By : MURIB MORPI.
KOTA KINABALU: Native land
issues dominated the second day of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia
(SUHAKAM) public hearing here yesterday, with witnesses claiming cruelty and
unfair treatment by government agencies.
A Sungai Village Chief,
Mahalil Mutalib, said his community had suffered unfair and cruel treatment
after government agencies and private companies took over and wanted to push
them out of their own ancestral land.
Mahalil, who came all the
way from Kampung Kenang Kenangan in Tongod, Kinabatangan for the hearing, said
their native customary land was somehow given away by the authority to a
logging company which had encroached and destroyed part of a 200-year-old
ancestral burial area in the village.
“A land title was then given
by the Land and Survey Department to an employee at the department’s Kota
Kinabalu office.
“And now the land has been
sold to a man from Johor. I learned this from one of the workers who are
planting oil palm trees there,” he said, claiming the land involved was
developed for crop planting since six months ago.
Mahalil said his community
had been residing in the area for generations long before independence,
sustaining themselves by planting short-term crops such as hill rice, tapioca,
banana and vegetables.
Naturally, they were angry
when outsiders suddenly appeared and with heavy machinery, claiming to be the
rightful owner of the land whose ownership is recognized by the authority.
“When we go to voice our
dissatisfaction, we were told to go home and there was no use for us to make
noise, as they have already bought the land title.
“They sent in a bulldozer,
leveled our ancestral burial ground, and there is nothing we can do about it.
It just makes you feel helpless and can’t prevent yourself from crying no
matter how hard you try,” he told the panel chaired by Suhakam chairman Tan Sri
Hasmy Agam.
Mahalil, who was accompanied
by several villagers, also produced documents to prove their claim on the land,
including payment receipt for the land title made to the British administrator
in 1946.
Also produced was an old
marriage document of his grandparents as supporting evidence that indicated his
community had settled in the area long before independence.
Being unaware of its
importance, he said the villagers never applied for the land title before, not
until 2010 where an application was filed at the Tongod District Office for the
90-acre burial ground.
As for the 225-acre village
land, he said an official application was made earlier, in 1982 by the
villagers headed by himself.
According to him the land
was surveyed in 1997 but the Land Department rejected it and ordered for
another survey to be conducted in 2002.
Following this, the
villagers submitted another application in 2003 together with a signed
supporting letter from Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman dated August 4 2003.
In the same year, they hired
a private surveyor to measure the land, confident that their application was
being handled accordingly and soon would be approved due to the Chief
Minister’s support.
But to their surprise, the
land was also applied by one Zaharah Abdullah and 39 others whom they did not
know, and now the land was being developed for oil palm plantation.
“A company is clearing the
land’s border for oil palm planting, and they are using the police to
intimidate the villagers who are objecting against it,” said Mahalil.
In addition to this, he said
part of their customary land had been included in the Tengkulap Forest Reserve
which was gazetted in the 80s covering an estimated 1,000 acres.
Following the
classification, he said the villagers who were heavily dependent on the forest
lost an important source of living, as they could no longer hunt, forage or
develop the jungle for agriculture.
The situation got
complicated in March 2005 when six villagers were arrested and charged with
encroaching after opening orchards in the reserve area.
“The villagers were robbed
of a vital resource and no longer allowed to enter their ancestral land which
they have been dependent upon since generations. In fact, the Forestry
Department has set up a post to guard the forest.
“We are accused of encroaching
forest reserve land when in fact we have been there since time immemorial. They
came and arrested the villagers, they threw us in jail.
“The police were not
particularly keen on putting villagers in lockups but the Forestry Department
insisted that they must be punished. So, with their dirty clothes and empty
stomachs, villagers, some were old men, were put behind bars.
“One of them actually got
sick after being detained in the cold prison cell,” said Mahalil.
The public hearing panel,
who had earlier listened to a similar case involving complainants from Kampung
Mangkadaid, Ranau, expressed sympathy to the villagers but said it was not in a
position to resolve land disputes.
It however will compile all
information related by those who had come forward to develop a proposal to be
given to the government, to effectively address the issue. (theborneopost)
Laporan tentang kes tanah di Sabah adalah yang terbanyak berlaku di negara ni. kerajaan perlu cari langkah yang lebih efektif agar kes ni dapat dikurangkan.
ReplyDeletemasih byk kes tanah berlaku, SUHAKAM menerima byk laporan mengenai ini. kes ini perlu diselesaikan segera.
DeleteTindakan harus diambil untuk mempertahankan hak milik penduduk.
DeleteHopefully the native land issues will get resolved so that the native land rights are protected.
ReplyDeleteSuhakam have received many reports regarding the land issue especially from the natives, hope that Suhakam will help fight for the people's rights.
ReplyDeleteSemoga Suhakam dapat menegakkan keadilan.
ReplyDeleteMoga-moga tanah rakyat dapat dilindungi dari mengancam hak miliknya.
ReplyDeleteMoga-moga kerajaan dapat menyelesaikan masalah tanah secepat mungkin agar mangsa perampasan tanah dapat diselesaikan.
ReplyDeleteHak milik penduduk harus dilindungi.
ReplyDeleteMengenai isu tanah di Sabah semakin berkurangan sekarang. Harap kerajaan akan menyelesaikan isu ini sebaiknya.
ReplyDeleteWhat is meant for the villagers, let them have it.
ReplyDeletesejak kebelakangan ini Suhakam seakan2 tidak aktif.. banyak kes2 tanah yang tidak diambil peduli oleh Suhakam..
ReplyDeleteNative community leaders such as district chiefs, native chiefs and village heads in Sabah have been urged to be more pro-active in their roles.
ReplyDeleteIn making the call, State Local Government and Housing Minister, Datuk Hajiji Noor said, these leaders should not just hear native court cases but also be more concerned about issues such as native land rights and those not eligible to get native status.
ReplyDeleteHajiji, who is the minister-in-charge of native affairs, stated that these leaders should go slightly beyond their normal scope of duties and go down to the ground to listen to the people more.
ReplyDeleteHe was speaking at the ground-breaking ceremony for the newRM5 million Kudat Native Court building here, Tuesday. Also present was the chairman of the Sabah Native Affairs Council, Datuk Zakaria Idris.
ReplyDelete“Community leaders should not simply endorse documents, especially those pertaining to native status, before double-checking. They should also be careful in making decisions when hearing native court cases as people are now more educated and have access to the new media. While you cannot satisfy everybody, you should at least make decisions which you can defend,” he pointed out.
ReplyDeleteThe new Kudat Native Court building is the third to be implemented this year; the first being in Penampang followed by Keningau. The government has approved seven more such new buildings in various districts.
ReplyDeleteHajiji noted that the new Kudat Native Court building is timely and appropriate as Kudat was once Sabah’s capital when the State was still known as North Borneo under Chartered Company rule.
ReplyDeleteHe added that the government’s approval of the ten new buildings was partly due to resolutions passed by the annual District and Native Chiefs Conference calling on the government to further upgrade native court facilities.
ReplyDeleteHe said despite the existence of the Civil and Syariah Courts, the State Government will continue to preserve the Sabah Native Court system, describing it as unique in the country. “The Native Court will always have a place in the life and hearts of the natives of Sabah.”
ReplyDeletePresent were Banggi Assemblyman, Datuk Abdul Mijul Unaini, Kudat District Officer, Sebastian Lim, Sabah Native Affairs director, Datuk Awang Sharin Alimin and Kudat District Chief OKK Hj Harun Bidin.
ReplyDelete