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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Star: Malaya responsible for Sabah crisis

 The invasion is yet another unwelcome incident pointing to the federal government's myopic view and disregard of Sabah’s original ethnic fabric.

PENAMPANG: There is a troubling question foremost in the minds of Sabahans these days – did it have to be this way?

Many believe that all the unpleasant things happening to Sabah would not have happened if the state had been allowed to remain a sovereign state within the Federation of Malaysia.

Veteran political activist, Fredoline Edwin Lojingki, 72, said the latest in a long line of unwelcome incidents – the intrusion of armed Sulu extremists in Lahad Datu – pointed to the federal government’s myopic view and disregard of the original ethnic fabric in Sabah.

He pointed out how initially in the 1960s Sabah was overwhelmingly a Dusun and Christian population until overzealous Malayan Muslim leaders, who dominated the federal government, decided to change the state into a Muslim majority.

“In the 1970s, with the encouragement of Tunku Abdul Rahman and Tun Abdul Razak, then Sabah leader Tun Mustapha Harun, coerced thousands of Dusuns and Muruts to convert to Islam, promising them a state-sponsored livelihood.

“But this was too slow and so Mustapha, himself a Suluk, connived with Malayan leaders to get Suluk people or Tausugs from the Southern Philippines to settle in Sabah, and increase the Muslim numbers,” said Lojingki.

He said this policy did not expire when the new Berjaya government helmed by Harris Salleh took over.

Thousands more poured in during the 1990s and the “new Malaysians” as they came to be called gradually merged and could no longer be distinguished from the local population. They became part of the social fabric of the state.

“But now look what has happened? Our policemen have a hard time searching for these people who have become safe havens for the Suluk intruders. Malaya is responsible for all this,” Lojingki said.

Malaya’s insecurities

Evidence heard during the on-going Royal Commission of Inquiry on the illegal immigrant problem in the state after years of allegations that a “reverse takeover” of Sabah was close to being accomplished, has added weight to the claims.

Lojingki is not alone in his belief that the federal government, driven by its own insecurity, launched the ill-conceived policy to “Islamise” Sabah to cement its hold on the resource-rich state.

Another native leader Felix Kain, 56, a campaign director of NGO Gindol Initiative for Civil Society Borneo for Kudat region, agrees fully with with Lojingki’s views.

“In Sabah they carried out ‘Projek IC’ for illegal immigrants. They were registered by SPR (Election Commission) as voters in many constituencies in their effort to defeat a Christian-led party Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) in the 1980s and 1990s.

“Why must Malayan people do this to Sabahans… I don’t quite understand,” he said, adding that he was inclined to believe that it all had to do with religious bias as there was no other explanation for it.

Kain from Kota Marudu said this bias has permeated everywhere and anything Malayan.

“The federal agencies, their people, seem to be all inclined towards the same thing… increase the Muslim population in Sabah and ignore the natural fabric of our society.

“This has happened so glaringly that even some of my Muslim relatives and friends have to awkwardly admit that Islamising Sabah is the intent,” he said.

Policy to neutralise

Another native leader, Saiman Sandah, said granting hundreds of thousands of Malaysian identity documents to Muslim illegal immigrants from the Southern Philippines as well as Indonesia showed that there had always been a policy to neutralise the political power held by native Sabahans.

“Our multi-cultural Sabah has always been a tolerant society but politicians from the peninsula brought their politics of racism and religion to the state and this is the result we have now,” he said.
More open-minded local Muslim leaders in Sabah, he said, had themselves become targets of unscrupulous leaders from the peninsula.

Sandah, who is also the Sabah State Reform Party (STAR) operations director, said federal leaders have yet to explain how things have been allowed to come to this stage.

As Lojingki said, things would have been safer if Sabahans were really in charge.

Luke Rintod

23 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. ALSO BLAME OURSELVES FOR LETTING UMNO BASTARDS GET AWAY WITH THEIR DIRTY POLITICAL GAME!

    It is true that we Northern Borneo people have been too tolerant and did not see the creeping takeover not only of our countries Sabah and Sarawak but also the take over of our bodies and minds. This is the scenario of the “Body Snatchers”- the science fiction horror story and movies!

    But brothers and sisters it is not too late for us to right the wrongs.

    We must realise that if we do not take control of things now we can never get ourselves out of this predicament which began with Sabah and Sarawak being annexed into a hell hole called Malaysia in 1963.

    However, we also need to pin the blame on Britain as the main perpetrator of our societies' sufferings today.

    Both our countries were known for their tolerant pluralist secular and harmonious society even in past colonial times. It was a national characteristic which even the colonial Cobbold Commission acknowledged in its Report on the Enquiry into “Malaysia” but nevertheless and forgivably recommended our countries be swallowed into this hell hole.

    Britain and Malaya each had their own agendas in conspiring to consolidate the Borneo colonies and Singapore under the rule of the friendly UMNO regime. For Britain it was to protect British economics interests in a strategic arrangement called Malaysia. They did not allow Sabah and Sarawak the opportunity Brunei and Singapore had to get out of Malaysia. They were swallowed up in Malaysia and Najib has said Sabah will always be a apart of Malaysia.

