By : LIM KIT SIANG
TOGETHER with DAP MP for
Segambut Lim Lip Eng, and accompanied by Sabah DAP leaders headed by DAP Sabah
Chairman and State Assemblyman for Sri Tanjong, Jimmy Wong Tze Phin, Sabah
State Vice Chairman Edward Muji, Sabah State Secretary Dr. Edwin Bosi, Sabah
State Organising Secretary Jeffrey Kumin, Sabah State Publicity Secretary Chan
Foong Hin and DAP MP for Kota Kinabalu Dr. Hiew King Cheu, I have just
completed a four-day 500-km visit to Sabah, covering Kota Marudu, Tip of
Borneo, Kg Bavang Jamal, Kudat, Kg Masangkong Matunggong, Ranau, Penampang,
Tawau and Sandakan.
The trip, planned as a DAP
political reach-out programme to northern Sabah interior as well as visit to
Tawau and Sandakan, turned out to be a “Janji Ditepati” study tour – or to be
more accurate, a “Janji Tidak Ditepati” (JTD) study tour, as everywhere, we
were told of the complaints and disappointments of Sabahans at the broken promises and pledges by the
Barisan Nasional governments, both Federal and State.
As I said to the Karamunting
ceramah capacity crowd in Sandakan last night, the Prime Minister Datuk Seri
Najib Razak should establish a “Janji Ditepati” Royal Commission of Inquiry
(RCI) in Sabah or lead Federal and Sabah State Ministers in public hearings in
the 23 Sabah districts to hear the views of the people of Sabah whether the
Barisan Nasional had fulfilled or broken its various promises in Sabah.
We are giving the Prime
Minister 48 hours to respond to this proposal for a “Janji Ditepati” RCI or to
spearhead a series of Public Hearings in Sabah.
If there is no response from
Najib in the next 48 hours, Sabah DAP will plan to hold “Janji Ditepati” public hearings
throughout Sabah on whether Barisan Nasional promises to the people of Sabah
have been fulfilled or broken.
The idea of a “Janji
Ditepati” series of public hearings in Sabah was born out of the very
widespread discontent and even exasperation expressed by Sabahans throughout
the state at the failure of the Barisan Nasional to fulfil its numerous
promises to the people of Sabah – to the extent that the slogan “Janji
Ditepati” has become quite a joke among Sabahans.
Undoubtedly, one of the top
issues among Sabahans where BN has failed to fulfil its promises is on the
long-standing problem of illegal immigrants, despite the recent announcement by
the Prime Minister on the establishment of a RCIII (Royal Commission of Inquiry
into Illegal Immigrants) in Sabah.
In fact, in the various
talks and ceramahs I had in the past four days in Kota Marudu, Kg Bavang Jamal
in Kudat, Kg Masangkong in Matunggong, Ranau, Kepayang, Tawau and Sandakan, the
Sabahans who attended were quite unanimous in expressing their lack of
confidence in the RCI as a genuine and sincere solution to the grave
four-decades old problem of illegal immigrants in the state.
The areas where Barisan
Nasional had failed to live up to its 55th Merdeka Day/49th Malaysia Day theme
of “Janji Ditepati” could generally be referred to as the 2Cs and 2Is in Sabah.
The 2Cs are crime and
corruption and 2Is are illegal immigrants and infrastructure neglect in Sabah.
For instance, the stretch of
road from Kota Belud to Kota Marudu (the latter the parliamentary constituency
of a Federal Minister) at Ulu Kukut must rank as one with the worst road
conditions in the country with the atrocious condition lasting for years – which is a crying shame for Sabah
which formed Malaysia 49 years ago as one of the richest states in the
federation.
In Kota Marudu and
throughout the state, the NCR controversy cries out as a prominent and
priority example where BN has failed to
live up to its slogan of “Janji Ditepati”.
At Kg Bavang Jamal, “Janji
Ditepati” again became a joke as water
pipes were provided there since 1986 but with no piped water supply in the past
26 years!
At Tip of Borneo, which can
rightfully boasts of having “best sunset, best surf, best wind of Borneo”,
“Janji Ditepati” became a subject of mockery as since the time of Tan Sri Chong
Kah Keat as Chief Minister and Tourism Minister, this great tourist attraction
had been neglected by both the Federal and state governments.
In Ranau, there were
evidence galore where BN had failed to measure up to “Janji Ditepati” – whether
the poisoned wasteland left behind by the Mamut Copper Mine (MCM) after earning
some RM3.4 billion export revenues in 24 years (1974-1999) for the Japanese,
Australian and Malaysian owners or the serious allegations of power abuses
about land use and alienation against local Ranau people after the reversion of
the MCM land lease to the state government.
In Tawau and Sandakan, the
people could themselves list out the major items where BN had failed in “Janji
Ditepati” – in both places, the most
basic infrastructure needs of water,
power and highways.
Sandakan is particularly
pathetic and the time is long overdue to check Sandakan’s decline and to
restore some of its former glory.
Sandakan was once the
premier centre of Sabah. It was the former capital of British North Borneo for
62 years from 1884 to 1946 until World War II when the capital was transferred
to Jesselton (later named Kota Kinabalu).
Today Sandakan has lost out
to Tawau and even to Miri and Bintulu in Sarawak as all the trio have
international airports but not Sandak
This is why I said in
Karamunting last night that if Pakatan Rakyat forms the federal government in
Putrajaya in the 13th general election, the new PR government will in the first
100 days approve the construction of an international airport for Sandakan.
Yesterday, the Sabah Chief
Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman followed the Sarawak Chief Minister Tan Sri Taib
Mahmud and said that the state’s five per cent petroleum royalty review issue
is open for discussion.
Taib said a day earlier that
the Sarawak state government would discuss the need to review the five per cent
petroleum royalty paid to Sarawak with the federal government.
This is a vindication of the
relevance and role of Pakatan Rakyat and demonstration of People’s Power.
The people of Sabah and
Malaysia will remember that it was only two weeks ago that Musa dismissed
Pakatan Rakyat’s demand for increase of state oil royalty from five to 20 per
cent as “illogical”, but he has now to change position because of Pakatan
Rakyat, the relevance and legitimacy of PR demands and the approaching 13th
General Election.
But it is not good enough
for the Sabah and Sarawak chief ministers to talk vaguely about “open for
discussion” as what the people of Sabah and Sarawak want is for them to endorse
Pakatan Rakyat’s demand for the increase of state oil royalty from five to 20
per cent.
Will the Sabah and Sarawak
Chief Ministers do it?
Otherwise, the oil royalty
issue will feature as one of the top issues where Barisan Nasional has failed
in its slogan of “Janji Ditepati”.
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