Temoq tribe resolves suit with company, Pahang govt over native land

Free Malaysia Today | Seven Orang Asli from the Temoq tribe in Rompin settled a class action lawsuit brought against private company YP Olio Sdn Bhd and the Pahang government, and a consent judgment between the villagers and YP Olio was recorded in the High Court. New Sin Yew was one of the lawyers who represented the villagers.

Institutionalise Law Reform Mechanisms

BFM | The Madani Government is setting up a committee to review three major pieces of criminal legislation with an 18-month timeframe. Lawyer Edmund Bon of AmerBON, Advocates spoke to BFM about the key areas of reform that need urgent attention.

Federal Court judge heads committee to review outdated laws

Free Malaysia Today | Amer Hamzah Arshad has been appointed to serve as a member of a committee that will identify provisions in the Penal Code, Criminal Procedure Code, and Evidence Act that are outdated or no longer suitable. Federal Court judge Harmindar Singh Dhaliwal will head the 25-member committee, which will also propose reforms to these laws.

Cops breached statutory duty in banning Bar’s 2022 judiciary walk, rules court

Free Malaysia Today | The High Court held that the Peaceful Assembly Act did not allow the police to stop an assembly — the Malaysian Bar’s “walk for judicial independence” — from being held. New Sin Yew, the Bar’s lawyer, informed the court that the Bar was only demanding RM1 as nominal damages since the suit was being brought as a matter of principle.

Police acted beyond powers in assembly ban, ordered to pay RM1

New Straits Times | Malaysian Bar President Mohamed Ezri Abdul Wahab said that the High Court decision regarding the Bar Council’s march for judicial independence in 2022 reaffirmed the fundamental right to peaceful assembly and served as an important precedent in upholding constitutional freedoms. Lawyer New Sin Yew acted for the plaintiffs.

Indigenous peoples’ rights: The ASEAN paradox

The Jakarta Post | There are high expectations that the rights of indigenous peoples in ASEAN will be strengthened in the ASEAN Declaration on Environmental Rights, currently being discussed by AICHR under Malaysia’s chairmanship. Advocacy groups are looking to AICHR Chair Edmund Bon to ensure that the new declaration will be fully centred on these rights and on environmental protection.

Former Aker Engineering manager given DNAA by court, as MACC vouches no further action

The Edge Malaysia | The Court of Appeal substituted the High Court decision that acquitted former Aker Engineering Malaysia manager Ahmad Hatta Kamaruzzaman over a charge of giving false material information to SSM, with a discharge not amounting to an acquittal (DNAA). Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay, and Michael Cheah acted for Ahmad Hatta.

Empowering women migrants in ASEAN

Monash University | Edmund Bon, Chair of the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR) and Representative of Malaysia to AICHR, encouraged the research team to make a formal submission of the research findings to AICHR and the ASEAN Commission on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Women and Children (ACWC).

No winners in Zulfarhan case, says defence lawyers

New Straits Times | Lawyer Amer Hamzah Arshad said no one emerged victorious in the case of six former UPNM students convicted for the death of a navy cadet officer. The six avoided the death penalty when the Federal Court upheld the High Court’s 18-year jail term for causing Zulfarhan Osman Zulkarnain’s death.

Zulfarhan’s death: Six UPNM students escape gallows

Malaysiakini | Six former UPNM students dodged the hangman’s noose over the 2017 death of a navy cadet officer. The Federal Court unanimously allowed the death sentence for murder to be set aside and substituted with 18 years’ imprisonment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder. Lawyers Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay and Lee Yee Woei represented two of the six appellants.

6 escape death sentence, jailed 18 years over navy cadet’s death

Free Malaysia Today | The Federal Court said the prosecution failed to prove the elements for murder beyond reasonable doubt against six former UPNM students for the death of Zulfarhan Osman Zulkarnain, and restored the 18-year jail term imposed by the High Court. Two of the six appellants were represented by lawyers Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay and Lee Yee Woei.

