Archive for the ‘1Malaysia’ Category

The ultimate Malaysian debate

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Malaysia or Malaysaja?

YB Nurul Izzah Anwar a towering Malay and Malaysian.

Perkasa claims to defend Malay rights in a multi racial Malaysia. And these Malay rights are inalienable, non-negotiable and permanent. Those that disagree with their interpretation of these Malays rights are deemed treacherous and should leave Malaysia.

In the spirit of Ramadhan and Merdeka, I would like to invite Perkasa to a Constructive Engagement for a new beginning for Malaysia with me.

I would like to ask Perkasa, several key questions to better understand, and together seek real solutions for the crisis it claims the Malays are facing.

I believe that Perkasa is the current vocal, and not necessarily the majority voice of the Malays. And by all indication, Perkasa is the alter-ego of Umno.

If Perkasa can be engaged constructively and a resolution found, then we would have answered the acid-test of Malay concerns once and for all?

To have an honest Constructive Engagement or dialogue, I suggest that we must decide on four fundamental principles.

First, we must base our dialogue on an agreed standard reference document. Should it be the Malaysian Constitution? The Umno constitution? Or the Perkasa constitution?

If we are unable to decide then our dialogue becomes futile and a monologue at best.

Must Read!

Part I

Part II

Umno sec-gen: We’ll win, with or without Taib

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Umno is confident that BN would be able to retain Sarawak in the upcoming state elections even if Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud decides to step down.

Commenting on Abdul Taib’s shock announcement yesterday that he was mulling calling it a day after 29 years at the helm, Umno secretary-general Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor said regardless of his decision, it would not affact BN’s chances.

“Maybe he realises that people in Sarawak need change. For us, we’ll still be able to hang on to Sarawak whether he leads or other people lead,” said Tengku Adnan, who is also BN secretary-general.

He was commenting on Taib’s response on whether or not he will contest the upcoming Sarawak election, and if he will remain chief minister if he wins.

The veteran politician, who rose to leadership in 1981, said yesterday: “I don’t know, it is up to the prime minister, Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) and the people to decide on my position.

“Well, a lot of people say I am not needed (any more). So if I am not needed, then I go out.”

Umno not pressuring Taib
Tengku Adnan denied speculations that Umno was putting pressure on Abdul Taib to step down, who has been courting increasing bad press over the wealth accrued by his family.

“There is no pressure from our side, but we’ll accept it if he wants to go. Maybe he’s been in power for too long.

“When you’ve been in power too long, people get tired of you. He is also probably tired, so the statement he made is fair,” said Tengku Adnan when contacted.

He said Ahmad Taib’s situation mirrors that of former Umno president Dr Mahathir Mohamad who began planning his departure after BN suffered a dip in support in 1999.

“It is statesman-like to think of the state rather than just of himself. As far as we (Umno) are concerned, there are other leaders who will be able to take over if he chooses to step down,” he said.

Despite Tengku Adnan’s denial, the prominence given to Taib’s statement in Umno-linked newspapers has raised eyebrows.

The statement, while an expected response from a politician prior to an election, made the front-page of Berita Harian and given a full-page spread in the New Straits Times.

Taib was elected into parliament in 1967 and became chief minister in 1981. In 2006, he expressed his desire to step down due to ill health, but was prevented from doing so by party members.

Higher stakes for BN
Taib’s withdrawal at this juncture would be timely as his increasing unpopularity has fast become a liability to BN.

In fact, said PKR Padungan assemblyperson Dominique Ng, Taib was the main cause for BN’s defeat in the Sibu by-election in May.

“Sibu was BN’s stronghold. If they can lose Sibu, they can lose all the Chinese-majority (constituencies),” he said.

The unexpected loss has raised the stakes for BN in the state election, due to be called by the middle of next year.

Additionally, BN is under more pressure to win the Sarawak election which is being seen as representing a testing ground for the ruling coalition ahead of the next general election.

If he steps down, would it diminish Pakatan Rakyat’s chances in Sarawak?

“It is irrelevant because our main problem is still BN policies. If he leaves, the next person to succeed him will still be a BN person,” said Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian.

As such, the PKR duo are banking on the hope that Sarawakians realise that “another Taib nominee” will not bring in the changes they desire.

