abused worst than his predecessor by sheer inertia. By entrenching the elected Sultanate system, he puts in danger the possibility of abuse by the truly ambitious. All it takes is someone mediocre but more ambitious and we would end up a basket case.

Everything else that Badawi does is irrelevant whether good or not.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Merdeka Day is a day of shame especially on this 50th Merdeka Day. On this day you have to compare how a successful country like Singapore has done everything right and why Malaysia has done everything wrong.

On this day you will wonder why are we not better off if we are still under the British, I can assure you - we do not fall into what we are today. On this day everyone especially Sabah and Sarawak should be reminded that they should not join Malaysia in the first place.

If you ask me how great are the Umno. I would say they are shameless people just like some Ang Mok who drop their pants for all to see.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

I think most of us Malaysians know the country is rotting to its core for the last few decades. It only takes a Michael Backman to confirm it.

Such a pity this country could have been a 1st world country like Singapore but had to be misgoverned by a bunch of crooks using misguided policies for their own ends.

It looks like the country hasn't reach rock bottom yet and it is going to get a lot worse before it get any better.

Local companies are moving away, rich peoples are moving their money elsewhere and the country's top brains are simply draining away. Our leaders are still happily plundering the country's wealth regardless of everything else.

Our future is bleak, very bleak indeed.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Malaysia is slowly and surely turning into a very sick place. We must finish off Umno and its cronies to cure the country from this acute sickness.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Malays have done wonders in terms of denying truth, while doing so, through policies of government raked in ill wealth for years. Malays are rich, I mean really rich.

Malays had certain qualities that other races in this country do not, but I must emphasise "had". Qualities such as "speaking less", contended, know how to read and understand the holy Quran (I know that nowadays Muslim kids spent 10 years of religious classes in school and end up not knowing).

But all done and said, the day malays deny their past, is the beginning of their end. Malays were Hindus once, as was the whole South East Asia, later some South East Asia went for Buddhism while the others went for Islam.

Who taught South East Asia races to plant paddy in a systematic manner? Who taught South East Asia races language skills, reading and writing?

The very essence of everything that South East Asia races are based on till today was taught by Tamils. Don't you guys notice that South East Asia races have similar writing codes, that are because it is based on Tamil. It even sounds like Tamil.

For peninsula: Tamils called the local inhabitants as "malai allu", basically means "people who dwell in the hills", this would mean Orang Asli, for they dwell in the hills, what is known as malays today was non-existent.

As malays are well known to do, they incorporated this term "malai" whence they started to land in the peninsula from Nusantara, and claimed the term "malai" as their own. This race has this peculiar trait of claiming that which is not theirs.

Deny this, and you deny your past, anyone who denies his past, denies his future. Malays……….be my guest.

Guess who is the master race? The master race doesn't doing some weird policy (NEP), or go around brandishing some knife, which if you really put some thinking into it, put the race on a sure path to beggary.

The reason why I commented as above is because I want malays to know that they are not tuan punya tanah.

For myself, as a Tamil, I will state what my forbearers have done centuries before, the truth is, no one owns this land, this land is owned only by - the one and only one - God.

This soil needs administration, not ownership. Accept that.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

Sad to say without the Chinese and other non-malay races in Malaysia and Indonesia, the region will be the backwater of Southeast Asia.

The malays cannot stand on their own feet. Just compare the GDP contribution of non-malays present and past against the malays.

Sadly, the most Middle Eastern civilization are Islamic based on their God Allah and they are a failure compared to Western civilization based on human ideology. This is partially why Malaysia 'tak boleh maju', as its policies are based on religion and race.

Oh wait, to that malay who says 'majority is always right'. Certainly, you still have a long way to go. You are not 'sons of the soil'. The Orang Asli, not the malays, are the rightful owner of Malaysia.

You guys stole the land from them, just like your Arab brothers who tried to force their religion on others by military conquest in hopes of dying for your God and copulate with the 72 virgins in Muslim paradise! Cheers.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

The major barrier to Malaysians becoming competitive is our ineffective and outmoded education system.

Malaysians are fully aware of this, and those who can have already abandoned it. This includes our own minister of education! Witness the steady stream every school day morning of our young heading to Singapore for their education.

The glaring deficit of our leadership is lack of execution. Your answer to every problem is to form a committee. Punting problems onto committees reflects shallow executive talent. Not paying attention to execution is the bane of many leaders. All your wise policies would be meaningless if their execution is wanting.

Make Malaysia and Malaysians competitive; that would be a legacy more enduring and worth striving for.

All these aspirations would be for naught if Malaysians were divided. I am distressed at the deepening polarization of Malaysians and the increasing fragmentation of Malaysians.

The solution lies not in emphasizing but celebrating our differences; not in minimizing but sharing our commonalities. You must blunt those elements that would drive a wedge between Malaysians, and nurture those that would bring us together.

Malay leaders are again selling to their followers a bill of goods with the doctrine of Ketuanan Melayu (malay hegemony). These leaders delude themselves and the masses into thinking that we malays have been anointed Tuan (master) of Malaysia, with all the implied glories and privileges.

Both the premise and promise of Ketuanan Melayu are false. The sooner malays grasp this stark reality, the better it is for us and for all Malaysians, as well as for the nation. In this competitive world, you work to be a master; you must earn it!

In feudal societies, whether you are fated to be master or servant is determined at birth by your heritage. Malaysia has long passed that stage although many are still entrapped in the feudal mindset.

The sure path to uniting Malaysians is not through culture, education, language, politics, or religion but economics, specifically through the wonders of the marketplace.

Embrace free enterprise, and encourage the market exchange of goods and services among Malaysians, and between Malaysians and the world.

Once Malaysians view each other less as malays and non-malays but more as potential clients, customers and partners, national unity and prosperity would be enhanced. Likewise when we view foreigners in those terms, Malaysians would be contributing their share towards world peace and prosperity.

Build on our own legacy, and if you are successful, the excesses of you predecessor will become obvious through comparison. Create your legacy in your own style. There is no need to blow out someone else's candle in order to make yours shine brighter.