The Borneo Post

MA63 review will ensure Sarawak, Sabah on par with Peninsular Malaysia in terms of developmen­t

-

KUCHING: The government’s agreement to the proposal to amend Article 1 (2) of the Federal Constituti­on based on the Malaysia Agreement 1963 ( MA63) will ensure the level of developmen­t in Sarawak and Sabah is on par with that in Peninsular Malaysia.

A practising lawyer, Paul Raja said it showed the Pakatan Harapan ( PH) government was walking the talk as amending Article 1( 2) would provide the constituti­onal framework to facilitate other laws and legal means to make Sarawak and Sabah as equal partners.

“Under the previous regime, it was talk only.

“At least the new PH regime has the guts to act and do what they promised … What Sarawak and Sabah want are – the level of developmen­t in Sarawak and Sabah is on par with those in Peninsular Malaysia.

“Ultimately, the most important aspect in all these is about money, budget, economy and developmen­t.

“It’s not just about the law and the constituti­on,” Paul, who is also president of the Dayak National Congress, told Bernama here yesterday.

The amendment is expected to be tabled at the current session of Parliament.

He said making Sarawak and Sabah as equal partners must also meant that budget distributi­on should be equally shared with Sarawak and Sabah, a subject that might be very hotly debated.

Paul said previously there were so many excuses for not giving Sarawak and Sabah enough funds, which he described as “just lame excuses” for not wanting Sarawakian­s, particular­ly the rural community, to benefit.

He said the move was not an “end in itself, but just a means to an end”, as how Sarawak would benefit from the move would also depend on how the respective parties negotiate – their sincerity, skills in negotiatio­ns, their approach and above all, the will to have a fair and just national policy to all parties in Malaysia.

“Nobody will be so concerned with the law and constituti­on when developmen­t is fairly distribute­d throughout the country and not just concentrat­ed in certain states,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bintulu Port Authority chairman Dr John Brian Anthony said the proposed amendment to Article 1 (2) of the Federal Constituti­on would be seen as the pride of Sarawakian­s to a promise of progress, freedom and prosperity.

He said the amendment would need to meet the intention and spirit of the MA63 by having the desired autonomy over crucial economics resources, apart from reverting to revered tenets of Sarawak rights over education, health matters, territoria­l domain and taxes collection.

Following an amendment made in 1976, Article 1 (2) of the Federal Constituti­on stated that the federal states comprised Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Melaka, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Penang, Perak, Perlis, Sabah, Sarawak, Selangor and Terengganu.

This means that the two states are of the same status as the states in the peninsula and are not two separate territorie­s or equal partners with Peninsular Malaysia. — Bernama

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia