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Sunday, June 23, 2013

“Tell the Truth or Be Investigated - Jeffrey”

KOTA KINABALU - “The Inland Revenue Board should be truthful about the tax revenues collected in Sabah rather than trying to cover up the truth just because Sabah is now claiming its constitutional share of this revenues” said Datuk Dr. Jeffrey Kitingan, STAR Sabah Chief, in response to front-pages stories that only RM4 billion federal tax collection was targeted by the IRB from Sabah in 2013 and not RM40 billion as reported earlier.

The RM40 billion was initially announced by the IRB Sabah and they appear to be back-tracking as if to attempt a cover-up now that Sabah is entitled to two-fifths (40%) of the net revenue collected from Sabah.

The Sabah government must do more and investigate into the matter and not be side-tracked by accepting whatever is being pushed down all the time from Kuala Lumpur.  It is the duty and responsibility of the Sabah government, first and foremost, towards the State and the people of Sabah not the political masters from Malaya.

Just looking at several preliminary figures, there appears to be basis for an amount of more than RM4 billion.   Petronas takes RM17.88 billion from Sabah’s oil and gas.   What about the major oil companies producing oil and gas from Sabah?   Sabah takes about RM1.1 billion in oil palm levies.

Sabah produces about 35% of Malaysia’s crude palm oil output and in 2012 Malaysia’s palm oil export earnings posted a value of RM71.3 billion with RM73 billion targeted for 2013.  Government-linked Sime Darby Berhad has 54,278 hectares of plantations while Felda has some 306,000 acres in Sabah.  Many public listed plantation companies have most of their plantations in Sabah.  Even Yayasan Melaka and Yayasan Selangor have palm oil plantations in Sabah!

Whether it is RM4 billion or RM40 billion, Sabah is still entitled to its legitimate 40% share!

Even assuming the lower figure, 40% of RM4 billion will increase Sabah’s budget by RM1.6 billion, a whopping 43% increase, and which will help the Sabah government and contribute to the well-being of Sabahans.

The issue of linking this 40% entitlement with federal allocations is fully of idiocy and stupidity. Firstly, it shows that Sabah BN leaders do not prioritize Sabah but the federal/BN government, secondly, that they are not acting in the best interests of Sabah and Sabahans.

Thirdly, it seems that they are more interested in bowing to their political masters from Malaya and protecting their party’s interests and their interests and positions which will be jeopardized if they go against the wish of their political masters and finally, they are just accepting whatever is being shaft down their throats without thinking and evaluating what needs to be done from the perspective of Sabah.

It also lends credence to the saying by people that Sabah BN leaders are remote-controlled by their masters in Kuala Lumpur/Putrajaya.

Its just over 1 month after being elected by Sabahans in the general elections and the Sabah BN leaders are already forgetting about the interests of Sabah and its people.  The people should seriously whether these leaders ought to continue to represent them or be booted out.

On the other hand, the Sab
ah BN leaders also fail to recognize that it is the duty and responsibility that the federal government to raise and provide development allocations.  Tiny Perlis and other States without much revenue are still entitled to its development allocations but it does mean that Sabah should be deprived of their allocations.

If the federal government feels that Sabah is a liability and is so difficult to reimburse Sabah’s entitlement and also to provide development allocations, it should just allow Sabah to go free and allow Sabah to manage its own revenue and resources.  There is no in point keeping Sabah which is a burden given that the federal government has got a national debt in excess of RM508 billion.

257 comments:

  1. Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak yang akan membuat keputusan berhubung pemberian bonus untuk penjawat awam tahun ini, kata Ketua Setiausaha Negara Tan Sri Dr Ali Hamsa.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Penjawat awam harus juga bersyukur dan membaiki lagi prestasi kerja.

      Delete
  2. Beliau berkata keputusan itu akan dibuat Najib selaku Menteri Kewangan sempena pembentangan Belanjawan 2014 yang dijadual 25 Okt ini.

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  3. "Saya rasa kerajaan akan membuat keputusan bila kerajaan buat bajet(pembentangan Belanjawan 2014), PM sendiri akan buat keputusan,

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kami berharapkan bujet 2014 lebih memanfaatkan golongan awam.

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    2. Tidak sabar nak tahu apakah keunikan bujet 2014 ini.

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  4. katanya kepada pemberita selepas majlis penyampaian Anugerah Perkhidmatan Cemerlang 2012, di Pusat Konvensyen Antarabangsa Putrajaya (PICC) hari ini. Seramai 1,374 petugas dari 42 Jabatan/Agensi/Bahagian Jabatan Perdana Menteri menerima anugerah itu.

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  5. Beliau berkata demikian ketika diminta mengulas cadangan Kesatuan Pekerja-Pekerja Dalam Perkhidmatan Awam (Cuepacs) kepada kerajaan supaya bonus melebihi sebulan setengah gaji diberikan kepada kira-kira 1.4 juta penjawat awam.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jumlah ini memang angka yang amat tinggi juga.

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    2. Ini adalah berita baiki untuk penjawat kerajaan.