    UMNO had its Melayu Raya agenda. Readers have read this clause in the 18/20 Points Agreement which says that the new federation shall be called "Malaysia and NOT Melayu Raya". This clearly expressed our predecessors fear of Malayan UMNO racial domination.

    Under the new Malayan colonialism, our harmonious society was completely changed and divided by UMNO's rampant vicious racist apartheid politics which even Indonesia has progressively dumped since the ouster of the Suharto regime.

    UMNO was able to take advantage of our tolerance and or lack of organisation to re-engineer our formerly harmonious society into one of discrimination and race hatred.

    Don't we hate the illegals? YES we do because they invaded our land and are taking over by degrees. But this hate is a response to the hate spread deliberately by UMNO.

    We cannot let this cancer eat up our society and the only way to stop it is for us to unite and fight back and take back our countries.

    If you don't resist- you lose- as simple as that!

    IT'S TIME WE TAKE BACK OUR COUNTRIES FROM MALAYAN COLONIAL RULE!

    IF BRUNEI SINGAPORE CAN SURVIVE AND PROSPER OUTSIDE MALAYSIA SO CAN SABAH SARAWAK- IF NOT BETTER!

    INI KALI LAH!

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  3. Yes, everything must favor a certain race and a certain religion. Look at me, I'm neither a certain race or a certain religion yet I have a certain name and a certain religion written in my IC. Why are they forcing these things on me? Is it insanity? Or is it for control? To tell you the truth I don't really care what their reasons are anymore. I just want them to leave me alone. Why can't they leave me alone?

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  4. Rakyat Sabah khususnya masyarakat Suluk harus mengukuhkan perpaduan dan bersatu hati untuk menangani masalah pencerobohan kumpulan pengganas yang berkubu di Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu dan Semporna.

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  5. Ketua Menteri Datuk Seri Musa Aman berkata, menerusi perpaduan yang kuat dan mantap ia dapat menangani segala masalah.

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  6. “Seluruh masyarakat harus memberi kerjasama dan kita mesti taat setia kepada kerajaan Barisan Nasional (BN) selain memastikan orang yang kita rasa ganjil atau baru datang di kawasan (kampung), lapor kepada pihak keselamatan berkaitan

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  7. Beliau berkata demikian selepas mengadakan pertemuan dua jam bersama pemimpin dan persatuan masyarakat Suluk Batu Sapi dan Libaran di kediaman rasmi Ketua Menteri di Sri Libaran di sini,

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  8. Musa yang juga Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Keselamatan Negeri berkata, jaminan Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak yang akan membentuk Kawasan Keselamatan Khas (KKK) di perairan pantai timur Sabah dapat meningkatkan keselamatan dan mengembalikan keamanan di Sabah.

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  9. After the first shootout on March 1, the number of deaths on the enemy’s side stands at 56, and 25 of the terrorists’ remains had been taken out of the red zone.

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  10. The number of Malaysia’s security forces killed stands at 10 — eight police personnel and two soldiers. One of the soldiers, Cpl Ahmad Farhan Ruslan, had died due to a road accident at Km37 Lahad Datu-Kampung Tungku Road.

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  11. Hamza said vehicle escort Ahmad Farhan was killed when a three-ton military vehicle in the convoy from Kota Kinabalu to Lahad Datu for ‘Ops Daulat’ skidded at 7.30am on Tuesday.

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  12. “We (police) will investigate this accident under Section 41 (1) of the Road Transport Act 1987.

    “Nine members of Malaysia’s security forces are on the injured list.

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  13. “The security in Lahad Datu and Semporna is beginning to return to normal. Daily activities have resumed and schools have reopened, except those located within the operation zone (Sekolah Kebangsaan Tanjung Labian, SK Lok Buani and SK Fajar Harapan).

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  14. State Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun has urged the people here not to allow themselves to become tools of rumour-mongering.

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  15. In a statement, he said the people of Sabah can assist in watering down negative perception following the Lahad Datu intrusion by resisting the urge to post baseless rumours to Facebook and Twitter accounts.

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  16. "Foreign tourists confidence in Sabah depends a lot in the way Sabah people conduct themselves.

    "What Sabahans post in social forums reflect themselves and Sabah.

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  17. "If we truly love our state, every one of us should consider ourselves as ambassadors to promote Sabah positively to the world," he said.
    Masidi admitted that what happened in Lahad Datu has had some impact on the tourism industry in Sabah.

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  18. The people especially those in tourism industry, have a lot to do to woo back tourists.

    The Federal and the State authorities in the meantime, are doing their best to bring confidence in the industry in Sabah, added Masidi.

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  19. Beside that, the Lahad Datu intrusion by a armed group from the southern Philippines, will not affect investor interest in Malaysia or the Philippine.- economist.

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  20. Dr Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy and chief economist of AMP Capital, said the intrusion had not changed his perception of Malaysia, especially when the relevant authorities were doing their best to resolve the matter.

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  21. “It looks more like a distraction rather than anything else,” he told.

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  22. Oliver was responding to a question on whether the intrusion by the armed group would turn away investors from Malaysia.

    we hope no such big impact in our state.

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  23. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak had also given an assurance on the establishment of a special security area in Sabah to safeguard the sovereignty and security of the state's east coast.

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