By : JOSEPH BINGKASAN
KOTA KINABALU: The already
muddy political scene in the state is getting dirtier as the general election
looms and the battle for candidacy heats up. The switch by former Barisan
Nasional loyalists to the opposition is threatening to upset the delicate
balance between the newcomers and the old hands, with both claiming they are
the legitimate first-choice contenders for any seat.
Until a few weeks ago, PKR
was the main opposition party that was seen as being able to topple BN’s
Maximus Ongkili from his parliamentary seat in Kota Marudu where he is
considered an interloper as his family is from Tambunan.
Support for popular
local-born Anthony Mandiau, a PKR candidate in the 12th general election, was
rising even though he was defeated by Ongkili. The writing was on the wall when
he polled a creditable 7,830 votes against the winner’s 12,028.
Mandiau did the same in 2004
as an independent candidate polling 7,268 votes against Ongkili’s 10,457.
However, with the entry of
former United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun Murut Organisation (Upko) veteran
leaders Wilfred Bumburing and Senator Maijol Mahap who quit their party and the
ruling coalition to enter the fray, Mandiau may not get the chance to test the
third-time-lucky game plan.
Things were looking up for
him when Mahap, the former Upko vice-president, quit BN to throw his support
for Pakatan Rakyat.
“The number of PKR
supporters has increased close to 10,000 now compared to just 13 members when I
joined the party in 2007,” Mandiau told delegates of the divisional party’s
congress in Kota Marudu last week.
However, the jump in the
number of overt supporters is making him sweat rather than smile.
“It now seems that my friend
[Mahap] has his own plans. He quit BN so that he can contest in the coming
election on a Pakatan ticket.
“When I joined PKR in 2007,
Upko leaders including Mahap laughed at me… they were telling the people of
Kota Marudu that my move was wrong as I was joining a political party that had
no following. Now they want to join us,” he told the congress.
‘Newcomers’ stoking anger
Mandiau, a two-time
opposition candidate, views (Mahap’s) move as unprincipled in the light of the
newcomers’ attempts to commandeer the process of nominating opposition
candidates for various seats in the state.
Mahap has joined Angkatan
Perubahan Sabah (APS) headed by Bumburing, who is Tuaran MP.
Bumburing has declared
support for Pakatan and seems intent on stamping his mark on the question of
candidacy.
Mandiau disclosed that
Bumburing was accompanied by Mahap and former senator Kalakau Untol last week
to a gathering of PKR supporters in Kampung Marak Parak, a remote village in
the Kota Marudu district.
“It was during this
gathering that the APS leader announced that Mahap will be the Pakatan
candidate for the Kota Marudu parliamentary seat, contesting on a PKR ticket.
“What is this? This is clear
that Mahap resigned from Upko so that he can contest, which he would not have
been able to do if he is still in BN,” Mandiau said.
He said he was only informed
by Mahap about the function three hours before it began at 2pm and he was
unable to attend.
But said that he was with
the senator the day before and there was no mention about the next day’s
gathering.
“I am the Kota Marudu PKR
head but was sidelined. This should not have happened,” he said, adding that
PKR leaders in the division are not happy about the new developments following
APS’ entry into the district.
He also told the congress
that due to APU’s move and activities in promoting Mahap as the candidate,
former MP George Sangkin and about 1,000 supporters had left PKR.
But Sangkin had promised
support if he (Mandiau) is the candidate.
PKR leaders must listen to
people
Mandiau believes the same
battle for seats is happening in other constituencies where those who left BN
to join APS and Pakatan Perubahan Sabah (PPS) headed by Beaufort MP Lajim Ukin
are expecting to be rewarded for the switch in allegiance.
There is a tacit
understanding that APS would help Pakatan in non-Muslim Bumiputera areas while Muslim
constituencies would be looked after by PPS.
The understanding also
includes a carte blanche to the leaders of the two organisations to contest
where they please using any of the opposition’s component parties – PKR, PAS,
DAP – as their platform.
However, this has not gone
down well with many opposition supporters.
Mandiau pointed out for the
opposition to win, party leaders must listen to the voice of the majority and
“not just a handful who have just jumped ship into the Pakatan stable”.
He said a disunited
opposition would be to the advantage of the BN.
Mahap contested for BN
against PBS-opposition Ongkili in the 1999 general election but lost, obtaining
6,781 votes against Ongkili’s 8,465.
The coming election will
potentially also see opposition candidates fielded by the Sabah Progressive
Party (SAPP) and State Reform Party (STAR), further splintering the vote.
Ongkili unperturbed
Tandak SAPP vice-chairman
John Mitah Mikat said the latest developments are an indication of the failure by
PKR to unite the people of Sabah in support of the opposition coalition in
facing the 13th general election.
Ongkili himself does not
look like a man under pressure. He has been boasting that his Kota Marudu
parliamentary seat and its two state seats of Matunggong and Tandek are safe
seats for BN.
The three seats have always
been PBS strongholds since 1985 and the party’s candidates have always won the
seats even when it was in the opposition. Before being elected as an MP,
Ongkili had also served as Tandek assemblyman.
Ongkili, the PBS deputy
president, won the seat in 1995 and 1999 elections when the party headed by his
uncle Joseph Pairin Kitingan, the current Sabah BN deputy chief minister, was
still in the opposition.
The Federal Science, Technology
and Innovation Minister went on to win the seats again in 2004 and 2008 general
elections on a BN ticket. PBS pulled out from BN in 1990 and rejoined in 2002.
Berebutlah dengan kerusi yang ada. Kita tahu yang mana pembangkang tidak sehaluan dengan pembahagian kerusi.
ReplyDeleteJika kita lihat sendiri pun STAR telah menyatakan yang akan bertanding akan disemua tempat di Sabah ini. Jika begitu bagaimana dengan PR dan SAPP. Memang tidak patut bukan.
ReplyDeleteBiar mereka rasa akibatnya bila tiada kesepakatan dalam pembahagian kerusi, pastinya sendiri yang rugi. BN 'tepuk tangan' untuk mereka.
Deletemereka tidak sefahaman, BN akan dpt kelebihan.
Deletekalau dalam BN, ada peringkat pucuk pimpinan. kalau dalam pembangkang + parti luar PR yang lain, siapa yang akan tentukan?
ReplyDeleteOpposition is resorting to lies and hatred. They turn good into evil, facts into fiction and harmony into discrimination.
ReplyDeletepembangkang di Sabah mmg tak ada sefahaman.
ReplyDeletedengan kemunculan parti2 politik baru di sabah, jangan haraplah pembangkang sabah boleh menumbangkan BN..
ReplyDeletekegagalan pemimpin2 pembangkang mengadakan kesepakatan untuk menumbangkan kerajaan BN Sabah, menunjukkan pemimpin2 parti itu memiliki sikap tamak yang tinggi..
ReplyDelete