Winds of discontent over Borneo


– Murray Hunter
The Malaysian Insider/Asia Sentinel
October 08, 2013

Since Malaysia’s general election last May, Umno has been attempting to redefine its electoral base to include Bumiputera or native groups across the country, most of them in East Malaysia in Sabah and Sarawak, and not just ethnic Malays.

Malays and Muslim Bumiputera today account for 59.7% of the population, with non-Muslim Bumiputeras comprising another 7.6%. That is expected to rise to 67.9% by the next election. Umno strategists believe that if the party can successfully capture this constituency, it would garner enough votes for the party to continue governing Malaysia into the foreseeable future, simply continuing to disregard the votes of Chinese and Indian voters on the Malaysian peninsula, who turned soundly against the Barisan Nasional, or national ruling coalition in the May election.

A recent statement by Sabah Mulfti Bungsu @Aziz Jaafar calling for the government to classify all Muslim indigenous people as “Malays” seems to support this view. This has attracted criticism from some local components of the ruling state Barisan Nasional coalition, as it ignores the differing histories and elements of cultural identities of peoples of the peninsula and Borneo, and creates many complications around native land ownership because of provisions in state constitutions.

However, this strategy faces problems, with rising discontent in Sabah and Sarawak becoming more and more public. On the eve of a conference organized by the Borneo Heritage Foundation (BHF), former Sabah Chief Minister Harris Salleh personally entered the debate through the local media, saying all Sabah leaders are responsible for the current situation.

This led to a public reply by the State Reform Party Chairman, Jeffrey Kitingan, saying that Harris himself should be blamed for what he sees as Sabah’s downtrodden and subservient position vis-a-vis the Malaysian federal capital of Putra Jaya, now effectively Malaysia’s 12th state.

More than 300 people turned up last weekend at a foundation-organized International Forum on “Malaysia 50 years on: Expectation vs Reality” in Kota Kinabalu to discuss and debate many of the issues related to the relationship between Sabah and Putrajaya.

At the center was a litany of grievances including the Malayanization of the civil service; the former Sabah-owned island of Labuan, which was taken over in 1984 and made a federal territory; Project IC. the alleged systematic granting of citizenship to illegal immigrants, most of them Muslim Malays from Indonesia; illegal immigrants; border security; the oil agreement, which gives the federal government a healthy proportion of East Malaysia’s crude profits; freedom of religion, and native land rights. All were highlighted as reasons why urgent change is needed in the relationship between Sabah/Sarawak and the federal government.

Sabah and Sarawak didn’t enter Malaysia as passive states, according to the conclusions at the forum, but rather were equal parties along with Malaya and Singapore, forming the new entity of Malaysia in 1963. Consequently, Sabah and Sarawak should be equal rather than subservient partners within the Federation of Malaysia. The relegation of Sabah and Sarawak to being mere states within the Federation in 1974 is regarded as effective colonization. Consequently according to Jeffrey Kitingan, Malaysia Day on September 16 is a day of shame rather than celebration for Sabah.

Kitingan told an emotional audience that it is now time to re-evaluate the Putrajaya relationship to bring back the original intentions and assurances given in the original Malaysia agreement which combined North Borneo, Sarawak, and Singapore with the existing Federation of Malaya to form the modern country. If one travels around Sabah and Sarawak talking to people, it quickly becomes apparent that many of the sentiments highlighted in the forum are of broad concern to people of all walks of life.

In much more subdued Sarawak, where open discourse is much more low-key, similar sentiments also exist, even within high ranks of the civil service. Although the older generation is loyal to the leaders, younger voters are much more widely exposed to the outside world as they have left longhouses to work in cities and they use social media heavily. They are coming home during festivals and sharing new ideas and values with the older inhabitants. Together with the dissemination of information from Radio Free Sarawak, this is beginning to have an impact on rural areas. In addition there have been major changes in electoral demographics in the urban areas of Sarawak in the last two elections.

However within Sarawak, many of the up and coming civil servants and politicians themselves are seeing these changes and are aware of the issues behind them. They are looking at remedies and discussing strategies for transformation within the current regime. If this goes to plan, the current government will for a long time remain the dominant force in Sarawak politics no matter what the opposition does.

However there is still discontent with Putrajaya over administration and policy issues in regards to Sarawak’s governance. On July 22 the Sarawak government organized a re-enactment of Liberation Day where the state received independence from Britain, a very symbolic gesture to indicate Sarawak’s sovereignty.

