KOTA KINABALU: Sabah's
demography changed drastically in 1991 when the Population Census showed out of
the 1.7 million people in Sabah, about 423,000 of them were non-citizens, a
historian said.
"This is not because of
a natural population increase but due to non-citizens. Who they were the census
didn't mention," said Prof. Emeritus Dr Ranjit Singh a/l Darshan Singh.
Testifying before the Royal
Commission of Inquiry (RCI) on Illegal Immigrants in Sabah chaired by Tan Sri
Steve Shim on the first day of the public hearing here, Monday, he said in the
1970 Sabah Census the population was 651,000 and there was no category for
non-citizens.
In 1970, the Dusun community
was the majority with 183,000, Murut (30,000), Bajau (77,000), Brunei (28,000),
Tausug/Suluk (10,000), other indigenous group (87,000) and Chinese (138,000).
Ranjit did not believe the
423,000 non-citizens in the 1991 census were transient people as suggested by a
RCI panel member, Tan Sri Herman Luping.
"With due respect to my
understanding transient people are those coming in and out using boats and
ships. As far as I am concerned when a government takes a census, it is the
people who are residing at the place.
"I think they were residing
in Sabah but without citizenship," said Ranjit who led the successful
Malaysian litigation team for the Sipadan and Ligitan islands claim at The
Hague in 2002.
Based on his book "The
Making of Sabah" (1865-1991) third edition, which was later tendered as an
exhibit, the first official census in Sabah was conducted in 1891.
It showed that the total
population in Sabah at that time was 67,000 with the Dusun making the bulk of
it with 34,000, Bajau (11,000), Brunei (3,000), Suluk (3,700), Murut (not available),
Orang Sungai (unknown), other indigenous people (6,000) and Chinese (7,000).
Based on his extensive
research during the course of the Sipadan and Ligitan Islands litigation case,
he said the most dominant Sultanate in Borneo was the Brunei Sultanate, which
in 1521 was already a large empire.
Brunei was so powerful that
it had established "jajahan" (dependence) in Sarawak and Sabah where
it controlled 23 rivers such as in Pandasan, Inanam, Menggatal, Api-Api,
Kimanis, Benoni and Tuaran among others.
The Brunei came as traders
and administrators establishing settlements in Tuaran and Papar.
"In my research the
Dusun, Kadazan (a term used in 1920 in Papar for the more urban Dusun), Brunei
Malay and Bisaya lived along the West Coast in the 16th century," he said.
But later on the Sulu
Sultanate began to emerge as another centre of power in the region because it
was dealing with European independent traders doubling as gun smugglers who
wanted to get supply of products that could be found in Borneo in exchange for
weapons.
So as Sulu became an
important market, they needed manpower, hence they began to settle in Sandakan,
Marudu, Tempasuk and Pandasan, he said, adding that the Sulu Sultanate capital
is where present day Jolo is in the southern Philippines.
He said the Sulu people
comprising the Tausugs, Bajaus and Irranuns came in the late 18th century,
hence changing the demography of Sabah.
He stated that they began to
intermarry with the locals such as in Paitan River where, he said, while Sabah
people might not agree, historical evidence showed that the Orang Sungai were a
mix of Sulu-Bajau-Dusun people.
By the late 18th century
there were at least six communities in Sabah, he said.
On another note, he said the
whole of Sabah was only joined together in 1902 after the arrival of the
British North Borneo Chartered Company who came and took over the rivers.
In 1881, he said the first
Governor, W Hood Treacher, started a scheme to bring in Chinese labour to plant
padi in Inanam and this also changed the demography of Sabah.
Ranjit who had written four
books and 50 articles said the history of Sabah showed there had been
settlements going back to 30,000 years ago and that there was no proof to show
that the people of Sabah originally came from South China or vice versa, as the
Wave Theory had suggested.
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