Will the AG–PP split stop political interference in prosecutions?
For decades, one person in Putrajaya has worn two hats. He advises the government on how to stay in power. He decides who will be prosecuted and who will quietly walk away. Does the new “AG–PP split” Bill truly cut that cord, or simply dresses old political control in the language of ‘reform’? Do you know what I think?
Malaysia is finally taking steps to split the roles of the Attorney General (AG) and the Public Prosecutor (PP).1https://www.bernama.com/en/news.php/world/general/news.php?id=2526592
This sounds like a bold, modern reform.
It sounds clean.
Is it?
FOR DECADES, ONE PERSON IN PUTRAJAYA HAS WORN TWO HATS.
The AG advises the government on how to stay in power.
He also decides who will be prosecuted, and who will quietly walk away.
That fusion of roles has hurt repeatedly public confidence.
It has placed Malaysia at odds with the way many other constitutional democracies organise their prosecuting authorities.
During the Pakatan Harapan government it has resulted in tens of DNAAs.
BUT WILL IT TRULY STOP POLITICIANS FROM DECIDING WHO GETS CHARGED AND WHO WALKS FREE?
In my view, the answer is: not yet.
The new Bill is a hesitant half‑step. It keeps too much power in the hands of the politicians. It falls far short of the strong legal protections we see in other Commonwealth countries, in Fiji, and in the Nordic states.2https://scandinavianlaw.se/pdf/54-21.pdf
NOTE-WHAT DOES “EXECUTIVE” MEAN?
To grasp the danger of the current system, we must first understand one word: “Executive”.
Whenever I say “Executive” or “Government”, I mean the political elite who currently run the country. Keep that in mind, and you will see exactly what is at stake.
RIGHT NOW, THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION GIVES THE ATTORNEY GENERAL INCREDIBLY WIDE POWERS.
Under Article 145(3), one person wears two very different hats.3https://www.unafei.or.jp/publications/pdf/RS_No60/No60_17PA_Ariffin.pdf
First, he is the chief legal adviser to the Government.
Second, he is the sole controller of all criminal prosecutions in the country. Section 376 of the Criminal Procedure Code confirms that the AG is the “Public Prosecutor”, with control over all prosecutions.4Khairil Azmin Mokhtar, “The Attorney General as Public Prosecutor in Malaysia”, IIUMLJ5“PP Authority and Functions – Notes for Finals (CPC 376)”, Studocu
This setup is deeply flawed. It creates a massive, built‑in conflict of interest.6https://www.transparency.org/en/press/separate-powers-of-attorney-general-and-public-prosecutor-to-restore-trust
What happens when a powerful politician or a cabinet minister is accused of a crime?
The public often watches in dismay as high‑profile cases are quietly dropped, downgraded, or delayed.
The power to halt a prosecution rests entirely in a single, office –which depends who the current controlling politicians are. This is bad.
Second, rarely are convincing reasons given to the people why some prosecutions are being stopped.7https://www.malaysianbar.org.my/article/news/press-statements/press-statements/press-release-the-attorney-general-s-chambers-media-statement-fails-to-provide-justifiable-reasons-to-the-public-on-the-withdrawal-of-the-47-charges-against-zahid-hamidi
We saw this when Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail was removed during the 1MDB investigations.
We saw it again when Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi received a DNAA on 47 charges.8https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/anwar-ibrahim-role-attorney-general-ag-role-dnaa-law-azalina-othman-37711369Malaysian Bar, “Media Statement fails to provide justifiable reasons on Zahid DNAA” (6 Sept 2023)
Many Malaysians see these cases as symptoms of a fragile system, not as isolated accidents.
A cosmetic makeover?
The proposed Bill now attempts to ‘fix’ this by creating a completely separate office for the Public Prosecutor.10https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2026/02/24/bill-to-separate-powers-of-ag-and-pp-gets-first-reading
Under this new law, the Attorney General will lose his power to prosecute. He will remain the Government’s legal adviser.
Meanwhile, the new PP will take over the sole power to prosecute crimes, and will serve a fixed seven‑year term with no automatic renewal.11https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2026/02/1383405/updated-bills-limit-pms-tenure-separate-g-and-public-prosecutor-roles
SOME CRUCIAL POINTS ARE WORTH NOTING ARE:
[a]. The PP becomes a separate constitutional office, not merely part of the AG’s role.12The Star, above; New Straits Times, above
[b]. The PP, not the AG, will sit on Pardons Boards and give written advice on clemency.13https://www.bernama.com/en/news.php/world/general/news.php?id=2526592
[c]. The AG and PP are removed from the “public services” in Article 132, and the Judicial and Legal Service Commission (JLSC) is reshaped to handle the PP’s appointment, suspension and removal.14Bernama and NST, above
On paper, this looks like real progress. It looks like a clean split.
