Protect those who own land
26/11/2007 The Star
I REFER to the report 'E-Tanah more efficient (The Star, Nov 21) where it
was reported that amendments to the National Land Code would be tabled at
the next Parliament session.
The report quoted Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak as
saying, after chairing the National Land Council meeting, that one of the
amendments would include extending the e-Tanah system to the entire
peninsula, following its successful implementation in Penang last month.
On July 24 ‘Government to review land code Bar Council calls for amendment’,
(The Star, July 25), the Bar Council handed over a memorandum titled
Prevention and Protection against Fraudulent Land Transactions, to the
Natural Resources and Environment Minister, Datuk Seri Azmi Khalid. A copy
of the memorandum was also later extended to the Attorney-General’s
Chambers.
In the memorandum, the Bar Council has proposed amendments to section 340(3)
and (4) and section 187B of the National Land Code. These amendments, if
passed, would legislatively reverse the unjust decision of Adorna Properties
v Boonsom Boonyanit delivered by the Federal Court in 2000.
For the past six years, the Adorna Properties decision has “wreaked havoc”
on every landowner in this country. It not only puts a landowner at risk of
losing his property to fraudsters and forgers, but also when the landowner
loses his land to these crooks, he loses everything without any compensation
or remedy.
The Government, therefore, owes every citizen an immediate duty to protect
and preserve his property from deprivation.
The Bar Council calls on the Government to ensure that the coming amendments
to the National Land Code will contain provisions to come to grips with
these serious ramifications of the Adorna Properties decision in order to
undo the injustices perpetuated by this case for the last six years.
ROGER TAN,
Chairman, Conveyancing Practice Committee,
Malaysian Bar Council.
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