Preventing Preventive Detention
Written by Murugesan Sinnandavar on July 25, 2008 – 12:57 am
Preventive detention is a process of arrest and imprisonment of a person without a formal charge on the basis of the executive’s subjective assessment that the said person is a threat to security or public order.
Three major preventive detention laws in Malaysia are the Internal Security Act 1960 (ISA), the Emergency (Public Order and Prevention of Crime) Ordinance 1969 (EPOPCO) and the Dangerous Drugs (Special Preventive Measures) Act 1985 (DSPMA).
The most infamous of these is the ISA.
The ISA has its legal basis under Article 149 of the Federal Constitution which enables legislation against subversion and action prejudicial to public order. Article 149(1) further states that law designed to stop or prevent that action is valid notwithstanding that it is inconsistent with any provisions of Articles 5, 9, 10 or 13 ( i.e. Articles that ‘entrenches’ Fundamental Liberties’).
The ISA has its historical origin in the Emergency Regulations Ordinance 1948. After World War II, the Malaysian Communist Party took to armed struggle and a state of emergency was declared by the then British High Commissioner to fight this insurgency.
Regulation 17 of Ordinance 1948 empowered the Chief Secretary of the Federation to direct the detention of any person named by way of an order for any period not exceeding one year.
The Emergency Regulations Ordinance 1948 did serve its purpose and was subsequently repealed when the Emergency ended on 30th July, 1960. However, the power of detention without trial under Regulation 17 was transformed into Part II of the ISA.
When the ISA was tabled in parliament, all indications and assurance were that it was a temporary measure and was enacted to fight the communist threat.
RH Hickling, the original draftsman of the ISA commented in “The First Five Years of the Federation of Malaya Constitution” (1962):
“… I must hope that the practice of imprisonment without trial, charge or conviction admitted by the Act 1960 will not be regarded as permanent feature of the legal and political landscape of Malaya or for that matter of Asia generally.”
Again in 1989, now Professor Hickling commented in the preface to Essays in Malaysian Law as follows:
“I could not imagine then that the time would come when the power of detention, carefully and deliberately interlocked with Article 149 of the Constitution, would be used against political opponents, welfare workers and others dedicated to non-violent, peaceful activities. It was with some considerable surprise that I discovered in 1987 that the Supreme Court (Teresa Lim Chin Chin and Ors v. Inspector General of Police [1988] 1 MLJ 293 at 296) took the view that ‘from the wording of the provision(s) of the Act there is nothing to show that it restricted to communist activities”. It seems extraordinary that a court, faced with two interpretations of a law, should adopt the one more restrictive of freedom, and indifferent to the Constitution.”
The late Tun Abdul Razak Hussein, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister when tabling the ISA gave the assurance that it would be used with utmost care so as to avoid abuse. In his speech he stated that the security of the Federation was still very much in issue on the basis that there was still a need for the people “to be protected from communist subversion.”
The threat of communist terrorism had come and gone with the Bangkok Accord in 1989 but we still have the ISA very much alive and kicking till today.
ISA which was enacted as a temporary measure and for a particular purpose had become a permanent feature in our Malaysian life. Enacted as a necessary evil to fight terror, ISA has become terror in itself.
Datuk Dr Rais Yatim, as early as 1996, made the following observation in INSAF:
“That the ISA may be used freely to thwart political or other challenges on the pretext of ‘security’ hardly needs qualification or rebuttal as events in the country have in the past proven. The culture of fear that the ISA emanates, the disregard for a person’s right of hearing, not to mention the gross disregard for the dignity of the person and the very percepts of a just society – all add up to the question of whether the ISA ought to be tolerated as a legal instrument to correct society from the standpoint of national security.”
Cases of mental and physical torture, inhumane and degrading treatment of the ISA detainees are numerous and are well documented by the victims. These horror stories have become our own “Tales from the Gulag”.
With the cessation of the communist threat, Malaysians did not benefit from the dividends of peace by the timely revocation of the ISA. Instead, the ISA had morphed into an overbearing and all encompassing instrument of fear and suppression.
In 1989, ISA Detainee’s recourse to the courts of law was further curtailed when we dutifully followed our southern neighbor in ousting judicial review in matters concerning the minister’s power to detain any person under ISA.
With the amendment, detainees can only challenge the detention on procedural grounds. I have nothing against Singapore. We have many things that we can emulate them but must we obediently imitate them in a field that they have one of the worst track records?
The breadth and reach of ISA has been expended to include amongst others, counterfeiters and religious extremist. What’s more worrying is that the ISA is viewed by some as the catch all enactment. There had been proposals that the ISA be used against copyright infringers, share fraudsters and rice hoarders. A government backbencher once even suggested that the ISA should be used against ‘political traitors’ of the country.
With so little understanding of such a grave provision of the law, it is worrying, to say the least, to allow it to remain as a law in our statute books.
Not only does ISA injure the detainees by depriving them of the basic right to be heard but it injures the Nation as a whole at a deeper level. The very threat of ISA casts a net of fear on the populace and retards our aspiration for justice for all.
ISA might have been a necessary evil once but with the evil vanquished, where is the necessity of ISA now?
We have a vast array of legislation that provides adequate legal frame work to deal with threats against national security. However, the executive have repeatedly chosen the easy path of invoking the ISA that deprives a man his day in court and send chills of fear down the spine of its citizens.