However in Sabah, the state is governed primarily by Umno, the same party that dominates the federal coalition. Some see this as a compromise to Sabah’s interests and ability to express its own aspirations. Although many members of the government and civil service grow tiresome with some of the attitudes of the Putra Jaya administration, they just tend to grin and bear it. This complacency has also been blamed for the erosion of Sabah’s rights.

So the vanguard of discontent is led by the evergreen ‘old guard’ of Sabah’s politics and public life, who include people like Simon Sipaun, Lim Heng Seng, and Yong Teck Lee, once a chief minister of Sabah, accompanied by a group of influential businesspeople including the flamboyant Paul Voon, under the guise of the Borneo Heritage Foundation and other NGOs.

The problem seems to be that there is no dialogue going on and this is leading to greater frustration among those who want a ‘new deal’ for Sabah and Sarawak. Rather than any engagement, anonymous sources within the government indicate that if the current talk continues then stern action may be taken. Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein Onn has already stated that his ministry will render all assistance possible to the Home Ministry to identify anti-Kuala Lumpur groups in Sabah who are advocating succession. In addition, investigations are underway in an attempt to associate Jeffrey Kitingan with the Lahad Datu incident that occurred earlier this year in which the Sultan of Sulu sent armed Filipinos to invade the state.

Although some quarters have called for succession, the large majority would be very happy for some recognition of the problem by Putra Jaya. Any further escalation of discussion on this matter could be used as a trigger for the government to move in and stifle discontent, as has been done before.

This issue is putting the very fabric of the Malaysia project under stress, where the old adage “a stitch in time may save nine” may be the course of action. – Asia Sentinel, October 8, 2013.

  1. #1 by sheriff singh on Wednesday, 9 October 2013 - 3:25 am

    In the case of Sabah, UMNO is firmly in control due to project IC. There may be discontent but the instant citizens will ensure the state remain in the Federation at the expense of the original locals.

    In Sarawak’s case, Taib the White Haired Rajah is firmly in control and will back UMNO and Malaya so long as he gets his way in plundering the State. You need to get him very annoyed for him to go against the Federation. Otherwise he will stay put and be very comfortable.

    There may be discontent but there is nothing much the dissidents can do. You need a mass uprising for the two states to either break away or have more autonomy. Given the weak Najib ‘leadership’ currently, the possibility is quite real. That’s why the presence of large numbers of West Malaysian Police and Army personnel. Their job is to protect the country’s sovereignty from both external and internal sources.

  2. #2 by Bigjoe on Wednesday, 9 October 2013 - 8:14 am

    When the 13 colonies of the US declared independence from the British, the final trigger was basically because of over-taxation to pay for wars and spending the British had gone into ignoring the citizens of the 13 colonies.. The British rulers were not particularly corrupt, they did not abuse their power – the original difference was over firstly over ideas of fundamental human rights and secondly over limited power of Parliament. In short the 13 colonies broke away because they were not respected and treated too unequal.

    In Sabah, the covert colonisation of Sabah and Sarawak was declared as far back as Mustapha time – decades ago. There was even an purposely engineered riot, quite apparent a reiteration of the engineering of May 13, 1969, as part of the idea.

    The Malaysia Agreement is broken by ANY DEFINITION. That its just a “discontent” is a SHAMEFUL for Sabahan & Sarawakian. Countries for centuries now has gone into war for much less.

    The only equivalent of what has been done to Sabah is no different than what has been done to Palestinians, or otherwise Bosnia and such places. If UMNO can swear blood and violence over the Palestinians, why is Sabahan not just as angry?

  3. #3 by lee tai king (previously dagen) on Wednesday, 9 October 2013 - 8:31 am

    Sabahans, the true sabahans, can complain and protest for all they want.

    Because umno does not bother. In fact if they were to complain too much umno would surely punish them by taking away their land and schools etc. The usual umno’s monkey tactics.

    The point is umno does not need them anymore. And this is because sabah has enough fools and also umno has the ability to create new ones – using the monster brand bumi baking machine, of course.

    Just look at the result of the recent election. Umno is hardly troubled. Shaken a little but hardly troubled.

  4. #4 by bangkoklane on Wednesday, 9 October 2013 - 12:07 pm

    Can Pakatan guarantee the review and implementation of the equal status of Sabah and Sarawak in about 5 to 10 years? It is only just and right…

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