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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Lim, Yong feel sting of Sabah’s political realities

The adage 'east is east, west is west and never the twain shall meet' perhaps best describes the political reality in Sabah which peninsular-based parties are oblivious too.


KOTA KINABALU: In Sabah, reality bites and both Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) leader Yong Teck Lee and his DAP counterpart Lim Kit Siang learned that lesson over the recent Harvest Festival.

It’s also a cautionary tale for Umno-led Barisan Nasional coalition government whose remote-control rule of Sabah does not sit easy here.

Lim learned that Sabah does not follow the rulebook while Yong re-learned that some things never change in the way peninsula politicians factor in the state in their political strategies.

The venerable DAP leader, who now acts as a party advisor, touched a raw nerve when he delivered a speech that SAPP interpreted as a ‘harsh’ lecture on the reality of politics in the country.

His remark that SAPP was being unrealistic in not joining the opposition coalition front going into the next general election recoiled on him when Sabah leaders viewed the speech as a demand for local Sabah parties to kowtow to the peninsula-based coalition, Pakatan Rakyat.

Yong, a former chief minister battling to keep his party relevant in a remodelled state political scenario, was quick to take offense and pointed out that if that was Pakatan’s view then it was no different from their arch enemy the ruling BN coalition.

Yong and SAPP believe their political ‘independence’ from peninsula-based parties is what sets them apart from the raft of ‘local’ parties who have to grovel before their more powerful peninsula-based counterparts.

DAP’s Lim however contends that he just told SAPP the hard facts about Malaysian politics and implied that SAPP is trying to turn back the clock and are fooling themselves and their supporters that they bring about change.

To be fair, the Sabah political race is a particularly difficult kind of test.

In order to pass, a party or candidate must persuade Sabahans to i) miss the colonial era and the ’60s, ii) fear much of the period from the ’70s to the’90s, and iii) start over without Barisan Nasional.

Too ‘harsh’ a reality

But implying that they have their heads buried in the sand is not a message either Yong or fellow maverick politician Jeffrey Kitingan of the NGO United Borneo Front (UBF) want to hear especially from a ‘peninsula’ politician.

Such was their dismay that Lim hastily sought to mollify them.

“If people think I was very harsh, that was not my intention. I apologise,” he said two days after his speech at a DAP organised Kaamatan dinner gathering  held last Friday.

Lim is a pragmatist while Yong and Kitingan seem to have their eyes firmly fixed on regaining what was promised almost half a century ago during the formation of Malaysia.

It’s a strong feeling among Sabahans who wishfully look back at their halcyon days during British colonial rule and at how much they have lost since they placed their trust in the peninsula and agreed to form Malaysia in 1963.

What the Kaamatan dinner on Friday regurgitated was something that has not rested easy in the stomach of Sabahans.

Yong like many other Sabahans including those in the BN believe that peninsula-based political parties are only interested in subjugating and overthrowing Sabah’s homegrown parties.

Yong pointed to how Umno vice-president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi during a recent visit openly ridiculed a Sabah party during an Umno function in the interior of the state.

Saying that leaders from the peninsula lack respect for Sabahans’ wishes Yong asked:”Is it polite when a guest openly says he wants to take away the rights of the house owner?”

The haughty ‘Malaysianisation’ of Sabah has been the nemesis of scores of politicians on both sides of the South China Sea.

Fallout worrying

Sabahans point out that they have always maintained an inclusive and open society unlike in the peninsula where the racial and religious divide is pronounced due to Umno’s firm views that produced big mistakes.
In Sabah 1Malaysia is a laughable concept.

Lim and Yong’s Harvest Festival ‘fallout’ points to worries of the political transition of sorts that local parties have to contend with.

Despite Umno’s entry into the state, talk has turned to how to limit the disaster.

For some its a debacle that has put local politicians on a leash held in Putrajaya, poisoned state-federal relations and greatly damaged the autonomy of the state.

More important, ‘Umno-misation’ has inflicted fear, misery and anger on its intended beneficiaries.

It is hard to imagine Sabahans less miserable than they were under Usno and Sabah hardman Tun Mustapha Harun.

People are now quietly saying that although Mustapha was like dictator, he was not like the Umno occupation which is more subtle and worse.

What would Sabah be like now if Kuala Lumpur had approached its undertaking of nation-building with humility, honesty and courage?

Thanks to the almost criminal negligence of the various BN administrations nobody, now, will ever know.

The fundamental truth is Sabah and Peninsular Malaysia are as far apart geographically as well as politically that efforts to bring the two together with one being dominant over the other are doomed to failure.

It’s a bleak reality. As author Rudyard Kipling said: “East is east and west and west, and never the twain shall meet.”

10 comments:

  1. First thing first and that is to topple UMNO/BN in Sabah and vote in Pakatan to government.SAPP cannot win on its own and thats a reality.If anyone is still stubborn to believe that then it will only spells doom and UMNO/BN will definitely win hands down in the next GE.
    Why are we still lauding a local party like SAPP when we know fully well that it is not able to win alone in the moslem bumiputra areas and the non-moslem bumiputra constituencies? At best SAPP will only be able to spoil the opposition chance of winning in the chinese urban areas.On its own I doubt it can win a single seat.
    So buck-up and face the real situation that only a cooperation and pact with Pakatan that will enable it to smell success and definitely not without it.Yes,its true.It's a bleak reality.

