The Star
KUALA
LUMPUR: The Security Offences (Special Measures) Bill to repeal and
replace the Internal Security Act 1960 is to be tabled for its first
reading today.
Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz said he would comment further on the Bill after it was tabled.
Prime
Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak announced his intention to abolish
the ISA and make major changes to several security laws in his Malaysia
Day address on Sept 15 last year.
Najib
also announced the repeal of the Emergency Ordinance and the removal of
the requirement for annual renewal of printing presses and publication
permits.
It
is learnt that the Bill will drastically cut the period a suspect can
be held and will allow for detailed judicial review of any arrest or
detention under the new law.
Sources
said the new law would focus on dealing with terrorism, espionage and
threats to national security with police being given less than a month
to hold a suspect without trial.
At the end of the period, the suspect must be charged in court or released.
They
said the new law would also state specifically that no one is to be
detained for his or her political beliefs as was promised by Najib in
his Sept 15 speech.
Malaysia
also looked at the security laws of several other countries including
Britain's Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 and the Patriot Act of the
United States, both of which were drawn up after the Sept 11 attacks in
New York and Washington DC.
The
ISA, introduced in 1960 in the wake of an armed insurgency by the
Communist Party of Malaya, gives police wide-ranging powers to detain
suspects indefinitely.
Under
the ISA, police can detain a suspect for up to two years after
obtaining the consent of the Home Minister. Keeping to his promise,
Najib got Parliament to approve a motion last November to lift three
emergency proclamations, two of which had been in place for over 40
years.
With that, the powers granted to police under the Emergency Ordinance are withdrawn.
The
motion sought to lift the emergency proclamation that was issued by the
Yang di-Pertuan Agong on May 15, 1969 following the May 13 racial
riots.
It
was also to lift the emergency proclamations issued by the King on Sept
14, 1966 and Nov 8, 1977 aimed at resolving political disputes in
Sarawak and Kelantan respectively.
The
Government also pushed through the Peaceful Assembly Bill, which allows
the people to gather and prohibits the police from stopping a peaceful
assembly without proper cause.
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