Not so easy for Sarawak to leave Malaysia, says Baru
Bian Tracy Patrick
Works Minister Baru Bian launches the Pan Borneo
Dashboard, which monitors the progress of the Pan Borneo Highway project on a
real-time basis, in Kota Kinabalu today.
KOTA KINABALU: Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian has rejected
the idea of the state leaving Malaysia, saying it is “legally difficult” to
secede.
However, he said it
was the choice of Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS) if it wanted to take Sarawak out
of the federation.
“It is legally
difficult but that is my opinion. However, it will not be that simple,” he
said, adding that there was no law to allow the state to pull out.
The works minister was responding to a suggestion by
Sarawak United People’s Party (SUPP) Youth for GPS to hold a referendum on the
state’s future in Malaysia.
SUPP Youth secretary
Milton Foo said yesterday the ruling coalition should set a time frame for its
negotiations with Putrajaya for equal status.
In the event the negotiations fail, he said a referendum
should be held to gather the people’s views on whether they wanted to remain in
Malaysia or leave.
Commenting on
Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng’s statement that Sarawak would go bankrupt in
three years, Baru acknowledged that the phrase used by Lim was inappropriate.
“You can say it is a
‘deficit’ in terms of accounting. Maybe, it was a wrong choice of word,” he
said.
At a Sarawak DAP
fundraising dinner in Kuching last week, Lim said the state might end up
bankrupt in three years under GPS.
He said that
Sarawak’s RM30 billion reserves would run out in three years with its annual
budget of RM11 billion.
Lim’s claim was
swiftly rebutted by GPS leaders who questioned his sense of accounting because
the projected budget for this year is actually a surplus of RM122 million.
Baru also said the
federal government would only know the exact completion date of the Pan Borneo
Highway once it took over the project in September.
He said the
government was allowing the contractors to carry on with the project until the
expiry of the notice at the end of September.
He hoped that any
compensation disputes, including land possession, still pending in court would
be settled as soon as possible.
“Recently, there
were complaints of unpaid claims. The complainants have direct access to me and
I am willing to look at their claims,” he said after launching the Pan Borneo
Dashboard here today.
The dashboard allows
the agencies involved to monitor the progress of the project on a real-time
basis without having to be physically present.
My comments:
[Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian has rejected the idea of
the state leaving Malaysia, saying it is “legally difficult” to secede.]
Nobody thinks that it is easy to secede Malaysia or Malaya
for good as Sarawak is the Auto-teller machine to Malaya which relies on
Sarawak heavily for survival. It is
understood that we Sarawakians have to be strong and stay really united to exercise
our self-determination to seek our independence in the International Court of
Justice one day. Have you heard of such
a proverb “Where there is a will, there is a way”. Constructing Pan Borneo Highway is not easy,
either, do you mean that it should be cancelled or stopped?
As a
Sarawakian, I wonder if you have ever explored of all the possibilities of
Sarawak withdrawing from Malaya/Malaysia.
Or are you too contented or pleased with the lofty post that you are
holding now to think of Sarawak withdrawing from Malaya for good.
MA63 which has
been breached more than 600 times by the federal government should justify
Sarawak to seek justice to secede from Malaysia in the International Court of
Justice.
MA63 is a
fraud from the very beginning when Sarawak and Sabah were the colonies of the
British government to sign the international treaty. This is another point that we can explore to
secede. The Chagos Island is a good
precedence for Sarawak to follow.
Going for
referendum is one of the options that we are looking forwards to.
Did you know that the United Nations passed
Decolonisation resolution 1514 or 1541 in 1960 to allow the people in the
colonised country to exercise self-determination to seek independence from
colonial power?