by Ganesh Sahathevan
FMT of Malaysia has reported:
A royal commission of inquiry must be set up immediately to investigate allegations levelled at Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission chief commissioner Azam Baki, the Bar Council said today.
It said the royal commission should be set up “without delay” and tasked to investigate the serious accusations against Azam as the MACC’s Anti-Corruption Advisory Board had failed to do so.
Meanwhile the Bar Council and it's president at the relevant time, YA Tuan George Varughese, have maintained silence about their business with Australia's College Of Law.
TO BE READ WITH
by Ganesh Sahathevan
Judicial Commissioner George Varughese continues to maintain his silence with regards his dealings with Australia's College Of Law, whose JV with the Bar Council Malaysia, entered into during Varughese's tenure as Bar Council president , has raised a number of issues that demand answers.
TO BE READ WITH
realpolitikasia
Sunday, June 21, 2020
(Click to enlarge)
It has been previously reported here that The Bar Council -College Of Law LLM lacked a physical presence which in turn raised tax and MIDA regulatory issues. The nature of the College's operations worldwide can now be shown in the diagram above , which is located at the this link on the College's website: https://www.collaw.edu.au/-/media/col/au_files/downloads-and-forms/about/corporate-governance/college-of-law-corporate-and-academic-committee-structure-as-june-2019.pdf
(See diagram above-click to enlarge).
The College Of Law-Bar Council JV was entered into when YA George Varghese (photo above) was chairman of the Bar Council . He refused to answer queries about the JV and about claims made by the College about its contributions to legal education in Malaysia, going back to the 1980s. Those claims have been refuted by UiTM, and the Federal Court Registry.
TO BE READ WITH
Bar Council education ‘JV’ must be clarified
KUALA LUMPUR, July 19 – The Malaysian Bar Council launched its first education venture, a LLM in Malaysian Legal Practise (LLM), last year in collaboration with the College Of Law Australia.
The LLM does not seem to have the approval of Malaysia’s Legal Professional Qualifying Board (LPQB) but the website for the course, which is hosted in Australia, prominently displays the Bar Council crest.
The crest has not been used before to promote a course of study, and queries put to Bar Council President Fareed Gafoor about the use of the crest have been acknowledged but remain unanswered.
NMT has however sighted an email from Fareed dated Friday, May 24, 2019 with regards the LLM and the use of the crest where he states:
Dear Rajen,
We can’t remain silent on this.
Abdul Fareed Bin Abdul Gafoor
Sent from my iPad
It is understood that “Rajen” refers to Rajen Devaraj, Chief Executive Officer of the Bar Council Secretariat in Kuala Lumpur.
The Bar has remained silent for nearly 2 months since.
Key person suddenly retired during extensive query
The College of Law used to be represented in Malaysia by its Director, Peter Tritt. Tritt have been queried extensively about the LLM and about the College’s business in Malaysia but has refused to provide answers. Tritt has been based in Kuala Lumpur since 2017 but announced on Friday that he had “retired” from the College on 30 June 2019.
It is understood that Tritt has forwarded queries sent him to his head office in Sydney and hence it appears that Tritt is under orders from his Chief Executive, Neville Carter, to remain silent.
Questionable advertising claims?
In advertising on the College’s website Carter has claimed that he had established a Professional Legal Training course for Malaysian Law students seeking admission to practise in Malaysia. There seems to be no evidence of such a course, or of any national level training course for the existing Certificate of Legal Practise.
Carter has also claimed to have produced the “inaugural” Handbook in Legal Practise for Malaysia, in the late 80s. A search of the main law libraries in Malaysia directed by the Chief Registrar, Federal Court Malaysia, has not found any such handbook.
He has also claimed to have, during that time to have identified and addressed “gaps” in Malaysian legal practise, but not even those in practice during that period and since have ever heard of him. Nor are senior practitioners aware of “gaps” that needed that to be addressed by external consultants.
As CEO of the College Carter has ultimate responsibility for the College’s Malaysian operation headed by Tritt and variously named the “College Of Law Asia Pacific” and the “College Of Law Asia”. A search by NMT has not revealed any entities registered under those names in Malaysia or in Australia, not even a foreign entities registered to conduct business in Malaysia.
Meanwhile the College, in collaboration with the Bar Council continues to sell its LLM and other courses in Malaysia, deriving a fee income from Malaysian courses.
-NMT
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