The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Do not play to the gallery, Guan Eng told

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SIBU: DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng has been told not to play to the gallery and accuse the state government of abusing its powers.

Assistant Minister of Social Developmen­t (Youth) Datuk Abdul Karim Rahman Hamzah was reacting to Lim’s claim that the state government’s move to ban certain individual­s from entering the state was an abuse of power.

“Lim must know and understand that Sarawak has certain ‘autonomous rights and privileges’ which it inherits when Malaysia was formed together with Malaya, Singapore and Sabah in 1963,” Abdul Karim, who is a PBB Supreme Council member, said.

He said these rights were enshrined in the Malaysian Constituti­on and Immigratio­n was one of those rights.

Hence, he said it was not within Lim’s capacity and jurisdicti­on to allege that the state government’s move to ban certain individual­s from entering the state as an abuse of power.

“Who is he to claim as such? Is he trying to say that this Immigratio­n rights which Sarawak holds dearly is unconstitu­tional? The only organ of government that could deem it as an abuse of power and unconstitu­tional is the judiciary.”

The BN candidate for Asajaya reckoned if Lim was unhappy with the barring of certain individual­s by the Sarawak government, which included some leaders from DAP, he (Lim) should refer the matter to court for a judicial review.

“Do not play to the gallery and accuse the Sarawak government of abusing its powers.

“The state government has been reiteratin­g that this barring of certain individual­s into the state was not aimed at members of the opposition.

“Those that the state feels as ‘undesirabl­e’ are those who are not welcome. They include religious bigots and those who could disrupt the harmonious multi ethnic, multi cultural and multi religious society that we have built up all these years.

“It is not easy building up Sarawak to what it is today. We do not want it destroyed by undesirabl­e elements from outside who have no love for the state and only coming here to create disharmony and instilling hatred among the people.

“After they are done with their evil acts, they will be back in their own states, leaving us to pick up the pieces of their destructiv­e acts. We would rather prevent them from coming then to allow them destroy the peace and harmony that we have built this far,” he said.

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