- Non-compliance of the 1963 Malaysia Agreement;
- Many stateless people in Sabah and Sarawak after Malaysia;
- Federal Government not being shared in equal partnership between Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah and Sarawak;
- Borneonisation;
- Government departments and agencies and media favouring the government party instead of being politically neutral;
- Federal Government taking all the revenue from Sabah and Sarawak and giving a pittance in return;
- 50 per cent of Federal allocations for Sabah and Sarawak either not received or delayed, sometimes to the next National Budget or the next Malaysia Plan. Of funds received, the implementation is only about 60 per cent after much delays;
- Very few university graduates in Sabah and Sarawak;
- The public healthcare system in Sabah and Sarawak in an appalling state;
- Still no piped water and no power in many areas nearly 50 years after Malaysiaj
- No access to rural credit;
- Children in Sabah and Sarawak still walk barefoot for miles on hungry stomachs to schools which resemble no better than cowsheds;
- Sabahans and Sarawakians not being recruited in sufficient numbers into the teaching service;
- The mystery behind the 1976 air crash which took the lives of so many Sabah leadres still unresolved;
- Oil Royalty review to 70 per cent backdated to 1976 and 8 per cent interest for arrears compounded yearly;
- Royalty from oil in the outer waters or independence. Examples: Timor Leste, South Sudan, Darfur, Acheh, and the nationalist movement in Scotland;
- Loss of oil blocks L and M to Brunei under mysterious circumstances;
- Brunei and Singapore;
- Poverty;
- Article 153 of the Federal Constitution and the New Economic Policy not being applied in Sabah and Sarawak;
- Sabah CM selected by Putrajaya;
- Gerrymandering of the electoral boundaries to favour the illegal immigrants and disenfranchise Sabahans;
- Umno disuniting the people of Sabah and Sarawak by fanning racial and religious issues and creating racial polarisation;
- Presence of Peninsular Malaysia parties in the Sabah, Sarawak state assemblies or representing the two states in Parliament is against the political autonomy of the two states;
- Peninsular Malaysia to have less than two-thirds of the seats in Parliament;
- National Cabotage Policy increasing prices to more than that in Peninsular Malaysia, while local wages are comparatively lower, and causing inflation in Sabah and Sarawak while impeding industrialisation of the two states;
- Air and internet connectivity in Sabah and Sarawak very poor;
- Very poor infrastructure in Sabah and Sarawak compared with Singapore, Brunei and Peninsular Malaysia;
- The security of Sabah, as promised by Malaysia, not guaranteed;
- The RMR should be removed from Sabah and Sarawak because they are an occupying force, not meant for protection or security;
- Influx of illegal immigrants has resulted in the explosive population growth of Sabah, and is depressing local wages, increasing crime rates, padding electoral rolls, disenfranchising Natives and other Sabahans, resulting in the loss of Native land and depriving local Muslims in particular of opportunities under Article 153 of the Federal Constitution and the New Economic Policy;
- Loss of Native land to Peninsular Malaysian companies;
32 Issues to ensure 100 per cent voter support in elections
The issues are :
Sokong penuh.
ReplyDelete32 REASONS FOR SABAH SARAWAK TO GET OUT OF MALAYSIA FAST!
ReplyDeleteThese are 32 reasons why Sabah should get out of Malayan colonial rule.
Why bother with elections which serve to legitimise Malayan colonisation of Sabah and Sarawak?
SABAH SARAWAK KELUAR MALAYSIA!
Go & sign the Petition!
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/sabah-sarawak-rights.html