But the devil, as always, is in the details.15https://malaysia.news.yahoo.com/ag-pp-split-explained-key-230000545.html
The legal architecture still bends heavily towards the politicians controlling the government.16https://www.ideas.org.my/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/PI34-Separating-the-Attorney-General-and-Public-Prosecutor.pdf
THE HIDDEN TRAPS
The Bill improves on the old model, but it does not cure the main disease. Prosecutions can still be shaped by politics.
(1). The Prime Minister still holds the keys
The new PP will be appointed and removed through the Judicial and Legal Service Commission (JLSC).17https://malaysia.news.yahoo.com/ag-pp-split-explained-key-230000545.html
This sounds like a safe, neutral buffer. It is not.
Who controls appointments into the JLSC? The Executive is still incredibly influential. The Prime Minister and the Government retain massive indirect control over who gets this powerful job, and over who sits in judgment over the PP.18https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/setback-for-anwar-bid-to-separate-powers-of-attorney-general-and-public-prosecutor-delayed
There is no strict rule stopping the Government from appointing a political loyalist as PP.
Imagine a future Government appointing a loyal friend as the PP. Over a seven‑year term, this loyalist quietly drops cases against ministers, while energetically pursuing opposition leaders.
The current Bill does not prevent this. It simply moves the problem from the AG’s door to the new PP’s door.
(2). Silence where strength is needed
In countries with a strong rule of law, the constitution often says bluntly that the prosecutor takes orders from nobody.19https://academic.oup.com/icon/article/21/3/770/7250119
For example, Fiji’s Constitution states that its Director of Public Prosecutions “shall not be subject to the direction or control of any person or authority” when exercising prosecutorial powers.20https://www.paclii.org/fj/constitutional-docs-archives/reeves-report/ch12.pdf
The Malaysian Bill dodges this completely. It has no strong, unbreakable guarantee that the PP will act independently. It does not explicitly forbid politicians from trying to sway the PP behind the scenes.21https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2026/03/03/ag-pp-split-explained-key-things-to-know-about-malaysias-massive-legal-reform/210961
The long corridor from the Prime Minister’s Office to the prosecutor’s desk is still open. It may have more doors, but it is the same corridor.
(3). The revolving door
There is no rule in the new Bill stopping a recently retired politician or party office‑bearer from becoming the top prosecutor.
In many modern systems, top prosecutors are career professionals, visibly detached from party politics. Malaysia needs the same strict boundary.
(4). Too much secrecy
If the new PP decides to drop a major corruption case against a politician, do they have to explain why?
No.
The Bill does not contain strict rules forcing the PP to give clear reasons to the public. There is no firm duty to report such decisions to Parliament.22https://www.bernama.com/en/news.php?id=2530359
This leaves plenty of room for backroom deals and quiet favours.23https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/anwar-ibrahim-role-attorney-general-ag-role-dnaa-law-azalina-othman-3771136
HOW OTHER COUNTRIES DO IT
To make this easy to read on your phone, here is a narrow table with only three columns.
| Country | Who prosecutes? | Are they truly independent? |
| England & Wales | Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) under the DPP | Yes. Law and practice demand independence. Any political direction is rare and must be exposed to Parliament and public debate.24https://ouclf.law.ox.ac.uk/judicial-review-of-the-prosecutorial-powers-of-the-attorney-general-in-england-and-wales-and-nigeria-an-imperative-of-the-rule-of-law/ |
| Fiji | Director of Public Prosecutions | Yes. The Constitution says the DPP is “not subject to the direction or control of any person or authority”.25https://www.paclii.org/fj/constitutional-docs-archives/reeves-report/ch12.pdf |
| Nordic states (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland) | Professional prosecutors and a Prosecutor General | Yes. They are career civil servants. Law and culture strongly resist political interference.26https://www.riksadvokaten.no/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Nordisk-avtale-om-overforing-av-straffesaker-av-09062025.pdf |
| Malaysia (now) | Attorney General | No. The AG is appointed by the PM, answers to the Government, and controls prosecutions.27https://www.unafei.or.jp/publications/pdf/RS_No60/No60_17PA_Ariffin.pdf |
| Malaysia (Bill) | Public Prosecutor | Unclear. The PP has some safeguards, but is still vulnerable to political influence and lacks a strong constitutional shield.28https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2026/03/03/ag-pp-split-explained-key-things-to-know-about-malaysias-massive-legal-reform/210961 |
These examples show one vital truth. A prosecuting authority must be treated as a public trust, not as a political prize.
