The New Straits Times 
by PUNITHA KUMAR
by PUNITHA KUMAR
KUALA 
LUMPUR: The government will initiate talks between the syariah and civil
 courts to propose a mechanism in solving the long-term jurisdictional 
dispute faced by both sides.
Minister
 in the Prime Minister's Department and de facto law minister Nancy 
Shukri said she will raise the matter at the next Cabinet meeting.
"Both courts need to sit down together and discuss this.
"It
 is now beyond the law because both sides are following the law," she 
said after launching two newly-minted specialist construction courts at 
the Duta Court Complex here with Chief Justice Tun Arifin Zakaria.
Nancy
 was commenting this in light of the recent case involving six-year-old 
V. Mithran who was abducted by his muslim father on April 9 despite his 
non-muslim mother gaining custody through the Civil Court. 
Arifin, on the other hand, said the case was pending at the Court of Appeal.
"We
 do not answer academic questions and will see how it is resolved (at 
the courts)," he said stating that newspaper reports had said the father
 will be filing an appeal against the civil court's decision to award 
the custody to the mother.
He also said matters relating to policies will be dealt by the government.
Meanwhile,
 the two specialist construction courts, which has been operating since 
April last year, have seen a total of 162 cases filed.
The
 courts, among others, will deal with cases involving building and 
construction disputes, engineering disputes and claims by and againt 
engineers.
It will also handle challenges to decision of arbitrators in construction and construction-related matters.
The
 establishment of the courts kicked off after the Construction Industry 
Payment and Adjudication Act (CIPAA) was passed in June 2012. The Act 
will take effect beginning tomorrow.
Malaysia
 is the second country in the world that has a specialist court for 
construction. The first is the United Kingdom which established the 
Technology and Construction Court (TCC).
Present
 during the event were Works Minister Datuk Fadillah Yusof, Construction
 Industry Development Board (CIDB) chairman Tan Sri Ahmad Tajuddin Ali, 
chief judge of Malaya Tan Sri Zulkefli Ahmad Makinuddin, chief judge of 
Sabah and Sarawak Tan Sri Richard Malanjum, Court of Appeal president 
Tan Sri Md Raus Sharif, TCC judge Robert Akenhead and Bar Council 
president Christopher Leong.
 
 
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