      Delete
  6. Semalam, Presiden Cuepacs Datuk Omar Osman menyarankan kerajaan agar bonus melebihi sebulan setengah gaji atau sekurang-kurangnya sebulan setengah gaji diberikan kepada kakitangan awam dengan pembayaran setengah bulan gaji dibuat sebelum perayaan Aidilfitri nanti.

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  7. Tahun lalu, penjawat awam menerima bonus sebulan setengah gaji dengan pembayaran dibuat sebanyak tiga kali; sebelum perayaan Aidilfitri, bulan Disember dan pada Januari tahun ini.

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  8. Masyarakat Cina diminta membuang tanggapan negatif kononnya sebarang program diperkenalkan oleh kerajaan termasuk inisiatif transformasi ekonomi, adalah untuk kepentingan Bumiputera semata-mata.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Isu perkauman tiada kaitan dengan program transformasi.

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    2. Kerajaan harus membuktikan dari tindakan bahawa tiada diskriminasi atas program kerajaan.

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  9. Presiden MCA, Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek, berkata tanggapan itu salah dan tidak benar kerana usaha kerajaan seperti melaksanakan Program Transformasi Kedai Runcit (TUKAR) dan Projek Pemodenan Bengkel Automotif (ATOM), adalah untuk semua peniaga di negara ini, tanpa mengira kaum.

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  10. Dalam hubungan ini, beliau berkata, Koperasi Jayadiri Malaysia Berhad (KOJADI) yang dimiliki MCA, berjaya memasti dan menyakinkan usahawan Cina lebih berminat untuk menyertai TUKAR dan ATOM.

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  11. Masyarakat Cina sering berpendapat apa saja program diperkenalkan kerajaan adalah hanya untuk Bumiputera, walhal ini tidak betul dan tidak benar.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ini cuma pandangan segelintir pihak sahaja. Kerajaan harus membuktikan di mana perjuangan kerajaan adalah untuk semua lapisan masyarakat tanpa kira bangsa dan kaum.

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    2. Apakah sebab masyarakat cina berpendapat sebegini? Harus juga difahamkan terlebih dahulu.

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  12. Program seperti TUKAR dan ATOM adalah untuk semua peniaga tanpa mengira kaum,” katanya pada sidang media selepas merasmikan Mesyuarat Agung Tahunan Ke-31 KOJADI di Wisma MCA di sini, semalam.

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  13. Soi Lek berkata, masyarakat Cina bagaimanapun didapati tidak meminati dan tidak yakin terhadap koperasi, sedangkan bidang itu memainkan peranan penting dalam kemajuan negara serta menjayakan Program Transformasi Ekonomi (ETP).

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  14. Malah, katanya, koperasi di negara ini mencatat perolehan berjumlah RM23 bilion pada 2011, manakala bilangan koperasi berdaftar menjelang akhir tahun lalu adalah kira-kira 10,000 dan dijangka mencecah 16,000 menjelang 2020.

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    Replies
    1. Siapa yang benar dimanfaatkan?

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    2. Jumlah ini masih dalam perkembangan.

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  15. MCA bangga kerana mempunyai dua koperasi, iaitu KSM (Koperasi Serbaguna Malaysia Berhad) dan KOJADI yang sudah berkembang dengan kedudukan kewangan lebih kukuh. Nilai aset KOJADI bertambah daripada RM130 juta pada 2011 kepada RM151 juta tahun lalu, meningkat 15.9 peratus,” katanya.

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  16. Pendapatan dari sumber petroleum di Sabah harus disalur untuk perkembangan di Sabah.

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    Replies
    1. Pendapatan negeri bertambah akan mendorong perkembangan di Sabah.

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  17. Kerajaan Sabah harus diberi kuasa untuk menguruskan sumber dan kewangan negeri Sabah juga.

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  18. Kerajaan Sabah harus bersuara dan membela nasib rakyat di Sabah.

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  19. Rakyat Sabah masih berkeyakian dengan Musa.

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  20. Musa membawa perkembangan yang amat positif di Sabah. Ini juga menyebabkan beliau masih mendapat sokongan yang berterusan.

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  21. Its just over 1 month after being elected by Sabahans in the general elections and the Sabah BN leaders are already forgetting about the interests of Sabah and its people.

    Keutamaan dan kebajikan rakyat harus diutamakan.

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  22. Tidak mungkin Sabah masih dalam kemiskinan.

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  23. Sabah berhak mengendali sumber dan pendapatan Sabah.

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  24. State IRB Director Kamaruzaman Ab Salleh said he was confident the target could be achieved judging from the agency's collection last year.

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  25. "Our collection last year exceeded our target of RM3.7 billion," he told reporters after launching a two-day campaign where IRB officers would visit housing estates and business premises to explain and educate tax payers besides helping them to fill up their tax return forms.

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  26. The Sabah Inland Revenue Board (IRB) expects to rake in RM4 billion in tax collection this year against RM3.8 billion collected in 2012.

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  27. The Inland Revenue Board, Sabah, regretted that Bingkor Assemblyman Datuk Dr Jeffery Kitingan chose to use a misquoted figure in respect of the so-called projected tax revenue to be collected from Sabah by the Federal Government.

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  28. Saying that it was also a strategy employed by IRB to meet this year's target, Kamaruzaman said the public need not fear the presence of IRB officers as they were only there to assist them.

