The church's counsel, Benjamin Dawson confirmed that the review application was filed about 3pm today, at the Federal Court registry in Putrajaya.
He explained that the review application was based on three broad grounds.
The first ground was that there were certain legal issues which were central to the leave application but were not considered by the majority judgment of the Federal Court, such as on the constitutional questions relating to the scope of Article 3 and Article 11 of the Federal Constitution, Dawson told Bernama when contacted.
He said the church further contended that there was also the fact the home minister's decision to prohibit the use of the word, Allah, in Herald had also taken into account a theological consideration.
Dawson said the second ground for the review was that the Federal Court's majority judgment had decided on certain legal issues which were not argued nor raised by the parties before the Federal Court or the Court of Appeal, such as on the constitutional validity of Section 9 of the Anti-Propagation Enactment.
"The third ground is that the Herald's case is one of the most important constitutional cases to have come before our court, particularly where minority rights are concerned," he said.
He added there existed a public interest factor to support the review application.
On June 23, this year, the seven-member Federal Court panel chaired by Chief Justice Tun Arifin Zakaria, had in a majority judgment dismissed the Catholic Church's application for leave to appeal.
The church is seeking leave to appeal against the Court of Appeal's decision delivered on October 14, last year which allowed the government's appeal to overturn the 2009 High Court's decision that Herald could use the word Allah.
On December 31, 2009, the High Court declared that the decision by the home ministry in banning Herald from using the word Allah, was illegal, null and void.
The Roman Catholic Church, led by Kuala Lumpur Archdiocese Archbishop Emeritus Murphy Pakiam filed a judicial review application in 2009, naming the home ministry and the government as respondents, seeking, among others, a declaration that the ministry's decision to prohibit the use of the word Allah in the Herald publication was illegal. – Bernama
- TMI
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