Temoq tribe resolves suit with company, Pahang govt over native land

Free Malaysia Today | Seven Orang Asli from the Temoq tribe in Rompin settled a class action lawsuit brought against private company YP Olio Sdn Bhd and the Pahang government, and a consent judgment between the villagers and YP Olio was recorded in the High Court. New Sin Yew was one of the lawyers who represented the villagers.

Institutionalise Law Reform Mechanisms

BFM | The Madani Government is setting up a committee to review three major pieces of criminal legislation with an 18-month timeframe. Lawyer Edmund Bon of AmerBON, Advocates spoke to BFM about the key areas of reform that need urgent attention.

Federal Court judge heads committee to review outdated laws

Free Malaysia Today | Amer Hamzah Arshad has been appointed to serve as a member of a committee that will identify provisions in the Penal Code, Criminal Procedure Code, and Evidence Act that are outdated or no longer suitable. Federal Court judge Harmindar Singh Dhaliwal will head the 25-member committee, which will also propose reforms to these laws.

Cops breached statutory duty in banning Bar’s 2022 judiciary walk, rules court

Free Malaysia Today | The High Court held that the Peaceful Assembly Act did not allow the police to stop an assembly — the Malaysian Bar’s “walk for judicial independence” — from being held. New Sin Yew, the Bar’s lawyer, informed the court that the Bar was only demanding RM1 as nominal damages since the suit was being brought as a matter of principle.

Police acted beyond powers in assembly ban, ordered to pay RM1

New Straits Times | Malaysian Bar President Mohamed Ezri Abdul Wahab said that the High Court decision regarding the Bar Council’s march for judicial independence in 2022 reaffirmed the fundamental right to peaceful assembly and served as an important precedent in upholding constitutional freedoms. Lawyer New Sin Yew acted for the plaintiffs.

Indigenous peoples’ rights: The ASEAN paradox

The Jakarta Post | There are high expectations that the rights of indigenous peoples in ASEAN will be strengthened in the ASEAN Declaration on Environmental Rights, currently being discussed by AICHR under Malaysia’s chairmanship. Advocacy groups are looking to AICHR Chair Edmund Bon to ensure that the new declaration will be fully centred on these rights and on environmental protection.

Former Aker Engineering manager given DNAA by court, as MACC vouches no further action

The Edge Malaysia | The Court of Appeal substituted the High Court decision that acquitted former Aker Engineering Malaysia manager Ahmad Hatta Kamaruzzaman over a charge of giving false material information to SSM, with a discharge not amounting to an acquittal (DNAA). Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay, and Michael Cheah acted for Ahmad Hatta.

Empowering women migrants in ASEAN

Monash University | Edmund Bon, Chair of the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR) and Representative of Malaysia to AICHR, encouraged the research team to make a formal submission of the research findings to AICHR and the ASEAN Commission on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Women and Children (ACWC).

No winners in Zulfarhan case, says defence lawyers

New Straits Times | Lawyer Amer Hamzah Arshad said no one emerged victorious in the case of six former UPNM students convicted for the death of a navy cadet officer. The six avoided the death penalty when the Federal Court upheld the High Court’s 18-year jail term for causing Zulfarhan Osman Zulkarnain’s death.

Zulfarhan’s death: Six UPNM students escape gallows

Malaysiakini | Six former UPNM students dodged the hangman’s noose over the 2017 death of a navy cadet officer. The Federal Court unanimously allowed the death sentence for murder to be set aside and substituted with 18 years’ imprisonment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder. Lawyers Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay and Lee Yee Woei represented two of the six appellants.

6 escape death sentence, jailed 18 years over navy cadet’s death

Free Malaysia Today | The Federal Court said the prosecution failed to prove the elements for murder beyond reasonable doubt against six former UPNM students for the death of Zulfarhan Osman Zulkarnain, and restored the 18-year jail term imposed by the High Court. Two of the six appellants were represented by lawyers Amer Hamzah Arshad, Joshua Tay and Lee Yee Woei.