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  29. He said the operation would also involve the conducting of a special census for corporates, monthly tax deduction for employers, hand delivery of pink letters and serving of final notices.

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  30. IRB Sabah Director, Hj. Kamaruzzaman Ab Salleh, said the figure reported by the English and KadazanDusun section of Daily Express on the May 22 2013 was not correct.

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  31. He said instead of RM4 billion as announced by IRB Sabah as being the collection targeted for 2013, RM40 billion was mistakenly quoted.

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  32. He said IRB Sabah immediately made a press release the next day through Bernama to request for a correction, and again, on the June 4, 2013.

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  33. Hj. Kamaruzzaman clarified that "for Sabah, the targetted collection in 2013 is RM4billion.

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  34. "Last year, 2012, IRB Sabah's targetted collection was RM3.45 billion but actual collection for the year was higher, that is, RM3.67 billion."

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  35. "However, this is a gross figure as it includes possible refunds and repayments.

    The RM3,085 million figure referred to by Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Hj Aman cum Minister of Finance in his winding up speech in the State Assembly could be the nett collection for 2012."

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  36. When contacted for comments, State EPU Director Datuk Ismail Abdullah said, "it is illogical that Sabah could yield such astronomical tax collection annually."

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  37. He said based on the clarification by the IRB Sabah Director and knowing that income or direct taxes are the biggest component, at around 70 per cent of the total federal tax collection, the Chief Minister was definitely correct in his winding up speech that Federal Government spent far more in Sabah that what it got via taxes.

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  38. He said the Chief Minister's statements pertaining to this matter were based on facts as supplied by the Accountant General Department (Sabah) and there was no issue.

    "Either Jeffery is very selective in his use of figures, or he is not thorough in his reading and research," he said.

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  39. Musa Aman is once again back to the power of the state as the poll result of the just-concluded 13th General Election of May 5 showed that he won a landslide victory.

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  40. The UMNO and Barisan National alliance grabbed more than two-thirds of the seats (48) in the 60 state assembly seats and 22 of the 25 Parliamentary seats.

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  41. Musa Aman’s victory is said to be due to the triumph of development, progress, and good governance.

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  42. From the very beginning, the 2013 assembly poll counting hinted that the UMNO-BN alliance would create a history in Sabah with their new win and they proved by attracting a total of 442,493 votes for state seats and 434,522 for parliamentary seats which total 877,015 in all.

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  43. The opposition, on the other hand, received only 59,862 votes for the State seats and 287,559 votes for Parliamentary seats.

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  44. Musa Aman, received the biggest chunk of votes with 16,637 for a state seat in Sibuga among the coalition’s state component leaders, a majority of 11,569 votes, underscoring the popularity of his Halatuju policy for the state’s development.

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  45. His acceptance of a renewed term as Chief Minister also makes it the first time a Sabah Chief Minister had broken the nine-year jinx and continued to hold the fortress, basically what I have been saying all along.

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  46. He is a trend setter and has established that pro-incumbency sentiment can firewall against even the toughest of incumbencies and a 10 year run for the Chief Minister.

    ReplyDelete
  47. He is able to break from the past, having able to discard political constructs of the past 5 decades to analyse this election. This requires a new political construct to analyse how elections of the future will be fought as well.

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  48. He has sent a signal to the Pakatan Rakyat and its extended ecosystem of Sabah Progressive Party and Star that the cliche victimhood card as a permanent political agenda is past its sell by date. Cynicism no longer sells.

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  49. It is reflective of what the future can hold for Malaysia. It shows Sabah is kingmaker in Malaysian politics.

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  50. The story of this election’s win is really the story of how the ‘New Sabah’ came to be and how Musa Aman has laid out a political roadmap to realise its aspirations.

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  51. Musa Aman preferred to call this a ‘Covenant of Commitment’. But I would go a step further to call it the ‘ladder of opportunity’.

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  52. It is much easier to resort to cheap populism. What I find striking about this election is the creativity with which the “Safety of Net” has been promised

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  53. This has been done so while being steadfast about creating a “Ladder of Opportunity”. Thus there is the opportunity for more citizens to cross over that much riled “Poverty Line” through targeted interventions and join the “New Sabah”. T

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  54. The “safety net” that has been promised is less of a trap that sucks you into dependency but more of a trampoline that helps you bounce right back to find your way up that ladder of opportunity.

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  55. The challenge therefore is on how to bring a synergy between agriculture and food security; on how to turn agriculture economically and ecologically sustainable in a manner that it does not lead farmers in distress to sell off their land to ‘outsiders’ and become landless and at the same time provide food and nutrition for the masses.

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  56. There are a total of 358 candidates representing the Barisan National the Pakatan Rakyat, Sabah Star, SAPP and Independents going for 60 State and the 25 Parliamentary seats, all up for grabs in Sabah for the 13th GE on May 5.

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  57. The opposition hasn’t been able to counter Musa Aman, but they say they have been able to contain him. That is one way of looking at it.

