Media Statement – 6/7/2019
Repeal draconian Peaceful Assembly Act 2012, not amend – Respect Right to
Peaceful Assembly
-Speedy ‘secret’ passing Peaceful Assembly (Amendment) Bill 2019
unacceptable -
MADPET(Malaysians Against Death
Penalty and Torture) is shocked to hear
that the Peaceful Assembly (Amendment) Bill 2019 tabled in Parliament, which
will amend the Peaceful Assembly Act 2012, which was tabled on 1/7/2019, have
already been passed (Star,
5/7/2019), and a perusal of the Parliamentary website indicates
that it was passed on 4/7/2019, but interestingly a perusal of the Agenda (Aturan
Urusan Mesyuarat) for 4/7/2019 does not
state that the Bill was to be voted and passed.
This Parliamentary Session was
supposed to end on 18/7/2019, and as such there was no necessity to rush and
pass the Bill, which first came to public notice as to the contents only on
1/7/2019.
Such speedy tabling and passing
of new law was criticized during the Barisan Nasional era, as it does not give adequate
time for the public to respond, let alone discuss and communicate their
position with their respective Members of Parliament. The lack of transparency
is abhorred.
There would have even been no
time or opportunity to organize a peaceful assembly to protest or support the
said amendment – as the law as it was required 10 days prior notice before the
assembly, and even with 5 days prior notice, as the amended Bill apparently now
allow would be insufficient.
Even, when the Peaceful Assembly
Act 2012 was tabled under the BN regime, there was time enough for the
Malaysian Bar to organize a peaceful assembly involving about 1,000 lawyers,
and hand over their protest to Members of Parliament on 29/11/2011 before the
vote. This time there was no such opportunity for any peaceful assembly.
Amendments fail to remove draconian unjust provisions
MADPET is disappointed with lame
proposals contained in the said Bill, which demonstrates that despite Malaysian
Pakatan Harapan-led government’s promise in its election manifesto ‘Buku
Harapan’(Book of Hope) that it will remove unjust draconian provisions in this
Act, it is obvious that they fail to understand the fundamental principles of
the right of peaceful assembly and what are the provisions in the current law that goes contrary to this right.
Article 10(b) of the Federal
Constitution provides that ‘all citizens have the right to assemble peaceably
and without arms’. The right to peaceful assembly must be a right exercisable
by any person in Malaysia at any time without any restrictions or prior
requirement of ‘permission’ from the government, police or any other
person/entity.
The Bill to amend the Peaceful
Assembly Act 2012, sadly only proposes to reduce the 10 days prior notice to
the police to now make it seven(7) days, to apparently, make some of the
offences in the act compoundable offences – meaning violators will be offered a
compound, if paid will mean that they will no longer be charged and tried in
court, and the removal on the restriction on ‘street protest’. Before being
passed, apparently the notice period was reduced to five (5) days.
Decriminalizing of street protest – good but really of little
consequence
It is good, but a perusal of all
past large peaceful assemblies in recent times in Malaysia would show that
hundreds and thousands had gathered at meeting points and walked along the
streets to assembly points.
The Act currently defines
"street protest" means an open air assembly which begins with a
meeting at a specified place and consists of walking in a mass march or rally
for the purpose of objecting to or advancing a particular cause or causes’
It is good to specifically
decriminalize ‘street protests’ in the current law but at the end of the day,
it is really meaningless as ‘street protest’ has in fact been happening all
this while in practice.
Power of Police/Minister to control exercise of the right to peaceful
assembly must be abolished
Police should NOT have the power
to allow or not allow the right to peaceful assembly. They should merely facilitate
the exercise of this right, and that include provision of safety to participants,
facilitating traffic flow and such.
There is no need for a Peaceful
Assembly Act that provides for any new offences, as our other existing laws are
sufficient.
The Peaceful Assembly Act 2012
now has a mandatory requirement to notify the police, and thereafter the police
can impose conditions and/or restrictions, which if breached is a criminal
offence. A person who fails to submit such a notice, or beaches any conditions
imposed by the police shall now, on conviction, be liable to a fine not
exceeding ten thousand ringgit.
All that the proposed amendment
will do is maybe shorten the notice period, but it does not solve the problem
of police having the power to control the exercise of one’s right to peaceful
assembly. Neither does it remove the power of owner/occupiers to deny this
right.
Police or government’s powers to
set conditions and restrictions on the fundamental right to peaceful assembly
is wrong.
Only the law or the courts should
be vested with such powers. Certainly not the police or the Minister, as the
Act now provides that anyone unhappy with the conditions/restrictions imposed
by the police may appeal to the Minister.
