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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Sabah’s economy on ‘Death Row’

Vidal Yudin Weil

Sabah is slipping down on living standards as families continue to feel the pinch of high inflation and low economic revival.

By the time this article is published, the Mayan calendar phenomenon is probably way behind us and like any other hoaxes of the last century, there was no apocalypse or Armageddon.

Let us go for something more real and imminent:

Upon this coming Chinese Lunar New Year in 2013, the zodiac snake will once again dawn the world. With so many political and fiscal uncertainties staring Sabah in the face, will she ever survive the python squeeze or will asphyxia be her final fate?

Or will the worst be reserved instead for the ruling coalition which has hogged the nation’s seat of power for more than half a century of dividing the people and rule, when the celestial serpent finally devour the entire Barisan Nasional in an election tipped to be held in or around February?

Will Malaysians in the country and the diaspora around the world watch and scream their lungs out with roaring ecstasy of colossal joy when past corrupt and vicious leaders and all their greedy cohorts are hunted down like fallen tyrants in the likes of Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi, Chen Shui Bian, Joseph Estrada, or Gloria Arroyo and put behind bars for crimes committed against citizens and looting the nation when Anwar Ibrahim does become the new Prime Minister of Malaysia?

The Jewish people believe that the world will end when every Jew scattered around the globe return to their homeland in Israel.

I personally believe that our motherland will eventually become a paradise when all her people can finally live together without hate, segregation, and persecution.

Many people in Sabah including Malaysians from Peninsular and Sarawak who have settled down here know very well why the BN federal government is issuing MyKads to immigrants and allowing them to flood Sabah.

These newly baked Malaysians are not only competing with genuine citizens in every aspect of life but also jeopardising the security and fabric of society with their thieving and violent cultures thereby destroying the sub-stratum of our formation of this country.

It was an open secret that in the 1994 Sabah elections, in an assault led by former DPM Anwar Ibrahim on Parti Bersatu Sabah, huge numbers of alleged immigrants were supposedly given citizenships and voting rights.

Yet, the Barisan Nasional still lost by a simple majority of seats.

Will the Royal Commission of Inquiry set up to look into this long standing conundrum eventually pinpoint the architects and engineers of this fraud? But what will be fait accompli this election is that Sabah must be won at all costs.

But a united Sabah population, particularly the lower and middle grounds, has now swung over to the local opposition parties, a repeat of 1994. This explains the high frequency of Najib Tun Razak’s visits to Sabah.

Can the state BN government be more foolish?

Rhetoric and slogans alone can no longer win elections because the present generation of voters is well-informed. While the people in Sabah are tightening their waist-belts during every meal at home, they often wonder why are their state ministers clueless as to what is actually happening or what should be done to arrest the decline and spur a rebound?

Are 99% of the misfortunes suffered by the people in Sabah these days directly inflicted by an experienced but incompetent state government? This sounded very oxymoronic, indeed.

If a government is competent, even with no experience, it can still produce the desired result albeit at a lower level of satisfaction, which is nevertheless better than nothing.

How is the state government to explain the dwindling quality of life and spiraling costs of essentials that is burdening the people? How can there be growth when every successive administrations of the Barisan Nasional are incapable of coming up with prudent and wise policies that can work in tandem with and for the people to sustain themselves?

It is absolutely preposterous to be the other way around!

Sabah’s economy is purportedly supported, among others, by three main sectors: (a) oil and gas, (b) palm oil, and (c) tourism.

To be frank, (save for a handful of local Sabah lads who worked at the rigs, Petronas, oil exploration companies, and federal and state governments) how much of Sabah’s oil and gas wealth actually benefitted the people?

Just check out the price citizens are paying for fuel and cooking gas now compared to 10 or 15 years ago and the answers are all out there. And the worst thing is this: we are still producing and exporting petroleum products today!

To give a closest analogy of the kind of sick joke we are living in: if you are a poultry farmer, do you sell your 1st class fowls, buy back 4th class birds, and sell it to your employees at 2nd class prices?

If I were to own the farm, I will sell my 1st class produce to my employees at 3rd class prices for their own consumption.

Sabah’s worrying decline in the economy came under more pressure a week ago after a tumble of crude palm oil prices put it on serious negative watch. It will prove very embarrassing for the state government if the condition worsens in the next couple of weeks.

As for the decomposing tourism sector, our hotspots are stale and expensive; a 4 Days 3 Nights package (which include airfare, resort hotel accommodation with food and beverages, transfers, and day trip tours) to Phuket Island in Thailand from Hong Kong costs an average of RM400 per person; a one night stay at a 5-star hotel in Kota Kinabalu alone will cost more than RM400!

