“THE KUCHING Declaration is
better than Umno/Barisan Nasional (BN) stand and looks good on paper in various
aspects. On the other hand, in some
aspects, it is not much different from Umno/BN especially in the treatment of
the status of Sabah and Sarawak,” said Datuk Dr. Jeffrey Kitingan, STAR Sabah
Chief, in response to queries from the press on the Kuching Declaration signed by
Pakatan Rakyat (PR) in Kuching on Malaysia Day 2012.
“Giving credit where it is
due, the Kuching Declaration is the first step in the right direction for PR
and it will add pressure on Umno/BN to follow suit. It may augur well for the Borneo States if
there is follow through by PR and or Umno/BN in the treatment of Sabah and
Sarawak,” added Dr. Jeffrey.
For example, Umno/BN would
now need to raise the oil revenue for Sabah and Sarawak from 5% to 20% and this
additional income, if put to good and proper use, will definitely contribute to
the well-being of Sabah, Sarawak and their people.
And if Umno/BN does not
increase the oil revenue to 20%, BN component parties in Sabah and Sarawak
should re-assess their position and pull out from BN for the sake of Sabah and
Sarawak and their future.
Sabah, Sarawak still the
12th and 13th States
Sabah and Sarawak are truly
equal partners to Malaya. However, it
is not correct to say that the equal partnership is based on the Federal
Constitution which means keeping the status quo of Sabah and Sarawak being the
12th and 13th States.
This is not what the
founding fathers of Malaysia, be they be from Malaya, Sabah or Sarawak,
envisaged or was as promised by Malaya.
In the Malaysia Act that was
passed by the Malaya Parliament in 1963 and Article 1 of the Federal
Constitution that was amended with effect on 16 September 1963, Sabah and
Sarawak were not to be the 12th and 13th States. Section 4 of the Malaysia Act and Article 1
of the 1963 Federal Constitution reads:-
“THE STATES OF THE
FEDERATION
4. (1) The Federation shall
be known, in Malay and in English, by the name Malaysia.
(2) The
States of the Federation shall be—
(a) the
States of Malaya, namely, Johore, Kedah, Kelantan, Malacca, Negri Sembilan,
Pahang, Penang, Perak, Perlis, Selangor and Trengganu ; and
(b) the
Borneo States, namely, Sabah and Sarawak ; and
(c) the
State of Singapore.”
To be true equal partners,
both BN and PR need to re-amend the Federal Constitution and revert back to the
old provision to set Sabah and Sarawak as equal partners with Malaya.
Judging from the statements
of the Prime Minister and PR, this looks easy since both sides are
acknowledging that Sabah and Sarawak are equal partners with Malaya. This can easily be done at the next
Parliament session next week and there is no need to wait until the next
general elections.
Unless of course, both the
Prime Minister and PR are not sincere in treating Sabah and Sarawak as equal
partners and do not mean what they say and they did not say what they mean.
Sabah and Sarawak did not
join Malaya?
The ignorance,
misunderstanding or insincerity of the Prime Minister is also clear from his
statement that Sabah and Sarawak joined and gained their independence through
Malaysia. Nothing is further from the
truth as even our Sabah students in the universities will tell you that Sabah
and Sarawak did not join Malaya or Malaysia and that Sabah and Sarawak formed
Malaysia with Singapore and Malaya in 1963.
This ignorance,
misinformation and misunderstanding is widespread amongst BN parliamentarians
including that from Kota Belud and the lawyer from Sandakan. The latter even gave an example of Sabah
being similar to Hawaii who joined the USA in 1959 and yet still celebrated
Independence Day on 4th of July and the same example was carried by
Bernama.
When did Sabah ever join
Malaysia? Wasn’t Malaysia formed as a
new nation on 16 September 1963? When
did Malaysia gained independence when it never existed before that? And who were the colonial masters of
Malaysia, if ever there were one?
Oil
Justice Still Injustice?
Increasing the oil royalties
from 5% to 20% is not oil justice. In
any event, it is wrong to refer to it as oil royalties when it is clear in
Section 4 of the Petroleum Development Act, 1974, it is cash payment.
The cash payment was
supposed to be in return for ownership rights of the oil and that is also
supposed to be mutually agreed upon by the State government concerned and
Petronas. The cash payment is also
clearly spelt out in Clauses 1, 2 and 3 of the Sabah Oil Agreement, 1976.
To do justice for Sabah and
Sarawak’s oil, the PR leaders as well as the State leaders need to study
in-depth the PDA as well as the oil agreements that were signed in 1976.
As regards oil royalties, it
is clear in Clause 4 of the Sabah Oil Agreement that the Sabah government was
made to agree to waive or reject its rights to collect royalties which the
State would otherwise have been entitled to collect under Section 24 of the
Sabah Land Ordinance, Cap. 68.
