logo
At forum, law experts say JAC good for Malaysia, suggest limiting PM's role in judges' selection, appointments

At forum, law experts say JAC good for Malaysia, suggest limiting PM's role in judges' selection, appointments

Malay Mail10-05-2025
KUALA LUMPUR, May 10 — The Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) — a panel which filters candidates to be judges based on their merits, ability and integrity — was a good step forward for the selection of judges in Malaysia, legal experts told a forum organised by the Malaysian Bar today.
In calling for the JAC to be retained and further improved, the law experts even discussed suggestions such as amending the Federal Constitution to include and enhance the JAC's position, and limiting the prime minister's role in the judicial appointment process.
Currently, there is a two-stage process in Malaysia for the selection and appointment of judges.
The JAC first vets through potential candidates to make sure they are qualified and suitable and then votes on these candidates, before recommending the selected candidates to the prime minister.
If the prime minister accepts these recommended names, the prime minister then gives advice to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong for these candidates to be either appointed or promoted as judges. The Agong makes the appointment after consulting the Conference of Rulers.
But the prime minister can ask for the JAC to provide other recommended names if he does not accept the candidates given, before he eventually gives advice to the King for judges to be appointed.
Emeritus Prof Datuk Shad Saleem Faruqi, who was formerly a JAC member, said the JAC should continue to exist and suggested that the prime minister's role be limited to just a formal role during the process of appointing judges.
'I personally support the existence of the JAC, though I recognise there is need for some reforms, especially on the issue of whether the recommendations of the JAC should be binding on the prime minister,' the holder of Universiti Malaya's Tunku Abdul Rahman chair said as a speaker at the forum.
'I think the prime minister and the Conference of Rulers, their role should be a formal role whereby the names are sent and there's some consultation.
'For example, the prime minister sends the name to the King, the King is required to consult with the Conference of Rulers. 'Consult' is not the same thing as 'consent', but consultation is useful because some facts might come out,' he said, noting that there was previously a Conference of Rulers meeting many years ago when a judge who was to be promoted was discovered to have had more than 30 unwritten judgments.
'I think consultation is good, but ultimately the recommendation of the JAC should be binding,' he said, adding that the prime minister, Agong and the Conference of Rulers should continue to play a role in the process of appointing judges.
Co-chairperson of Bar Council Civil Law and Law Reform Committee Datuk Seri M. Ramachelvam addresses the floor during the Judicial Independence in Malaysia Forum in Kuala Lumpur May 10, 2025. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin
Fellow forum speaker Datuk Seri M. Ramachelvam, who is co-chair of the Bar Council's Civil Law and Law Reform Committee, said the introduction of the JAC has improved the process of how judges are appointed in Malaysia and that the law should be amended so that the prime minister is bound to follow the JAC's recommendations.
He said many other Commonwealth countries had also introduced a JAC, but they have not removed the formal role of the prime minister in the process of appointing judges.
He also said the recommended model clause in the Commonwealth is for the JAC's recommendations to be binding on the prime minister, while also maintaining the formality of sending the recommendations to the prime minister.
Lawyer Alex De Silva, who proposed the motion adopted by the Malaysian Bar as a resolution in March this year to defend the judiciary's independence and who was also a speaker at the forum, said the formation of the JAC in Malaysia in 2009 'was a good thing' and that it had brought 'much needed reform'.
'I think one thing we cannot run away from, as much as we say we want to remove or lessen the role played by the prime minister, you cannot run away from the fact that in most jurisdictions, even if we go to UK, the prime minister is involved,' he said, adding: 'The only way we can do it is perhaps lessen his role, but we cannot remove him from the process.'
International Islamic Universiti Malaysia Lecturer Associate Prof Datuk Shamrahayu Ab Aziz speaks during the Judicial Independence in Malaysia Forum in Kuala Lumpur May 10, 2025. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin
Datuk Shamrahayu Ab Aziz, who was also a former JAC member, said at the forum: 'I believe by having JAC, we are in the right direction.'
Shamrahayu, associate professor and lecturer at International Islamic University Malaysia, said it 'may not be possible' in both Malaysia and other countries to totally remove the participation of the government's executive branch, but said there could instead be 'certain limitation' on the prime minister's role instead in the process of appointing judges.
She said there must be mechanisms to ensure the executive's involvement in the process was a 'controlled one' and that the executive is not given total discretion.
Proposing that JAC's role be inserted into the Federal Constitution, she said Malaysia should also consider giving JAC members security of tenure so that the 'JAC will also give their recommendations to the prime minister without fear or favour'.
She said the criteria of those to be selected as JAC members should also be further discussed.
These legal experts were all speakers in two separate panels at the Malaysian Bar's forum titled 'Judicial Independence in Malaysia: Past Lessons, Current Challenges'.
Other panellists at the forum were former JAC member and retired Court of Appeal judge Datuk Mah Weng Kwai and lawyer Mohamed Haniff Khatri Abdulla.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

71 rat trails in Sarawak bordering Kalimantan found, says home minister
71 rat trails in Sarawak bordering Kalimantan found, says home minister

