Tuesday, 19 June 2012

SABAH NATIVES PROTEST MALAYAN RULE




PROVOCATIVE....STAR leaders with part of the crowds holding the provocative banners.

By : LUKE RINTOD (FMT)

KENINGAU: As Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak went about wooing support for his embattled government in this interior district of Sabah, he was kept blissfully unaware that the natives here are restless.

The stage-managed show of support for the federal government which is bitterly resented here for failing to raise the quality of life in one of the richest states, was in stark contrast to the heartfelt show of protest and call for freedom just down the road in a tamu (local bazaar) ground.

A mere 25 kilometres away from the Keningau town where Najib was busy attending special functions arranged for him by the state government, a group of about 500 locals waved half a dozen banners calling for ‘independence’ for Sabah.

The group led by State Reform Party (Star) Sabah chairman Jeffrey Kitingan was celebrating a Kaamatan or harvest festival at the Apin-Apin Tamu Ground but they took the opportunity nevertheless to make their own political statement.

Denied use of a stage at the shaded tamu ground by the District Council they built a makeshift stage to put on their Kaamatan show.

An organising committee member told FMT that Umno and PBS politicians had pressured the District Office to deny them use of the stage.

Early this (Sunday) morning the organisers and Kaamatan revellers put up banners along the Apin-Apin road which Najib, his wife Rosmah Mansor and entourage will pass on the way from Keningau to Tambunan for the launch of a community college called KDM College.

The crowd in Apin-Apin though dwarfed by the nearly 20,000 who turned out Saturday night for the national level Kaamatan celebration at Keningau Stadium, was high-spirited and intense.

Bias local media

Jeffrey, whose elder brother Joseph Pairin Kitingan, the PBS president and a deputy chief minister was busily escorting Najib on his two-day visit to Sabah, described the mood in Apin-Apin as excellent.

“We cannot any longer tolerate the colonisation by Malaya where we continue to be treated as a mere colony when we are so big and rich and yet our people are the poorest in Malaysia. How can we accept this?

“Just look at Keningau parliamentary seat itself is bigger than the states of Perlis, Penang and Malacca combined and yet we in Keningau only have one MP and two state assemblymen and one District Officer. This is unfair,” he said.

The wording on the the banners read: “Sabah adalah negara bukan negeri ke-12 Malaysia”, “Kami mahu Perkara 20 dilaksanakan“, “Hentikan penjajahan Sabah, laksanakan Perjanjian Malaysia” “Tolak Umno penjajah, Sabah negara merdeka“, “Kami menuntut hak NCR“, and “RCI untuk siapa?, Hapuskan Projek IC Mahathir”.

The local press though aware of the protest in Apin-Apin refused to acknowledge it and focused on Najib’s visit.

Those who attended the Apin-Apin Kaamatan celebration questioned the selective reporting in the face widespread disquiet in Sabah over its political future under the Umno-led Barisan Nasional coalition.


 

CROWD....Dr Jeffrey addressing the crowd in Apin-Apin.

A resident who wished to be known only as Rayner told FMT they were disappointed with the pro-government slant to all news in the local mainstream media.

“Maybe it is their policy, maybe they are on the take, who knows with some editors being given datukships and JP and so on. They have become more vulnerable to exploitation, and certainly some have compromised their so-called independence,” he said.


Meanwhile, Star flags were seen fluttering in many places here and in some areas side by side with the Barisan Nasional and PBS party flags recently put up to coincide with the Prime Minister’s visit.

32 comments:

  1. I don't think so. Kelantan is the poorest I think.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. Last time Najib said that Sabah is no longer the poorest state.

      Delete
    2. So I don't understand why this issue resurfaced.

      Delete
    3. Sabah bukan Negeri termiskin. Kelantan mungkin lah.

      Delete
    4. The people feels neglected.

      Delete
  3. Bias ka tak local media, biar pembaca yang tentukan.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sekarang ni, apa yang paling penting ialah rakyat harus fokus dan tahu calon terbaik yang patut diundi masa PRU13 nanti. hehe

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. rakyat sudah tahu menilai...biarlah mereka yang buat keputusan.

      Delete
  5. Sabah inginkan hak2 mereka dan perkara 20 dipertahankan.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tuntutan kuasa autonomi dan borneonisasi harus segera dipenuhi.

      Delete
    2. memang patut pun hak2 sabah dipertahankan..

      Delete
    3. That's nothing more important than fighting for the 20 points.

      Delete
    4. kerajaan mesti tahu perasaan mereka, kenalah bersabar.

      Delete
  6. I will continue supporting the government.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I will continue to support them too, hope many people will understand the Govt.'s hardship in leading our country.

      Delete
  7. The majority will win over the minority.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Kerajaan yang ada sekarang sudah cukup bagus..Buat pa mau tukar lain lagi.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Kita tahu masih ramai yang tidak puas hati dengan 20 perkara yang masih belum lengkap sepenuhnya. Kita teruskan memperjuangkannya bersama dengan kerajaan Negeri kita.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Pasti rakyat tahu menilai yang baik dan buruk.

    ReplyDelete
  11. kalau benarlah kerajaan BN sekat kebebasan, ingat Jeffrey boleh buat perhimpunan bersifat provokasi seperti itu??

    ReplyDelete
  12. is there any good news about BN in pro-opposition media??

    ReplyDelete
  13. jika Jeffrey yakin bahawa kerajaan persekutuan telah gagal melaksanakan perjanjian 20 perkara, kenapa tidak bawa kes ini terus kemahkamah antarabangsa?? kalau mahu jadi hero, jangan hanya kuat lompat dan lantang di media, tapi takut ambil tindakan..

    ReplyDelete
  14. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak Najib has noted the close working relationship between the Federal Government and Sabah State Government under Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman’s able leadership.

    ReplyDelete
  15. He said the relationship has been facilitated by the recently established Sabah Economic Development and Investment Authority (SEDIA), which is also under Musa’s leadership.

    ReplyDelete
  16. SEDIA was in fact wholly funded by the Federal Government from an allocation of the Prime Minister’s Department, and the arrangement was already producing remarkable results – as can be seen from the efficient implementation of the Sabah Development Corridor (SDC) projects, the outcome of the Corridors and Regional Cities Lab, and the implementation of schemes the Public-Private Partnership Programme, he said when handing over the Letters of Offer for the facilitation fund for three projects to Musa after officially launching the SDC Open Day: Corridors and Regional Cities Programme.

    ReplyDelete
  17. The total of RM459.2 million facilitation fund from the Federal Government is for six development projects in Sabah under the Public-Private Partnership projects in the SDC.

    ReplyDelete
  18. The projects are Sipadan Mangrove Resort in Tawau, the Geothermal Power Plant in Tawau, the International Technology and Convention Centre (ITCC) in Penampang, the Integrated Jesselton Waterfront and Sabah International Convention Centre (SICC), Gleneagles Medical Centre in the state capital and the Dalit Bay Integrated Tourism Resort in Tuaran.

    ReplyDelete
  19. “With all the measures being implemented by the State and Federal governments, I have no doubt that Sabah and the entire Malaysian nation will be able not only to weather this global economic storm but to emerge from it even stronger.

    ReplyDelete