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  2. Minta YTL jangan suka bermain dengan emosi rakyat Sabah.Sudah tahu tidak bolih menang tapi masih keras hati mahu kan SAPP jadi kerajaan.Konon pandai berpolitik tapi politik apa ini kalau mahu langgar tembok.
    Nasihat saya kepada YTL 'swallow your pride' dan kerjasama dengan Pakatan sebagai satu jalan yang baik untuk peluang menang.
    Saya rakyat Sabah dan suka parti tempatan menang tapi kalau peluang menang itu tipis lebih baik sokong parti yang ada 'fighting chance to win.'

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  3. Dap has failed to understand its position here in Sabah which is unique not like their fellows in KL. By advocating autonomy to Sabah means total respect to local parties like SAPP.

    Dap never showed any respect and that is the attitude we abhorred as an ordinary Sabahan.

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  4. Reality is that Pakatan never showed their sincerity to help Sabah and its Sabah local opposition parties namely SAPP. Their arrogance was clearly spelt out in the Sarawak GE recently.

    Common sense tells us that they are not to help you but to control us Sabah people just like what Umno is doing.

    If they have one slightest sincerity, they would have said...let us give the local party our support and chance to win over the state govt and in turn they help us win Putrajaya.

    If not, then there is nothing more than opportunistic agenda of Pakatan, and nothing noble nor sincere.

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  5. Pakatan can keep on dreaming and will never can defeat BN in Sabah and Sarawak alone without the assistance of SAPP.

    Sarawak election is a good lesson for them to learn whereby the Sarawak bumiputra clearly rejected them. What is the point to win only chinese seats in Sarawak? Taib still the Sarawak CM. Nothing change. BN still rule.

    In Sabah even worst, PKR contested 2 terms in Sabah but LOST ALL their seats contested even though 1 on 1 with BN. DAP has been in Sabah for more than 30 years and only manage to win 1 Adun seat. How pathetic!!!

    What is the point to change from party malaya UMNO to another party malaya PR but state government still be controlled by Malaya people to dictate the Sabah people?

    In order to change the Sabah people future, Sabah people should support local-based party who sincerely fight for our state rights because SAPP is truely a local party to reflect the needs of the people.

    SAPP know better what the people needs and problems than any party from malaya.

    SAPP not like those party malaya only good in provide lips service and go to point finger at longkang to gain cheap publicity. This is what PR only good at in Sabah.

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  6. DAP is a typical chinese chauvish party. They are like chinese perkasa version.

    They do not know how to respect the local people.

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  7. SAPP wants to be a champion local party more to say act like Sabah 'taiko' but why fail sabahan and Sabah in the past when chance were given?
    Now if PR or sabahan suppose to put this responsibility to SAPP do you think SAPP can really have confident to win or ousted BN totally?
    Ask Yong Teck Lee how influential his party or rather how responsive his party members on any mission?
    Shout almost for 1000 days asking Minister to resign on QEII but do Minister response to them?
    They are just getting kids on the street!Your political venture still green if relly compare to other local parties and their leaders!
    Wake up SAPP or heading to no way.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Minta YTL jangan suka bermain dengan emosi rakyat Sabah.Sudah tahu tidak bolih menang tapi masih keras hati mahu kan SAPP jadi kerajaan.Konon pandai berpolitik tapi politik apa ini kalau mahu langgar tembok.
    Nasihat saya kepada YTL 'swallow your pride' dan kerjasama dengan Pakatan sebagai satu jalan yang baik untuk peluang menang.
    Saya rakyat Sabah dan suka parti tempatan menang tapi kalau peluang menang itu tipis lebih baik sokong parti yang ada 'fighting chance to win.'

    Saya terperanjat betul kata-kata pada Jun2 12:57AM diatas.
    "YTL 'swallow your pride' tepat sekali sebab kalo fikiran angkuh seorang pemimpin tidak sampai ke mana bawa partinya.
    Peluang dah terlepas beberapa kali bagi SAPP untuk berjuang seketika dahulu.Tetapi apa mereka buat dalam BN atau Karajaan masa itu?Fikir-fikirkan lah!

    ReplyDelete
  9. DAP itu parti untuk opportunist.

    Apakah DAP buat untuk orang sabah selama 30 tahun? Jawapannya TIADA!

    DAP hanya macam seekor anjing menyalak tapi apa hasilnya? perkara sama juga tidak diselesaikan.

    DAP akan ditolak bulat2 di dalam PRU13 akan datang terutama dari golongan cina sebab kita tidak payah parti politik macam dap tahu saja menyalak macam anjing gila.

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  10. SAPP making a right choice by quitting party malaya umno because they will listen to our people problem like PATI issue.

    It is no point to vote for change from party import like UMNO into another party import like PR because both are the same from malaya. Decision making also by the malayan people. Their so called local sabah leaders merely a PUPPET to their master in malaya.

    We need to support our local party SAPP to fight for Sabah autonomy and to give back whatever that we rightfully deserve.

    ReplyDelete