By Joe
Fernandez
Malaysia Agreement or no Malaysia
Agreement, Sarawak or Sabah/Labuan for that
matter, cannot step outside the bounds with the Federal Government. Putrajaya
belongs as much to the two Malaysian states in Borneo
as to Peninsular Malaysia.
At a
lower level, the Federal Government presides over the individual sultanates,
states and territories in Peninsular Malaysia.
Five
on-going issues, some simmering for long, have pitted the Sarawak
state government in a head-long clash against the Federal Government. It’s anybody's
guess how Putrajaya will bring the recalcitrant Taib Mahmud regime to heel.
Surely, the Joseph Pairin Kitingan administration (1985 - 1994) in Sabah is the mother of all precedents!
In the
latest move, the Sarawak National Registration Department's (NRD) willful
defiance of an 18 Nov 2009 policy circular, [ref: PM( R)11880/A/072/3 Jld 5] by
the Chief Secretary to the Government is likely to inflame passions and further
infuriate the Chinese and other non-Native communities in Sarawak against the
state government.
Not
that Taib cares anyway despite the drubbing he received in the urban and
Chinese seats during last year's state elections.
A
Sarawakian non-Native married to a Bidayuh lady has come forward to scream in
the local media, anonymously, that the Sarawak NRD does not recognise the Chief
Secretary’s circular which rules that children born in Sabah and Sarawak of
only one non-Native parent can henceforth be registered “by administration” as
Natives. The only reason that this is happening is because recruitments for
federal departments in Sarawak, unlike in Sabah ,
are done through the Sarawak Federal Public Services Commission.
The
Sarawak NRD, according to Sarawakian, advised him to get confirmation from the Native Court and
the Majlis Adat Istiadat Sarawak (MAIS) on his children’s Native status. To add
insult to injury, The Sarawak NRD reiterated that it doesn’t recognise the
Chief Secretary’s said circular as valid.
MAIS
told him point-blank that it interprets Native strictly as a citizen of
Malaysia of any race which is now considered to be indigenous to Sarawak as set
out in the Schedule under section 3 of the Interpretation Ordinance (1958
Edition), Chapter 1 of the Laws of Sarawak “and any admixture of the above
races with each other”.
Obviously,
the Sarawak NRD is wrong in law to ignore the said administrative policy
circular from the Chief Secretary to the Government. The said circular has
never been successfully challenged in Court and therefore, until such time,
stands valid in law.
"Law"
is not just Adat, the Constitution and Acts/Enactments/Ordinances but also
constitutional conventions, administrative policies and even includes what can
be deemed as "politically correct".
That's
how Momogun (non-Natives) in Sabah can apply for Pasok (Native) status provided
they are citizens in the state living among the latter community and habitually
speaking Native languages and practising Native culture, customs and
traditions.
For
example, the Queen of England can refuse to appoint a Prime Minister on the
grounds that the unwritten constitution and related aspects makes no reference
to a Prime Minister.
In
reality, the Queen appoints the Prime Minister anyway by convention. Otherwise,
she would be precipitating a constitutional crisis.
Likewise,
the Sarawak NRD has no business ignoring the said circular by the Chief
Secretary to the Government. Wither 1Sarawak, if not 1Malaysia!
Those
unhappy with the said circular, and this by the way does not include the Sarawak
NRD, should take up the matter in Court by way of a Judicial Review of the
administrative policy.
So,
the right thing for the Sarawak NRD to do under the circumstances would be to
accept the applications from "Sarawakian" and leave it to others with
locus standi to challenge the administrative ruling in Court.
Instead,
the Sarawak NRD seems to have created its own mini-administrative ruling to
oppose the circular.
The
Federal Government is also irked by the state government, under Taib’s
directive, routinely barring Malaysian citizens from Peninsular Malaysia and
Sabah entering Sarawak .
The
Special Provisions for East Malaysia, under the Immigration Act 1967, does not
bestow the right to bar citizens from Sabah and Sarawak .
The provision is only meant to safeguard local jobs from being taken by
Peninsular Malaysians.
Likewise,
Taib has been misusing the Immigration to deny long-term work permits to
Peninsular Malaysians or Sabahans appointed as heads of Federal Departments in Sarawak . These appointees can only secure three-month
work permits at a time instead of one for three years.
Will
Prime Minister Mohd Najib Abdul Razak blink when push comes to shove on the
difficult patches with the state government and, as it is being predicted by
the locals, flee with his tail between the legs when Taib says, "boo!”
The
talk in Kuching is that Taib has gone back on his public pledge, made during
the state elections in Sarawak last year, to
resign as Chief Minister not long after the results come in and certainly well
before the 13th General Elections. Instead, Taib woke up the
90-year-old Governor and had himself sworn in as the Chief Minister in the dead
of night instead of waiting until the next morning.
Taib,
when pressed by Najib on the resignation issue, is reported to have retorted in
a challenge: “Let’s see who will retire first, whether me or you!”
The
Federal Government is also extremely unhappy that the Sarawak
state government has virtually ignored several NCR land cases which went
against it in Court. Putrajaya released several million ringgit to demarcate
Native lands in Sarawak but Taib, being
displeased with the funding, has been dragging his foot on the issue. In the
lands reluctantly demarcated so far by the state government, only the area
immediately surrounding a longhouse is being considered NCR land while communal
land further away is being treated as state land.
Najib
seems ever mindful that Taib, with at least 25 parliamentary seats behind him,
can dictate to him at least for the moment given his stand-off in Peninsular
Malaysia with the national opposition alliance Pakatan Rakyat.
It
goes without saying that had Taib been a non-Muslim, Najib would have gone
after him hammer and tongs as what former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad did
to Pairin.
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