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Less than 24 hours after he suffered an adverse Court of Appeal verdict,
former Sabah Chief Minister Chong Kah Kiat called for a special press
conference in Kota Kinabalu yesterday on the aborted Mazu - Goddess of the
Sea - statue project in Kudat.
He said he urgently wanted to clear the air following public confusion on
what the Appellate Court verdict on Wednesday actually meant in law.
Chong said that "the Appellate Court verdict was more important for what
it did not say rather than what it subsequently proceeded to do".
The court, said Chong, did not rule on the legality or otherwise of the
project. In essence, the court did not say:
(1) that the Mazu statue project, as approved by the Kudat Town Board, was
illegal;
(2) that he cannot build or put up the project as approved by the Kudat
Town Board; and
(3) it did not say that the actions of the relevant Sabah state
government authorities - the Kudat Town Board, the Permanent Secretary in
the State Ministry of Local Government and Housing, the State Secretary
and the Chief Minister - in first stopping the project and subsequently
cancelling and withdrawing the approval of the project was right and
proper.
"The Court merely said that that the Kudat Thean Hou Charitable
Foundation was unlawful as it has never been registered under the
Society's Act. The Court did say that I had, in consequence, no standing
to proceed with the suit and the originating motion," said Chong, a lawyer
by profession, warming up to the main issue. "The Court did not say
anything else."
No proper avenue for redress
Chong expressed dismay that in striking out his originating motion
against the Kudat Town Board and his civil suit, the Court of Appeal had
been bogged down by technicalities. It had deprived him of an opportunity
to seek redress in a court of law over the stoppage of the project.
The stoppage was preceded 10 days earlier by the infamous Sipadan barge
incident which plunged relations between Chief Minister Musa Aman and
Chong to a new low.
Chong was then Deputy Chief Minister and State Minister for Tourism,
Culture and the Environment. He resigned on April 13, 2007.
"Had I a proper avenue or venue for redress within the state government
apparatus after the Mazu statue was halted, I would not have gone to
court," said Chong at his Alam Mesra office in the suburbs, opposite the
mini Putra Jaya Federal Administrative Complex.
"The Kudat Town Board does not have an appeals board that meets to
address issues."
Chong confirmed that he had instructed his counsel, Ansari Abdullah, to
apply for leave to the Federal Court to file a notice of appeal against
the decision of the Appeals Court to strike out his civil suit against the
Chief Minister and three other defendants, and an originating motion
against the Kudat Town Board.
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The Court of Appeal, according to Ansari (right), has advised
that it will only issue a written judgment on its verdict "if there's
going to be an appeal", an unusual procedure according to the legal
fraternity.
"If the Federal Court finds for me, we will be back to the High Court and
the Mazu cases will proceed," said Chong, expressing his confidence that
the Malaysian legal system will maintain the right to redress.
"If I don't go to the Federal Court, the defendants do not have to explain
anything at all or even account for their actions and they can get away
scott-free with the exercise of absolute power which does not exist. Is
this what we want in this country?"
"If the Federal Court upholds the Court of Appeals verdict, it will be the
end of the road legally for me and leave me without any redress against
government interference. I will have to look at other options."
One option, according to Chong, is to put together the huge granite pieces
of the Mazu statue, as a tourist icon, and leave it lying on its proposed
site next to the Marina Resort.
"The Chief Minister is against a Mazu standing up," noted Chong. "But
there is nothing to prevent it from lying on the ground. We will put up a
signboard to inform the tourists that the statue was not allowed to be
positioned standing up. Or, we will just leave the huge pieces lying
around on the site. Again, there is no law against that."
'Najib very objective'
"Many states in Peninsular Malaysia are also willing to take my statue
pieces, put it together and have the Goddess standing up."
The final option, according to Chong, "will depend on divine instructions
from the Goddess."
Chong disclosed that he briefed Prime Minister Najib (left), "who
is very objective", on the Mazu project on July 22 but "he's bogged down
by so many problems in Peninsular Malaysia".
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Revisiting familiar grounds, Chong stressed that four documents are
important in deciding the Mazu issue; a letter of approval dated Feb 8,
2006 from the Kudat Town Board; a letter from the Kudat Town Board dated
May 25, 2006, addressed to him, advising him to "stop work on the statue
until further agreement and instructions from the Chief Minister"; a June
6, 2006 letter advising him that the approval for the project had been
cancelled and withdrawn because it was "too close to a mosque - more than
700 metres away - and there were objections from people"; a Nov 15, 2007
letter advising him that he had been found to be "in breach of Section 15
of the Town and Country Planning Ordinance because the plans were not
considered by the Central Planning Board".
"The May 25, 2006 letter is evidence of the state government interfering
in a private project on private land, financed by private funds. There are
legal implications. All these are in black and white and we cannot run
away from them," said Chong.
"They clearly demonstrate that I had standing in law but unfortunately the
Court of Appeal did not allow us to address the issue. We hope to remedy
that.
"If I had no standing in law, the state government would not have
addressed me and by name. They should not have addressed me at all in that
case."
Chong further contended that the state government should have taken the
"gentlemanly approach' and maintained in court that the actions that they
took in the stoppage of the project was lawful. Instead, its statement of
defence did not reflect that, and "out of the blue" it brought up the
issue of locus standi which had never been mentioned before during all the
months in court.
The former Sabah Chief Minister also disclosed that he plans to bring out
a book soon in various languages on the Mazu saga in the state as a
reminder to the people that "the constitution cannot be taken for
granted".
The book will be on sale to both tourists to the Mazu site and others. |