Wednesday, January 18, 2023

"Whale" co-author Bradley Hope describes circumstances in China which suggest the elimination of Jho Low and family would be in China, and perhaps Malaysia's national interest

 by  Ganesh Sahathevan 

                                                         Joh Low claimed he had inherited
                                                         the money stolen from 1MBD



Surin Murgaiah of The Edge has reported, quoting Bradley Hope: 

“What we know from our reporting is that during (Jho Low) began to get closer with the Chinese state intelligence service, especially a man called Sun Lijun.

“In the years afterward, it emerged that [Jho Low) single-handedly negotiated one of the greatest mortgages of sovereignty in the modern age,” he said.

“ (When Najib lost the 2018 election Jho Low)  wasn't useful anymore, but his arrest would be a risk to China's reputation because who knows what (Jho Low] learned over the years working with the intelligence apparatus and any other funny deals he cooked up.

“Meanwhile, [Jho Low's) protectors started getting into serious trouble. Sun Lijun, his patron, was convicted for corruption,” he said.

Hope argued that China is at the point where it could argue that Jho Low and a rogue intelligence agent, Sun, worked for their own corrupt goals and without permission from the Party.

He said the Party, it could argue, has now completed its  investigations and is ready to hand Jho Low over and his assets to Malaysia.

Hope said China is going to want assurances that any besmirching of the Belt and Road Initiative stop (no matter how much the US pushes Malaysia to talk about it), as well as for Jho Low to keep his mouth shut about his spy work and dealings with the rich and powerful in China.

“I would imagine they would want Malaysia to lock him up and keep him far away from any FBI agents still investigating the case.

“Of course, there are many moving parts to this and things I don't know. But I have a feeling, backed up by some murmurs and whispers from connected sources.

“Therefore, I put the odds at 6/10. If you had asked me a year ago, I would have said 1/10,” he said.

Anyone familiar with business in Asia, and especially China and Malaysia would understand when this writer says that given Hope's analysis, it  would be more practical for all concerned to have Jho Low, and his family, assassinated. After all, officially, their whereabouts are supposed to be unknown. Asian and Malaysian business history includes the murder of people who knew less, for example  Jalil Ibrahim. Unlike the Lows, Jalil did not have assets that could be taken over upon death. 


END 

See Also 

5. Abdul Jalil bin Ibrahim, juruadit dari Bank Negara, 1985

Sepertimana yang dinyatakan tadi, anugerah S.P tak semestinya khusus kepada para perajurit berani kita. Kes skandal Bank Bumiputera Finance (BMF) dikesan selepas kematian pegawai juruadit dari Bank Negara bernama Abdul Jalil bin Ibrahim. Wajah dan pengorbanannya haruslah kita ingati sepertimana kita semadikan Tony Stark dalam ingatan millenial.

Selepas beberapa kejadian pelik melibatkan wang negara khususnya berkaitan dengan anak syarikat Bank Bumiputra Malaysia Berhad (BBMB) iaitu Bumiputra Malaysia Finance (BMF) yang dipusatkan di Hong Kong, Abdul Jalil tahu dia perlu hentikan perkara tersebut.

Potret Allahyarham Abdul Jalil bin Ibrahim, ‘whistleblower’ skandal BMF dulu. Via carigold.com

Sebagai anak Melayu yang berjati diri, keengganannya berpihak pada syarikat yang tak berintegriti wajar dipuji. Dia sempat serahkan laporan auditnya ke atas BMF di Hong Kong kepada Bank Negara. Selain itu, dia juga sempat mengarahkan agar pinjaman yang dipinta oleh pihak Carrian Group (lagi satu pihak yang terlibat dalam skandal tersebut) tak diluluskan. Esok harinya, mayatnya ditemui di sebuah kebun pisang dan suspeknya Mak Foon Than ditahan polis. Itupun tak mengaku bahawa dia yang bunuh.

