FLOGGING.....While
opposition SAPP is flogging its plan for Sabah IC's for genuine Sabahans, Umno Vice-President
Shafie Apdal says it will be counter-productive.
By : JOSEPH BINGKASAN
KOTA KINABALU: The Sabah
Progressive Party (SAPP) has justified its plan to issue ‘Sabah identity cards’
to bona fide Malaysians in Sabah as the only solution to overcome the illegal
distribution of national identity cards to foreigners.
The opposition has insisted
there is an urgent need to differentiate Sabahans from the dubious document
holders who are on the electoral rolls as voters and have managed to sway past
elections in favour of the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition.
SAPP leader Yong Teck Lee
said his party plans to wipe out the discrepancy between the will of genuine
Malaysians in the state and that of newcomers who have been granted citizenship
illegally and forced to vote for those in power for fear of being deported if
the opposition forms the next Sabah government.
He said the plan would serve
as a check against unqualified foreigners influencing the outcome of any
election and the future of the country.
Yong’s plan however came
under immediate fire from Umno vice-president Shafie Apdal.
“Why should we? We are a
nation already. If (we say) Sabah is for Sabahans and Perlis is for Perlis
people, the (nation) won’t go anywhere,” Shafie said.
Yong however stressed that
new Sabah IC system would differentiate legitimate citizens of Sabah origin
from illegal immigrants who hold Putrajaya-issued identity cards and would be
used for all official purposes.
The former Sabah chief
minister said the authority (of the state government) to issue identity cards
was guaranteed by way of the 20-point Malaysia Agreement of 1963.
He noted that past identity
cards have always indicated the place of issuance was Kota Kinabalu or
Jesselton as the state capital was known before it joined the Federation of
Malaysa, Sarawak and Singapore in forming Malaysia in Sept 16, 1963 unlike now.
Meanwhile SAPP’s tresurer
Dullie Marie told a press conference here the party’s plan was to ‘safeguard
the genuine Sabahans’.
“This (plan) is to safeguard
the identity and rights of genuine Malaysians in Sabah. It must be addressed
assiduously with full conviction and political will,” Marie said.
He said the issue of giving
dubious identity cards had been going on for decades only to be denied time and
time again until the recent establishment of Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI)
to investigate the matter acknowledged there is credence to the allegations.
Shafie disagrees
The opposition and its
supporters are however doubtful that the Umno-controlled federal government is
committed to resolving the issue pointing to how Prime Minister Najib Tun
Razak’s administration has dragged its feet on the matter since announcing the
RCI earlier this year.
Earlier this week Shafie who
is also the Semporna MP cemented their misgiving when he was quoted saying: “We
can’t even control the (Filipino militant separatist group) Abu Sayyaf and
illegal migrants from entering Sabah, so why (are) we trying to control Malaysia.”
While acknowledging that the
20-point agreement – which, among others, controls the movement of Malaysians
from the peninsula to Sabah and Sarawak – he said a new identity card would be
counter-productive.
Shafie recounted how in the
early 1980s he brought his wife who is from Kedah to Sabah. “I had to join one
immigration line for Sabahans and she was in another for people from the
peninsula” even though she was his wife.
Marie said that the
statement by a federal minister from Sabah was an admission of failure by the
federal government to provide security and prevent illegal migrants entering
the state.
He said this was confirmed
by federal secretary Abu Bakar Hasan who said that out of the 151,849 arrivals
in Sabah through the Tawau port in the first eight months of this year only
120,980 had left and 30,869 persons were unaccounted for.
“For the year 2011 at Tawau
alone, 217,453 entered but only 165,857 departed, leaving behind a staggering
52,857 immigrants unaccounted for. How about the other years and other ports of
entry,” Marie asked.
He said this was the reason
Umno top leaders could boast that “Sabah is a fixed deposit for Barisan
National”.
The issue is seen as an
election game changer given Sabahans’ growing anger over the surrender of the
state’s oil wealth and the erosion of state rights including immigration
control guaranteed by the 1963 Malaysian Agreement.
“This should not be
perceived as disloyalty Datuk Shafie or other leaders,” said Marie.
The new Sabah IC proposal is
one of SAPP’s responses to Pakatan Rakyat’s promise to restore Sabah’s
autonomy.
SAPP is not an official
Pakatan component but the Sabah-based party has an unofficial “working
relationship” with the opposition coalition parties which are all headquartered
in the peninsula.
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