Invisible hands of Perikatan Nasional in Sabah’s latest political coup?
By Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy
THE last thing that the unity government needs is rebellion among those who support the government.
Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS), Barisan Nasional (BN) and Warisan might support the unity government having signed the memorandum of agreement, but then politics in Sabah is unsteady, mercurial and erratic.
Even the coup organised by Sabah BN chief Datuk Seri Bung Mokhtar Radin together with Warisan against the chief Minister Datuk Seri Hajiji Noor of GRS, the motive seems to revolve around the question of money, power and endless greed.
I wonder whether politics in Sabah could take on a more noble direction despite the presence of uneasy and neo-colonial relationship with the government in Putrajaya.
Politicians in Sabah and Sarawak should be uniting to reclaim their lost rights from the earlier federal set up.
Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy
The amendment to the Malaysia Agreement of 1963 (MA1963) is all about regaining lost rights and elevating the status of these two principal regions to the level and status of Peninsula Malaysia.
But alas, the road to the ultimate restoration of rights, unfortunately, is paved with rocks and stones.
Hajiji might have regained his majority of 44 seats in the 79-seat Sabah assembly, but things are far from over. It might even be a pyrrhic victory.
Bung has wowed that he would not rest until the Hajiji is brought down from his high pedestal.
Does Perikatan Nasional have a hand?
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim who claimed that the Sabah crises is storm in the teacup might be meeting the principal warring parties with the aim of resolution after his return from Indonesia.
UMNO president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi thinks that he has a formula to rescue Sabah from the present imbroglio but I am not sure what the formula is. It remains to be seen what Anwar will do to resolve the political crisis in Sabah.
Certainly, he will try his best, but I am not sure if “his best” is enough to put Sabah on the road to political stability.
The way Sabah politics is “rolling” – to use the term coined by Bung – it might be more than storm in the teacup.
If not resolved within a short period, it might affect not just the performance of the unity government but the very unity itself.
The unity government which is hardly one month in power does not need regional centrifugal tendencies. Certainly not at the time Sabah and Sarawak stand to gain from a tolerant federal government.
I wonder whether PN (Perikatan Nasional) has any role in the present crisis. I wouldn’t be the least surprised that they are surreptitiously engaging in the proverbial game of throwing the stones and hiding their hands behind their backs.
Anyway, why shouldn’t an opposition remain quiet when there could be political opportunities to capitalise upon? Bung might think that he is a fighter functioning in the larger interests of Sabah.
His past performance in the Parliament is nothing to be proud of. The only reason he is being tolerated is because of the Sabah factor.
If he is a politician from Peninsula Malaysia, he would face his oblivion long time ago. The removal of a politician from helming a Sabah GLC (government-lined company) could have triggered the crises leading to the failed coup.
But then Sabah political crises is all about who gets what, when and how. Unfortunately, it is never about the people in Sabah especially those who are living from hand to mouth.
It is not alleviating poverty level or creating sustainable development to address unemployment.
Sabah has proven to the world that the state is never behind when it comes crises, revolts and rebellions.
There is so much porosity in politics that the boundary lines between political parties, ideologies and principles are blurred beyond recognition.
Only when ideas crystallise around ideologies and principles predicated on the need to address the well-being of society, then politics get stabilised. – Jan 9, 2023
Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy is the state assemblyperson for Perai. He is also Deputy Chief Minister II of Penang.
The amendment to the Malaysia Agreement of 1963 (MA1963) is all about regaining lost rights and elevating the status of these two principal regions to the level and status of Peninsula Malaysia.
But alas, the road to the ultimate restoration of rights, unfortunately, is paved with rocks and stones.
Hajiji might have regained his majority of 44 seats in the 79-seat Sabah assembly, but things are far from over. It might even be a pyrrhic victory.
Bung has wowed that he would not rest until the Hajiji is brought down from his high pedestal.
Does Perikatan Nasional have a hand?
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim who claimed that the Sabah crises is storm in the teacup might be meeting the principal warring parties with the aim of resolution after his return from Indonesia.
UMNO president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi thinks that he has a formula to rescue Sabah from the present imbroglio but I am not sure what the formula is. It remains to be seen what Anwar will do to resolve the political crisis in Sabah.
Certainly, he will try his best, but I am not sure if “his best” is enough to put Sabah on the road to political stability.
The way Sabah politics is “rolling” – to use the term coined by Bung – it might be more than storm in the teacup.
If not resolved within a short period, it might affect not just the performance of the unity government but the very unity itself.
The unity government which is hardly one month in power does not need regional centrifugal tendencies. Certainly not at the time Sabah and Sarawak stand to gain from a tolerant federal government.
I wonder whether PN (Perikatan Nasional) has any role in the present crisis. I wouldn’t be the least surprised that they are surreptitiously engaging in the proverbial game of throwing the stones and hiding their hands behind their backs.
Anyway, why shouldn’t an opposition remain quiet when there could be political opportunities to capitalise upon? Bung might think that he is a fighter functioning in the larger interests of Sabah.
His past performance in the Parliament is nothing to be proud of. The only reason he is being tolerated is because of the Sabah factor.
If he is a politician from Peninsula Malaysia, he would face his oblivion long time ago. The removal of a politician from helming a Sabah GLC (government-lined company) could have triggered the crises leading to the failed coup.
But then Sabah political crises is all about who gets what, when and how. Unfortunately, it is never about the people in Sabah especially those who are living from hand to mouth.
It is not alleviating poverty level or creating sustainable development to address unemployment.
Sabah has proven to the world that the state is never behind when it comes crises, revolts and rebellions.
There is so much porosity in politics that the boundary lines between political parties, ideologies and principles are blurred beyond recognition.
Only when ideas crystallise around ideologies and principles predicated on the need to address the well-being of society, then politics get stabilised. – Jan 9, 2023
Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy is the state assemblyperson for Perai. He is also Deputy Chief Minister II of Penang.
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