Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng has filed a RM15 million defamation
suit against two mainstream newspapers and Pertubuhan Pribumi Perkasa
(Perkasa) leaders over “false reports” that he had leaked national
secrets to Singapore’s PAP leaders.
In his statement of claim, Lim said that New Straits Times and Utusan Malaysia
had reported on the allegations “without first verifying the facts and
truth of the statements issued” by Perkasa’s information officer Ruslan
Kassim.
“I’m not a federal minister, how would I know national
secrets? It’s a serious claim and it carries an extremely heavy
penalty,” Lim told reporters at a press conference at the Parliament
lobby.
In the particulars of the malice intended, Lim said that
the defamatory allegation was part of an “obvious agenda” to help BN
recapture power in Penang, which it had lost in the 2008 general
election.
He noted that that Umno, the leading component party
in BN, has a “substantial shareholding” in both the dailies through
Media Prima Sdn Bhd and was therefore able to “politically manipulate
news items for its benefit”.
“Bearing in mind the fact that the
plaintiff (Lim), as the chief minister of Penang, commands a high degree
of respect due to his government’s performance during his term as chief
minister, it has become imperative for the BN coalition to do all it
can to tarnish the plaintiff’s good name in the hope this will entice
voters to vote the plaintiff out of office in the next general
election,” read the suit.
Lim added that Umno “utilises” its control over the dailies to “propagate” false news against him and Pakatan Rakyat.
The Bagan MP named NST and its group editor Syed Nadzri Syed Harun, Utusan Malaysia and its group editor-in-chief Abdul Aziz Ishak as well as Ruslan and Perkasa president Ibrahim Ali as defendants.
Apology sought on front pages
Lim
is claiming RM15 million in general, exemplary, aggravated and special
damages as well as an apology in the manner and form approved by him
published on the front pages of both NST and Utusan.
He
is also seeking for an undertaking from the newspapers that they would
not publish similar “defamatory” statements against him, interest, costs
and further relief to be decided by the court.
The dailies’ Sunday editions - New Sunday Times, Mingguan Malaysia as well as Berita Minggu
- had carried the allegedly slanderous report on Oct 2 last year which
quoted Ruslan as saying that Lim and business personalities Mohamed
Azman Yahya and Kalimullah Hassan had leaked national secrets during a
dinner in Singapore.
The newspapers had however apologised to
Kalimullah and Azman on Oct 23 last year and acknowledged that Ruslan’s
claim was without any foundation or basis.
“They completely
forgot about me. It is not true that I met with Singapore leaders, I
have only had dinners with Singapore businessmen,” he insisted.
Lim’s
lawyer Americk Sidhu, who was present today, said that the newspaper
failed to do the same for Lim, as they refused to accede to the latter’s
request and negotiations had broken down.
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