KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 7 — Putrajaya has insisted it will not take action
against Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail despite renewed allegations of
corruption and fabricating evidence made against the country’s top
lawyer.
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri
Aziz said that last year’s decision to close the door on the A-G’s
alleged involvement in Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s 1998 “black eye” case
still stands.
“Same reply, same reply. I replied to (DAP adviser Lim) Kit Siang in Parliament before. The reply is the same,” he told The Malaysian Insider when asked if Putrajaya would act on the latest allegations against Abdul Gani.
When asked to state if the government would take action against Abdul Gani’s accusers, Nazri repeated, “Same reply.”
In Parliament last December 14, the government side-stepped the
damning accusations made by former investigating officer Datuk Mat Zain
Ibrahim that Abdul Gani had falsified documents in the “black eye” case,
brushing aside several open letters and appeals issued by the retired
policeman..
Instead, Nazri had told the House that there was no need for Mat Zain
to complain that the independent panel formed to investigate the
claimed evidence fabrication had failed to clear his name in the
incident.
This, said Nazri, was because Mat Zain had never been the subject of
the panel’s probe and had merely been called forth as a witness to
testify.
“The MACC’s (Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission) advisory board,
though its letter to Datuk Mat Zain on July 23, 2009, had already
stressed that there was no need for the independent panel or the MACC to
clear Mat Zain’s name, seeing as he was not the subject of the
investigation in the first place,” he said.
Nazri also said that the panel had been constitutional, despite Mat
Zain’s claim that the Solicitor-General had no right to appoint the
members.
In his first open letter to Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri
Ismail Omar, Mat Zain had claimed that the right to appoint a tribunal
only lay with the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, based on the prime minister’s
advice.
Despite Nazri’s response, Mat Zain continued his relentless pursuit
to convince the government to charge Abdul Gani in court and, over
recent months, penned more letters to IGP Ismail.
The former senior police officer also went a step further recently by
accusing Putrajaya of admitting to Abdul Gani’s role in allegedly
falsifying evidence when Nazri appeared to back the independent panel’s
findings on the case.
He said with Putrajaya’s endorsement, there was no longer a need to
form a royal commission of inquiry or a tribunal to investigate Abdul
Gani’s involvement.
Mat Zain also claimed that Najib was aware of Abdul Gani’s
involvement as the prime minister had been briefed and was provided
“complete evidence” in October 2008, when he was still the country’s
deputy premier.
Mat Zain said he had briefed Najib at the latter’s Finance Ministry
office in Putrajaya, adding that he had “assumed” the leader would take
appropriate action once he took up the prime minister’s post.
PAS recently stepped into the fray, demanding Putrajaya form a royal
commission of inquiry (RCI) to investigate the numerous allegations of
misconduct against Abdul Gani or prosecute the latter’s accusers for
issuing false accusations.
PAS vice-president Datuk Mahfuz Omar asked why the government and
Abdul Gani had chosen to ignore the allegations, which include several
claims of corruption and evidence fabrication.
Failure to act on the accusations, he added, would only further
tarnish the image, reputation and integrity of the Attorney-General’s
Chambers and the post of the Attorney-General, who serves as the
country’s highest-ranking public prosecutor.
“If the government fails to take any action within an acceptable
timeframe, PAS will initiate a petition calling for the formation of an
RCI and submit it to the Agong,” Mahfuz told a press conference.
The PAS MP had also listed several other accusations against Abdul
Gani such as claims made by blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin that
construction company Ho Hup Bhd paid for renovations to the
Attorney-General’s house; the latter’s purported relationship with
Shahidan Shafie, an alleged proxy to former Malaysia Airlines (MAS)
chairman Tan Sri Tajuddin Ramli; and also his alleged role in the case
of murdered Mongolian model Altantuya Shaaribuu.
Abdul Gani has denied all of Raja Petra’s accusations and had his name cleared by the authorities.
No comments:
Post a Comment