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Monday, February 25, 2013

Pakatan's Borneo Agenda and Kuching Declaration meaningless


Pakatan’s over demanding on state constituencies reflects the same mentality as Barisan Nasional’s wanting to have a grip over state matters, says SAPP.

KOTA KINABALU: The Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) has accused national opposition front, Pakatan Rakyat, of applying the same ‘divide-and-rule’ tactic applied by the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition, which puts their parties and personal interests over the people’s interest.

The party’s secretary-general Richard Yong made the accusation when commenting on the seat-sharing formula unveiled by Pakatan recently.

“When Pakatan offered the 60 divided by 6 formula with Pakatan going for more than 50 state seats in Sabah, the Pakatan formula had nullified their own “Kuching Declaration” and the recently launched DAP “Borneo Agenda”. All these announcements became meaningless to Sabah.

“Pakatan’s over demanding on state constituencies reflects the same mentality as Barisan Nasional’s wanting to have a grip over state matters. Both Pakatan and BN and peninsula based-parties must not try to dilute and neutralise Sabah’s political representation and make Sabahans subject to their mercy.

“I believe the people will not allow the divide-and-rule tactic to be applied again on Sabah and they will know that they have a better choice in supporting a local party like SAPP,” said Yong in a statement issued here.

Yong also critisised the Pakatan leadership for repeatedly blaming SAPP for the seat-sharing deadlock.

“Pakatan’s seat-sharing (negotiations) also hit a snag in some constituencies in the peninsula and generating heated argument in the media,” he noted.

While noting that the opposition coalition’s component parties are arguing for more seats to be allocated to them, he said that SAPP as a local party was bound to ensure Sabah’s autonomy was non-negotiable.

“This is so that we do not have to leave the state’s future into the hand of outside-controlled parties. We have been firm from the very beginning, we will not waver in our stand and must not compromise on Sabah’s rights,” he stressed.

Yong urged voters in Sabah to give their full support to SAPP in the coming general election, to ensure the state is not ruled by peninsula-base parties.

“The coming general election is the best time for Sabah to regain their autonomy and its fair share of political representation in Malaysia so that we can decide what is best for Sabah. We can avoid our Chief Minister being appointed by Kuala Lumpur and we can stop the implementation of policies which is unfavourable to the state,” he said.

“This is not about SAPP but for the larger interest of the state and I believe the people will be unified to put a stop to the long time imbalances and mistreatment by the federal government and regain what is rightly Sabah’s,” he added.

SAPP, he said, would not budge from its stand of defending and safeguarding Sabah’s rights just to please Malaya parties.

SAPP agenda in the coming general election, he said, is an all out push to wrest Sabah back from the federal government and ensure the interests and state and her people are given priority and not allow the federal government to centralise power, he said.

Queville To

11 comments:

  1. Pakatan Rakyat and Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) have ended their recent months of courtship with two top Parti Keadilan Rakyat leaders saying that “we will go separate ways.”

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  2. PKR deputy-president Azmin Ali and vice-president Tian Chua made it clear that there will be no more negotiations with SAPP president Datuk Yong Teck Lee for a seat-sharing pact to confront Barisan Nasional in a one-to-one fight in the general election.

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  3. Tian Chua described SAPP's continued demands for a large share of state seats during negotiations as “unreasonable and reflects their insincerity and commitment towards an Opposition pact to oust Barisan in Sabah.

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  4. “If SAPP maintains that they must be given a large share of the seats which makes it impossible for an agreement to be reached, we can only interpret it as their not being interested in the cooperation.

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    1. “This means we have to go separate ways,” he told.

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  5. Tian Chua dismissed the possibility of the opposition losing the support of Sabah voters if local-based SAPP was excluded from the Pakatan pact as he believed it would have minimal impact on them.

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  6. “In the coming polls, the people will choose between Barisan and Pakatan.

    “Any other force will not have any substantial impact on the choice of the voters,” he said.

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  7. Tian Chua's public stand on SAPP was in tangent with Azmin's statement to an online news portal which quoted him as saying that SAPP was “completely out of the list and out of our formula” as far as seat negotiations were involved because of the party's unreasonable demands.

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  8. Pakatan party leaders including Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim had previously agreed in principle to work out a seat-sharing agreement with SAPP for the 60 state and 25 parliament seats in Sabah.

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  9. Besides having problems with SAPP, the Pakatan parties also face problems in working out a seat deal with Sabah STAR, led by Datuk Dr Jeffrey Kitingan who is pushing for a Sabah for Sabahans agenda.

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  10. Both SAPP and Sabah STAR believed that state-based parties should be allowed to contest the bulk of the state seats while Pakatan parties should focus on parliament seats.

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