Dikatakan dia dibunuh ketika sedang menulis surat kepada isterinya untuk menjelaskan gangguan ‘orang berpengaruh’ ke atas dirinya. Mayatnya ditemui di sebuah kebun pisang di Hong Kong. Via Mole.my

Hasilnya, pegawai tinggi BBMB berjaya ditahan selepas cubaan mereka untuk terus melesapkan diri tak berjaya. Kes pembunuhan Jalil dianggap oleh media pada masa itu sebagai kes berprofil tinggi sehingga berjaya menekan pihak kerajaan dengan lebih kuat supaya wujudnya siasatan ke atas pengurusan anak syarikat BBMB. Pada 1985, anugerah pingat S.P juga diberikan pada Abdul Jalil secara posthumous.




Sunday, January 8, 2017

Did Singapore let Jho Low's sister Low May Lin escape the country

by Ganesh Sahathevan 



Larry Low and family, including Jho, and their attempts to derail the US DOJ's seizure of "their assets" is revealing a lot.

Of special interest to this writer at this point of time is Larry's eldest daughter, Low May Lin.
It appears that Ms Low might well be the planner of the Low family's complex network of companies;a lawyer who specialises in offshore structures and who was admitted to practise in Singapore and the British Virgin Islands.

Emails to her and one Michael McNeil, who appears to be a husband and/or business partner, to resolve this seeming discrepancy where McNeil ,and not Low ,is listed as the sole solicitor of the practise in Singapore,have not got a response.



1 solicitor at Alliance Law Pte Ltd

Michael Mcneill Ward




Solicitor Admitted as a solicitor: 02/03/92SRA ID:153852SRA Regulated

Tel:62484775Email:m2mcneill@yahoo.comhideDirector at:Alliance Law Pte Ltd
80 Raffles Place,
#36-00 Uob Plaza 1,
Singapore,
Singapore,
048624,
Singapore
View in Google Maps


Equally intriguing is this record from the Singapore Attorney General's Office which seems to suggest that Michael McNeil runs Alliance Law while running his own practise, McNeil Legal.

There has been speculation for sometime in Malaysia that Singapore authorities had in fact apprehended Ms Low, but then let her go.The reasons are equally speculative, but her mother's maiden name, Goh Gaik Ewe, does raise the raise the question of whether the Lows Singapore connections are far deeper than many have realized. Her name does suggest that she is a Peranakan ,and possibly of the famous Goh clan, even if she has been reduced to managing a small travel agency.One presumes of course that this  was the source of family income before the Lows "inherited" tens of billions. 


Admiral Tours & Travel Sdn. Bhd.



Company & Membership Info

Membership NoMA0632Company No243314-WKPL No.2414 (Inbound)

Company Contact Details

(604) 2636 394
2-7-10 Harbour Trade Centre Gat Lebuh Macallum Georgetown 10300, Penang Malaysia

Company Administrative Contact

  
Esther G L Goh
Executive Director

Official Representative

  
Goh Geik Lin

Alternate Representative

  
Goh Gaik Ewe

END 

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

PM Albanese of Australia told PM Lee of Singapore that Sun Cable " is the ultimate win-win" just 3 months before Sun Cable collapsed - Australian media has never been shy to investigate and criticise Asian politicians and their fantasy projects, must now do the same to the their own Prime Minister who has misled Australians and Singaporeans

by Ganesh Sahathevan  


    Albanese tweeting a family photo with the Lees


At a press conference in Canberra on 18 October 2022  Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister Of Australia, told Lee Hsien Loong,Prime Minister Of Singapore


.............Sun Cable, which has the potential to export clean energy to Singapore, is the ultimate win-win. If this project can be made to work - and I believe it can be - you will see the world's largest solar farm, you will see the export of energy across distances, the production of many jobs here in Australia, including manufacturing jobs. And the prospect of Sun Cable is just one part of what I talk about when I say Australia can be a renewable energy superpower for the world.


Just under three months later the project collapsed, for some very obvious reasons( see story below). 

Australian media has never been shy to investigate and criticise Asian politicians and their fantasy projects. The Bakun Dam project promoted by then Prime Minister Of Malaysia Mahathir Mohamad which was meant to transmit hydropower across the South China Sea is one eerily similar example.

Australian media must now do the same to the their own Prime Minister who has misled Australians and Singaporeans.


TO BE READ WITH 

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Albanese's Sun Cable fantasy collapses - Albo must now explain why he misled Australians, and Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 




    

Albanese has used his position to promote Sun Cable, in Australia and overseas, despite Sun Cable having no power supply agreement with the Government Of Singapore.