Sabah and Sarawak have been
deprived of their rights to oil royalties.
Therefore, how can PR pledge to increase the oil royalties without first
pledging to review and revise the existing oil agreements?
On the other hand, is PR
meaning in its pledge to increase the 5% cash payment to 20%? If that is the case, what about the oil
royalty rights of Sabah and Sarawak? Is
PR intending to also allow Sabah and Sarawak to impose oil royalties on top of
the 20% cash payment?
What about the views of the
people of Sabah and Sarawak? Shouldn’t
PR seek the views of these people? After
all, the oil and gas comes out of Sabah’s and Sarawak’s territories, the oil
and gas belongs to the people of Sabah and Sarawak.
There is no dispute, the oil
and gas originally belonged to Sabah and Sarawak until the late Tun Abdul
Razak, father of the current Prime Minister, signed away and vested the oil and
gas in Sabah and Sarawak to Petronas on 26 March 1975.
How can Tun Abdul Razak sign
and vest the oil and gas to Petronas when it belonged to Sabah and
Sarawak? Such a vesting to Petronas has
to be unconstitutional and invalid?
If PR and their leaders are
sincere and genuine about the oil rights, they should first restore and return
these oil rights to Sabah and Sarawak and then re-negotiate for the States to
contribute a portion of the oil revenue to the federal government/Petronas.
Until the oil rights are
returned to Sabah and Sarawak, the 20% oil revenue will still be oil injustice
and not oil justice as alleged although it is much better than the 5% under the
current BN.
Is Fair Representation/Equal
Partnership Genuine or Indirect Annexation of Sabah/Sarawak?
There is a serious issue of
the genuineness and seriousness of the fair representation and equal
partnership of Sabah and Sarawak with Malaya as promoted by PR and many
questions come to mind?
If PR is serious or genuine,
why is there no local political parties participation in Sarawak? What about the local parties in Sabah?
As all 3 PR components are
Malayan-based, who are their local partners in Sabah and Sarawak? It appears to be their subservient Sabah and
Sarawak branches but not with local parties?
Why is this so? And what are
their intentions in side-lining local parties?
Umno, MCA, MIC and Gerakan
are already treating Sabah as “fixed deposits” which is an insult to the people
of Sabah. This is tantamount to a
political annexation of Sabah and overall control of Sabah with its vast and
rich resources.
The formula of no local
political parties in PR for Sabah and Sarawak smells of a similar political
annexation of and keeping control of Sabah and Sarawak with their rich
resources as the 12th and 13th States.
The fair representation must
also take into consideration the constitutional safeguards guaranteed for
Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore in 1963 with Malaya getting not more than 65% of
the parliamentary seats and taking into consideration the size and
potentialities of Sabah and Sarawak.
This is one of the safeguards emplaced for Sabah and Sarawak.
Therefore, parties from
Malaya should not be contesting and taking the seats in Sabah and Sarawak. Even if the Borneo States get their seats
restored to 35%, Sabah and Sarawak would be defenceless and hopeless if these
35% seats are controlled by Malayan parties.
Fair representation should
also be applied to all sectors and not just confined to parliamentary seats and
should include posts in the government service, foreign and diplomatic service,
government agencies and government-linked corporations (GLCs).
Rights
of Indigenous Natives of Sabah and Sarawak
As for native customary land
rights, the issue is not restoration as these rights have always been in
place. It is not a question of
restoration but of respecting and implementing these rights.
The problems are compounded
when the people are denied the land rights and the same land occupied by the
natives are alienated to cronies and companies to the extent of tens of
thousands of acres. These companies not
only rob the natives of their lands but also destroy their homes, crops and are
often evicted from their own lands.
In addition, the special
rights and position of the indigenous natives of Sabah and Sarawak as enshrined
in Article 153 of the Federal Constitution needs to be affirmatively
implemented.
Under Article 153, the
rights of the indigenous natives are not inferior to the Malays in the
Peninsular. They are equal in status and
entitled to the privileges as contained in Article 153 and should not be denied
these privileges in implementation by the government of the day.
If these privileges and
equal status were not guaranteed in 1963, it would be doubtful whether the
Sabah and Sarawak founding fathers would have agreed to form Malaysia with
Malaya.
Borneonisation,
Competent Sabah and Sarawak and Federal Agencies
Endorsement of appointments
of Sabahans and Sarawakians is not new as these appointments were clearly spelt
out in the 20-Points and the IGC Report.
What Sabahans and Sarawakians
are seeking are not just borneonisation of the civil service in their States
and the federal agencies and departments there? Due recognition, appointments and roles
need to be provided for Sabahans and Sarawakians at national and international
levels of the civil service at federal level.
