On August 16, an appeal by the Malaysian Socialist Party (PSM) was rejected in court and a January 13, 2003 ruling denying the PSM’s right to be registered as a political party was upheld.
The two reasons provided by the judge in 2003 were that the PSM did not comply with a regulation necessitating that parties have members in at least seven states, and that the party is a threat to national security. The Court of Appeal dismissed the latter argument, but reaffirmed the first.
In a statement issued after the decision, the PSM said it was “deeply disappointed” with the judgment, that the PSM “was never given a license to operate as a state level party” and that it had “on numerous occasions stated that the party has no problem in fulfilling the seven state requirement”. The statement said the ruling was a “step backward for democracy and freedom of association in Malaysia”, but that it “is not going to stop us from forming a socialist party in Malaysia”.
The party will now file an appeal in the Federal Court.