A dispute between Mike Canon- Brookes  and Twiggy Forrest is said to have been the reason why Sun Cable has been put into administration.  The ABC is reporting that there are " disagreements about the funding and direction of the company......these included the significant amounts of cash that Sun Cable was spending, and its failure to achieve certain milestones".


As reported by this writer Sun Cable, Prime Minister Albanese of Australia, and the Chief Minister of The Northern Territory, Natahsa Fyles, all claimed that Sun Cable would supply Singapore with solar power from a solar bank in the Northern Territory, when in fact no agreement had been reached with the Government Of Singapore.


All three, but in particular Albanese and Fyles, must now explain why they misled Australians, and account for all any government resources provided the project.


TO BE READ WITH




 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-01-11/sun-cable-enters-administration/101845100




Monday, October 24, 2022

PM Lee Hsien Loong confronted with another Crooked Bridge dilemma. From the south, out of Australia, Australia's PM Albanese demands that Hsien Loong share his fantasy of a solar power cable connecting Singapore and Australia

 by Ganesh Sahathevan


The crooked bridge project was mooted by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad before he retired as premier in 2003. PHOTO: GERBANG PERDANA


For much of the past decade Singapore has had to endure demands from Malaysia's Mahathir Mohamad that the causeway connecting the two countries be replaced by what has become known as the Crooked Bridge. His resignation as prime minister of Malaysia in 2020 seems to have put that demand to rest but now it seems Singapore and its prime minster Lee Hsien Loong are being tormented by a similar demand, this time from the south,  from Australia's PM Albanese  who  demands that  Hsien Loong share his fantasy of a solar  power cable connecting Singapore and Australia. 

As this writer noted, Albanese seemed to be channeling BJ Habibie, the former Indonesian President (who is supposed to have described Singapore as a little red dot) when he told Hsien Loong at a press conference in Canberra: 

"This island continent of ours is a little bit bigger than the island continent of Singapore...... And hence, a project like Sun Cable, which has the potential to export clean energy to Singapore, is the ultimate win-win. If this project can be made to work - and I believe it can be - you will see the world's largest solar farm, you will see the export of energy across distances, the production of many jobs here in Australia, including manufacturing jobs".

Hsien Loong said nothing in response, and that is to be expected for  Hsien Loong, his government, and the relevant authorities have yet to provide Sun Cable any approvals whatsoever to Sun Cable:

Infrastructure Australia says Sun Cable's Darwin-Singapore solar cable qualifies for taxpayer funding, Singapore says Sun Cable does not have permission to import electricity into Singapore


While Mahathir's insistence on the Crooked Bridge despite a lack of interest from Singapore caused local Malaysian media to investigate the motivation for the project, there has yet to be any serious investigation in Australia into Albanese's fantasy.

END 








Monday, January 16, 2023

Tommy Thomas RCI must include review and excision of Vincent Tan and related decisions from the body of Malaysian Caselaw if it is to have proper context

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


The Malay Mail reported:

The cabinet has agreed with the special task force’s proposal to set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) to further examine the allegations made by former attorney-general Tan Sri Tommy Thomas in his controversial memoir, My Story: Justice in the Wilderness.

According to Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional Reform) Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said, the RCI’s terms of commission will have a scope wider than the proposal’s recommendations.

-ADVERTISEMENT-

“The government takes a serious view of the allegations involving the violation of professional responsibilities by a bearer of high office.

“This is because transparency and accountability are at the basis of people’s trust in the administration of justice and government institutions.


Thomas' experience with the administration of justice and government institutions includes the infamous VK Lingam-Vincent Tan defamation decisions, and hence these too need to be reviewed by the RCI if its inquiries are to have proper context. These matters have been addressed by the High Court, in VK Lingam v David Samuels  and the RCI into the VK Lingam tapes which found that Vincent Tan had interfered with Malaysia's judiciary


That review of the Malaysian Caselaw is long overdue.


TO BE READ WITH 




Sunday, December 5, 2021

Findings of the Royal Commission into the VK Lingam video confirmed that something was in fact rotten in the State Of Denmark - Excision of the rot will require removal of Vincent Tan and related decisions from the body of Malaysian Caselaw

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 






The 2008 Royal Commission of inquiry into the VK Lingam video found that lawyer Datuk V.K. Lingam (since disbarred) former Chief Justices Tun Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim and Tun Eusoff Chin, businessman Tan Sri Vincent Tan and others seriously undermined the independence and the integrity of the judiciary by their actions of fixing the appointment and promotion of judges.