HOW THE CURRENT MODEL FAILS INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
If we compare Malaysia’s present system with these examples, the gaps are obvious.
[a]. We allow one person to both advise the Government and control prosecutions. That is unusual, and dangerous.29UNAFEI; IDEAS; Transparency International, above
[b]. We give that person very broad, personal discretion to start or stop cases, with little explanation.30UNAFEI; IDEAS
[c]. We do not insist on clear independence language in our Constitution. Fiji and others do.31Reeves Report; Fiji Constitution
[d]. We have weak traditions and weak rules on explaining controversial decisions, or facing detailed questions in Parliament every year.32Bernama; ICON article; Nordic practice
By these measures, the current Malaysian model fails international standards of independence, transparency and accountability.
HOW WE CAN FIX THE BILL
If Malaysia truly wants to stop political interference, the Bill must be improved in a few clear ways. We cannot rely on slogans and press conferences.
(1). Add an iron‑clad independence clause
We must add strong language directly into the Federal Constitution.
It should say:
“In the exercise of his or her powers, the Public Prosecutor shall act independently and shall not be subject to the direction or control of any person or authority.”33https://www.facebook.com/FijiGovernment/posts/𝐓𝐡𝐞-𝐀𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠-𝐀𝐭𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐲-𝐆𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐥-𝐔𝐫𝐠𝐞𝐬-𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐩𝐞𝐜𝐭-𝐟𝐨𝐫-𝐂𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐭-𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐜𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐞𝐬-the-acting-attorne/1221001310064064/
This single sentence builds a constitutional firewall against political bullying.
(2). Depoliticise the hiring process
The PP must not be quietly chosen by the Prime Minister.
Instead, he or she should be appointed by a truly neutral body, such as an independent Constitutional Offices Commission, made up mainly of judges and senior non‑political lawyers.34https://www.parliament.gov.fj/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Office-of-the-Attorney-General-Annual-Report-2022–2023.pdf
Ex‑politicians and party office‑bearers should be completely banned from taking the job for at least five years. This closes the revolving door. It also sends a clear message that prosecutions are not a reward for party loyalty.
(3). Demand total transparency
If the Government ever issues general policy guidelines to the PP, these must be in writing and made public. They must be debated openly in Parliament.
Above all, there should be an absolute legal ban on politicians giving instructions on specific, individual cases.35https://mcchr.org/2024/03/20/separating-prosecutorial-power-from-the-attorney-general-office-a-probable-solution/
Policy can be political. Cases must not be.
(4). Make the AG, the PP and the politicians explain themselves
When a high‑profile case is suddenly dropped, the public deserves to know exactly why.
The law must force the PP to publish written, logical reasons for these major decisions, in a way that does not harm ongoing investigations.36https://www.bernama.com/en/news.php?id=253035937https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/anwar-ibrahim-role-attorney-general-ag-role-dnaa-law-azalina-othman-3771136
The PP should also be required to submit a detailed annual report to Parliament. This ensures their choices can be examined in the open light of day, as they are in many rule‑of‑law systems.
WE ARE AT A CONSTITUTIONAL CROSSROAD—WHAT WILL MALAYSIANS LIKE YOU DO?
Malaysia now stands at a constitutional crossroads.
It can keep a system where prosecutorial power sits in the long shadow of politics, ‘dressed up’ in the language of ‘reform’.
Or it can build what other mature democracies already take for granted: a truly independent, transparent and professional prosecution service that answers to the law, to the courts and ultimately to the people.38https://www.transparency.org/en/press/separate-powers-of-attorney-general-and-public-prosecutor-to-restore-trust The text of the Bill is still in our hands.
The question is whether we have the courage to write into it the independence we keep ‘promising’ each other.
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We thank Imkara Visual of Unsplash for the image.
The author thanks Miss KN Geetha, Miss Lydia Jaynthi, Miss TP Vaani and Miss JN Lheela.
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