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29 IIUMLJ 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/iiumlj29 and id is 1 raw text is: 29 (1) 2021 IIUMLJ 1-28

WA TANIC JURISPRUDENCE: ARTICULATING THE
LEGITIMATE ELEMENTS OF THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF
THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
Wan Ahmad Fauzi Wan Husain*
ABSTRACT
The doctrine of the basic structure of a constitution would be
undisputable if those elements thereunder are clear and representing the
facts of our local history, nationhood, and the principle of the rule of law.
Former Chief Justice Tun Abdul Hamid Mohamad argued that the
doctrine of the basic structure of a constitution introduced by the Indian
Supreme Court contradicts Article 159 of the Federal Constitution and
beyond the competent jurisdiction of the local courts. Hence, this article
puts forward the conceptual framework of the basic structure adopted by
the Federal Court in the case of Indira Gandhi to articulate those
elements summed therein viewed from the watanic jurisprudence. The
watanic jurisprudence analyses legal documents and sources of
sovereignty based upon two philosophical worldviews; continuum and
dichotomous frameworks relying upon the local legal history context and
the present legal provisions of a country. Depending on a broad and
purposive manner in proper linguistic, philosophic, and historical
contexts of the Malaysian legal historical documents, the legitimate
elements of the basic structure are the principle of sovereignty as
embedded in the oath of office of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong together
with the matters aggregated in Article 38(4), Article 159(5) and Article
161E. The oath of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong thus legitimizes Syariah
compliance as the rule of law. The Federal Constitution of Malaysia also
expressly protects its basic structure with strict conditional amendments.
In conclusion, the basic structure of our Federal Constitution must be
viewed from our local circumstances in compliance with the principle of
constitutional supremacy and the rule of law.
Keywords: Malaysian    constitution,  basic  structure,  watanic
jurisprudence,  sovereignty, Malay  custom, local
circumstances.
* Datuk Associate Professor Dr., Director, Institute of Civilization and
Strategic Studies, University Malaysia Pahang (ITKAS). Email:
wanfauzi@ump.edu.my.

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