Members of the commission said that documents produced before them showed that Tan was involved in a string of high profile commercial cases. And in all the cases, Lingam was his lawyer.

In one of those cases one a  presiding judge, Justice NH Chan, was driven to say : “There is something rotten in the state of Denmark.” Many saw this as a reference to Denmark House where Malaysia's superior courts were then located. In fact Dato' Mohd Hishamudin Bin Yunus J in Dato' V. Kanagalingam v. David Samuels observed:

Clearly the quotation at the end of the above passage attributed to Shakespeare’s Hamlet was meant to be a pun, for the High Court that heard the Ayer Molek case was located in Denmark House. Without doubt the rebuke by the Court of Appeal was directed at both the High Court Judge and the solicitor/counsel concerned, that is to say, the plaintiff in the case before me.



The decisions in Ayer Molek and Kanagalingam v Samuel  should have prompted the review and removal of all decisions involving Vincent Tan and entities known to be connected   to him, particularly those in which he was represented by VK Lingam. Instead a number of other decisions were handed down to the point where the Royal Commission handed down its findings.

The two decisions and the Royal Commission  findings lead to the inescapable fact that there  are in the body of Malaysian Caselaw a number of cases that are , to borrow Chan J's words, "rotten", but which  are still  precedent.  What is rotten cannot be precedent, and the situation  can only be remedied by removal of the cases concerned from Malaysian Caselaw.

The decision and act of excision is ultimately in the hands of the Chief Justice Of Malaysia who has a duty to defend the integrity of Malaysian Caselaw.

TO BE READ WITH 


Damning conclusions from Lingam video findings18 May 2008 12:00 am

©The Malaysian Insider (Used by permission)

KUALA LUMPUR, May 18 — Datuk V.K. Lingam, Tun Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim, Tan Sri Vincent Tan, Tun Eusoff Chin and others seriously undermined the independence and the integrity of the judiciary by their actions of fixing the appointment and promotion of judges.

This was the finding of the Royal Commission on the Lingam video clip. This is what commission members concluded about:

Datuk V.K. Lingam

The key question in the hearing was whether Lingam was the Indian man captured in the video clip speaking on the telephone to presumably the former Chief Justice Tun Ahmad Fairuz.

When confronted with the clip, Lingam told the commission that "it looks like and the voice sounds like me."

Tan Sri Haidar Mohamed Noor and other members of the commission were not impressed with this opaque answer, noting that there were direct accounts by witnesses that the man in the video clip was the lawyer.

"It is our considered opinion that Datuk V.K. Lingam had virtually emasculated himself on the issue of his credibility by admitting to his identity in the photographs but refusing to admit his identity in the video clip...Datuk V.K. Lingam took an oath before us to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. In refusing to accept that he was the person in the video clip we hold that his credibility was worthless."

They said that at no point during the proceedings did Lingam offer any evidence to show that he was not the person in the clip, offering only bare denials. In fact at the later stage of his testimony, he admitted that he was the one in the video clip but that the statements by him were made in the privacy of his house and that he was drunk and was bullshitting and bragging.

They also gave little weight to opinions expressed by his overseas experts on the authenticity of the clip, noting that one of the experts offered her advice without even seeing the video clip.

The commission noted: "Question that begs to be answered is why if Lingam placed such store in his experts, he did not ask them to take live tests of the person featured in the video clip so as to prove that the Indian man was not him? He provided overseas experts to condemn the Malaysian expert’s qualifications, methodology and conclusions but he had nothing in the other end of the scales!"

Tun Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim

The commission drew adverse inference from the former chief justice's behavior after the video clip implicating him became public knowledge. Fairuz denied that he was the person on the other end of the line to Lingam in letters to the prime minister, deputy minister and the minister in the Prime Minister’s Department on Sept 21, 2007.

The commission said that the letters were bare denials and volunteered no information as to why his name should be mentioned in the video clip. "In a situation of such national gravity it is usual for a public officer to invite a full scale public enquiry to clear his name and in certain cases the officer concerned would even offer to suspend himself from further duties whilst his name was being cleared.