Malayiakini

Chinese should no longer puzzle Taib

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

It’s the height of irony for Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud to claim that he has done everything he can to win the support of the Chinese community for his ruling coalition, and yet failed. This will not serve as any excuse for him with the ruling elite in Putrajaya, who bank on him being a good proxy for their interests.

The Chinese, in Taib’s own words, puzzle him no end. One would think that Taib, during his years in power since 1981, had done everything possible to drive the Chinese away from the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN).

Finally, the Chinese community decided that enough was enough and since 2006 began ditching the Barisan Nasional. In that year, several seats fell to the opposition, which won by default. It was not a vote for them, but a vote against the BN.

Wasn’t it the Chinese who saved Taib’s hide when Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) teamed up with Malay rebels from his Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) in 1987 to oust him in a virtual coup d’état dubbed the Ming Court Affair? True the Dayaks from Pesaka stood by Taib (right), but their support alone wasn’t enough to keep him comfortably in the saddle.

What did the Chinese get from Taib in return? To cite a recent case, Taib told the Chinese that if they weren’t interested in renewing their expired land leases at the exorbitant rates set by his state government, “there were others who were keen on the lands that they now occupy”

It’s as if Taib expects the Chinese to simply vacate their properties, leavving them to the state government free-of-charge, and flee elsewhere like the Penan – “the animals referred to by Taib” – and the people of Bakun and Batang Ai.

Even now, the land lease agreements are being renewed by the Land Office on a selective basis. Those who voted against the BN in the recent by-election in Sibu are not getting the discounts announced by Taib on the eve of polling. The discounts came after Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak (left) shamed Taib into action by insulting the voters of Sibu: “I want to make a deal with you. You do something for me and I will do something for you.”

Chinese no more the kingmakers
Even before Taib’s calculated insult against the Chinese on the land-lease issue, the chief minister had embarked on a series of measures to neutralise, marginalise and eliminate them from Sarawak politics. This has seen the Chinese community reduced from being kingmakers in the state to irrelevance.

At one time, the threat of Chinese support for the majority Dayak community and their legitimate aspirations was enough to bring Taib and his maternal uncle, Abdul Rahman Ya’kub, to their senses and into toeing their line. It’s a different story today.

The BN has allotted the Sarawak United People’s Party (SUPP) 19 state seats out of the 71 at stake in the state. This number includes four Dayak seats, which means the Chinese political strength is even less than it seems. The DAP has been whittling away at this number in recent years and is poised to consign Supp into the dustbins of political history.

The major strategic political mistake of the Chinese in Sarawak was not to support the Ming Court rebels and to Taib when they had the chance to do so. Initially, it began as a Malay revolt against Taib, before PBDS jumped on the bandwagon.

The other major strategic mistake was to go along with Taib’s systematic attempts to politically emasculate the Dayak majority, first by spawning the 1983 breakaway of PBDS from the Sarawak National Party (Snap), and then the emergence of Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) from PBDS, which was deregistered.

The move to register the Malaysian Dayak Congress (MDC) to replace PBDS was rejected, and this was followed by the Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party (SPDP) breakaway from Snap, which was deregistered until saved by the court. In the meantime, PRS was almost deregistered, but the timely 2008 general election saved the party from certain death.

Mistake of putting all political eggs into one basket
These two major strategic mistakes by the Chinese combined to confirm that they had placed all their political eggs in one basket – the Taib-Rahman political dynasty.

If the Chinese thought that this would bring about a major windfall for them, with the Dayaks out of the way and the Malays put in their place after Ming Court, they were sadly mistaken.

While PBB’s seats in the state assembly grew by leaps and bounds, Supp’s allocation fell drastically from the percentage it held during Stephen Kalong Ningkan’s time,

The Chinese have since realised that all heir political moves since 1981, when they ousted Rahman Ya’kub, from power have all been one mistake after another.

Taib lost no time in capitalising on the political mistakes of the Chinese and their growing irrelevance in the state government to put a finger in every pie in Sarawak. If there was money to be made anywhere in Sarawak, nothing moved until Taib gave his approval, but at a price.

The chief minister, his family and their dynasty grew enormously wealthy, as those with eyes can see, even as the Chinese suffered economically and had to make do with the crumbs like the Dayaks and Malays. Sibu is a classic example of the Chinese economy in Sarawak being in the doldrums.