Quality tourists are flocking to our neighbours in the region instead of us. Many tour operators including the established players have already closed down with many more on the way.

Non-existent reforms

Sabah is slipping down on living standards as families continue to feel the pinch of high inflation and low economic revival.

With rising food bills eating into spending power, every citizen is as shock as they are furious to know that everyone of their elected representatives in government is living a luxurious lifestyle funded by hard pressed taxes.
Many of these state ministers even find it fit to travel overseas together with their families purportedly for government business where no bilateral reimbursements beneficial to the people were ever brought back.

Not only is their performance appallingly bad, none of them lives by the sacred mantra that “we are all in this hardship together”.

While every lie to hoodwink the people is elegantly composed and spread by irresponsible cyber troopers and mainstream journalists with no backbones to prop up the image of outdated and toxic politicians who are only around to serve their own twisted and vested interests, the straits of the Sabah people are so dire that they are only one step closer to financial anarchy.

If this is not a monstrous and rogue administration, guilty of not doing enough for the people, but finding it highly appropriate to be engrossed in a fawning court of shoe polishers, what is?

Predictably, our state government has remained unrepentant. We have inherited from a despotic administration another that is outright incompetent which only know how to spin about non-existent reforms to the citizenry.
After some many hopeless administrations, the current one is presumably not only the most terrifyingly pathetic and ineffectual but also the most self-isolated one which defies bona fide warnings and display contempt for genuine ideas which they themselves are intellectually deficient of.

Step aside, you will not be missed

Citizens of the state are so fed up when their persistent disapprovals kept falling on deaf ears with no practicable resolution to tackle the issues complained of in sight.

The state government just like its federal counterpart is too proud to even admit that its policies are riddled with planning and implementation faults.

It could not even coherently list out their so-called transformations or achievements with which the people can judge and evaluate for themselves its effectiveness in dealing with the issues at hand.

Day after day nothing worthy is being done to reduce the significant discomfort of the people and induce recovery.

Even after countless futile programs of unjustified extravagance, Sabah’s economy has stayed moribund and its
agriculture disastrous, unsurprisingly.

If the state government does not have the intellectuals within, it should at least have the courage to hire from outside – not sit around doing nothing and wait for something to happen!

This state government just does not have strong commitments or the expertise to implement a fiscal mandate for consolidation and revitalization. Very soon Sabah will trounce even Greece for catastrophic performance.

And to all the shameless leaders who are re-contesting this coming general election, if you are not a complete waste of the people’s time and money, who else?

This is probably my last piece to be published by FMT this year; see you again in 2013. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all Malaysians and friends of Malaysia, wherever you are! Adios amigo!

The writer is a member of Sabah’s fading travel industry; loves food and speed, speaks to all sides of the political divide, and blogs at http://legalandprudent.blogspot.com/ giving no quarters.

75 comments:

  1. Chief Minister Datuk Seri Panglima Musa Hj. Aman commended the Sabah Urban Development Corporation (SUDC) for its success in carrying out its role as a government-linked property developer in Sabah.

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  2. The Chief Minister said SUDC should continue to play its role to provide the catalyst of urban development as a government development agency.

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  3. “I appreciate SUDC's the contribution and commitment to the development of the state and at the same time contributed to the socio-economic and wellbeing of the people,” he said.

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  4. SUDC has carried out various development programs as a developer of commercial buildings, industrial estates, residential and urban satellite townships and housing units in various parts of Sabah. It is particularly noted for the many shop houses that it built to sell to Bumiputra entrepreneurs to enable them to open up retail shops, coffee shops and restaurants.

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  5. SUDC strived to build quality homes for the present and next generation that will last for years to come.

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  6. He said the residential development comprises medium-cost and luxury housing such as the houses at Taman Milik, Kingfisher Park, Marina Court Resort Condominium, Beautiful Court, Lok Kawi Heights and Kingfisher Cove.

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    1. key word u are looking for is RUMAH MAMPU MILIK. what good is development like Taman Milik, Kingfisher Park, Marina Court Resort Condominium, Beautiful Court, Lok Kawi Heights and Kingfisher Cove kalau rakyat negeri sabah yg rata2 masih berpendapatan rumah di bawah 1.5k nda mampu membelinya? at the end of the day these so-called residential development akhirnya dibuka kpd mereka yg bukan berasal dr sabah..by then penduduk sabah sendiri masi ramai yg tinggal di kawasan perumahan yg still kurang dr segi kemajuan infrastrukturnya. bekalan air di kawasan kampung spt Beaufort masih bercatu. rata2 penduduk kampung masih belum memiliki 'tangki biru 1malaysia' yg dijanjikan oleh pihak berkuasa tertentu lantaran menunggu PRU akan dtg dan berharap penduduk kampung mengundi BN terlebih dahulu sebelum menyalur bantuan spt tong biru tersebut. BERHARAP, is a soft word. another word i wouldn't mind using is COERCED.

