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Cabinet says toll agreements to
remain secret
S.Tamarai Chelvi and Pauline Puah
sun_28012007
KUALA LUMPUR (Jan 25, 2007): The Cabinet is not
prepared to make public the toll agreements inked
between the government and highway concessionaires,
says Works Minister Datuk Seri S.Samy Vellu.
"I have also suggested that the Cabinet take
appropriate action against the person (or persons)
who had stolen and exhibited an agreement. The
agreement is solely between the government and the
company and it is a secret document," said Samy,
adding that he brought up the matter at the Cabinet
meeting on Wednesday.
"It is classified secret ... a restricted document
of the government. It has been stolen by some people
and we have suggested we are going to ask the
Attorney-General's office to take appropriate action
against those who stole the document and exhibited
it without the authority, and they have to pay for
it," Samy said.
Asked whether this was the Cabinet's decision, Samy
said: "This is what has been suggested to the
Cabinet."
Samy spoke in a press conference today after
chairing a MIC central working committee meeting in
the MIC headquarters on Jalan Rahmat.
In a press conference early this month, the
Coalition Against Toll Hike (Protes) revealed a copy
of the agreement between the government and
Lingkaran Trans Kota Sdn Bhd (Litrak) to reporters.
Protes also demanded the government to reveal how
the government had reached its agreements with other
highway concessionaire companies.
In an immediate response, Parti Keadilan Rakyat
information chief Tian Chua, who is also a Protes
member, the Cabinet's decision confirmed what the
coalition had said earlier that the content of the
contract was unfavourable to the public.
"The government needs to explain how and why this
contract had been signed. Instead of being
transparent, they (the government) have decided to
declare this an Official Secrets Act document.
"It's greatly unfair to the public as they are the
ones who pay taxes and tolls," he told theSun.
He said Protes had decided to take the risk before
divulging the document in order to tell the public
the truth.
"The government is subsidising a big sum of money to
the concessionaire companies and these monies come
from the public. They've the right to know how the
contract was drafted and why the government so
willingly accepting terms that clearly disadvantaged
tax payers," he added.
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