"That did not happen here. Whilst it could well have been a Freudian slip we also think that it is not irrelevant that when he was asked by counsel why he described the conversation as a monologue, he said that his voice could not be heard at the other end of the line."

The commission also noted that after the video clip was made public, Fairuz retreated into silence and refused to respond to call from the media. “Tun Ahmad Fairuz could have publicly denied that he was the person at the end of the line and informed the nation that pending a public enquiry into the matter, he was voluntarily suspending himself from further duties. That step would have allayed public confidence in the system."

The commission also noted that judges have been given powers to punish any contempt or conduct by lawyers which scandalises the judiciary. Fairuz explained to the commission that did not exercise the court’s power because he did not want contaminate himself.

"We cannot accept this as a valid reason. He did not himself have to issue Datuk V.K. Lingam a letter to show cause why he should not be held liable for contempt. He could have directed any other judge to do it. At the very least a formal letter could have been issued to Datuk V.K. Lingam to explain," concluded the commission.

Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor

The commission noted that Tengku Adnan’s name was mentioned 11 times in the video clip and every time it was in the context of what the former deputy minister would or could do to push Fairuz up the judicial ladder.

When the passages in which his name was mentioned was read out to him during the hearing, he denied the truth of the content and said that he never had a conversation with Lingam about these matters.

Later he suggested that Lingam was drunk when captured on the video clip. That was why he kept bringing up Tengku Adnan’s name in the conversation during the telephone conversation.

"This explanation is too facile to be accepted. The Datuk V.K. Lingam we saw on the video clip was certainly not drunk…So why give such an explanation which was no explanation at all? Again, it was one man’s word against another and in all the circumstances of the case we regret to say that it is our opinion that Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor was too economical with the truth to be believed."

The commission said it was puzzled why Tengku Adnan did not take any action against Lingam if the statements made by the latter were untrue. "Criminal offences by way of leaking Official Secrets were being alleged but Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor seems to have been quite unfazed," the commission noted.

Tan Sri Vincent Tan

The commission was left incredulous by the businessman’s testimony during the hearing, saying that his answers were a faithful echo of Lingam’s. For example, when he was asked if the Indian man in the video clip was his close friend, Tan remarked: "It looks like him, it sounds like him but I cannot be 100 per cent sure."

The commission noted that the congruence of his answer with that of Lingam’s was too exact not to draw adverse comment. "Tan Sri Vincent Tan is talking about a man he has known intimately for over 20 years and he still refuses to give mouth to reality before his very eyes.

"A little later, he gives the reason, 'I cannot be sure 100 per cent because with modern technology, I don’t know what is the motive behind this.' In other words he is suggesting that the video clip may have been tampered with. All this is such a faithful echo of Datuk V.K. Lingam’s own testimony that it is very hard not to make an inference that there has been some confabulation here between them."

In their report, the commission said it was clear from Tan’s testimony that he, Lingam, Tengku Adnan and former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad are long term friends and business associates "whose lives are inextricably linked both personally and in the tentacles of Tan Sri Vincent Tan’s business empire and various business projects which require the PM’s political backing."

In his testimony, Tan denied that he had ever discussed the appointment of judges, especially the elevation of Fairuz with Dr Mahathir.

"When it was roundly put to him that PM did admit that he could have taken the views of Tan Sri Vincent Tan into account in the selection of judges, Tan Sri Vincent Tan’s answer was that he could not remember this but went on to say (notwithstanding he had just said that he could not remember) that he had definitely not discussed about judges," said the commission.

Members of the commission said that documents produced before them showed that Tan was involved in a string of high profile commercial cases. And in all the cases, Lingam was his lawyer.

"It is hard to believe that Tan Sri Vincent Tan would not have taken a very keen interest in the identity of the judges who were trying the cases," said the commission, adding that Tan tried his best to distance himself from Lingam.

"But the background of joint holidays together, and the fact that they even communicated with each other by intercom shows a closeness between them which cannot be discounted and must give rise to an adverse inference on Tan Sri Vincent Tan’s credibility," said the commission.