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  58. What Musa has won is 18 seats more than the required majority, which is not spectacular, but the number is still more than what the opposition has managed to win

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  59. It is this “New Sabah” that a hunger for job opportunities and infrastructure is shaping a different kind of electoral discourse where development and economic growth are viewed as essential to the ladder of opportunity while concerns over inflation manifest into the desire for a subsidy-oriented safety net.

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  60. It was found that the opportunity exists to materially alter the battleground in Sabah through a platform that emphasized on ‘economic issues’ that can size up to the ‘economic aspirations’ of the “New Sabah”.

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  61. The earliest indicators of the rise of the ‘New Sabah’ came from the Census data of Rural Households.

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  62. Between the fall of Harris Salleh’s Berjaya that was wrongly attributed to “Sabah Shining” and the re-election of Pairin Kitingan’s PBS that was once again wrongly attributed to ‘Sabah rights based entitlements’ most commentators have ignored what the Census data told us going as far back as 1985.

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  63. In block after block, district after district, when queried over what kind of assistance Rural families preferred one message came out loud and clear – education, skills and security.

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  64. For the first time in the middle of a high stakes election for an incumbent Chief Minister in a country like Malaysia to go on record and express his commitment to Development takes both courage and conviction

    ReplyDelete
  65. He is a trend setter and has established that pro-incumbency sentiment can firewall against even the toughest of incumbencies and a 10 year run for the Chief Minister.

    ReplyDelete
  66. He is able to break from the past, having able to discard political constructs of the past 5 decades to analyse this election. This requires a new political construct to analyse how elections of the future will be fought as well.

    ReplyDelete
  67. He proves that Technology can be a winner – and that is necessary to stop being apologetic for being tech friendly.

    ReplyDelete
  68. He has sent a signal to the Pakatan Rakyat and its extended ecosystem of Sabah Progressive Party and Star that the cliche victimhood card as a permanent political agenda is past its sell by date. Cynicism no longer sells.

    ReplyDelete
  69. It is reflective of what the future can hold for Malaysia.

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  70. Sabah today is a model economy that generates both envy and aspiration among the people of other States.

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  71. This is where Musa Aman’s contribution has made a qualitative difference, recasting the role of Government

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  72. Sabah today is a model economy that generates both envy and aspiration among the people of other States.

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  73. He has demonstrated that maximum governance is possible with minimum Government.

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  74. To achieve that goal, he adopted a policy of zero tolerance towards corruption, reduced the role of the Government to that of a facilitator and placed a premium on the hallmark of quality in everything that was done to create the right conditions.

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  75. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak berkata, pembangkang di negara ini adalah pasukan yang tidak berkredibiliti kerana hanya bersandarkan kepada tiga senjata utama iaitu 'kutuk, hasut dan janji' dalam usaha memenangi hati rakyat.

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  76. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Perdana Menteri menegaskan, rakyat perlu berwaspada dengan tiga senjata pembangkang itu serta tidak termakan dengan agenda pembangkang kerana mereka tidak mampu mentadbir negara.

    Nak jadi pembangkang (dengan) tiga senjata iaitu kutuk, hasut dan janji. Kemudian mereka akan janji matahari, bulan, bintang sehingga ke galaksi, itu sahaja tiga senjata yang mereka ada.

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  77. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Sebenarnya pembangkang tidak mampu menjadi pakatan yang baik kerana gagal memenuhi beberapa syarat asas dalam sesebuah sistem demokrasi berparlimen.

    Antaranya, pembangkang tidak didaftarkan di bawah satu nama dan parti serta tidak mempunyai simbol yang sama bagi mewakili sesebuah pasukan.

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  78. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Ini jelas berbeza dengan parti-parti komponen BN yang diwakili simbol sama terutamanya ketika bertanding pada pilihan raya.

    Selain itu, menurutnya, pembangkang sehingga kini gagal menampilkan senarai Kabinet Bayangan kerana takut berlaku percakaran dalaman antara DAP, Pas dan Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR).

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  79. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Pembangkang mempunyai pelbagai wajah, ada imej bulan, ada roket dan ada satu lagi entah nampak mata, 'a very funny looking' mata.

    "Jadi simbol mereka tidak sama, kita tidak pasti sama ada mereka akan membentangkan manifesto yang sama,"

    Percakaran antara Pas dan DAP amat jelas terutama dalam isu pelaksanaan hukum hudud yang menjadi aspirasi Pas manakala DAP pula konsisten menolaknya.

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  80. Hence, roads and highways were built conforming to global standards, emphasis was laid on creating infrastructure that would cater not only to current and emerging demands but also needs of the future, and social development was given its due prominence on the Government’s ‘To Do’ list.

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  81. SENJATA PEMBANGKANG HANYA KUTUK, HASUT DAN JANJI

    Selain itu, kata beliau, perbalahan antara DAP dan PKR juga ketara di Pulau Pinang apabila Timbalan Ketua Menteri 1, Datuk Dr. Mansor Othman yang menggelarkan Ketua Menterinya, Lim Guan Eng sebagai seorang yang sombong, angkuh dan bersikap seperti dewa.

