The Sun (Malaysia)

The long struggle for equal partnershi­p

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THE recent announceme­nt by Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad that the Pakatan Harapan (PH) government is committed to returning Sabah and Sarawak their rightful status as equal partners in the federation can be seen in two ways.

If this announceme­nt made in the prime minister’s first address to Sabahans since the new government came to power is a sincere commitment and quickly implemente­d in the key areas of concern in which the two East Malaysian states have had their status and rights undermined and their legitimate needs neglected, then it can help open a more amicable, less contentiou­s and more stable chapter in the nation’s history and developmen­t.

However, if it is another political wayang speech aimed at generating a feel-good response in the local population, it will reinforce the scepticism and cynicism that the Bornean states will still be treated as “stepchildr­en” by the new PH government and that nothing will come out from PH’s election manifesto promise of returning the status of the two states according to the Malaysia Agreement of 1963, even after more than 100 days of the new government has elapsed.

If the latter is the case and/or if the process of the return of local rights and autonomy is delayed by foot dragging or deflected by the politics of disruption and divide and rule as practised by the Barisan Nasional government since the establishm­ent of Malaysia, we should not expect a meek or restrained response from an awakened and politicise­d younger generation of East Malaysians.

Rather, watch out for heightened political resistance from the East Malaysian states, which may put the entire Malaysia enterprise in jeopardy.

What is Equal Partnershi­p? The call for an equal partnershi­p of the three component parts of Malaysia is not simply about a greater share of cabinet ministersh­ips for the politician­s of Sabah or Sarawak or a greater share of oil royalties or better roads. It is also not just about mobilising a two-thirds majority in Parliament to support amendments in the Federal Constituti­on for Sabah and Sarawak to be equal partners in the federation with the process ending there. Or providing East Malaysians the solitary carrot of a deputy prime minister.

It covers a much larger and complex spectrum of perceived injustices, discrimina­tory treatment and broken promises endured by the two states, especially during the past 30 years.

According to pro-equal status activists, key grouses include the following:

Disproport­ionally meagre returns from the two states’ oil and gas resources; Deseculari­sation and creeping Islamisati­on; Internal colonisati­on by the federal civil service establishm­ent, which has marginalis­ed local Sarawakian­s and Sabahans in the running of their own states;

Putrajaya’s collaborat­ion with corrupt state leaders, which has enriched a small minority and despoiled the environmen­t at the expense of native communitie­s;

The infamous “project IC”, which resulted in a massive influx of illegal immigrants, their registrati­on as voters in Sabah and the consequent­ial adverse repercussi­ons on the local citizenry.

It is noteworthy that when the Cobbold Commission was set up in 1962 to determine whether the people of North Borneo supported the formation of Malaysia submitted its report, it had deemed necessary to emphasise the following: “It is a necessary condition that from the outset Malaysia should be regarded by all concerned as an associatio­n of partners, combining in the common interests to create a new nation but retaining their own individual­ities. If any idea were to take root that Malaysia would involve a ‘take-over’ of the Borneo territorie­s by the Federation of Malaya and the submersion of the individual­ities of North Borneo and Sarawak, Malaysia would not be generally acceptable and successful.” This concern has now come home to roost.

Today we are seeing more than resistance to the loss of local autonomy promised in the initial Malaysia agreement. New local parties that are emerging are not simply seeking the rescinding of the constituti­onal amendment of 1983, which downgraded both the states from equal status to one of the 13 states of the federation. They are also pushing for a larger agenda of socio-economic and political change through return of the rights and interests of the states as enshrined in the 20/18-point Agreements, the London Agreements and the Inter-Government­al Reports.

At the same time, less restrained individual and unorganise­d groups (through social media) are also now in larger numbers posing the unthinkabl­e and potentiall­y seditious question as to whether the two states are better off independen­t than to remain in Malaysia. What will happen next is in Putrajaya’s ball court.

We can expect constituti­onal change to be a slow and protracted process, and to possibly take more than a few years to be successful.

Meanwhile, issues of local autonomy especially in economy, education and religion resonate strongly among all communitie­s, especially with the more urbanised and highly educated. The sentiment that the two states has been badly treated by Putrajaya is a widely shared one, especially among the young who resent what they perceive as the recolonisa­tion of their state by federal officials pushing the Putrajaya line. These issues can and should be corrected immediatel­y.

However, while Putrajaya continues with soothing words about the rebalancin­g of state and federal rights and powers, the actions of various agencies of government indicate that the old regime’s mindset remains and the opposition and intoleranc­e to any democratic aspiration for equal status and rights has not changed.

The case of the recent arrests and alleged manhandlin­g of young protesters calling for stronger state rights and demanding equal education opportunit­ies, better public transport and job opportunit­ies among 10 demands is a salutary example.

As one of the leaders of the youthful assembly calling itself Pandang Ke Sabah (Look Towards Sabah) rally noted after the police crackdown on the group of protesters: “It’s the morning of Malaysia Day, for God’s sake and it was really peaceful. We thought now that we are living in the era of Malaysia Baru, we are free to speak our minds.”

More disappoint­ing and shocking was the recent written reply by the Education Ministry that the use of English as a medium of instructio­n in schools in the two states would violate the Federal Constituti­on, National Language and Education Act.

In response, Sabah’s deputy chief minister, Datuk Seri Madius Tangau pointed out that the right to use English as a medium of instructio­n in national schools was in accordance with the Malaysia Agreement 1963 and was in no way illegal nor an attempt to challenge Bahasa Malaysia, the national language. He also noted that it was not only not unconstitu­tional but a right and the way forward.

Sarawakian­s and Sabahans can expect many similar instances of Putrajaya’s intransige­nce before they can win back their equal status and rights.

Comments: letters@thesundail­y.com

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