PEACEFUL ASSEMBLY – A right that must be exercisable fast at times
The police even seem to have the
power to waive the application of the mandatory requirement of providing notice
10(ten days) prior to the intended peaceful assembly, which happened recently
in March in a peaceful assembly apparently proposed by a Minister. It was
reported, that ‘The police said today it will allow tomorrow’s Peace,
Solidarity Rally in Kuala Lumpur, despite not meeting the 10-day notice
requirement. Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Mohamad Fuzi Harun said
organisers can proceed with the “peace rally” at Dataran Merdeka, but only from
7.30am to 11am. Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mujahid
Yusof Rawa had proposed for the rally back on Monday, which was too short for
the 10-day notice required under the Peaceful Assembly Act 2012. (Malay Mail,
22/3/2019).
No reasonable person will protest
against that particular peaceful assembly in response to mass killings of
Muslims at their places of worship in New Zealand, but it highlights the point
that peaceful assembly or protest sometimes need to happen promptly to be
effective.
A peaceful assembly in response
to human rights violation against the Rohingya people in Myanmar, against atrocities
committed by Israel against Palestinians or even Parliament’s intention to pass
a Bill all would need a speedy response, and a law that impedes this right for
people to assemble peacefully to voice protest or support by imposition of a
requirement of any prior notice of 7 or 10 days is clearly violates the right
to peaceful assembly, and need to be abolished. The Bill was passed on 4/7/2019
by the Dewan Rakyat(House of Representatives), 3 days after it was first
tabled, and people did not have the time to exercise their right to peaceful
assembly, if they wanted to.
POLICE POWERS limited to facilitating the right to peaceful assembly
Police may take action against
any participant or others that breach the ordinary already existing many laws
of the land like maybe causing damage to property or assaulting another person.
When a peaceful assembly happens,
the police still have the power to take action against any individual that
breaks the law but this should never prejudice the right of others to continue
to exercise their right of peaceful assembly.
It is not uncommon that
perpetrators against whom the peaceful assembly is happening may place their
agents or even ‘agent provocateurs’ who may resort even to violence or damage
to property simply to undermine the objects of those exercising their right to
peaceful assembly. Such individuals who break laws may be arrested then and
there, but the right of other peaceful protesters must not be violated by
reason of actions of a few ‘trouble-makers’.
The Act now has presumptions with
regard to who is the organizer any person who initiates, leads, promotes,
sponsors, holds or supervises the assembly, or invites or recruits participants
or speakers for the assembly, shall be deemed to be the organizer of the
assembly.(Section 19). This means that even anyone who provide information to
another and ask him/her to join could be presumed to be an organizer. This
provision need to be repealed.
Age of persons entitled to organize/participate in peaceful assemblies
It is ironical that this
government wants to reduce voting age from 21 to 18, but then the right to
organize a peaceful assembly is only for persons above the age of 21.
Malaysia also forgets that it is
a signatory of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, whereby in Article
15, it clearly ‘recognize the rights of the child to freedom of association and
to freedom of peaceful assembly.’ The Convention, in Article 1 states that, ‘a
child means every human being below the age of eighteen years unless under the
law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier.’ Hence, a child,
whether accompanied by adults or not, should be granted their right to
participate in peaceful assemblies.
We recall that children have
opinions, and they must be granted the right to freedom of speech, opinion and
also the right to participate (and even organize) peaceful assemblies.
The penalizing of parents who
bring children to peaceful assemblies is also wrong. Parents have an obligation
to teach children values and principles, and as such bring them for peaceful
assemblies is a choice of parents. Many a parent also do not have domestic workers
to leave their children at home. As such, this restriction is discriminatory
and a violation of rights of persons with children. Note also that many who
join a peaceful assembly may have no prior plan but suddenly decided to join
because it was something they too support.
No right of peaceful assembly to non-citizens
This will include also permanent
residents and foreign nationals living and working in Malaysia. This is
unacceptable as this a human right and should not be a citizen only right.
In many countries, when some
inter-government meeting is going on like the ASEAN meet, it is not uncommon
that many will want to participate in a peaceful assembly to express a common
stance. Likewise, in some issues like the massacre of Muslims in New Zealand or
what happened to the Rohingya, it makes no sense to bar non-citizens from
participating in peaceful assembles. Migrant workers also may sometime want to
exercise this right to highlight some rights violation. This is a human right
which must be accorded to all in Malaysia.
Peaceful Assembly Act 2012 – Many Other Unjust Hurdles
That draconian Act brought about
hurdles to people exercising right of peaceful assembly.
Organizer
One, was the requirement of the organizer
to identify himself, and when he/she does so, he/she is made responsible for
all persons that participate in a peaceful assembly and may be criminally
liable for actions not his/her own. Then, there is draconian obligation to
clean up or to be liable to pay for cleaning bill. This obviously will deter
the exercising of the right of peaceful assembly. No ordinary person, community,
the poor or even smaller groups/organizations can afford this risk of such criminal
liability, and more importantly the financial obligations. As such, since the Peaceful
Assembly Act 2012, only bigger groups like BERSIH 2.0 and political parties
have the capacity of organizing Peaceful Assemblies.
