By : LUKE RINTOD
KOTA KINABALU: United Borneo
Front (UBF) chairman Jeffrey Kitingan has disputed the context of the 1962
referendum which academics and Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak claim confirmed
Sabahans’ desire to be part of Malaysia.
“There has never been a
referendum on Sabah as stated by some academics.
“In fact, the so-called
referendum in 1962-63 was actually only a sampling survey of less than four
percent of the Sabah population,” he said in response to Najib’s comments on
Sabah yesterday.
Najib said there was no
question of Sabah not being within Malaysia.
Said Najib: “On the question
of polemics of whether Sabah is a part of Malaysia, I want to stress that the
issue had been finalised in 1978 and Sabah is a valid region in Malaysia,” he
said.
He said the Cobbold
Commission had held a referendum and two-thirds of the people in Sabah agreed
to the state being a part of Malaysia. The commission also obtained the
recognition of the United Nations.
(The Cobbold Commission was
set up to find out whether the people of Sabah and Sarawak were agreeable to
the proposal to create Malaysia, made up of Malaya, Singapore, Sabah and
Sarawak.)
But Jeffrey, who also heads
the Sabah chapter of the State Reform Party (STAR), said the Malaysia Agreement
which incorporated terms of the Cobbold Commission “is yet to be implemented”.
“Najib must realise that
Sabah belongs to the people of Sabah. Malaysia does not own Sabah as the
Malaysia Agreement is yet to be implemented. Sabah is not a piece of lifeless
property to be fought over between the Philippines [Sulu claim] and Malaya.
“Therefore, any talks
between Malaysia/Malaya and the Philippines must include Sabah because only the
people of Sabah can decide what they want.
“The [Sulu's] Sabah claim,
whether valid or not, must be resolved once and fo all by bringing all the
relevant parties to the table within the ambitof Britain and the United Nations
and find a peaceful solution,” he said.
PMs have failed Sabah
He added that “the time has
come to review the implementation of the Malaysia Agreement and ensure its
viability and survival by addressing the unhappiness of the other remaining
partners – Sabah and Sarawak”.
Jeffrey also pointed out
that it was vital that the federal government clean up the mess created by
(former prime minister) Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Umno in Sabah which had put
Sabah and its citizens at perpetual risk.
“They made Sabah insecure by
supporting Muslim rebellion in the Philippines and supplying them weapons,
giving them refuge and training facilities in Sabah and, worst still, by
deploying them as voters in Sabah through the ‘Project IC Mahathir’, despite
knowing full well that the same group of people from the Philippines have
unsettled claims over Sabah.
“To restore confidence, the
federal government must clean up the mess. Umno should leave Sabah politics to
Sabahans and local political parties.”
Jeffrey said the Sulu
invasion was proof that Malaysia and successive prime ministers, including
Najib, had failed miserably to secure the safety and security of Sabahans.
“Now that the fear felt by
Sabahans has become a reality, Najib, as the current premier, must not only
guarantee the security of Sabahans but he must also restore their confidence
because security was the number one reason why Sabahans agreed to be part of
Malaysia in 1963,” said Jeffrey.
He said Najib “has a moral
duty to put things right” in Sabah.
“That is why we Sabahans
supported the RCI [Royal Commission of Inquiry] as part of a necessary action
to put things right.
“But that is not enough. A
lot more needs to be done to regain the confidence of the people of Sabah who
feel cheated by the federal government,” Jeffrey said. (FMT)
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