Tun Eusoff Chin

The commission said that the credibility of the former chief justice was in tatters after he gave evidence regarding his relationship with Lingam. In his sworn testimony, Eusoff said that there was nothing special about his ties with the lawyer.

This issue was important because in the video clip, Lingam seems to suggest that because of his close relationship with Eusoff, he was able to get his own way in a number of matters.

The commission noted that evidence showed that Eusoff and his family spent almost the entire holiday in New Zealand in 1994 with Lingam. At the hearing, the former CJ said that he bumped into Lingam and his family at Changi Airport but admitted that they were on the same flight to Auckland, went to the zoo and bird park together, went on a fishing trip together and took a few internal flights in New Zealand together.

Eusoff put his travel arrangements and itinerary down to coincidences. “Given the amazing number of alleged coincidences, which can be extracted from the whole trip from Singapore to New Zealand and back, we need no more than mere common sense to detect the incredulity of that proposition," the commission ruled.

In their report, the commissioners also drew attention to the testimony of Thirnama Karasu, Lingam’s brother. Among other things, this witness said that he had driven Lingam to Eusoff’s house on several occasions in 1995 and 1996. On one occasion, he delivered a briefcase and a brown envelope on behalf of his brother to the CJ.

Eusoff and Lingam denied all these allegations but the commission noted that Karasu was subjected to intense cross–examination by counsel for Eusoff, Lingam and Tun Ahmad Fairuz but was unshaken. They also alleged that he was suffering from a mental disorder and was motivated by vengeance and greed.

"When the evidence of Karasu is examined against the rebuttals and denials relating to the events highlighted, we are of the view that his version of the events is more probable than that of his detractors," said the commission.

In the final analysis, the commission noted that the effect of all the testimonies showed that not only was Eusoff and Lingam extremely close “but there was a strong prima facie case made out that their proximity was such that the relationship far from being normal was quite inappropriate."

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad

The commission noted that Dr Mahathir did not follow the constitutional process of consulting the then Chief Justice Tun Dzaiddin Abdullah in the appointment and promotion of judges. For example, when the then PM rejected Dzaiddin’s choice of Tan Sri Malek Ahmad to fill in the vacancy as the Chief Judge of Malaya, he did not give any reasons.

Instead, he directed Dzaiddin to choose between Tun Ahmad Fairuz and Tan Sri Mohtar Abdullah as the next CJM. The commission noted that they was evidence that Lingam and his collaborators sabotaged Malek’s candidacy by influencing Mahathir. In the video clip, Lingam told Fairuz that Malek was considered anti–Mahathir.

“Tan Sri Malek Ahmad was a victim of character assassination by third parties who had their own axe to grind...This would not have happened if the PM had consulted Tun Dzaiddin as to why Tan Sri Malek Ahmad was considered to be unsuitable for appointment to the post of CJM. Nor were there reasons given why the PM considered Tun Ahmad Fairuz or Tan Sri Mohtar Abdullah better candidates. PM’s letter was nothing short of a 'Hobson’s Choice' that one of the two should be chosen because they were PM’s favoured candidates."

The commission ruled that an exclusive right in the executive to appoint judges without consultation is inimical to the doctrine of separation of powers and destructive of judicial independence.

Worse was to follow when Dzaiddin proposed five individuals as High Court judges in a letter to the PM in October 2001. This time the Chief Secretary to the Government picked the names of five names of serving Judicial Commissioners for Tun Dzaiddin to choose two out of the five names.

No reasons were given to Dzaiddin why his choices were rejected.

“The PM cannot remember the reasons. His KSN (chief secretary) does not know the reasons. But there was somebody else who claimed to know the reasons. That somebody else is Datuk V.K. Lingam and he said that he achieved this with the participation of Tan Sri Vincent Tan and Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor when all three of them went to see the PM with this objective in mind," noted the commission.

In the video clip, Lingam discussed Dzaiddin’s letter to the PM in October 2001 and told Fairuz that moves were underway to block the appointment of some of the names nominated by the then CJ.

The commission noted that the Constitution makes clear that the PM has to consult the CJ on appointments to the Bench. “These were serious defaults in the constitutional process, because the mandatory requirement of consultation had not been compiled with by persons who had taken an oath to uphold the Constitution. This kind of misbehavior is so unprecedented that were it not for the release of the video clip it may never have come to light," it added.