FED
UP.... Disgruntled Sabah Upko members are fed up with Umno YBs and want a
special programme to re-educate them on their responsibilities to the
electorate.
By : THOMAS PI
LAHAD DATU: The strained
relationship between two Barisan Nasional components here has emerged into the
open over the preferential treatment given to Muslim Bumiputera at the expense
of the non-Muslims.
The United Pasokmomogun
Kadazandusun Murut Organisation (Upko) which is embarrassed that it has not
been able to provide the same level of social assistance that Umno provides its
supporters, this week accused the dominant BN party of granting assistance
based on religious beliefs rather than on needs and creating a split where none
existed before.
Silam Upko division
chairman, Basari Sarkun, charged that the Silam Umno elected representatives
were neglecting the wellbeing of the non-Muslim Bumiputera and ignoring the
sacrifices of BN component parties and their supporters that ensured the
coalition’s victory in the last election.
Basari, who is also district
councillor, said Umno seemed to be only interested in helping the Muslim
community, especially its party members first and then the community.
“Let me remind you all that
the victory of Silam is the victory of all the component parties in BN, and not
solely Umno or the YBs themselves. They should fulfil their election pledge to
the people after they had won,” he said.
He suggested that the BN
conduct a special programme to educate its elected representatives to
understand their duty to all citizens as well as Prime Minister Najib Tun
Razak’s unity drive which they had taken to mean as an exercise of merely
putting up their finger and shouting “1 Malaysia” during a function or a photo
opportunity.
“I have requested for the
YBs special fund to repair churches, roads, village community halls in
non-Muslim Bumiputera majority villages. I also requested 1Malaysia computer,
zinc sheets, water tanks and other such items for our communities, but sadly
the YBs were not forthcoming,” he said.
A highly emotional Basari,
who cried at various points of his speech to some 600 party members during a
division meeting, said that even government poverty eradication programmes were
discriminatory in nature including the supply of electricity and water in rural
areas.
‘There’s still hope’
In attendance were Upko
president Bernard Dompok, who is also federal Plantation and Commodity
Minister, his deputy Ewon Ebin, who is State Rural Development Minister, State
Cultural Board chairman Wences Anggang and central committee members Madius
Tanggau and Markus Mojigoh (Putatan MP).
Dompok urged his party
members to be calm and voice their grievances through the proper party
channels.
He said the acceptance by
Najib to set up Royal Commission of Inquiry on illegal immigrants was “a good
indication” of the willingness of the current BN government to resolve the
long-standing Sabahan problems.
“There is still hope in BN…
it is willing to listen and find ways to improve the situation. Of course, we
can’t resolve everything overnight, but when the right times come, it will be
resolved,” he told disgruntled members and party supporters.
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