In many peaceful assemblies,
there may be no organisers. People may gather at a place to protest with others
with a common objective. The 1998 Reformasi peaceful assemblies that happened
on several consecutive Saturday afternoons that saw thousands participating peacefully
along Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman ending in Dataran Merdeka is such an example.
Likewise, the people of Kuantan
may want to protest Lynas or Bauxite mining, or the people of Pasir Gudang may
want to come together to protest the ‘chemical poison’ but they could not
because the law requires a named organizer, and no one wants to take on that
onerous responsibility.
As such, the need for an organizer
to come forward, to submit notification, to get permission from the consent of
the owner or occupier of the place of assembly, arrange for security, etc must all
be removed. This impedes the right to peaceful assembly
Consent Of The Owner Or
Occupier Of The Place Of Assembly
There should be no such
requirement, for owners or occupiers of the place of assembly and others must
respect the right of their fellow men to exercise their right to peaceful
assembly. Asking owners and occupiers consent is also unfair to
owners/occupiers as they suddenly have to decide whether to consent or not –
either way, there will be an implication to them directly or indirectly. They
would really prefer not to be burdened with this question of consent, and
should not be asked. If freedom of assembly is a right, then even others who
are against it should respect the right of those who choose to exercise that
right.
Most peaceful assemblies happen
not inside private premises, but in public areas which usually comes under the
Local Council or the government. In the past, as an example, the Kuala Lumpur
City Council (a government appointed Council) has rejected to allow peaceful
assemblies in Dataran Merdeka. This is very wrong and a violation of right to
peaceful assembly, which must be allowed in all public areas.
Cleaning Bills
This again is absurd, as in all
public areas, it is the obligation of the Local Council (Local Government) to
keep the area clean. It is an offence to litter, and it is alright to catch and
penalize litter-bugs but certainly not right to send organizers of peaceful
assembly a hefty Cleaning Bill.
Designated places of peaceful
assembly
If a peaceful assembly is held at
a designated place of peaceful assembly, then there is no need to notify the
police. As of now, the only such designated place is the Darul Makmur Stadium
in Pahang.
The object of a peaceful assembly
is usually to highlight a certain issue, wrongdoing or failure, and it is held
in a public place where there are many other persons so that more will be
educated and convince to join the cause, and as such peaceful assemblies are
usually where there are many other people.
The idea of allowing a peaceful
assembly in a Stadium or some field, far away from the public eye defeats the
purpose. That exactly has been the reason why many peaceful assembly have been organized
along Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman, in front of KLCC and Dataran Merdeka.
If the peaceful assembly is
protesting something concerning a company, it may be held in front of that
company. If it is about ASEAN, it will be held where the ASEAN is meeting, If
it is concerning something in Parliament, then it will be in front of
Parliament. If it is to try and prevent a Malaysian being executed in
Singapore, then it will be before the Singapore Embassy.
As such, increasing the
designated places of peaceful assembly is foolish, for it all depends on the
subject matter of the peaceful assembly. Every public area should be places
permissible for peaceful assembly.
Power to compound – the proposed new section 21A
This will give the power to the
police to compound offence relating to failure to provide notification (Section
9) or persons who breach the restrictions and conditions imposed by police (Section
15). This power will negate the need to prosecute or provide a person with a
fair trial, thus removing the judicial supervision of actions of police unless
the victim refuses the offer to pay the compound. Some conditions/restrictions
imposed by the police may be found to be unjust or unconstitutional.
It must be noted that many in
Malaysia, guilty or not, would choose to pay the compound rather than be
prosecuted in court which will entail not just loss of time and income, but
also monies including legal and court fees.
It is of concern that the Home
Minister, Tan Sri Dato’ Sri Muhyiddin bin Mohd Yassin, on 4/7/2019, also said
that the compound will be good for Parliamentarians as unlike fines, it would
not affect their qualification as MPs or their ability to contest in future
elections. (Hansard 4/7/2019, page 49)
Therefore MADPET
-
Calls for the repeal of Peaceful Assembly Act
2012;
-
Calls on the government to withdraw the current Peaceful
Assembly (Amendment) Bill 2019,
-
Call on the government to transparently disclose
to the public way in advance proposed Bills, or at least the proposed main points
of law to enable public participation, and not speedily rush and pass laws as
it did the Peaceful Assembly (Amendment) Bill 2019;
-
Call on Malaysia to amend Article 10(b) of the
Federal Constitution to provide all person with ‘the right to assemble
peaceably and without arms’; and
-
Call on the government to respect the fundamental
human right to peaceful assembly, and allow all persons in Malaysia, including
children, to freely exercise this right;
Charles Hector
For and on behalf of
MADPET(Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)
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