New Straits Times

NO UPSET SEEN IN SABAH

CM Musa Aman and team likely to fend off a strong assault by Shafie & Co.

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DEEP in Sabah’s interior marked by rugged terrain and quite nerveracki­ng driving conditions, life is simple. But not politics, where a resurgent opposition is mounting the biggest yet challenge against the status quo.

With a myriad of political parties vying for seats, the battle for Sabah is down to incumbent Barisan Nasional and Parti Warisan Sabah, a loose Umno splinter group trying to stage an upset.

Beginners in Sabah politics will be drowning in the state parties’ alphabet soup with scores of mystifying acronyms used by them. Here are some of them: PCS, PHRS, PKAN, PPRS, SAPP, PPRKS, PKS and Sabah STAR and Sarawak STAR.

Having said that, the battlegrou­nds are mostly in the Kadazandus­un Murut seats where Warisan and some other Sabah-based parties are trying to make deep inroads.

After BN, which is running in all seats, Warisan is the only party that is contesting most of the seats in Sabah, with 17 parliament­ary seats and 45 state seats, marking a strong electoral debut.

In GE13, BN won 22 of the 25 parliament­ary seats and 48 of the 60 state seats in Sabah. A simple majority is 31 seats.

Based on a conservati­ve estimate, BN may win 18 parliament­ary seats and 45 state seats, thus denying Warisan a shot at power in Sabah.

“Sabah should be safe for BN,” said one political analyst.

But the election campaign is as rugged as Sabah’s terrain.

Kiulu, a sleepy small sub-district in the foothills of Mount Kinabalu and which remains largely untouched by modern developmen­t, for example, is seeing a four-cornered fight in the 14th General Election this Wednesday.

Kiulu Valley, in the district of Tuaran in the northweste­rn part of Sabah, has some 12,000 voters.

Located about 60km from Kota Kinabalu, people here depend on agricultur­e as the main source of income. This includes rubber, fruit orchards, padi and mixed gardens (mostly vegetables, pineapples and ginger).

By the way, the name Kiulu is derived from a plant that is called Tulu, which is a small bamboo that commonly grows on riverbanks.

Poring, one of the 105 villages in Kiulu, has a primary school with just 12 students. But there are 12 teachers attached to the school.

To get from one village to another, they rely on four-wheeldrive jeeps to traverse hills, muddy trails and rocky rivers.

Ahead of the general election, the state seat of Kiulu has been thrust into the national limelight because of a showdown between a former beauty queen and a journalist-turned-politician.

Law graduate Jo-Anna Sue Henley Rampas, 29, is a former Unduk Ngadau (Sabah Harvest Festival) beauty queen, singer and model. She faces incumbent Parti Bersatu Sabah’s Datuk Joniston Bangkuai.

Her uncle, Louis Rampas, was the PBS assemblyma­n before Joniston took over. Joniston had won the seat on the BN ticket with a razor-thin majority of just 44 votes in GE13.

The contest for Kiulu is a fourcorner­ed fight with Terence Sinti from Parti Solidariti Tanah Airku (STAR) and Gaibin Ransoi from Parti Cinta Sabah (PCS) joining in the fray.

Jo Anna was born in Kota Kinabalu to an ethnic Kadazandus­un mother from Kiulu and a British father.

She was raised by her grandmothe­r in Poturidong, Kiulu, until the age of 9 before moving to Penampang and Kuala Lumpur. The candidate said she aimed to raise the income of rubber tappers and fight to get them land titles if she wins.

“I hope people don’t just vote for me based on my looks,” she said.

Joniston said a wakil rakyat should be assessed based on his or her track record and not just by looks.

“As a local, I understand the plight of the people here. I come from a poor family and I had to walk a long way to school,” he said.

Low commodity prices seemed a major concern among farmers in this election. Of course, the issue of Sabah for Sabahans was the main slogan for Warisan — led by Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal — STAR and other small Sabah parties.

But most of the anger that cuts across Sabahan politician­s is directed at Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad for his role in “Project IC” which granted citizenshi­p to foreigners during his 22-year reign.

Datuk Seri Wilfred Madius Tangau, the United Pasokmomog­un Kadazandus­un Murut Organisati­on president, said Dr Mahathir has not apologised for the controvers­ial project, adding that “Sabah will never forget”.

“Twenty-two years as PM, 22 years Sabahans suffered,” said Datuk Seri Panglima Radin Malleh, who is defending the state seat of Melalap. He is a big critic of Project IC.

Melalap is part of the Tenom parliament­ary seat where the Muruts are the majority.

Datuk Seri Salleh Said Keruak, who dropped by in Tenom midway through the 11-day campaign, told BN workers that Shafie’s Warisan is not a party for the future and that Sabahans should reject politician­s with self-interests.

Across BN events, the main narratives are about continuity, federal commitment to develop the state and restoring the rights of Sabah under the Malaysia Agreement 1963.

Salleh cited the Sabah portion of the Pan-Borneo Highway project, which will open up new economic areas and generate a lot of job opportunit­ies.

Warisan’s Shafie, dumped from Umno and the federal cabinet in

But most of the anger that cuts across Sabahan politician­s is directed at Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad for his role in ‘Project IC’ which granted citizenshi­p to foreigners during his 22-year reign.

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 ??  ?? (Clockwise, from top left) Tan Sri Musa Aman, Datuk Seri Salleh Said Keruak, Datuk Joniston Bangkuai, Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal and Jo-Anna Sue Henley Rampas
(Clockwise, from top left) Tan Sri Musa Aman, Datuk Seri Salleh Said Keruak, Datuk Joniston Bangkuai, Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal and Jo-Anna Sue Henley Rampas
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