The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Children of mixed marriages should be recognised natives – Baru

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KUCHING: Children who are born to parents of mixed marriages between a non-native person and a native of Sarawak should be recognised as natives, said Selangau MP Baru Bian.

In supporting the recent calls made by Rurum Kelabit Associatio­n president Datuk Dr Philip Raja and Dayak Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI) secretary-general Libat Langub on the issue, Baru said he had discussed the matter with his fellow leaders in Parti Sarawak Bersatu (PSB) and it was agreed that the party would give priority to his matter.

“For the benefit of all the offspring of mixed marriages in Sarawak, we pledge in our manifesto to protect their identity and rights by taking immediate steps to amend the definition of ‘Natives’ in the Federal and State Constituti­on and the Interpreta­tion Ordinance, to include any children of mixed marriages between natives and non-natives,” he said in a statement yesterday.

He said his first experience with this issue was when he was acting for the plaintiffs in the Nor Nyawai case in the High Court.

According to him, the AttorneyGe­neral’s (AG) Chambers had contended that the plaintiffs had to prove that they were pure natives, and that none of their ancestors had married outside the races listed as ‘native’ in the Schedule of the Sarawak Interpreta­tion Ordinance.

“Although the AG’s Chambers subsequent­ly withdrew their assertions, Justice Ian Chin noted in his judgment that ‘if the contention­s which I have referred to earlier are upheld, it would strip many Sarawakian­s who are the products of mixed marriages (between a native on the one hand and a non-native) of their native status’,” said Baru who is also Ba Kelalan assemblyma­n.

He pointed out that problems have arisen in recent times with the Land and Survey Department which has made it more difficult for children of mixed native/non-native marriages to inherit native land.

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