Neither BN nor Pakatan good for Sabah, S’wak

Declassified documents pertinent to Borneo, found in
the British archives, indicate that Putrajaya's
policies may be running foul of the unwritten
constitution of Malaysia.
Former Sabah Chief Minister Mohd Harris Salleh has never failed to appear from time to time as a bundle of contradictions to the extent of even embarrassing his own party leaders.
Harris, in his defence, may be said to mean well and even acting in good faith but often this argument is nothing more than the proverbial fig-leaf.
The man simply can’t be allowed to get away with it too many times. It creates not just bad but dangerous precedents. Both Harris and former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad appear to be birds of a feather in more ways than one.
However Harris isn’t even facing the remotest danger of being hauled up by Umno — assuming he’s still a member of the party given his penchant for sponsoring mosquito parties including Usno 2006 which is awaiting “registration” — on disciplinary charges for bringing it into public disrepute. This Mother of All Charges, with apologies to Saddam Hussein, is sure to cook anyone’s goose for good.
Harris, in the latest, put his aging foot in his mouth in making comparisons between the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) and Pakatan Rakyat (Pakatan).
In remarks carried earlier this week in the local media, a seemingly worried and frustrated Harris warned Sabahans in no uncertain terms that voting in Pakatan will be like going into the fire from the frying pan (BN).
Either state is not a desirable “ideal” for Sabahans. Harris however seems quite convinced that the frying pan is the lesser of two evils for Sabahans “since there’s no other choice”.
Orang Asal — Murut and Dusun including Kadazan or urban Dusun — activists beg to disagree with Harris on his theory that “better the frying than the fire”.
For starters, they think the jury is still out on whether Pakatan is the fire or the frying pan, not that it makes any difference. Pakatan, in a way, might be akin to going into the frying pan from the fire (BN).
Pakatan has pledged that Sabah and Sarawak will enjoy 20 per cent oil and gas royalty under its federal administration vis-a-vis the present measly five per cent they collect from the BN federal government.
Agenda Borneo vs Agenda Malaya
Is this what Sabahans really want after 50 years of putting up with Malaysia in the mould of the Peninsular Malaysia-dominated Putrajaya?
This year alone, the federal government collected RM18 billion in oil and gas revenue from Sabah. Elsewhere, it has collected RM24 billion in other revenue.
The Malaysia Agreement stipulates that 40 per cent of this combined total must be returned to the state. However, this stipulation has allegedly not been honoured since 1970, according to sources in the know.
Orang Asal activists like local hero Jeffrey Kitingan are urging the people to say “enough is enough!”.
“Ini kali lah!”, scream Sabahans who want to have nothing to do whatsoever with Putrajaya allegedly continuing to rule Sabah and Sarawak through local proxies and their stooges.
“Kalau bukan sekarang, bila lagi! Kalau bukan kita siapa lagi!”, they want to know.
Enter the Agenda Borneo, propagated by Jeffrey’s United Borneo Front (UBF), as the eternal stand against the Agenda Malaya of Putrajaya and the parti-parti Malaya operating in Borneo.
The Agenda Malaya, according to Jeffrey and his people, has seen the Federation of Malaya masquerading as the Federation of Malaysia since 1963.
Giving proof they cite the fact that Putrajaya claimed that Malaysia was 55 years old this year, the figure calculated from Aug 31, 1957, the day that the British advisors to the Bugis Sultans gave up their control of the Malayan Administration.
As further proof they point out that Putrajaya keeps referring to Sabah and Sarawak as the 12th and 13th states and has ensured that local history text books maintain the fiction that both “nations in Malaysia” secured their independence through Malaysia on Sept 16, 1963.
Malaysia has unwritten constitution
Nothing could be further from the truth on the history of Malaysia, swear activists in Sabah and Sarawak.
Sarawak in fact chose independence as its form of self-determination and secured that status on July 22, 1963.
Sabah, likewise, chose independence as its form of independence and secured that status on Aug 31, 1963.
It follows therefore that both Sabah and Sarawak entered the 1963 Federation as “independent nations” in Malaysia unlike self-governing Singapore which became independent through the new Federation.
Brunei chose to remain a British protectorate rather than risk all in emulating Singapore.
Brunei was proven right when Singapore left Malaysia two years later in 1965.
Sabah and Sarawak, which realised that the written Constitution of Malaya was being passed off as the written Constitution of Malaysia, were not allowed by Putrajaya to follow in Singapore’s footsteps and go back to solely their hard-won self-determination status of July 22, 1963 and Aug 31, 1963 respectively.
Malaysia, Jeffrey and company want to tell the whole world, has an unwritten constitution based on the Batu Sumpah among other constitutional documents including the written constitution of Malaya.
The other constitutional documents cited are the Inter-Governmental Committee Report (IGCR); the Cobbold Commission Report (CCR); the 20/18 Points; the informal UN survey in Sabah and Sarawak; the Malaysian Bill and the state constitutions of Sabah and Sarawak.
Constitution a pandora’s box
STAR deputy chairman Daniel John Jambun and activist Kanul Gindol claim that they found more than 5,000 declassified documents during a month’s research stint in November at the British Archives in Kew Gardens, England.
These documents, they claim, give the historical, political, moral and legal background to the constitutional documents making up the unwritten constitution of Malaysia.
Patently, a constitution by its very nature is a political document and not law as it is often mistakenly thought.
Hence, Acts passed by Parliament must be in keeping with the letter and spirit of the unwritten constitution of Malaysia or be deemed unconstitutional, therefore unlawful, and accordingly inoperable and/or null and void to the extent of its inconsistency with the unwritten constitution of Malaysia.
Activists in Sabah and Sarawak appear to have opened a Pandora’s box here and relegated both Malaya and it’s written constitution to the legal twilight zone in Borneo, if not in Peninsular Malaysia.
One further political difficulty for activists in Borneo is that Putrajaya has passed a mountain of administrative laws — government policies in action and which is not law at all — based on the written constitution of Malaya and hence these may be running foul of the unwritten constitution of Malaysia.
If activists in Borneo want to imply that Malaysia has long been in a simmering constitutional crisis in Sabah and Sarawak, they are not going there for the moment.
The priority through the STAR, a Borneo-based national alliance, is to deny both BN and Pakatan the 112 seats that they would need in parliament to form a federal government with a simple majority.

Wishful thinking
STAR wants to build a Third Force in parliament and is prepared to support either BN or Pakatan, but not both, to form the federal government without itself being in the federal government.
They will insist on taking a third of other positions in government to compensate themselves.
In return, STAR also wants Putrajaya to put a stop to the Federation of Malaya masquerading as the Federation of Malaysia and the written constitution of Malaya being passed off as the written Constitution of Malaysia.
Malaysia, they stress again, has an unwritten constitution and they want Putrajaya to take due note of this and put it into practice, and all anti-Malaysia administrative laws done away with.
Between Harris and the activists in Borneo, it appears that the latter has caught up with the spirit of the times and offers a definite way forward independent of both BN and Pakatan.
Harris is so much wishful thinking and living on hope, continuing to flog the proverbial dead horse on Agenda Malaya in Borneo.

1 comment:

  1. I agree Umno and PKR almost the same.. they share the same DNA, as Star Ini Kali Lah rightly put it somewhere.

    ReplyDelete