by Ganesh Sahathevan
After approximately SIX years of correspondence and after prolonged periods of silence and much ding-donging the Industrial Court of Malaysia has at least admitted that the case name in Sun Media v Ganesh Sahathevan, in which Ganesh Sahathevan was in fact the plaintiff, is incorrect. As any first year law student would know, the correct order is Plaintiff v. Defendant, in this case, Ganesh Sahathevan v Sun Media.
However, the Industrial Court has then gone on to say that it does not know how the error occurred, and will not therefore correct its records. The partial admission, after a fashion, adds to the evidence that the Industrial Court also was subject to the legal manipulation of disgraced former lawyer VK Lingam,and his primary client, Vincent Tan Chee Yioun, at least in the matter of Ganesh Sahathevan v Sun Media.
Interference in the workings of the Industrial Court is very likely to have been driven down from the Ministerial level (Tan and Lingam only dealt with their equals) and hence an investigation into the Industrial Court's misconduct can serve as a platform for investigation into the current Minister V.Sivakumar , and his predecessors. It was the case until at least 2018 that the Minister for Human Resources determined ,which cases were heard by the Industrial Court. It would be naive to assume that the Minister and his officers do not still exert influence over the Industrial Court.
TO BE READ WITH
UESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2007
Saufee Affandi of The Industrial Court and the law he created for Vincent Tan and VK Lingam
One of those proceedings was the matter of Ganesh Sahathevan v Sun Media Group Sdn Bhd.
I have referred to this matter and how its management by the Industrial Court, in light of the VK Lingam video, raises questions about the corruption of that court and a former Director-General of the Manpower Department, Zainol Abidin Abdul Rashid.
http://malaysianjudges.blogspot.com/2007/10/will-zainol-abidin-abdul-rashid-step.html
In Award 893 of 2006 , delivered on 22 May 2006, IC chairman Haji Saufee Afandi bin Mohmad found that the sacking of the claimant , Ganesh Sahathevan , a journalist , by his employer, Sun Media Group Sdn Bhd, publisher of THE SUN daily, was just and for proper cause.
The company had sacked the claimant in January 1997 , for writing a
story that the company had published concerning the business dealings
of Datuk Mokzhani Mahathir and a former stock broker from Singapore,
Peter Lim Eng Hock.
The story written was based almost entirely on statements made by
Mokzhani Mahathir.
Peter Lim issued a cease and desist to the Claimant and company in
regards to the story, but not Mohzani Mahathir.
The company immediately sought to apologise to Mr Lim and retract the
story, before it had obtained from Ganesh Sahathevan a written report
regarding his sources and justification for the story.
Subsequently, the company had claimed that Ganesh did not exercise
proper care in writing the story, claiming that the story was false.
The company alleged that legal action had been commenced against it
by Mr Lim as a result of publication of the story, even though no
legal action had been commenced. Ganesh maintained that the story was
accurate, and alleged victimisation on the basis that Berjaya Group
Bhd, then a shareholder of Sun Media Group, was also a party to the
business dealing revealed in the story.Company searches were provided
as evidence of Berjaya's involvement.
In finding for the company , Haji Saufee Afandi held:
"The Claimant has made issue with the Company's offer to apologize to Peter Lim.I agree with the Company that the offer to apologize is irrelevant to whether or not the dismissal of the Claimant is for just cause or excuse. If the Claimant had indeed written the Peter Lim article negligently ie without proper basis then he has committed a misconduct. That is so whether the Company offered to apologize or not. In fact even if the Company decides to fight the claims and wins based on evidence or fair comment that it obtains subsequently or through other parties still the Claimant is guilty of misconduct if he wrote the article without proper basis. "
The company had relied on a number of defamation cases in its submission.
Thus, the Industrial Court in this case considered the matter as one of defamation.
In the words of the learned Chairman:
Although these are defamation cases, they are relevant to guide the Court on the type of justification a journalist must have when he writes an article, especially one that contained allegations which may affect the reputation of the person mentioned .
The decision opens to the door for plaintiffs in defamation matters another avenue when seeking suppression of stories they are not happy about.
Parties who feel aggrieved by any matter published need not now seek the more legally rigorous and expensive route of an action in defamation, and related interlocutory injunctions. They can now attempt to ensure that the publisher of the article is pressured enough,with the mere threat of an action in defamation, to act against its own journalist,who would be denied the defence of fair comment.
In one fell swoop Saufee Affandi destroyed the centuries old defence of fair comment, quite an amazing feat for a chairman of an Industrial Court, who was formerly a judge in the Sessions Court. Like the case of Vincent Tan v MGG Pillai, this too appears to be a case where the court was prepared to create, re-write the law to suit the plaintiff for reasons best known to the judge concerned.
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