    "Guan Eng cuba menguar-uarkan kredibiliti, akauntabiliti dan ketelusan atau CAT, timbalannya pula berkata tentang CAT 'cocky, arrogant and tokong' (berlagak, angkuh dan tokong). Kemudian buat sidang akhbar depan Guan Eng, dia nafikan, tetapi apabila rakaman dikeluarkan, nyata dia telah berbohong kepada rakyat, saya tak perlu kata apa-apa lagi, kita tidak boleh mempunyai kerajaan yang menipu rakyat serta tidak melaksanakan janji,".

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  82. Musa Aman did what any visionary leaders are supposed to do: He kept on coming up with ideas that were at once big and creative. He placed the people at the centre of his projects, making them the ultimate beneficiaries.

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  83. If investors were encouraged to invest their money in Sabah, it was not merely to enable them to reap profits but also create wealth through income for the everyday Sabahan.

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  84. Just as Musa Aman has encouraged investors to look at Sabah as their preferred destination, he has also encouraged the people of Sabah to make the maximum use of the opportunities created by such investment.

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  85. He has constantly played up Sabah’s ‘pride’, which in turn has instilled a tremendous sense of self-confidence in all Sabahans.

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  86. he said the move was appropriate with the ministry’s mission and policy to develop the food production and agro-food sectors to contribute to the nation’s income.

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  87. Musa Aman by the opposition commentariat which just can’t see anything right, leave alone good, about the Government he heads and its enviable governance record.

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  88. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Sometime in 2007, a group of businessmen approached Sabah CM Musa Aman to discuss ways they could explore and benefit from the state’s lucrative oil & gas industry.

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  89. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Now, these are the same group of people who benefitted greatly from the state’s timber resources via Yayasan Sabah and other channels for many, many years under previous Sabah Chief Ministers.

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  90. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    They became very wealthy over the years, so much so they could afford to blow a few millions a night in casinos.

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  91. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Well, the Sabah reforestation plan and conservation programme that was put in action by Musa since he became CM in 2003 was taking a toll on this group of businessmen.

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  92. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    They could not make as much money as before and therefore, needed another cash cow.
    Unlike the millions they made in the timber industry, the petroleum industry has the potential to make them billions!

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  93. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Sabah has Malaysia’s top oil reserves and the Sabah Basin is projected to produce oil for a much longer period than any other oil-producing states in Malaysia.

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  94. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    All they had to do was get Musa’s blessings and the money from the petroleum industry would start pouring into their coffers.

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  95. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    But the unimaginable happened.

    Musa, despite being 'friendly’ to them, refused to entertain their demands and deemed it not right for them to put their hands in the petroleum ‘cookie jar’.

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  96. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Many attempts were made to smooth talk Musa, and numerous meetings and lobbying sessions took place – but Musa kept them at bay.

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  97. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Angry and bitter that Musa had cut them off the lucrative petroleum sector and denied them a chance to taste a slice of the billions in oil money, this group hatched a plan to get rid of Musa.

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  98. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    They vowed that Musa must be removed at all cost. Timber tycoons run out of trees to chop...

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  99. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Proceeds from the timber industry in Sabah were in the past used intensively to fund political activities.

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  100. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The forests of Sabah became the ATM machines for Sabah politicians.

    Musa Aman is the 14th CM of Sabah since Tun Fuad Stephens first took office in September 1963.

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  101. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The other 13 CMs were Tun Fuad Stephens (1st term 1963-1964), Peter Lo Sui Yin (1965-1967), Mustapha Harun (1967-1975), Mohamad Said Keruak (1975-1976), Tun Fuad Stephens (2nd term 1976), Harris Salleh (1976-1985), Joseph Pairin Kitingan (1985-1994), Sakaran Dandai (1994), Salleh Said Keruak (1994-1996), Yong Teck Lee (1996-1998), Bernard Dompok (1998-1999), Osu Sukam (1999-2001) and Chong Kah Kiat (2001-2003).

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  102. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    There are dozens of timber tycoons, or sometimes known as timber mafias in Sabah and they played instrumental roles as the political backbone and controlled the purse strings of the political elites.

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  103. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    As a matter of fact, Sabah had the highest concentration of millionaires in the country during the 80s and 90s, all cultivated by the backwater political system backed by timber proceeds.

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  104. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    When Musa took office in 2003, the state’s timber resources were fast depleting and getting out of control.
    Illegal logging was terribly rampant and something had to be done fast, especially as the timber mafias were creating a lot of problems for Yayasan Sabah with their demands for more concessions/contracts/favors/etc.

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  105. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The Yale’s School of Forestry and Environment Studies, in its Yale Environment 360 publication had this to say on their 12th June 2012 issue:

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  106. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Forests not only became the state’s principal rainy day fund, but eventually came to be seen as a piggy bank for politicians. The biggest potential beneficiary was the chief minister, who controls both Yayasan Sabah and appoints the director of the forestry department, obliging the most senior forest official to abide by his orders.

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  107. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Soon, the push to generate more cash began to take a toll, and in the 1970s logging accelerated in forests across Borneo, including Sabah, due to rising global demand for timber products. The situation for forests outside the area designated as permanent forest estate was worse due to the emergence of a new and highly profitable crop: oil palm. Oil palm plantations in Sabah grew from almost nothing in the mid-1980s to covering nearly a fifth of Sabah’s landmass by 2010.

