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Friday, June 17, 2022

Bar Council to take legal action after cops stop 'Walk for Justice'

 


The Malaysian Bar is gathering evidence for a legal challenge after police blocked hundreds of lawyers at Padang Merbok earlier today from proceeding with a planned 'Walk for Justice' to Parliament.

Bar Council president Karen Cheah said the evidence-gathering process to determine their next course of action will involve viewing footage from the ground as well as interviews with witnesses among lawyers present for the march.

"We will not sit down quietly. We are definitely taking it to court," said Cheah during a press conference at the Bar Council this afternoon, several hours after the cancelled march.

"I think the police have failed in their duty to facilitate the walk. Police were very high-handed in their actions," she said, citing the presence of riot police on the scene.

Cheah stressed that police failed in their statutory duties to facilitate the march, as well as possibly committing an unconstitutional act by restricting their rights to freedom of assembly.

"The Peaceful Assembly Act 2012 (PAA) has been around for 10 years but yet the police have not appreciated the fact there is no police permit needed," she said.

Cheah said the Bar Council, as organisers of the march, had fulfilled all conditions under the PAA, including notifying the police within a stipulated time.

Bar Council president Karen Cheah

On the other hand, she said the police failed to respond within three days as stated in the act, only informing organisers through a letter received yesterday.

"If we were to follow the PAA, if the police do not come back within three days with any conditions, we (organisers) are entitled to go ahead as if no conditions have been imposed," she said.

Negotiations with police

Cheah said police officers involved in two failed negotiations with organisers at Padang Merbok only cited "safety" concerns with no further reasons given to stop their walk.

"I don't know the safety of what, safety for whom," she added.

She confirmed that organisers turned down an "offer" from the police for up to 20 lawyers to march to Parliament, as all who gathered had expressed their intentions to walk.

Earlier, Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Parliament and Law) Mas Ermieyati Samsudin, who was initially expected to receive a memorandum from the Bar Council at Parliament, instead came to the scene and met with the lawyers.

The walk was in response to MACC’s investigation against Court of Appeal judge Mohd Nazlan Mohd Ghazali after a politically linked blog claimed he had unexplained wealth.

The judge, who previously convicted former prime minister Najib Abdul Razak over the RM42 million SRC International corruption case, has lodged a police report denying the allegation. - Mkini

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