By : DANIEL JOHN JAMBUN
THIS YEAR’S slogan for the
national day celebration, “Janji Ditepati” has courted a lot of controversy not
only because it violates the sanctity of the national celebration by converting
it into a BN election campaign but also because it is so easy to argue with.
It was a mistake on the part
of BN to have chosen the slogan because the statement of the slogan itself
invites criticisms and arguments. BN has forgotten that the national
celebration is for all Malaysians regardless of party affiliation, so BN is
really making an outrageous blunder, or showing plain arrogance, by making even
the national celebration its own celebration.
By doing so, BN has
alienated the rakyat who are in the opposition. Now there is no reason for the
opposition to celebrate the national day together because it has become “BN’s
Day”! There is no reason for people in the opposition to be patriotic with the
national day because to celebrate it means to support BN!
BN has forgotten that its
duty is to celebrate the national day on behalf of ALL the people. The national
day belongs to the people NOT to BN! No wonder the number of flags being put up
on shops, offices, houses and vehicles have suddenly dwindled to ALMOST ZERO
compared to previous years. Now even the Jalur Gemilang has a strong tinge of
BN’s arrogance so much so that many people no longer feel any patriotic feeling
when they see flapping in the wind.
Is BN so desperate or so
frightened of losing the next general election that it is using everything and
anything it can get its hands on, even the people’s patriotic heritage to
glorify itself? Or is it so overconfident or simply super-arrogant that it
thinks that it will gain a lot of political mileage by making it a part of the
BN propaganda?
Apparently that is the case,
and because of this the whole meaning of patriotism has been hijacked and
damaged. From the BN’s viewpoint patriotism means supporting the BN while from
the viewpoint of the opposition patriotism means saving the nation from the
abuses of the BN!
So now it is meaningless for
the BN to appeal to the people’s sense of patriotism because when the Prime
Minister or any top BN leader talks about patriotism they know it means only
one thing, “Come and support the BN” and “Supporting the opposition means
destroying the country.” So, in a way, being patriotic in Malaysia nowadays is
to come in cahoots with robbers!
But back to the problem of
“Janji Ditepati.” If we were to list and discuss all the issues which prove
that this is not an honest statement, it would fill up several books. But here
is a sampling of only a few cases.
One, the security for Sabah
in Malaysia. When Sabah was considering whether to join the formation of
Malaysia, the rational bandied about for doing so was the supposed threat from
the Philippines which had been claiming Sabah and the threat by Sukarno’s
konfrontasi to “Ganyang Malaysia” before the cockerel crows on the dawn of
September 16, 1963, that without Malaysia, Sabah would be invaded and colonized
by Indonesia.
But strangely history had
shown that these threats didn’t go far as proven by the fact that Brunei not
only survived but prospered. And when we became part of the federation we
didn’t really get the security that we were promised. Very ironically it were
the Filipinos and Indonesians who actually invaded Sabah, not as military
forces, but as illegal immigrants, and all the security forces of Malaysia –
the army, the border police, the immigration officials – couldn’t or wouldn’t
stop them! Where was the promise to guarantee us security?
Two, the promise not to
‘colonization’ of Sabah. Donald Stephens biggest worry was that Sabah would
escape from the clutches of British colonialization and fall into being a
colony of Malaya. The Tunku then made a promise that Sabah and Sarawak would
not become the 12th and 13th states of Malaya. But this is what had happened.
We are now unitary states instead of being independent, equal-partner nations
in the federation as was originally understood. The promise not to colonize
Sabah was flagrantly broken.
Three, there is no
compliance by the federal government on the five constitutional documents
and/or constitutional conventions (the Federal Constitution, the Malaysia
Agreement, the 20 Points, the IGC Report, and the Batu Oath Stone) which formed
the basis for Sabah & Sarawak’s equal partnership as nations in Malaysia.
Four, why wasn’t there a
proper constitution drafted and passed? What we have is actually the
constitution of the federation of Malaya amended to become what is now the
“Federal Constitution” which is the real reason why it is not called the
“Malaysian Constitution.” When they came up with the decision to use the
Malayan constitution as a basis for the constitution we have now, there was
already a hidden agenda. We were played out from even before the start of
Malaysia.
Five, the rights and
autonomy for Sabah. The 20 Points has many points which promised certain rights
and autonomy for Sabah. These have now been taken away, eroded or simply
denied, often without any proper legal process. That is why we no longer have
freedom not to have any official religion, right to arrange our own education
system, to determine our own immigration rules and to retain the collection of
our own taxes and use it in accordance to our own economic plans. The 20 Points
in fact is a list of not only broken promises but a list of rights and autonomy
which were then taken away unceremoniously.
Six, we were not consulted
before the decision was made to expel Singapore from Malaysia. This means
Malaya thought that the views of Sabah and Sarawak as components of the
federation were immaterial and irrelevant in matters of such a critical and
vital decision as expelling a partner.
This was simple arrogance, a
condescending attitude, taking us for granted because our leaders in Sabah were
seen as people who could be forced to accept Malaya’s decision. Only one
leader, Donald Stephens, demanded for a review of the Malaysia Agreement and to
silence him he was sent or “ice-boxed” to Australia as Malaysia’s ambassador.
Seven, the Sabah Baru
promise. When BN took over the state government in Sabah in 1994, there was a
huge announcement of a promise to create “Sabah Baru” (a New Sabah) within 100
days. Now after 18 years we do have a ‘new Sabah’ – a Sabah depleted of its
natural forests which had caused the death of ecosystems and many rivers, a
Sabah mired in poverty and abject poverty with 40 percent of Malaysia’s poor, a
Sabah which is the poorest in Malaysia. BN had promised a dream but delivered a
nightmare!
And the situation is not
improving. In fact things are getting worse. The state continues to be flooded
with illegal immigrants, and the solution is not forthcoming because the
recently-announced RCI is not expected to solve it largely because it has no
provision to penalize those culprits behind the problem, and that obviously it
was announced only as an election ploy.
Janji ditepati? You be the
judge!
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