FOLLIES....Jeffrey
Kitingan claims that Sabahans are now paying the price for the follies of these
yesteryear political novices.
By : JOSEPH BINGKASAN
KOTA KINABALU: Amateurs in
Sabah’s political arena were the cause of the state losing its autonomous
rights and privileges when it joined joined Singapore, Sarawak and Malaya to form
Malaysia in 1963, local opposition politician Jeffrey Kitingan charged.
He said Sabahans are now
paying the price due to poorly educated and inexperienced founding leaders
having been selected to negotiate Sabah’s entry into the federation as a
founding member.
“All we had were Donald
Stephens (Fuad Stephens), a Form Five school leaver and Mustapha Harun who
completed only Primary Six, at the top of the leadership of a young nation,” he
said.
The head of State Reform
Party (STAR) Sabah chapter told a gathering during a Borneo Tea Party in Kota
Kinabalu that this was the reason Sabah became dependent on Kuala Lumpur and
Malayan leaders for guidance and leadership, which the latter gladly provided.
Kitingan said little did
those Sabah leaders realise that Malayan leaders had their own agendas and
priorities.
“Their agendas and
priorities were not the same as ours and they took full advantage of this
situation.
“It was unfortunate that
when Sabah was persuaded to join Singapore, Sarawak and Malaya to form
Malaysia, she was politically unprepared and did not have educated nor
experienced leaders to negotiate and take on the responsibilities of a young
nation, what more be part of a federation,” he said.
Sabahans, he added, should
now therefore grow up and take charge of their state and resolve their problems
instead of relying too much on Kuala Lumpur.
He said Sabahans must
realise what dependence had brought them and understand that the “neglect of
responsibilities meant the loss of our autonomy and special rights, loss of
political franchise, loss of revenues and control of the state’s most valuable
natural resource”.
“Yet we Sabahans continue to
be dependent on KL and Malaya for leadership. We continue to believe that
without the support of the said leadership of the so called national or Malayan
political parties we are doomed,” he said.
Divided
on joining federation
Former Sabah
attorney-general Herman J Luping in his book “Indigenous Ethnic Communities of
Sabah – The Kadazandusun” wrote that the important personalities in the making
of the Malaysian Federation from Sabah – Stephens, Mustapha, G S Sundang and
Khoo Siak Siew – were divided on the offer.
Luping, also a former deputy
chief minister during the Usno-led Alliance government (1967-1976), said when
Tunku Abdul Rahman proposed the formation of Malaysia in 1961, the first
reaction of the four Sabah leaders differed.
“Mustapha accepted the plan
outright, Stephens did not, nor did Sundang and Khoo,” he wrote.
However, after several
rounds of meetings the four founding leaders agreed that Sabah join Singapore,
Sarawak and the Federation of Malaya to form a new nation called Malaysia.
Sabah officially became part of Malaysia on Sept 16, 1963.
What subsequently happened
was Stephens became the chief minister, Mustapha was made head of state (then
known as Yang di-Pertua Negara), Sundang was deputy chief minister and Khoo was
appointed a Cabinet minister.
Singapore was ejected from
the federation in 1965.
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