A Senator will be the next Sabah leader to leave the ruling BN coalition
to join the Sabah Reform Front, a movement set up by Wilfred Bumburing
and Lajim Ukin, and aligned to the Pakatan Rakyat led by Opposition
Leader Anwar Ibrahim, to fight for change in the poverty-stricken East
Malaysian state.
Amongst names tossed around as to who could be the latest to make the
switch out of the BN is Senator Maijol Mahap, an Upko vice president who
is believed to have tendered his resignation from the party earlier
this week.
"A giant rally will be held in Kota Marudu on August 12 and a major
announcement will be made. Anwar will be there to speak to the crowds
and join in the celebration. Najib is not being smart by choosing to
come at a date so near to our event. He will be humiliated as he won't
be able to reverse the trend. Just like Muhyiddin, he will fail," PKR
vice president Tian Chua told Malaysia Chronicle.
Tian was referring to last night's news that Najib planned to head to
Sabah on August 11, where the PM said he would announce the details of a
Royal Commission of Inquiry into the illegal immigrants problem there.
Maijol the man?
It is believed Maijol's term as Senator will only expire next year. In the meantime, he cannot be sacked or removed.
Malaysia Chronicle could
not reach Maijol for confirmation, while Tian declined to reveal
identity details. However, the PKR stalwart confirmed that another
leader was coming on board and that there would be several more joining
soon.
"It can be said that I belong to Upko which is a party that is
attractive and has a great culture. President Tan Sri Bernard Dompok is a
good and competent leader. Upko is very fortunate to have leaders like
him. However, after studying the problems persisting in Sabah, while
visible settlement efforts, with a heavy heart, I have to leave the
struggle," Maijol is reported to have said in several Sabah blogs.
"I no longer had faith that the BN can or will resolve critical issues
in Sabah, such as the issue of illegal immigrants which are long
lasting, high poverty rate in Sabah, the elimination of racial KDM
(Kadazandusun Murut) from the public service and scholarship awards, the
land problems, 5% oil royalty, 'Borneo-nization' and the Cabotage
Policy."
Tremendous pressure to stop BN breakup
The
embattled Najib is under tremendous pressure to stop Sabah BN from
breaking up after losing two Members of Parliament to the Pakatan
Rakyat.
Wilfred, the former Upko deputy chief, is the Tuaran MP and Lajim, an
Umno supreme council member, is the Beaufort MP. Both men are now
independent lawmakers aligned to the Pakatan.
So far, neither men have joined any of the Pakatan parties of DAP, PAS
and PKR, but Wlifred is expected to move into PKR while Lajim is
believed to be keen to join PAS. It is not clear yet where Maijol is
headed but it could be any of the Pakatan parties or Sapp.
Pakatan's role is to provide them with an umbrella under which they can
contest, iron out disputes and to prevent multi-corner fights so as to
enhance the Opposition's strength in taking on BN, which has
controversially ruled Sabah since 1963.
"Sabah leaders who leave BN can also join Sapp. There is no restriction,
it is up to the individuals. At this stage, we look at the overall goal
of freeing the people of Sabah from poverty and oppression above
everything else," said Tian, the Pakatan chief negotiator in the
agreement.
Will Najib succeed where Muhyiddin failed
Indeed,
the long-anticipated exodus of leaders from the corruption-tainted BN
into the Opposition is finally picking momentum. It is expected to
intensify as leaders from Sarawak, Johor and other states declare their
stand ahead of the general election.
All eyes are now on whether Najib will succeed in stopping his nemesis,
Anwar Ibrahim, and succeed where his deputy, Muhyiddin Yassin, had
failed.
Last Saturday, the Deputy Prime Minister had also headed to Sabah - a
day before Wilfred and Lajim were due to officially announce their exit
from the BN. But Muhyiddin could not stop the duo.
“You heard the speech of Wilfred Bumburing... suggesting he has
absolutely no confidence in the prime minister and the Umno
government... the vast disparity between the rich and the poor, the
marginalisation of the masses there and the failure to accept
recommendations for the formation of the RCI on the illegals issue,”
Anwar told a press conference earlier this week.
“I will be back in Sabah on the 12th (of August) with some more positive
news. Because Umno has ridiculed me for so long, saying that there are
no surprises,” the Opposition Leader, widely seen to be Malaysia's next
prime minister, teased.
Arrest the 'M' in Project M if you are sincere!
The
issue of illegal workers given citizenship and permanent residency in
exchange for voting BN is a long-standing grouse in Sabah. Not only have
Sabahans been squeezed out of jobs and forced to accept reduced slices
of the economic pie, the social problems of heightened and violent
crimes plus overcrowding in housing and public amenities have been
horrendous.
Sabahans blame the "diabolical plot" on the BN, accusing the coalition
of trying to cling to power via the Project M, where the 'M' allegedly
stands for Mahathir Mohamad, the former premier who ruled between 1981
and 2003. Mahathir has denied any responsibility for the scheme but
Sabahans have never forgiven him and bay for his blood continuously.
Official figures put the number of illegals in Sabah at several hundreds
of thousands but it might be above a million, some experts have warned.
"We
welcome Najib's announcement that he will reveal the RCI details when
he comes over. We challenge him to present a comprehensive plan but we
are very sure that Najib will only be able to give his usual vague
watered-down terms of reference," said Tian.
"The test is, can Najib launch a real inquiry that is independent,
neutral and focused without exposing Dr M? Would Najib dare to arrest Dr
M? Najib shouldn't waste time with doubletalk, he should put it to test
and let Sabahans see for themselves how sincere he and BN are."
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