The Prime Minister, YAB Dato Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has the best window of opportunity to revoke ISA now. With the current political scenario and calls to repeal ISA coming from all quarters, Pak Lah has the political momentum to push for the repeal of ISA.
The Prime Minister, by repealing the ISA, will not only pave the way to set the heart and soul of our country free, but also will leave a legacy more enduring and meaningful then any monument one could ever built.
Please repeal the ISA now Mr. Prime Minister.
Murugesan Sinnandavar
Posted in Education, Social |

July 25th, 2008 at 1:33 am
Admin note : As a non-partisan organization, we had to remove the last sentence to avoid any contradiction to MIndsBlog’s stipulated rules.
Mahendran
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July 25th, 2008 at 1:40 am
THank you Muru for the mind opening article. It surely gives more insight on what ISA and other so called preventive law means and how it came to be.
We cant use the laws that were meant to be used against Communist for any type of action against the civilians. It is very wrong for the executive powers that be. to simply stroke their mighty pen and ink the paper that gives the absolute power to act as they wish.
In a Suhakam-sponsored human rights camp, we were told that the Emergency Ordinance 1969 ( or sum other law) is still in effect till today, even when the need is obviously not there
Pity the family members of the ISA detainees, who cant make ends meet, and yet at the same time had to fight for their loved one’s justice.
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July 25th, 2008 at 10:41 am
So a possible turning point for the country *could* have been in 1989 when we signed the Bangkok Accord, at which time ISA’s necessity would have diminished drastically.
So how come no one voiced against ISA back in 1989? Were those who dared to voice out threatened with ISA itself?
Well its not too late now, but it needs a hell of a force to go against this law. It *probably* needs opposition parties, component parties who are against ISA, NGO’s, bar councils, human rights groups etc to join hands and protest.
But then I guess with all the political saga going on in our country right now I guess protesting against ISA is way down the pecking order.
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July 25th, 2008 at 11:03 am
Very good article indeed.
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July 25th, 2008 at 11:59 am
Yes Mr Mahendran, we are still under the proclamation of emergency. There have been calls to revoke it by lawyers but no one took notice of it. Technically speaking we are still under a state of emergency. Planning to write about at some other time.
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July 25th, 2008 at 9:42 pm
ISA. Sedition Act. Aku Janji.
All three are enough to put away anyone who utters a different opinion from the government or who has a free thinking mind that offers a new point of view. These “laws” are simply too tempting for whoever in charge of the government to NOT misuse. They provide great convenience.
Without healthy freedom of expression and opinions, how can we call this country a “democracy” with a straight face?
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July 27th, 2008 at 10:00 pm
Its about time
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July 27th, 2008 at 10:05 pm
Oh,If all these prevention laws has been repealed, what we going to do when we catch real terrorist?
Let’s say someone who is planning to topple to goverment, using high handed measures. What we going to do with them? Is there any separate laws to put them behind the bars?
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July 28th, 2008 at 4:45 pm
Novinthen,
Say I plan to blow up some building, and plan to get away with it. To get away, say I simply plant some evidences that will be traced back to you. For example, your id in the terrorized location, or some chemical spill in your backyard. I can get you arrested with a simple phone call even. Should the police catch you, and dump you in ISA, how would you be able to prove that you are NOT guilty, without a lawyer and a proper judiciary process?
Remember what happened to Dr Mohammad Haneef in Australia, who was caught and charged, and his visa revoked all because his sim card was found in the home of his cousin hundreds of miles away? If Australia had ISA, Dr Haneef will prabably be rotting in prison. Instead, now he is a free man.
Terrorism is simply a convenient excuse for governments all around the world to maintain laws which benefits their own personal agenda.
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July 28th, 2008 at 9:47 pm
Good comment by tzarina…
Malaysia have real good anti-terrorist force. I’m telling this because im in the field. I have seen the way they do it LIVE.
In Malaysia, anybody(terrorist) go against the King and country, in Malay it is know as DAHAGI, will be hanged to death.
how many in ISA are “REAL” terrorist? anybody…
so ISA is just political gimmick
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July 29th, 2008 at 12:03 am
haa! gud example tzarina. novin bathel illeya??
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July 29th, 2008 at 12:58 am
lol. Mahendran Tata… Mahendra Scorpio… lol. all car brands.. I never run away from intellectual debates my friend. Even if im wrong , ill come and apologize
Me sick ler, didnt have time to check others blogs.
Anyway, i oni asked whether got other laws for us to put terrorist behind the bars.Coz I belive Kassim Selamat does exist! lol
Most of the times we tend to think of out the box till the box oso hilang. So ill just follow.
There is always pro and con in any law.
Remember how one malay artist( dowant to name,then kena sue! ) got away with Drug case? The drug was inside his pants,but he didnt wear the pants at the time of raid. Reasonable doubt come , he got released.Even when his video smoking drug was all over the net? And the 999 Host. And many more.
So all the laws got pro and cons. Lubang besar di sistem perundangan mana mana negara
Anyway back to topic, its just depends u r liberal or democrat. With Obama or Mccain?
Obama leads, but one small bomb in NY will make McCain the next president
.. We never know what we want ever.
We also have people who have been inside bar for tens of years for being at the wrong place at wrong times. Can we repeal all the laws?
Anyway. Gtg la… Pergi Dinnering..
Have fun blog commenting!…
“If you’re not a liberal at twenty you have no heart, if you’re not a conservative at forty you have no brain.“Sir Winston Churchill
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