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  108. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Inside the Yayasan Sabah concession, logging was rampant, with companies cutting ever-smaller trees and using helicopters to harvest steep slopes. Yayasan Sabah’s revenue plunged with declining timber yields. The situation reached a crescendo in 1998 when the then-chief minister signed off on a massive pulp mill to be run as a Malaysian-Chinese joint venture.

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  109. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The mill would require nearly a third of Yayasan Sabah’s concession to be cleared and planted with fast-growing acacia. When Sam Mannan, then director of forestry, objected to the project, he was relieved of his post by Sabah’s chief minister.

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  110. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Parts of Yayasan Sabah were laid to waste, but it was all for naught, as the pulp project never materialized. Even with the official abandonment of the mill project in 2001, logging continued, eventually serving as a catalyst for early re-logging of nearly three-quarters of Yayasan Sabah. Logging generated a short upswing in revenue for Yayasan Sabah, but it wasn’t sustainable. The long-term economic outlook for Yayasan Sabah was bleak.

    You can read more at:
    http://e360.yale.edu/feature/a_desperate_effort_to_save_the_rainforest_of_borneo/2540/

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  111. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Musa’s secret game plan to curb excessive logging…

    When Musa assumed office in 2003, he set the wheels in motion that slowly and steadily dried up the money supply of these timber tycoons/mafias.

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  112. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Sustainable forestry was introduced and Sam Mannan, who got back his old job, was given more power to carry out the reforestation initiatives.

    The Yale Environment 360 article goes on to say this further:

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  113. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    In addition to trying to turn around the situation in Yayasan Sabah, Mannan has so far successfully protected some of the last remaining lowland primary forests in Sabah.

    Indeed, if you travel far enough in Sabah, some of Borneo’s most treasured forest still exists.

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  114. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    “Sabah is still way ahead of Sarawak and Kalimantan: surviving primary forests areas are being conserved, reforestation and forest restoration is happening, and encroachers have moved out of forest reserves,” said John Payne, a conservation scientist with the Borneo Rhino Alliance.

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  115. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Musa Aman’s plans were slowly bearing fruits.

    He was slowly cutting off one timber tycoon after another in the food chain.

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  116. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    To enforce his plans, Sam Mannan came up with a set of stringent guidelines under the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), an eco-certification body.

    Various internationally recognised systems such as the Pan European Forest Scheme (PEFC) and the Malaysian Timber Certification Scheme (MTCS) were introduced and put in place.

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  117. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The Sabah Forestry Department set 2014 for full certification of Sabah’s forest concessions. At the same time there is experimentation occurring in parts of the Yayasan Sabah concession, including the world’s first Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+) project.

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  118. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The forestry department’s strategy to enforce the FSC guidelines is to bind loggers to compliance.
    Even if a chief minister or a politician wishes to use the forest revenue as a personal ATM, it becomes very difficult and controversial because the areas are FSC-certified.

    Short-term licences that cause tremendous damage to the environment are being drastically phased out and Sabah’s forest management credibility is at its highest — an open-book philosophy whereby logging and forest management areas are all open to third-party and NGO scrutiny.

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  119. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Long-term logging licences have been subjected to third-party auditing (independent audit) since 2010 so independent auditors would detected any illegal felling.
    The size of forest reserves under the Totally Protected Areas (TPAS) category is now reaching 1.3 million hectares or about 20 per cent of Sabah’s total land area, exceeding international standards of 10 per cent.

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  120. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    By 2014 when all rules and regulations come into full effect, many timber tycoons/mafias still existing in Sabah will be out of business and the remaining players have to follow strict international guidelines. The party’s over.

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  121. The criticism and rebuke could have been ignored but for the fact that electronic media is controlled by those who love to hate Musa Aman and a sustained campaign of calumny does tend to influence opinion

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  122. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Frugality and tight grip on purse strings created enemies for Musa…
    Musa entered politics as a wealthy but prudent businessman. Contrary to popular belief, he made hundreds of millions as a businessman first before becoming the CM.

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  123. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    When he assumed office in 2003, Musa’s asset declaration exceeded a whopping RM280 million.
    His company Musman Holdings started off with stevedoring and later diversified into construction, real estate, shipping, plantation and banking.

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  124. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    He also made a sizeable fortune selling his stake in City Finance Berhad to EON Finance Berhad.

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  125. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    City Finance itself is an interesting story…

    When Tengku Razaleigh was Finance Minister in 1976, he issued a banking license to the late Tun Said Keruak with the aim to establish a Bumiputera-based bank in Sabah.

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  126. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    To qualify for the license, Said Keruak gathered a few qualified and capable Bumi businessmen, including Musa Aman to become shareholders.
    Only one of the shareholders was a Chinese, a retired bank manager by the name of Thomas Chow.

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  127. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Besides Musa, other shareholders included Herman Luping, Ben Stephens, Lawrence Sinsua and Simon Jenkins – all of whom had equal shares except Said Keruak who had a higher amount of shares.

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  128. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    They used their own money and even borrowed heavily from banks to finance the venture.
    As time went by, the dividends were not forthcoming and interests on bank loans obtained to purchase the shares were mounting and this became a heavy burden for the shareholders.

