The Registrar of Societies has maintained a silence
over the HRP's application to be registered as a political party
Government departments in Malaysia,
whether federal or state, have their respective Client’s Charter which spells
out the A to Z details of the processes involved in getting anything done
through the bureaucracy.
The
Registrar of Societies (ROS) is no exception.
Its Client’s Charter promises
that any application to register an organisation would be speedily disposed of
within four months. Applicants would be advised, irrespective of whether they
succeeded or failed, within that period.
An
exception seems to have been made by the ROS, for no rhyme or reason, in the
case of the Human Rights Party (HRP) Malaysia. It was clearly not informed by
the ROS about the status of its application within its own four-month
timeframe. The ROS should explain this obvious discrimination against the party
or risk being exposed as doing the bidding of the ruling Umno, and its poodle,
the MIC.
The HRP had
sent several reminders to the ROS since June 18, 2009 to March 14, 2011 but to
no avail.
Before June
18, 2009 the registration bid was under the Parti Reformasi Insan Malaysia
(PRIM) and after that under HRP. The party lodged all the necessary forms on
Nov 25, 2010 when there was no reply to the June 18 letter requesting the
forms. PRIM, in fact, first applied for registration in 2000.
The ROS
waited until the matter was in court before mischievously replying to the HRP
on Aug 4, 2011 that its application had been rejected on two specific grounds.
The hands of the court were thus tied at the 11th hour. To add insult to
injury, the ROS callously got an Indian civil servant by the name of Dasmond
Das a/l Michael Das to convey the bad news vide a covering letter. The attached
notification itself had to be signed, as it was, by the ROS, Abdul Rahman
Othman.
The first
ground for rejection was that the application was “not in order” in line with
what the ROS wanted and, secondly, that “there were issues with the party
constitution”.
The ROS did
not spell out the specific details on the two grounds for rejection, thereby
underlining that these were feeble attempts at afterthoughts. The ROS has
obviously to work out the specifics which could be as simple as sending in the
application forms in triplicate when the ROS needs four copies.
Splitting hairs
The ROS,
generally, splits hairs on these two – organisation and constitution –
subjective issues.
Besides,
its hands are virtually tied and there’s little that it can do to prevent the
registration, eventually, of any organisation.
Left
unspoken was the stark reality that the “onus” is on applicants to get back to
the ROS within two weeks of lodging an application to enquire on its status.
The ROS would generally have some questions on the proposed constitution of an
applicant’s organisation. These must be put in order before clearance is
sought, it’s known, from the Special Branch on the applicants.
The HRP
clearly did not get back to the ROS within two weeks and did not follow up
personally with the department. HRP pro-tem secretary-general P Uthayakumar,
when asked about this earlier this year, rightly took the position that the
onus should be on the ROS to get back to the applicant and not vice-versa.
He
reiterated the same position when asked again recently. Nevertheless, he
conceded that HRP treasurer A Sukumaran followed up personally, on his own
accord, with the ROS on the party’s application but to no avail.
If an
applicant has previously been detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA),
as was the case with Uthayakumar, the Special Branch would not respond to any
enquiry from the ROS. Otherwise, the Special Branch would signal that “there’s
no file on the applicant”, meaning “the applicant is not a security threat”.
It’s not
known whether other government departments and/or other interests have to be
consulted as well.
In the case of the Malaysian Dayak
Congress (MDC) it’s known that the Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS), led by James
Masing, objected to the former’s formation. Both were then making their bids
for registration after the Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) was deregistered.
MDC was
subsequently advised by the ROS, unofficially, that its application could not
be approved “on national security grounds” and because “there were too many
political parties”. MDC hesitated to take the matter to court to test these ROS
theories despite the fact that it was in violation of Article 10 1(c) of the
Federal Constitution.
Grounds for rejection
Moving
forward, lawyers in the know feel the HRP would have to write officially to the
ROS and ask for specifics on the two grounds for rejection of its application
for registration.
The ROS is
unlikely to reply, according to sources familiar with the mechanics.
It would be
a different matter if Uthayakumar makes an effort to meet with the ROS
personally and get the necessary details. But knowing the man, many of his
supporters feel that he’s unlikely to bother with such an approach
This would
clearly play into the ROS’ hands and set in motion a chain of events which will
see Uthayakumar in court on yet another day on the same issue with the same
applications in tow, thagt is, judicial review, mandamus and certiorari.
“Uthayakumar
would have to decide whether he, like the ROS, wants to play politics with the
issue of registering the HRP or call the latter’s bluff”, say political leaders
in Kuala Lumpur who pleaded anonymity.
In short,
according to them, he would be well-advised to march to Putrajaya, drop by the
ROS and “take the bull by the horns”.
Writing numerous
reminder letters to the ROS, no doubt, would not get him anywhere but would
simply see him back in court before a judge whose hands would have been tied by
both the parties in the dispute bent on engaging in what would increasingly be
seen as a game of cat-and-mouse but to avail.
At this
time of writing, the HRP is preparing to appeal to the home minister over the
ROS rejecting the party’s application, according to Uthayakumar. The party
would at the same time give the home minister/ROS two weeks to register the
party, failing which they would be back in court once again clutching the same
applications.
Source : FMT
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