Malaysian lawyers under fire
26/05/2008 New Straits Times
By June Ramli
Judge: Many lawyers clueless
Datuk Gopal Sri Ram says many lawyers don't know how to prepare written
briefs.
KUALA LUMPUR: The standard of lawyers, most of whom graduated from local
universities, range from the good to the grotesque, says a senior judge.
"Many of them are bad because of the low-quality training they received at
local institutions of higher learning," Court of Appeal judge Datuk Gopal
Sri Ram told the New Straits Times after the launch of a book, Malaysian
Employment Laws, by M.N. D'Cruz here on Thursday.
Sri Ram, who has been in the legal profession for 40 years, said some
lawyers did not have a clue how to introduce their opponents or to cite
cases in court.
There was also a large number who did not know how to prepare written
briefs, he added.
"The Bar Council should address this problem instead of being distracted by
other matters. "
He said the professional standard of lawyers, estimated at 13,000, had
declined in the last 10 years.
"At Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, for example, I was told that they do not
offer company law, which is a core subject if one wants to practise law."
He said many lawyers were also financially strapped because of the high cost
of maintaining their practice.
As a result, many could not afford to even buy law journals, which cost
between several hundreds and thousands of ringgit per volume.
"Law books to a lawyer are what the scalpel is to a surgeon and making them
expensive does not help the profession," he said.
"Many are broke because private practice takes a lot of money; they have to
pay their staff and their provident fund and taxes, and when all that is
done, nothing much is left."
He said the journal for contract law, for instance, cost RM2,000 and this
was because it was printed and published in England.
"Many law journals come from Australia and India while Malaysia produces
very few law books.
"This is another reason why it makes it expensive for lawyers.
"That is why the photocopy machines in their offices are kept busy at all
times," he added.
He commended the government's decision to replace the Certificate in Legal
Practice examination with the Common Bar Examination.
Sri Ram added: "This is a good idea and we should give it our support." |