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  129. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    All shareholders, except Musa, agreed to sell their stakes when a Chinese property tycoon from Kuala Lumpur approached them to buy over City Finance.

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  130. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    One person who resisted the deal in the shareholders meeting was Musa – who was keen to ensure City Finance remains a Bumi company.

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  131. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    After a series of negotiation, Musa agreed to buy over the shares held by the directors and shareholders, thus making him the major shareholder and chairman of City Finance.

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  132. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The company eventually started to grow and was on its way towards becoming a major finance company in the country until the new banking policy under Tun Daim saw it merging with EON Finance Berhad.

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  133. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Musa made a sizeable profit from the merger and eventually moved up the political ladder to become numero uno in the state’s administration.

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  134. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    However, he is known to be very frugal. He has very tight grip on money – his as well as the state’s.

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  135. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    This made some people very unhappy, even those in his inner circle – and this includes the timber tycoons aka timber mafias.

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  136. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    It was becoming very hard for these timber tycoons to influence Musa because he was captain of his own ship and had his own money to do things as he pleases.

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  137. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    While CMs of the past had to curry favour with these timber tycoons, with Musa it was the other way around.

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  138. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    There are close to 14 timber tycoons that have been around in the state for decades and they still have very strong influence on Sabah’s political elites.

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  139. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Under the previous rotation system of CM, all had some form of accessibility to the state’s riches.

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  140. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The group of businessmen which we mentioned earlier then started their secret operation to ‘finish off’ Musa.

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  141. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Much has been said and written about the RM40 million money laundering case involving Michael Chia. But unknown to many, the telephone call to Hong Kong anti-graft body ICAC originated from this KK number: 088-4XXX83.

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  142. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Michael Chia was entrapped so that information on Musa and his proxies could be squeezed out of him by the authorities.

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  143. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    (Some timber tycoons from Sabah have Hong Kong registered companies, where one director is enough to open a limited liability company, and have corresponding banking accounts in HSBC or Standard Chartered, giving them ease to carry out parallel transactions in HK or KK)
    Chia had escaped the dragnet on 2 different occasions a month earlier because he diverted the money to other locations around the world at the last minute.

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  144. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The anti-graft authorities - both in HK and KK, managed to extract only a certain amount of information from Michael Chia.

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  145. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    But additional information, that were essential to the success of this elaborate operation to pin down Musa, came from an individual by the name of Lo Man Heng, a KK based timber businessman.

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  146. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    He was Michael Chia’s partner and the two later had a fallout due to money issues.
    Lo Man Heng and Michael Chia were involved in a legal battle at the Singapore High Court following the fallout.

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  147. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Photographs of him standing next to Anwar were found hanging on his office wall.
    In fact, Anwar introduced him to Clare Rewcastle Brown, who is behind Radio Free Sarawak and Sarawak Report.

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  148. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Lo Man Heng was the deep throat that Clare boasted about in her website when she was attacking Musa before the 13th GE.

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  149. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The conspirators tried hard to bring down Musa but so far they have been unsuccessful.
    Despite coming up with an impressive chart on the money trail (see below), nothing much was accomplished.

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  150. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Among the key reason why the money trail chart above had little impact was that the account number registered to Musa was opened on 14 June 1999, four years way before he became CM.
    The argument that there was abuse of power while in office as CM could not be pinned down on Musa.

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  151. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    MACC officers who questioned Musa found that the money paid to his sons was carried out by his trusted aide, who conveniently used the funds from the UBS account. And the lawyer who supposed to ensure no such complications or conflict of interest arose was clearly sleeping on his job.

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  152. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Next, in 2010, the conspirators tried to ruffle the feathers in BN component parties to come up with a vote of no-confidence on his leadership.

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  153. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    If you read here http://akimomogun.blogspot.com/2010/08/salleh.html, Sabah Umno deputy chief Salleh Said Keruak openly disclosed that certain leaders of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) were in cohorts with certain quarters to topple Musa Aman.

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  154. especially among those who have little or no knowledge of what transpired back in the 80′s and 90′s, in which they were still in infancy I’m sure.

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  155. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    He warned that Sabah BN would not be intimidated by any attempt to hold the coalition at ransom by mounting a veiled threat on its Chairman-cum-Chief Minister.
    "We are prepared to face the worst challenge," Salleh was quoted as saying.

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  156. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Salleh questioned the rationale behind LDP Deputy President Datuk Chin Su Phin's outrage and claimed it was part of an on-going plot to oust Musa.

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  157. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Chin was quoted as asking PM Najib to remove Musa because his party could no longer work with the CM. Then in 2012, stories of Michael Chia and Musa reappeared, making their rounds in the various media.

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  158. Tranforming these sectors are a challenge, which not only involves changing the way agricultural activities are implemented by applying the latest technology, but also requires us to change our mindset from thinking that agriculutre is a backward and low-skill activity

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  159. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    This time, whistleblower site Sarawak Report, which had their guns initially trained at Sarawak Chief Minister Taib Mahmud and the rainforest issue, shifted their target to Musa.

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  160. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Scores of allegations were made but none of this came close to even warrant a misdemeanor criminal or corruption charge in Malaysia or Hong Kong on Musa Aman, or even Michael Chia for a fact.