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    2. key word u are looking for is RUMAH MAMPU MILIK. what good is development like Taman Milik, Kingfisher Park, Marina Court Resort Condominium, Beautiful Court, Lok Kawi Heights and Kingfisher Cove kalau rakyat negeri sabah yg rata2 masih berpendapatan rumah di bawah 1.5k nda mampu membelinya? at the end of the day these so-called residential development akhirnya dibuka kpd mereka yg bukan berasal dr sabah..by then penduduk sabah sendiri masi ramai yg tinggal di kawasan perumahan yg still kurang dr segi kemajuan infrastrukturnya. bekalan air di kawasan kampung spt Beaufort masih bercatu. rata2 penduduk kampung masih belum memiliki 'tangki biru 1malaysia' yg dijanjikan oleh pihak berkuasa tertentu lantaran menunggu PRU akan dtg dan berharap penduduk kampung mengundi BN terlebih dahulu sebelum menyalur bantuan spt tong biru tersebut. BERHARAP, is a soft word. another word i wouldn't mind using is COERCED.

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  7. Like most corporate celebrations these days SUDC has in its programme a ceremony to make good its corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the form of a cheque amounting to RM15,000.00 each in favour of a a Community-based Rehabilitation Center in Papar, the San Damiano Girls Hostel in Kiulu and the Korea Food for the Hungry International.

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  8. SABAH'S stable economic growth and solid investment figures have drawn praise for the state's financial management.

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    1. Banyak pelaburan asing berkeyakinan dengan perkembangan di Sabah, ini juga membawa masuk pelaburan yang banyak dan berterusan.

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    2. Pelaburan asing juga dalam pertambahan, cukup membuktikan pelabur juga beryakin ekonomi Sabah akan berkembang pesat.

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  9. A statement by the Oxford Business Group said yesterday the Malaysian state's focus would now shift to ensuring that budget programmes designed to build on those achievements are implemented properly.

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  10. Last month, Malaysia's Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin characterised Sabah's financial performance as "extraordinary" noting that from January to September this year, investment was at RM4.84 billion (around $1.93 billion), the second highest total in Malaysia after the Selangor state.

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    1. Jumlah ini memang satu tanda yang menggalakkan supaya ekonomi melambung tinggi dan rakyat jug amenikmati perubahan dari segi kehidupan.

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  11. In addition, some RM114 billion worth of investment has been recorded in the state since the 2008 launch of the Sabah Development Corridor (SDC), which aims to triple the states gross domestic product (GDP) per capita and increase total GDP four-fold by 2025.

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  12. Sabah Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman, who is also the State Finance Minister, also noted some US$20 billion (around $24.4 billion) worth of oil and gas projects had been implemented this year.

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    1. Industri minya dan gas akan menjadi tumpuan dan menggalak pendapatan yang berterusan untuk negeri Sabah.

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    2. Kadar royalti juga harus diperbaiki lagi agar jumlah royalti ini dapat digunakan untuk projek pembangunan.

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  13. Earlier this month, an Investment Incentive Package for the SDC was approved and is expected to further increase investment activity in the state in tourism, manufacturing, agriculture and major industries and in designated strategic development areas and projects such as the Kinabalu Gold Coast Enclave, Sabah Agro-Industrial Precinct (SAIP), Sandakan Education Hub, Sabah Oil and Gas Industrial Park, Interior Livestock Valley, Marine Integrated Cluster and the Lahad Datu Palm Oil Industrial Cluster (POIC).

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  14. Major chemical and bio-organic operations have also been set up in the POIC including a RM4.5 billion fertiliser plant by Syarikat Petroliam Bhd (Petronas), which is expected to almost double its fertiliser output from 1.4 million tonnes to 2.6 million tones annually.

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  15. Sabah is also regarded as the world's third largest producer of palm oil with some 1.36 million hectares Meanwhile.

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  16. the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) revealed in September that the state"s manufacturing sector received RM4.8 billion in investments during the first nine months of 2012 compared to RM921.4 million throughout 2011, making Sabah the Malaysia's second most preferred investment destination for manufacturing activities.

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  17. The agency said the rating reflected Sabah's rich natural wealth, which remained the key to spurring economic growth, the governments strong revenue-adjustment capacity, its healthy fiscal position, and its supportive relationship with the Federal government, hence unlocking Sabah's long-term development potential.

