KUALA LUMPUR (May 19): Student activist Adam Adli Abd Halim has been remanded for five days to allow police to question him over remarks he allegedly made at a post-GE13 forum.

His lawyer, Latheefa Koya, said a magistrate this morning approved the application by police to remand Adam until May 23.

She said Adam was remanded under Section 124B of the Penal Code for allegedly undermining parliamentary democracy as well as under Section 4(1)(b) of the Sedition Act for allegedly uttering seditious remarks.

“We are shocked that Adam’s speech on May 13 could be amounted to undermining parliamentary democracy, because the section is quite general. Anything you said can be interpreted as undermining parliamentary democracy.

“We see this as a malicious intention to punish Adam, to detain him in the lockup because the purpose of remand is just to carry out investigation,” she said.
Adam, 24, was arrested by police outside his Bangsar home yesterday and was kept overnight at the Jinjang police remand centre.

His arrest is linked to his remarks at a post-election forum organised by Suara Anak Muda Malaysia (SAMM) on May 13 where he told the audience that Malaysians “cannot wait for five years to overthrow Umno and BN”.

“We were told that he was under arrest since 3pm yesterday but not a single statement was recorded untill this morning,” Latheefa told reporters outside the centre.

Insisting that the case is straightforward as it is about remarks made by Adam at the forum, she said police were supposed to have carried out their investigation over the past few days before arresting him.

She added that Adam had decided to exercise his right to remain silent and therefore his statement could have been quickly recorded without the need to remand him for five days.

Adam’s lawyers will challenge the remand order at the High Court, she added.

Eric Paulsen, another lawyer for Adam, pointed out this is the first case of a person being remanded under Section 124B Penal Code, which is a new section that was inserted after the enactment of the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012.

He said it was an “oppressive and arbitrary” provision with a wide definition of what amounted to “detrimental to parliamentary democracy”.

Paulsen opined that this is an attempt of the police to shut the mouth of the youth, as well as other civil society members to question and discuss the state of democracy in the country.

Meanwhile, Adam Adli passed a message to his friends through his father: “Be strong, this is only the beginning, keep up the fight.”

Abdul Halim Abdul Hamid said he was proud of his son for fighting for the rights of the people, adding that his family fully supported him.

“As a father I pray for the safety of my son. We will let the lawyers decide on any further action,” he said.

Khalid Ismath, chairman of Kumpulan Anak Muda Independen (Kami), said Kami members will continue to hold candle light vigils outside the lockup every night.

About 50 youths had gathered outside of the remand centre last night, urging police to release Adam immediately.

Adam, a suspended student of Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris, made headlines last year when he was investigated for removing a flag bearing Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s image outside the Umno headquarters here.

by Chen Shaua Fui, fz.com

Read more: http://fz.com/content/student-activist-adam-remanded-5-days#ixzz2ToqpbG1c