By Joe
Fernandez
It appears that ties between the Sabah
chapter of the Borneo-based State Reform Party (Star) and the Sabah Progressive
Party (Sapp) could be “much better” if not for the latter’s insistence on
contesting in 40 state seats and almost a third, about five to seven, of the
parliamentary seats in Sabah. The party reiterated this stand at its meet on
Sun in Kota Kinabalu.
Before
the 40/5-7 Sun announcement by Sapp, Star had been publicly toying with the
“goodwill gesture” of conceding two state seats -- Likas and Luyang -- and one (Tawau)
of the two parliamentary seats it (Sapp) won in 2008 as a member of the ruling
BN. Star itself had announced in mid-April that it would go for all 60 state
seats at stake in Sabah and 26 parliamentary seats including Labuan.
Another
major policy difference, reiterated by Sapp President Yong Teck Lee at the Sun
meet, is that Sapp, unlike Star, does not want to be the king maker. He would
be quite happy with just “killing the King” (Umno) so that “Anwar Ibrahim can
be King”.
Yong
condescendingly attributes Star’s stand to the 16-year-old party being new in
Sabah and “still feeling its way” and this has outraged Star which is taking
Sapp’s sanctimonious pontifications on “king killing” as a ploy and with more
than a pinch of salt.
Jeffrey,
given a history of bitter animosity with the allegedly anti-Christian Anwar, is
not happy with the idea of him being “King” as it contradicts his party’s grand
“vision of working towards helping empower the people of Sabah and Sarawak to
wean them away from the dependency syndrome foisted on them by the BN to hold
them to ransom in a climate of fear”.
His
party, or at least the young Turks, is pushing for either Lim Guan Eng or Wan
Azizah on the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) side vs Tengku Razaleigh on the Barisan
Nasional (BN) side. Star disagrees with the Pas notion that the Prime Minister
must always be a Muslim from one of the Malay-speaking communities in
Peninsular Malaysia who originated from the Archipelago.
Under
Star’s kingmaker policy, it’s a toss between PR and BN but with the right Prime
Minister-designate, “and the one favoured most would be the one – not party -- who
would least disrupt the economy”.
Star
feels that Anwar, being a noted rabble-rouser all his life, would be a
disruptive element in the economic management of the country. They are not
impressed with his pledge to virtually “steal less oil and gas” than BN from
Sabah and Sarawak given that the Petroleum Development Act has been found by
legal experts to be unconstitutional and the oil agreement null and void.
The
bottomline is that Star does not want Sabah and Sarawak in the post-13th
GE period to go from the frying pan (BN) into the fire (PR), or at best, from
the fire (BN) into the frying pan (PR).
The
political fallout from Sapp’s insistence on “killing the King” and contesting
40 state seats has surprisingly taken a personal turn and is increasingly
souring ties between the two parties.
Sapp
activists are claiming during their ceramah that “Star is a useless reject from
Sarawak where it failed to make any headway for 16 years, that its agenda is
simply a cut-and-paste of Sapp’s original ideas, that it has been planted by BN
to split the opposition votes and that Jeffrey himself received RM 50 million
from a veteran BN leader in South Africa recently”.
Jeffrey’s
international passport, a senior Star leader confided, does not show any trip
to South Africa.
He
dismissed the other allegations by Sapp as “a pack of lies which only this
party of samsengs is capable of cooking up”.
“Samseng”
is an image that Sapp finds particularly difficult to shake given the Dap
constantly harping on this hypersensitive theme. This has made the soft-spoken
Jeffrey more than a little wary of being publicly seen as being too close with
Sapp, Yong in particular.
Sapp,
in any case, seems bent on demolishing Star’s attempt to stake a claim to all
seats at stake under Kingmaker Jeffrey’s Plan Z despite a caveat in some
quarters.
In a
sign of light at the end of the tunnel, some Sapp leaders are willing to accept
just what Star can offer it and go along with Jeffrey’s king maker idea.
However, they are coming under intense pressure from hawkish elements in the
party who are reportedly linked with political party financers and moneybags
working across the political divide and known hoodlums from Sarawak, all Foochows,
controlling the Sabah underworld.
The
young Turks in Star who originally came up with the party’s 60/26 plan,
initially denied by Jeffrey “to please Sapp” and subsequently endorsed after
Anwar, think that “Sapp will continue with its annoying mosquito ways despite
staying in a glass house”.
They may
hit back by probing the known skeletons in Sapp’s cupboard and, where possible,
dredge up new information.
One of
the skeletons is Jeffrey’s incarceration under the draconian Internal Security
Act (ISA) for two two-year terms for activities undertaken by Sapp leaders when
they were with the Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS).
They
are puzzled that Jeffrey can be so “forgiving”.
It was
Yong, they swear, who prevailed upon PBS President Joseph Pairin Kitingan to
pull out his party on the eve of General Election in 1990. Yong was then a PBS Deputy
President. Yong did not work alone. He earlier sought the support of PBS Deputy
President Bernard Giluk Dompok – now Upko President – after being first
rebuffed by Jeffrey who feared being blamed by then Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad.
The
young Turks confide that Star has two options “to put Sapp and PKR as well in
their place in Sabah” in the run-up to the
forthcoming 13th General Election.
The
first was to demolish “the lies being spread by Sapp activists” and the second
was to emphasize that “there’s no basis for comparison between Sapp and Star”.
“It
was Sapp who ganged up with Umno to overthrow the PBS Government in 1994
through defections,” said a young Turk who remains incognito. “The Natives are
mad to this day with Sapp for overthrowing the government of their Huguan Siou
(paramount chief) Pairin.”
According
to her, this is the most telling point among the Dusuns and Muruts in
particular against Sapp; followed by the sneaking suspicion flogged by Dap that
Sapp will “frog back into BN after the 13th GE to play the kingmaker
role there”.
Elsewhere,
Sapp’s track record when Yong was Chief Minister will come under growing
scrutiny.
Topping
the list is Yong’s allegedly lackluster record in office as Chief Minister; followed
by the Likas election petition during which the Court discovered that the
electoral rolls had been padded with illegal immigrants and, as a result, over-turned
the election result; Yong’s disqualification from contesting for five years;
Yong’s inability to explain the crippling losses suffered by state-sponsored Saham
Amanah Sabah (SAS) holders who at one time saw the value of their holdings drop
to ten sen per unit; and the marginalisation and disenfranchisement of
thousands of forest fringe-dwelling Natives left virtually internally-displaced
by the Sapp Government approving 100-year leases for so-called Forest Management
Units (FMU).
Star,
of all the parties in Sabah and Sarawak, fights a lonely battle on internal
colonisation, self-determination, the Petroleum Development Act being
unconstitutional, and the Federal Government’s non-compliance on the four
constitutional documents and/or conventions which formed the basis for Sabah
and Sarawak in Malaysia viz. the 1963 Malaysia Agreement; the 20/18 Points; the
Inter Governmental Committee Report; and the Cobbold Commission Report.
It
also has reportedly a different and comprehensive take on the proposed Royal
Commission of Inquiry (RCI) on illegal immigrants. The party’s stand will be
unveiled in the security aspects of its Manifesto which is “work in progress”.
Therein
lies the difference.
Wikisabah: Joe Fernandez is a liar
ReplyDeleteYong Teck Lew is a Saint. He never lies. He always speaks the Gospel Truth even when he calls others liars while lying through his teeth at the same time.
ReplyDeleteI nominate Yong Teck Lee as a living Saint.
Saint Yong Teck Lee