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  18. Sabah is also working to promote its potential into playing a key role in the Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines-East Asia Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA) initiative, with Musa noting in October that significant improvements in customs and trade procedures had been achieved among the members this year, and aims to focus on agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, and oil and gas in the initiative.

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  19. Pertumbuhan ekonomi Sabah terus kukuh dan mapan meskipun berdepan pelbagai cabaran termasuk kelembapan ekonomi global, kata Ketua Menteri Sabah Datuk Seri Musa Aman.

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  20. pelaburan asing dan domestik menunjukkan peningkatan memberangsangkan untuk memacu ekonomi negeri sekali gus menyokong strategi dan program pembangunan holistik.

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  21. Kerajaan negeri komited untuk menguruskan perbelanjaan dan sumber negeri secara berhemah.

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    1. Pengurusan sumber ini harus dibuat dengan terancang, jika tidak, pasti sumber ini akan habis digunakan.

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  22. Pengiktirafan yang diberikan oleh Ketua Audit Negara terhadap kecemerlangan kerajaan negeri mengurus sumber dan dana menuntut kita untuk terus meningkatkan lagi kecemerlangan bagi memperkukuhkan lagi ekonomi dan kedudukan kewangan negeri Sabah

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  23. Musa berkata bagi memastikan setiap projek pembangunan benar-benar dimanfaat oleh rakyat di peringkat akar umbi, semua jabatan dan agensi pelaksana diminta mempertingkat keberkesanan sistem penyampaian perkhidmatan awam serta memantapkan lagi kecekapan jentera pentadbiran dan pelaksanaan di semua peringkat.

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  24. kerjasama dalam menggembleng usaha dan tenaga penting untuk terus memacu pembangunan negeri dan mempertingkat kesejahteraan rakyat, antaranya, menerusi Hala Tuju Pembangunan dan Kemajuan Negeri, Rancangan Malaysia Ke-10, Koridor Pembangunan Sabah, program di bawah Bidang Ekonomi Utama Negara (NKEA) dan pelaksanaan Program Transformasi Kerajaan (GTP).

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  25. inilah agenda utama kerajaan negeri yang memerlukan sokongan padu dan jitu daripada semua pihak, termasuklah daripada pemimpin, anggota perkhidmatan awam, sektor swasta dan rakyat pada keseluruhannya.

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  26. dengan adanya sokongan yang jitu dan kerjasama yang berterusan, Insya-Allah kita akan dapat memenuhi mandat rakyat dengan penuh ikhlas, akauntabiliti dan bertanggungjawab demi kemakmuran dan kesejahteraan kita serta generasi akan datang

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  27. Sabah akan terus menempatkan diri sebagai pesaing utama ke arah menjadi pintu masuk kepada pelaburan termasuklah dalam wilayah Kawasan Pertumbuhan Asean Timur Brunei-Indonesia-Malaysia-Filipina (BIMP-EAGA).

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  28. selaras dengan perkembangan itu, tarikan pelabur yang semakin meningkat di negeri ini turut meyakinkan kepada perkembangan ekonomi Sabah secara keseluruhannya.

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    1. Sistem infra harus diperbaiki lagi agar lebih banyak pelabur yang berkeyakinan dan mendorong pelaburan yang berterusan.

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  29. Economists here foresee further capital formation investments flourishing in the Malaysian economy next year, given the ongoing projects to be implemented over the next two years.

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  30. World Bank senior economist for Malaysia, Dr Frederico Gil Sander, said the bulk of these projects would come from the sectors of oil and gas (O&G), infrastructure as well as real estate.

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    1. Jumlah pendapat minyak dan gas adalah pendapatan utama di Sabah.

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  31. Notable projects in the O&G sector include the RM60 billion Refinery and Petrochemical Integrated Development (Rapid) project in Pengerang, Johor, and the RM3.

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  32. 8 billion Sabah Oil and Gas Terminal (SOGT) in Kimanis

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  33. investors interest would also be spurred by the progress in the infrastructure and real estate sectors, such as the billion ringgit Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) project, the RM4.

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  34. 45 billion Second Penang Bridge and the RM26 billion Tun Razak Exchange.

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  35. These investments are directly and indirectly linked to the fund was increased by RM2 billion to RM3 billion and the application period extended for another three years until Dec 31, 2015.

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  36. Malaysia’s vision in promoting a green economy also saw the launch of the MyHijau Label, a certification for green products, by the Energy, Green Technology and Water Ministry.

