The Attorney General is also the Public Prosecutor. He prosecutes people who have broken the laws of Malaysia.
Now, there is an allegation that Najib Tun Razak may have broken the law - and Najib is the current Prime Minister of Malaysia, the head of the Executive Branch of government.
In this case, the problem arises, when the Public Prosecutor/Attorney General is also the advisor of the government. And, we were told that he had advised that the Prime Minister Najib should not speak about this in Parliament...
Here, there is a conflict - should he who is in charge of Prosecution be also advising the person being investigated? or the Prime Minister or the Government? This is something that we need to seriously consider...and we may need reforms...
In this case, the person being investigated is Najib Tun Razak (not Prime Minister of Malaysia) on, amongst others, possible corruption charges... 1MDB and/or its subsidiaries(or related companies), which are Malaysian government owned companies (or GLCs) - hence the government is being investigated...Should AG Apandi Ali be advising or acting as the government lawyer in such a situation? I am of the opinion that he should not...
In such a situation, I believe it is best that government and/or the Prime Minister engage their own personal lawyer...
In this case, the person being investigated is Najib Tun Razak (not Prime Minister of Malaysia) on, amongst others, possible corruption charges... 1MDB and/or its subsidiaries(or related companies), which are Malaysian government owned companies (or GLCs) - hence the government is being investigated...Should AG Apandi Ali be advising or acting as the government lawyer in such a situation? I am of the opinion that he should not...
Could the Auditor General then take on the role of government advisor, leaving the Attorney General to focus on his prosecutorial duties? Not in this case, as he is auditing 1MDB and related companies.Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak was only acting on the Attorney-General’s (AG) advice in declining explaining personally in Parliament the RM2.6 billion donation he received, Datuk Seri Azalina Othman said today... decision to issue a ministerial statement in their response to questions after AG Tan Sri Apandi Ali said Najib may be risking “subjudice” if he attempted to answer in person with investigations into the surrounding controversy still ongoing....“The AG is the government's lawyer. We are guided by his advice,”...
In such a situation, I believe it is best that government and/or the Prime Minister engage their own personal lawyer...
Azalina: AG reason why PM didn’t explain RM2.6b in person
Thursday December 3, 201502:08 PM GMT+8
KUALA
LUMPUR, Dec 3 ― Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak was only acting
on the Attorney-General’s (AG) advice in declining explaining personally
in Parliament the RM2.6 billion donation he received, Datuk Seri
Azalina Othman said today.
The minister in the Prime Minister’s Department in charge of
parliamentary affairs said the federal government made a collective
decision to issue a ministerial statement in their response to questions
after AG Tan Sri Apandi Ali said Najib may be risking “subjudice” if he
attempted to answer in person with investigations into the surrounding
controversy still ongoing.
“The AG is the government's lawyer. We are guided by his advice,” she told a press conference in the Parliament lobby here.
“The government decided that the best thing to do was to issue a
ministerial statement,” Azalina said, and added that it was to be read
out by Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.
Azalina had previously promised to answer all questions surrounding the
RM2.6 billion donation controversy in “one go,” saying it will do so
today, the final day of the current Dewan Rakyat session.
In a written reply earlier today, Ahmad Zahid said the identity of the
donor behind the RM2.6 billion deposited into Najib's private bank
accounts cannot be revealed as the case is still being investigated by
Malaysian authorities.
The RM2.6 billion figure first surfaced through a US-based paper Wall
Street Journal’s report about 1 Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) in
July on the purported discovery by government investigators of a money
trail of that amount ending in Najib’s accounts.
Najib has said that he has not taken public funds for personal gain,
but the RM2.6 billion controversy has remained the centre of media and
public attention.
The RM2.6 billion was later declared to be a donation by the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) from Middle Eastern donors whose
identities were not revealed, however.
The MACC is to record Najib’s statement in connection with its
investigation on 1MDB and its former subsidiary, SRC International
today, international news wire Reuters reported this morning, citing an
unnamed source. - Malay Mail, 3/12/2015
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