By : IDA LIM
KUALA LUMPUR : A Royal
Commission Of Inquiry (RCI) is needed to see if Sabah and Sarawak’s “dreams and
aspirations” in forming Malaysia with Malaya 49 years ago has been “fulfilled
or betrayed”, Lim Kit Siang said today.
The DAP parliamentary leader
called for all MPs from Sabah and Sarawak to give their unanimous support when
he proposes such an RCI in the next Parliamentary sitting.
“The people of Sarawak and
Sabah were promised progress and development, at least to the level achieved by
the Peninsula states,” Lim said in a speech in Kuching, Sarawak during Pakatan
Rakyat’s Malaysia Day celebrations today.
“Have these promises to
Sabah and Sarawak been fulfilled in the past five decades? The answer must be a
loud no.”
“Where has all the wealth of
Sabah and Sarawak gone to in the past five decades?” he asked.
Using official statistics
from the 2009 National Household Income Survey Report and from the Economic
Planning Unit, Lim pointed out that the two east Malaysian states had the
highest rate of overall poverty and rural poverty.
Sabah’s overall poverty is
the nation’s highest at 19.7 per cent, while Sarawak is third at 5.3 per cent.
The nation’s rural poverty
rate is again headed by Sabah at 32.8 per cent, with Sarawak placing second at
8.4 per cent.
The poverty income line in
Sabah is the highest at RM1,048, with Sarawak being the second highest at
RM912. Peninsula Malaysia’s line stands at RM763.
“Let there be a national
debate and soul-searching as to how two of the richest states in Malaysia, namely
Sarawak and Sabah, have been reduced in five decades to be among the poorest
and the most inequitable states in the federation...,” said Lim.
Lim said that his visits to
the interior of the two states had shown that “there are deep-seated
frustrations and dissatisfactions that the two promises of constitutional
safeguards and development progress...had not been realised.”
“I think there is no more
meaningful manner for Sarawak and Sabah to mark their 50 years of Malaysian
nationhood than to conduct a comprehensive review of the successes and failures
in all aspects of development in these two states in the past five decades with
feedback from the people Sabah and Sarawak as well as to review the
constitutional safeguards as contained in the 18 Points for Sarawak and 20
Points for Sabah.”
Lim said that both states
face the problems of corruption, unresolved native land issues, lack of basic
infrastructure and breach of constitutional safeguards.
He also pointed to Sabah’s
long-standing illegal immigrant issue, saying that the prime minister had
“taken more than six months” before finally announcing the terms of reference
and panel for an RCI to probe the matter.
“More than a month has
passed since Najib’s announcement, but there are no signs that the RCI has
started work or its members have been presented with their Instruments of
Appointment — which is pertinent as the six months given to the RCI to complete
its report is to take effect from their official appointments,” Lim said.
The prime minister has given
the RCI six months to finish the probe, and PR leaders have questioned if the
probe would be completed before the 13th general elections.
The federal opposition have
claimed that citizenships were given out by the Sabah BN government in exchange
for votes, and insist that the RCI will clean the electoral roll.
“This raises the serious
question whether the RCI (on illegal immigrants) would be another meaningless
public relations exercise...” Lim said.
Federal seats in east
Malaysia’s Sabah and Sarawak are expected to be BN’s focal point come the
general election as both states, including the federal territory of Labuan,
contribute a significant 57 seats, or 25 per cent of the 222 parliamentary
seats available.
In Election 2008, BN lost
its customary two-thirds parliamentary majority largely due to significant
losses in the peninsula. The opposition won 82 seats to BN’s 140.
BN’s saving grace was in
Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan where the coalition trounced the opposition in a
near-clean sweep, winning 55 parliamentary seats to the opposition’s two.
However, with the recent
defections, BN now holds 53 parliamentary seats in east Malaysia, while the
opposition’s score is now four. (TMI)
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