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  37. Its minister, Datuk Seri Peter Chin Fah Kui, had expressed the wish to see between three to five per cent green technologycompliance for newly developed buildings by 2030 under the Low Carbon Cities Framework.

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  38. Just because Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim doesn't have much in the way of policies ahead of GE 13 doesn't mean the veteran politician doesn't have a few tactics that he hopes will help him take power.

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  39. During July and August this year he showed us his key strategy for winning seats in Sabah and Sarawak at GE 13: defection. The man who boldly predicted in 2008 that a wave of defections by BN MPs would hand him power, still believes this is a legitimate tactic despite its spectacular failure.

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  40. But after welcoming a handful of turncoats to the fold this time around, including Beaufort MP Datuk Seri Lajim Ukin and Tuaran MP Datuk Seri Wilfred Bumburing, there was hardly the chain reaction Anwar was hoping for. As The Choice concluded at the time: it was no more than a trickle of has-beens

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  41. But Anwar has another tactic up his sleeve for those states that is no less subtle, but just as predictable – cold hard cash.

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  42. Anwar has promised the oil-producing states of Sabah, Sarawak and Terengganu a 20 per cent petroleum royalty if he becomes Prime Minister. This is a huge increase from the present five per cent, and like so many Anwar ideas, it is simplistic in the extreme.

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  43. Anwar doesn't pretend that this is part of a comprehensive strategy to boost revenues or grow our nation. This is a measure to buy votes in just three states – states that Pakatan Rakyat desperately needs if the coalition is to have any chance of getting to Putrajaya.

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  44. But has anyone in Pakatan taken even a moment to consider the consequences? Petronas, which contributes 40 per cent of all Government revenues, warned last week that Anwar's rash plan will jeopardise planned exploration and development projects valued at RM170 billion.

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  45. Much of this investment is aimed at finding new oil fields at a time when our existing oil fields are "mature", which is a polite oil industry way of saying "running out".

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  46. Anwar's plan therefore threatens our future oil supplies, Government revenues, and crucially, our energy independence.

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  47. Then there is the issue of fairness. Malaysia is a federation where we all share our mutual successes and the challenges we face together as a nation.

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  48. Why should some states suffer just because they don't have oil? In fact, most of the nation will certainly suffer if the federal Government has to axe vital health care or education initiatives so that Anwar's chosen three state's can enjoy their new-found petro-wealth.

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  49. Anwar is out to create a two-tiered Malaysia with the "haves" enjoying their black gold and thanking their new Pakatan MPs, while the "have nots" look on from the outside.

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  50. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is being more than fair by setting up a committee to review oil revenue in a "fair and transparent manner". He has even considered a request by PAS-controlled Kelantan to re-examine its share, even though the state produces no oil from its coastal waters.

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  51. Throughout his premiership Najib has warned that oil is not a gift that keeps on giving. It is a finite national resource and how we use it between now and when the pipes run dry needs to be carefully mapped out.

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  52. Education provides a good example. Every ringgit spent on implementing the reforms of the National Education Blueprint is an investment in Malaysia's future as a knowledge economy. That means that the industries that take over from oil as the engine of the economy would benefit from how that money is spent now.

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  53. It's a complicated issue and it shows why managing oil wealth needs long-term strategies, not just piles of cash hurled at a few lucky states to win votes.

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  54. Various development programmes have been undertaken to make Kota Marudu the economic hub of northern Sabah and more are in the pipeline.

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  55. Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Datuk Seri Panglima Dr Maximus Ongkili, who is also Kota Marudu member of parliament, said there must be continuity for these development and transformation programmes to take place for the benefit of the people.

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  56. the government was embarking on serious development plans to uplift the socio-economic status of rural people and the efforts could only be effective with continuity.

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  57. one of the major economic projects in the pipeline that would also benefit Kota Marudu was the aquaculture prawn rearing project in Pitas, a project under the National Key Economic Areas.

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  58. The factory which would export prawns to Korea, Japan and China, would require 1,000 workers and this would also contribute to job creation for Kota Marudu folks.

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  59. The project would also require corn as source of protein for feed, thus providing another potential source of income for farmers in the district.

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  60. Agriculture is still the economic mainstay in Kota Marudu, contributing to 70 per cent of the economic activities here with oil palm, rubber and paddy being the top three

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  61. the government was caring for the people’s needs, including in rural Kota Marudu which had been allocated RM230 million for water reticulation system for implementation in 2011 and 2012

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  62. Kota Marudu had also seen infrastructure development, including schools and major road connections

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  63. There is also a plan to build a dual carriage road for Kota Marudu because the current road cannot cater to the increasing traffic volume in the town area

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