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

71 rat trails in Sarawak bordering Kalimantan found, says home minister

Home minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said the government has approved RM28 million to develop seven more security posts along the Sarawak-Kalimantan border, including in hotspots in Lubok Antu and Ba'kelalan. (Bernama pic) KUALA LUMPUR : The home ministry has identified 71 illegal routes and smuggling trails along Sarawak's border with Kalimantan, said its minister, Saifuddin Nasution Ismail. Saifuddin said the government has approved RM28 million to develop seven additional security posts, including in hotspots in Lubok Antu and Ba'kelalan. Winding up the debate on the 13th Malaysia Plan for his ministry in the Dewan Rakyat today, he said an additional RM64 million had been allocated for 22 projects along the border, covering both physical and non-physical projects involving the police, the immigration department and border agencies. He also said another 390 senior and lower-ranking police officers would be stationed to protect the border. Illegal gambling centres disguised as coffee shops Saifuddin also addressed the increase in illegal gambling operations, often disguised as coffee shops, in Sarawak. He said the authorities carried out 509 raids across Sarawak, resulting in 535 arrests, from January to July. 'We will continue to take action including under the Anti-Money Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001, and the Prevention of Crime Act 1959. 'We also cooperate with the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission and Sarawak Energy Bhd when we cut power and water supply to them. We will review the laws to see if they need to be strengthened. 'We can take down their websites in split seconds, but they can immediately create mirror websites,' he said.

Differentiate between right and wrong, Sarawak DAP Youth tells ‘peacemakers'
Differentiate between right and wrong, Sarawak DAP Youth tells ‘peacemakers'

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Differentiate between right and wrong, Sarawak DAP Youth tells ‘peacemakers'

Sarawak DAP Youth said it had raised concerns and upheld justice in the matter of the upside-down Jalur Gemilang. PETALING JAYA : Sarawak DAP Youth today urged those attempting to play the peacemaker in DAP's spat with Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh over the upside-down Jalur Gemilang gaffe to differentiate between right and wrong. In a statement, it said Akmal had continuously gone overboard, without basis, while the party, on the other hand, had raised concerns and upheld justice. 'To label both parties as culprits is wrong,' it said. The wing gave the example of a situation involving an arsonist and a person who lodged a report against him, only to be accused of sowing hatred, saying this would be unreasonable. 'It is therefore unfair to lump Akmal and DAP Youth together,' it said. While Sarawak DAP Youth did not identify anyone in particular, its statement came two days after a DAP central executive committee member urged parties not to be distracted by the tiff over the upside-down Jalur Gemilang but to focus on more pressing matters instead. Banting assemblyman V Papparaidu said that parties in the government, even Umno, were no longer in the opposition and should focus on economic growth and other national matters. He added that friction in the unity coalition would not augur well with the Sabah state election just around the corner and the next general election not too far away. Papparaidu also said that 'no one should attempt to seek cheap publicity by highlighting the flag issue'. Akmal is under investigation for sedition and criminal intimidation over a video he posted related to the shop owner in Penang who accidentally hung the Jalur Gemilang upside down. Several DAP Youth chapters have called for the party to sever ties with Akmal, including Sarawak DAP Youth.

Pontian MP calls for cool heads over another upside down flag
Pontian MP calls for cool heads over another upside down flag

Free Malaysia Today

timean hour ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Pontian MP calls for cool heads over another upside down flag

A social media account posted a photo of a three-storey shop building in Pontian, Johor, where the national flag was hung upside down on the second floor next to the state flag, which was correctly displayed. (Facebook pic) PETALING JAYA : Pontian MP Ahmad Maslan has called for calm after another business premises, this time in his constituency in Johor, was seen hanging the Jalur Gemilang upside down. Ahmad, who is also the deputy works minister, said the upside down flag displayed at a dental clinic had been corrected. 'I urge everyone to remain calm. This matter is being addressed, and the authorities are already taking the necessary action,' he said in a Facebook post. He said the business owner and a staff member had given their statements to the police, after several police reports were lodged. He also explained that the staff member had hung the flag upside down by mistake. Ahmad said he has spoken to the president and secretary of the Pontian Municipal Council and the district officer in charge, and that he will be meeting with the district deputy police chief tomorrow to discuss the matter. 'Let us remember that this is not an issue of race. It is a matter of awareness, attentiveness, and patriotism. All communities and all parties must be careful when dealing with sensitive matters, while the authorities must ensure that the law is upheld at all times,' he said. Earlier today, Harian Metro reported that a 33-second video, which had gone viral, had shown the national flag being flown upside down on the second floor of a three-storey shop building, next to the Johor flag, which was correctly displayed. Several members of the public and policemen were also seen in front of the building. Pontian deputy police chief Abd Hamid Abdul Rahaman confirmed in a statement that an investigation had been launched. Last week, the Attorney-General's Chambers reminded the public not to take matters into their own hands in instances of protocol breaches regarding the Jalur Gemilang. The AGC's statement was issued after more than 200 people led by Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh gathered near a hardware shop in Kepala Batas, Penang, after its owner was investigated for hanging the Jalur Gemilang upside down outside his premises. Several other cases involving the incorrect display of the Jalur Gemilang also made the headlines, including one involving a school in Port Dickson, Negeri Sembilan, and another where Terengganu Umno Youth had posted on its social media account a graphic of the flag with a mistake.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store