Tuesday 25 March 2008

NO JUSTICE IN THIS WORLD

The Bar Council today applauded the intention of Dato Zaid Ibrahim to persuade the Government to apologise to Tun Salleh Abas, the former Lord President.

Dear Dato Zaid, why do you want to do that for? Why do you want to embarrass the King and the Country? You don’t have to please the Bar Council to bring back confidence in the Judiciary.

Dear Tun Salleh Abas, as a Malay, a Muslim, you should forgive those who do wrong and injustice to you without the need of that person seeking apology to you. His All Mighty Allah Subhana Wataala, Most Knoweth Will Bless And Forgive You.
It was by the blessed of the His Majesty you were appointed as Lord President, it was also by the blessed His Highness Tuanku you were dismissed from your position as Lord President.

Calling the Government to apologise would amount to seeking His Highnesses hands for an apology, unless you really want His Majesty to bow before you.

Perhaps, it would be a good idea too that the Bar Council apologise to all the lawyers who were struck off the roles and suspended summarily by the Bar Council.

The truth is Tun, there is no justice in this world even though you are or were a Lord President.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Some of the lawyers who were struck off the rolls probably deserved it for misusing their clients' money or committed gross negligence. Tun's case was different, the reasons behind his dismissal were blantly obvious. If you had already started practise at that time you would agree that it was indeed Mayday for Justice. I agree that as a Muslim (nothing to do with being a Malay, incidentally, is the standard required by a Malay higher than that required of a Chinese, Indian, Arab or Melanau? Aren't we all God's children?) one should forgive others' sins done onto us. However, there is a matter of doing the right thing, of correcting the past and restoring a man's honour.

DARI HULU said...

the Bar never apologise for their mistakes.

And one thing for sure why do we want to live in the past.

The future is about bringing confidence in the judiciary.