UNUSUAL....Earlier this
week, Dr Mahathir had sought to explain away Sabah’s unusual population boom.
By : CLARA CHOOI
KOTA KINABALU : Former Sabah
Barisan Nasional (BN) leader Datuk Seri Wilfred Mojilip Bumburing today
labelled Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad a “traitor” for defending Sabah’s burgeoning
migrant population, saying the latter had betrayed east Malaysians with his
remarks.
The Tuaran MP said Dr
Mahathir’s defence of the problem was also “clear admission” of his alleged
hand in the controversial “Projek IC”, a purported initiative to award
foreigners Malaysian citizenships in exchange for votes in Sabah, ostensibly to
help keep the ruling BN in power.
“He (Dr Mahathir) had been
silent all these years while various quarters are providing proof of the
indiscriminate issuance of citizenship to foreigners,” Bumburing said in a
statement here.
He alleged that the country’s
longest-serving prime minister had banked on “Projek IC” to change Sabah’s
voter demographics during his tenure, in a bid to stay elected.
“Dr Mahathir is indeed a
traitor to the people of Sabah,” Bumburing said.
He reminded that at the time
of Malaysia’s formation in 1963, leaders from Malaya had promised the people of
North Borneo, or Sabah and Sarawak, that the sovereignty of both states would
be protected.
But following the unchecked
influx of foreigners into Sabah from the 1970s, Bumburing said the state’s
dominion has now been compromised.
A national population census
in 2010 showed an exponential 390 per cent increase in Sabah’s population from
636,431 citizens in 1970 to 3,120,040 citizens in 2010 ― more than double the
national population growth of just 164 per cent.
Of the 3.12 million Sabahans
today, reports have estimated that 27 per cent are foreigners.
“What Dr Mahathir did was a
blatant betrayal to the people of Sabah and Sarawak on that promise,” Bumburing
said.
In an apparent move to
quieten the uproar over the longstanding issue, Dr Mahathir wrote in his blog
earlier this week that many migrants in Sabah were qualified to be given
Malaysian citizenships as they have stayed in the country for decades and speak
Bahasa Malaysia.
“On the basis of length of
stay and mastering of the national language, they qualify to be citizens of
this country. And so they acquired citizenship.
“By comparison we have many
citizens who cannot speak the national language who were accepted as citizens.
And we are still giving citizenship to foreigners who wish to be Malaysians on
condition they have been living in this country for 10 out of the last 12
years, speak the national language and take the oath of allegiance to the
country.
“So why cannot the migrants
to Sabah who have all these qualifications be accepted as citizens? The
objections for them being accepted seem to be political,” he said.
Dr Mahathir’s words may have
bruised BN badly, particularly as it comes at a crucial time for the
once-formidable Sabah BN, which was just hit by the departures of two senior
federal lawmakers, including Bumburing.
Bumburing, who was formerly
the deputy president of Sabah-based BN party United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun
Murut Organisation (UPKO), had left the ruling pact last month to support
Pakatan Rakyat (PR), citing his anger over BN’s failure to address Sabah’s
problem with illegal immigrants.
He was joined by fellow BN
lawmaker Beaufort MP Datuk Seri Lajim Ukin, who was formerly a federal deputy
minister and Umno supreme council member.
Both men have launched
PR-friendly movements ― the Angkatan Pemuda Sabah (APS) for Bumburing and
Pakatan Perubahan Sabah (PPS) for Lajim ― as their new political platforms for
the coming polls.
Their departures have,
however, been described by BN leaders as a political move fuelled not by
principles but their disgruntlement at being passed over to defend their
respective seats.
Just days after their
Bumburing and Lajim’s quit move, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak told a
press conference that he would announce the terms of reference into the Royal
Commission of Inquiry (RCI) into Sabah’s illegals issue today, a move described
as an attempt at damage control.
But Bumburing, despite
acknowledging that the RCI was a key demand of the Sabah electorate, said the
panel should be dismissed as an election ploy by BN.
He said Najib should instead
apologise to Sabahans for the wrongdoings of his predecessors, particularly Dr
Mahathir.
“If indeed the government is
truly concerned about the matter, why make announcement on the eve of election?
“I urge the prime minister not
to continuously treat the people in Sabah as naive and stupid.
“The people will not believe
this ‘rabbit-from-the-hat’ announcement by him,” he said.
Bumburing added that the
only way to resolve Sabah’s illegal immigrant problem was to change the federal
government.
He pointed out that PR has
promised to turn the issue into its topmost priority in the state, should it
come to power in the next polls.
Najib is expected to
announce the RCI terms after a closed-door meeting with state Umno and BN leaders
here this afternoon.
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