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  161. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    Any charge on money laundering on Michael Chia by the Hong Kong authorities, or say the MACC, could have had a devastating effect on Musa’s political career.

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  162. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    But for all their worth, they were just hot air.

    Then, stories surfaced that Musa was asked to take a leave by PM Najib but these were also found to be false and malicious articles.

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  163. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    The operation to topple Musa is still active, even after the 13th General Elections.

    The conspirators are trying everything and will continue to do all they can until they succeed in bringing down Musa.

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  164. Uncovering the plot to topple Musa Aman. It all began with oil…

    But Musa is a battle hardened veteran who has survived much worse battles and he is not to be brought down by a bunch of disgruntled businessmen or politicians who could not get what they want.

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  165. I personally believe that there was huge propaganda against Musa Aman, and in a case where there is a criminal investigation, propaganda can never be hard evidence.

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  166. I do believe that there wasn’t a shred of evidence against him. It was all propaganda, a fact which is now coming to be established even further.

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  167. This is where Musa Aman’s innovation can make a difference. He has ensured, as he says, “peace, unity, social harmony and brotherhood”, which have collectively given “further impetus to the process of development”.

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  168. That peace, unity, social harmony and brotherhood now need to be made into permanent features.

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  169. Undoubtedly, there is no political leader in Sabah who has been as popular as Musa Aman since its inception in 1963. Musa Aman had charmed the poor and Natives, his influence is not limited in UMNO pockets.

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  170. In the last five years, after appropriating the Best Chief Minister’s title, Musa has calibrated his communication with people through the language of development.

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  171. That has clicked with people because the subtext of his act says that under Musa’s rule you could make money and have a comfortable life without many political, communal or social disturbances.

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  172. This shows that people are ready to re-elect Musa Aman. In his statewide meet the people sessions, men, women and youngsters gather to see him. Their faces evoke emotions.

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  173. They look pleased to see their leader. The relation of trust between Musa Aman and his fans is certainly there.

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  174. WHEN Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman took over the state government in 2003, he introduced a development blueprint called halatuju to propel Sabah to greater heights.

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  175. Musa's now in his record 10th year in office. Previously, the longest-serving chief minister had served only nine years.

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  176. His halatuju focuses on agriculture, manufacturing and tourism as catalysts for the state's economic development. Known as a strong advocate of strict financial management, Musa, with support from his colleagues in the state Barisan Nasional government, has improved the state's finances significantly.

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  177. With its economy and revenue growing consistently over the last 10 years, the state government has produced a budget that has risen since 2003. Its RM4.088 billion budget for this year is the largest in state history. The figure is nearly double the RM2.3 billion budget in 2008.

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  178. The people of Sabah have every reason to rejoice over the big budget as this means more development programmes. The rising revenue and development budgets are the perfect riposte to critics, who describe Sabah as one of the poorest and least developed states in the country.

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  179. Despite uncertainties in the global economy and the fluctuating prices of oil, gas and commodities, such as palm oil and timber, Sabah's economic fundamentals have remained strong because of political stability, coupled with the state's administration and financial management.

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  180. Over the past 11 years, Sabah has been recognised as among the top states with sound financial management, which has earned it a clean-bill rating from the auditor-general.
    The state received the highest rating of triple A (AAA) by RAM Rating Services for the last three years for its strong fiscal position.

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  181. It obtained the International Organisation for Standardisation certification from Moody International for efficiency and proper state budget management for three consecutive years.
    The auditor-general's report for last year revealed the state's financial achievements.

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  182. For example, the state's reserves had exceeded RM3 billion, its revenue had surpassed RM4 billion, its actual surplus amounted to RM730 million, its development expenditure stood at RM1.17 billion and it had no outstanding arrears on federal loans.

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  183. For example, the state's reserves had exceeded RM3 billion, its revenue had surpassed RM4 billion, its actual surplus amounted to RM730 million, its development expenditure stood at RM1.17 billion and it had no outstanding arrears on federal loans.

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  184. The state has also reduced the number of poor by more than half last year compared with that in 2009. Preliminary results of a nationwide survey by the Economic Planning Unit in the Prime Minister's Department showed the poverty rate in the state last year stood at 8.1 per cent compared with 19.7 per cent in 2009, the lowest in more than 20 years.

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  185. The survey showed that the state's monthly household income had increased by 29.4 per cent last year (RM4,013) from RM3,012 in 2009. The monthly household income in urban areas had increased by 22.7 per cent (RM3,803) in 2009 to RM4,668 last year, while in rural areas, it had risen by 33.8 per cent to RM2,913 from RM2,177.

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  186. In 2009, Sabah's poverty line stood at RM1,050, with the hardcore poor categorised as those earning less than RM520 a month. Meanwhile, the government has set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry on illegal immigrants.

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  187. It has also issued communal titles for landless locals. The good ties between the state leadership and the federal government are key to the state's progress.

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  188. Parti Bersatu Sabah president Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan has described Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak as a "brilliant doctor of politics" because of his ability "to diagnose and understand Sabah's ills and prescribe effective medicines as remedial measures".

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