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I refer to the front-page report today 'Humiliated' MPs attack NST DAP's Kit Siang leads with support from BN members in New Straits Times with me leading a quartet of photographs of four MPs under the headline question "The untouchables" as well as the commentary by the NST group editor-in-chief Kalimullah Hassan in pages 4 and 12, entitled Column was fair comment .

Let me state from the outset that I fully agree that there is an urgent need for a higher standard of parliamentary debate by MPs, which is why I had been consistently and persistently calling for parliamentary reform and modernisation to upgrade parliamentary standards and performance.

There is, however, an equally urgent need to raise the standard and quality of media reporting and commentary about parliamentary proceedings as well as national affairs, which is highlighted by the NST's articles alleging that I had led - with the support from Barisan Nasional members - an onslaught against the NST for it's Zainul Arrifin column Our MPs are not ready for prime-time TV .

I did not lead, and I have no doubt that BN MPs do not want to be led by me, in any onslaught on the NST . In fact, BN MPs are very sheepish and shamefaced about the whole episode.

I do not know whether BN MPs are 'untouchables' but DAP MPs and lead have always belonged to the most vulnerable political group in the eyes of the 'mainstream media', or I would not have been treated as a 'non-person' by them all these years, including the 17 months of a new premiership which is supposed to herald reform, including in the fourth estate.

The NST commentary Column was fair comment is guilty of 'below-the-belt' blows when it said:

'So what did 'Mr Opposition' Lim Kit Siang, who often passes himself off as a champion of democracy and the free press, find so offensive?

'As an MP, Lim has the power to suggest that Zainul be referred to the Privileges Committee. Are we all not glad that he does not have the power of the Internal Security Minister to revoke the licence of a newspaper?'

What is the basis for the NST leap in its baseless and unwarranted insinuation that I would have revoked the NST's licence if I had the power to do so when I have always advocated the repeal of the annual press licensing law?

NST should doubly apologise for its low quality of parliamentary reporting and completely misunderstanding of the thrust and the purpose of my raising Zainul Arifin's column in Parliament yesterday.

Firstly, the NST report opened saying that 'Members of Parliament - from both sides of the parliamentary divide spent the morning session of the Dewan Rakyat" yesterday criticising the NST for having 'humiliated' them'

In actual fact, not more than 7.5 minutes were spent on the NST column in two separate episodes yesterday morning or about four percent of the three-hour morning session.

Secondly, I am astounded that NST has completely missed and mistaken the thrust and purpose of my raising Zainal Arifin's column, which was to highlight the deplorable behaviour of a handful of BN MPs who had brought Parliament into disrepute and public contempt, and had probably justified Zainal's strictures.

When I suggested that the NST and Zainul be referred to the Committee of Privileges, I was not making any prejudgment that h was was guilty of breach of privilege or contempt of Parliament and should therefore be penalised, but to provide a forum to focus public scrutiny on MPs' conduct, standard and quality of debate.

When I first referred to the NST column during the debate on the Prime Minister's Department during the committee stage of the second 2004 supplementary estimates yesterday (April 20), I said that anyone reading the NST column 'Our MPs are not ready for prime-time TV' will get the impression that it was highly contemptuous of MPs and Parliament.

When I asked whether MPs shared the same feeling that the column was contemptuous of members of parliament, (menghinakan Ahli Parlimen), there was general agreement even among BN MPs. But I continued and asked:

"The most pertinent question is whether the writer Zainul Arifin not only has the right but is right. He is in the right to be contemptuous of MPs because of the behaviour of MPs which have brought this contempt on themselves. Is he right?"

I went on to say that if Zainul was wrong in writing about Parliament and bringing it into public contempt, then BN MPs should agree to refer him to the Committee of Privileges. I asked specifically whether BN MPs, who comprise 92 percent of the House, were prepared to refer Zainul to the committee for contempt, which would give him the opportunity to justify his writing.

I also asked whether the BN MPs were of a 'guilty conscience' and not prepared for such a reference.

I next asked whether BN MPs were prepared to defend their conduct and debate over the past two weeks - which had made Parliament a national laughing-stock - on issues like the LRT courtesy campaign advertisement, MAS stewardess uniform and polygamy.

This challenge to BN MPs to refer Zainul to the committee for contempt was not taken up simply because BN MPs knew that adverse criticisms against them not only by Zainul but by the general public on the issues named were valid and fully justified, and that if there is public contempt of Parliament, then it is they that had brought it upon themselves by their own behaviour and conduct.

I append the transcript of the 6.5 minutes of the first episode yesterday relating to this reference, and the video clip of this parliamentary proceeding. It is also accessible at the DAP website .

In my speeches in Parliament yesterday, I spoke about corruption, the death of Department of Environment officer Rumie Azzan Mahlie, why the Anti-Corruption Agency is not transparent about its investigations, the urgent need for a 'whistle blowers' legislation to protect those who can give information to combat corruption and Islam Hadhari.

I also spoke on the views and criticisms of non-Muslim religious groups about justice and fair play in the treatment of all religions, and the need for open and tolerant attitude on the free use of languages, including Bahasa Malaysia, by all religions for three reasons: (1) that Bahasa Malaysia is the national and common language of all Malaysians regardless of religion; (2) that the era of information technology when all languages and religious are easily accessible, whether on the Internet or otherwise and (3) that Malaysia must move towards a future with 'open minds' and not 'closed societies'.

As usual, I was blacked out of NST reports being a 'non-person' in Malaysian Parliament and politics.

Nonetheless, NST can be assured of my support if it is campaigning for improvement in the quality of parliamentary debate and performance. It must prepared to do so in tandem with the uplifting of its media quality, both in reporting and commentary, whether parliamentary proceedings or national development.

I hope the NST can demonstrate fair play by according this reply front-page treatment. This response also refers to the Berita Harian which carries a similar report today.

The writer is Parliamentary Opposition Leader.


Editor's note: NST today published a page 4 report entitled Kit Siang explains attack on the NST , which is based on the above letter Lim Kit Siang had sent to the NST editor-in-chief.

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