In addition, the federal
government need to review the roles and presence of federal agencies in Sabah
and Sarawak and many of these agencies and their roles can be better handled
with costs savings by the relevant State agencies.
There is no necessity for
Risda, Felda, Felcra and many others to be in Sabah and Sarawak which
eventually make local agencies and local staff redundant. It would have been better if the funds of
these agencies are channeled to the State governments and the relevant agencies
concerned.
Reverse Focus of Development
to Sabah and Sarawak more Appropriate than Equitable Development
Whilst it is appreciated
that PR promises equitable infrastructure development, it should not just be
confined to infrastructure alone. For
49 years, Sabah and Sarawak have been deprived of its legitimate and fair share
of development funds and denied the opportunity of development focus.
The sufferings of Sabahans
and Sarawakians have gone on for too long.
Their miseries are compounded by the huge amounts of oil revenue taken
from Sabah and Sarawak. In 2012,
Petronas is expected to collect RM28.69 billion from Sarawak’s oil and gas and
RM14.73 billion from Sabah’s oil. In
addition, in 2011, Sabah contributed RM22.7 billion in federal taxes and
revenue to the federal government.
Judging from the huge and
monstrous amounts taken by the federal government, a promise of equitable
development is not inadequate to compensate for the deprivation of the last 49
years.
It would be more equitable
and fairer to Sabah and Sarawak for the federal government to reverse its focus
of development to Sabah and Sarawak. A
quantum leap in development funds will raise all indicators of development,
investment and progress and contribute positively to Malaysia’s overall growth.
Other than a reverse of the
focus of development, anything else will come us short. Sabah and Sarawak should not be short-changed
anymore.
The Prime Minister again
short-changed and duped Sarawakians when he announced on the eve of Malaysia
Day in Sibu, Sarawak, that he approved an additional 342 federal projects worth
RM2.32 billion for Sarawak since he took over the premiership in 2009.
To add insult to injury, he
was reported to have said that this was indicative of the sincerity of the
federal government in helping the state to progress.
What is RM2.32 billion over
3 years when Sarawak contributed about RM30 billion to Petronas in 2011 alone
and another RM26.89 billion expected for 2012?
The insincerity is apparent when during his premiership, RM9 billion was
only approved for Sabah and Sarawak with RM100 billion going to Malaya in the
development spending under the initial 10th Malaysia Plan budget.
Sabah
and Sarawak should leverage on their “Kingmakers” role
In the forthcoming 13th
general elections, it is very likely that Sabah and Sarawak will once again be
kingmakers in deciding who rules in Putrajaya.
The people of Sabah and Sarawak and the leaders in Sabah and Sarawak
need to understand this window of opportunity for Sabah and Sarawak to leverage
on their role as kingmakers.
This will be the golden
opportunity for Sabah and Sarawak to regain and restore their lost rights and
autonomy and not leave it to the Malayan parties to decide on their future.
As for STAR Sabah, its focus
and objective for Sabah is very clear and fully set out in the Borneo Agenda
and its 7 core objectives. This will
regain and restore Sabah’s rights and autonomy which will also propel Sabah
into an autonomous, safe and progressive nation within Malaysia.
As usual Jeffrey will critic Pakatan's idea. They will never have good cooperation between STAR and PR.
ReplyDeleteDua-dua kan konon hebat jadi masing-masing lah mahu tunjuk siapa yang lebih pandai.
Deletedua2 tidak boleh pakai.
DeleteBoth STAR and PR are arrogant. They don't want to share the PM post.
DeleteMasing-masing ada agenda untuk dicapai, tidak mungkin boleh kerjasama.
DeleteBaguslah kalau sedar yang mana deklarasi itu tidak lengkap sepenuhnya. Tapi rasanya ini semua pun cuma untuk PRU 13 dan bukannya serius untuk dilakukan.
ReplyDeleteTambahan lagi kita perlu sedar semua ini cuma kata-kata kosong dan bukannya dalam realiti sebenar. Mungkin cakap senang tapi belum dalam keadaan yang sebenar lagi.
ReplyDeleteNanti kalau jadi kerajaan, kata janji tu bukan janji yang wajib untuk ditepati.
DeleteCakap memanglah senang tapi cuba kalau buat?
ReplyDeletebelum tentu boleh buat.
DeletePakatan patut lihat wajah sebenar Jeffrey Kitingan.. beliau tidak akan membiarkan mana2 parti termasuk pembangkang yang cuba merampas Sabah dan Sarawak..
ReplyDeletebagi Jeffrey, idea borneo beliau sahaja yang "sangat baik" berbanding dengan idea2 parti lain.. pemimpin2 ego dan bongkak macam beliau wajar ditolak bukan sahaja oleh rakyat malah oleh semua parti politik..
ReplyDelete