Malaysia

Bar hails walk as success after deputy minister accepts memo

They will look into whether authorities violated marchers’ constitutional rights, says veep

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 17 Jun 2022 9:40AM

Bar hails walk as success after deputy minister accepts memo
Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law) Datuk Mas Ermieyati (left) after receiving the memorandum from Bar Council president Karen Cheah. – SYEDA IMRAN/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022

by The Vibes Team

KUALA LUMPUR – At least 1,000 lawyers and like-minded individuals are expected to converge at the Padang Merbok car park this morning as part of the Malaysian Bar’s Walk for Judicial Independence.

However, not all participants of the walk, organised in protest of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission’s (MACC) probe into senior judge Datuk Mohd Nazlan Mohd Ghazali, would be allowed to make the 2.5km march to the Parliament.

The Bar had initially planned to march to the entrance of the Parliament building and hand over a memorandum to the government venting their grouses on the MACC’s actions, which they claimed to have threatened the independence of the judiciary.

Dang Wangi police chief Noor Dellhan Yahaya previously explained to The Vibes that police would only allow a small group of participants to make their way towards Parliament for the memorandum handover.

He cited “security factors” as the reason behind their decision to bar the entire group from marching to the administrative building.

The Vibes’ team on the ground will be providing chronological updates live from the capital. – The Vibes, June 17, 2022

11.23am: The crowd of lawyers in Kuala Lumpur disperses peacefully.

Speaking to The Vibes at the end of the rally, Bar Council vice-president Mohamad Ezri Abdul Wahab said the gathering can be considered a success.

“We would have liked to walk and present it (the memorandum) to Parliament, but things happened,” he said, referring to the police barricade that prevented the group from marching.

On whether the authorities had violated constitutional rights, Ezri said the Bar will look into the matter and go over facts as well as video evidence.

“If there is a course of action, we will most probably discuss how to go about it.”

Datuk Mas Ermieyati (left) receives the memorandum from Bar Council president Karen Cheah. – EMMANUEL SANTA MARIA/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022
Datuk Mas Ermieyati (left) receives the memorandum from Bar Council president Karen Cheah. – EMMANUEL SANTA MARIA/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022

11.16am: Mas Ermieyati arrives and receives a memorandum from Bar Council president Karen Cheah.

In accepting the memorandum, Mas Ermieyati apologised to rally participants for any inconvenience caused during their peaceful march today. 

She also promised to submit the memorandum to both Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob and Law Minister Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar. 

“May justice for our country’s judiciary continue to be upheld,” she said to cheers from the gathering crowd.

11.00am: At the Kuala Lumpur march, a lawyer announces on the PA system that Datuk Mas Ermieyati Samsudin is on her way to Padang Merbok. The crowd begins to sing Rasa Sayang.

In Sabah, some 130 members of the Sabah Law Society reach the Kota Kinabalu Court Complex, 30 minutes after they left the Damai Multipurpose Hall. 

Society president Chin reads his statement, condemning the injustice against members of the judiciary, including the corruption probe into Nazlan.

Police barricade the one-way street out of Padang Merbok leading onto Jalan Parlimen, obstructing several lawyers from continuing. – EMMANUEL SANTA MARIA/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022
Police barricade the one-way street out of Padang Merbok leading onto Jalan Parlimen, obstructing several lawyers from continuing. – EMMANUEL SANTA MARIA/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022

10.45am: Police have barricaded the one-way street out of Padang Merbok leading onto Jalan Parlimen, obstructing several lawyers from continuing.

10.30am: The group in Kuala Lumpur, now 500-strong, attempts to march towards Parliament but are stopped by a police officer.

As Bar leadership negotiate with police, other lawyers can be heard shouting “jalan, jalan!” (walk, walk!).

Lawyers at the Damai Multipurpose Hall in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. The group of around 30 lawyers are expected to start their 2.3km walk at 10.30am. – JASON SANTOS/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022
Lawyers at the Damai Multipurpose Hall in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. The group of around 30 lawyers are expected to start their 2.3km walk at 10.30am. – JASON SANTOS/The Vibes pic, June 17, 2022

10.15am: In Sabah, lawyers have gathered at Kota Kinabalu’s Damai Multipurpose Hall, the starting point of the Judicial Independence Walk at 10am. The group of around 30 lawyers are expected to start their 2.3km walk at 10.30am.

Sabah Law Society president Roger Chin is seen talking with Kota Kinabalu police chief Mohd Zaidi Abdullah, later indicating to reporters the authorities have no issues with the lawyers carrying on with their Judicial Independence Walk. 

There are close to 20 policemen, including plainclothes officers, at the scene.

10.00am: Sg Buloh MP R. Sivarasa, commenting on the sidelines of the walk, said investigations initiated against a sitting judge by the MACC was equivalent to an act of intimidation towards the judiciary.

“We all know justice Datuk Mohd Nazlan Mohd Ghazali has been involved in a very high-profile case involving Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

“So, the MACC’s action in that context is totally unwarranted and is seen as a threat to the judiciary,” he said.

9.35am: Over 75 lawyers have gathered at the parking lot of Padang Merbok for the Malaysian Bar’s Walk for Judicial Independence. Despite police warnings that the entire group will be prohibited from walking to Parliament, it is understood that they intend to proceed with the march. Those seen here include Bar Council president Karen Cheah, Ipoh Barat MP M. Kula, former Bar Council president Ambiga Sreenevasan, and former attorney-general Tommy Thomas.

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