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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Malaysia’s ruling PKR in bind over judicial crisis, after Anwar’s daughter joins protest

Nurul Izzah’s presence at the march goes against party line, is an ‘implicit rebuke’ of Anwar’s position on the crisis, says lawmaker Rafizi Ramli

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Police officers stand guard at the entrance to the prime minister’s Office as lawyers and trainee lawyers march from the Palace of Justice during the “Walk to Safeguard Judicial Independence” in Putrajaya, Malaysia, on Monday. Photo: EPA
Hadi AzmiandJoseph Sipalan
A fresh quandary may be brewing in Malaysia’s ruling People’s Justice Party (PKR), after Deputy President Nurul Izzah Anwar joined a march calling for judicial independence while her party weighs disciplinary action on her peers for demanding an investigation into alleged meddling in the country’s judiciary.
Nurul Izzah, the daughter of Prime Minister and PKR President Anwar Ibrahim, joined nearly 1,000 lawyers in a march on the prime minister’s office on Monday afternoon to protest against alleged executive interference in the appointment of the chief justice.

Public attention on the issue intensified over the weekend when purported minutes of a Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) meeting in May were publicly leaked, exposing alleged attempts to fix judicial appointments.

PKR Deputy President Nurul Izzah Anwar with members of the Malaysian Bar during a march for judicial independence on Monday. Photo: Handout
PKR Deputy President Nurul Izzah Anwar with members of the Malaysian Bar during a march for judicial independence on Monday. Photo: Handout

Nurul Izzah’s presence at the march, however, sent the party into a tailspin after it launched an internal probe into calls by more than a dozen divisions to suspend her predecessor, Rafizi Ramli, and eight other party leaders, for questioning the government’s handling of the judicial crisis.

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“Izzah’s attendance puts the party in an awkward position, given the official party line so far is to deny that there is a crisis in the judiciary,” Rafizi told This Week in Asia.

“Her attendance means she endorsed the [Malaysian Bar’s] demands, including the setting up of the [Royal Commission of Inquiry] which I advocated; and Anwar is known to oppose it.”

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In a statement on Monday, Nurul Izzah called for an independent tribunal made up of senior judges to investigate alleged attempts to fix judicial appointments, stressing that it would “go a long way to preserve the faith in our systems”.

Her position, however, appeared to contradict her party’s view on her fellow leaders, who had asked for something similar just a week earlier.

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