Umno waiting to move in
Taib should no longer be puzzled about the Chinese. He should write off their support during the forthcoming state election, which should be held by the middle of next year. They have crossed the Rubicon.

What worries the Chinese in Sarawak the most is that Taib has created a situation in the state where Umno can march in, as it did in neighbouring Sabah, and take over on the ruins of PBB. It’s accepted argument that PBB will be history after Taib’s exit.

The Chinese are wishing now that they had not been a party to Taib’s calculated destruction of Snap ,which provided the first and second chief ministers for the state, Stephen Kalong Ningkan and Penghulu Tawi Sli.

Denying the Dayaks their rightful place under the Sarawak sun has cost the Chinese dearly. They will have a lot of time to repent at leisure in the years ahead as Umno stamps its mark and authority on the state.

The ruling party in Putrajaya is finished with running Sarawak through proxies. Its Sabah experience has shown that this can be done in Sarawak as well so as to directly shore up its position in Parliament – even as the opposition hounds bay for its blood at its doorsteps.

Source – Malaysiakini

Related Articles:

Taib! “You better go and not wait to be told”

Taib unsure whether to contest in State election

Abuse of power: PM’s Dept funding defeated BN candidates

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

The defeated Candidate for Padungan recently appeared in the media handing out MRP grants which was denied to the opposition by the UMNO-PBB-Barisan Nasional.

This is not the only incident of abuse of their power and funds by UMNO-PBB-Barisan Nasional! Inorder to consolidate their position and gain lost ground, they have hypocritically gone back on their words and have taken in frogs ala BN friendly Aduns and MP into their fold, initially extending the frogs MRP funds and more recently attempting giving them membership to a fledgling party (SUPP).

The Voters should note this is blatant abuse of their mandate and tax payers money. With that, they should in unison rise and vote UMNO-PBB-Barisan Nasional (for that matter PBB-Barisan Nasional together with the leaches in SUPP, SPDP and PR) out of power.

The BN – under the guise and funding of the Prime Minister’s Department – has appointed all the defeated BN election candidates as parliamentary and state constituency coordinators.

The landmark 2008 general election saw the Barisan Nasional losing many seats in both the federal Parliament and the state legislative assemblies. Needless to say, the ruling coalition also lost a few prized states to the Pakatan Rakyat led by Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim.

But although more than two years have passed, the BN federal government is insistent on not recognizing the mandates given by the people.

And to avenge the people’s mandates, the BN under the guise of the Prime Minister’s Department has appointed all the defeated BN election candidates as parliamentary and state constituency coordinators.

The job of these coordinators is to manage their respective “constituencies”, with the PM’s Department providing them annual grants and allocations similar to those enjoyed by the sitting BN MPs and state assemblymen.

Malaysia Chronicle

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SUPP caught sleeping on their job?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Sentosa was under SUPP until 2006 when it fell to to DAP a member of Pakatan Rakyat Sarawak.

YB Tan Joo Phooi was the Chairman of Majlis Perbandaran Padawan (local council neighbouring Sentosa).

Have SUPP and Barisan Nasional been sleeping on their job.

Kampung Bumbok despite the fact that the village is located near the city’s suburban area, particularly Kota Sentosa township do not have electricity! Can you imagine that?

If not for the forth coming 10th State Election, do you think, the following article will appear in Borneopost.

How nice. YB Tan Joo Phooi will bring the matter up to the relevant minister and authorities, in this case Public Utilities Minister Datuk Amar Awang Tengah Ali Hassan, to get the project done promptly. How prompt will that be?

Let us wait and see when electricity will be connected to Kampung Bumbok. The forth coming State Election is the 10th. 12th, 13th, 14th? It is your draem and guess!

And they profess that they are clueless what their supporters and voters want besides blaming Civil Servants for not bringing it up to the government!

30 pct of families yet to enjoy 24-hr power supply
Though living near the city, 30 per cent of families in Kampung Bumbok are yet to enjoy round-the-clock electricity.

It was revealed yesterday that more than 80 families out of the 270 in the village do not get 24-hour electricity supply like their fellow villagers.

This is despite the fact that the village is located near the city’s suburban area, particularly Kota Sentosa township.

Bumbok, with a population of about 1,450 people, is one of several Bidayuh villages under the Batu Kawah state seat held by Assistant Minister in the Chief Minister’s Department (Environment) Tan Joo Phoi.

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