KOTA KINABALU: Maverick politician Jeffrey Kitingan wants to renegotiate the Malaysia Agreement, the founding document of federation, and is seeking a meeting with the Prime Minister to do so.
He hopes to strike a renewed agreement on the rights of Sabah and Sarawak as members of the Malaysian federation.
He said the two states were in an advantageous position because the federal administration depended on the bloc of MPs from the two states to remain in power. (There are 56 parliamentary seats for the two states out of a total of 222 in the Dewan Rakyat; all but four are held by Barisan Nasional members.)
"Sabah and Sarawak control the Parliament. We control the government. Without Sabah and Sarawak, the present government would have collapsed," he said, in a reference to the crucial importance of the Barisan Nasional's eastern seats underpinning the party's current 61-seat majority in the Dewan Rakyat.
Dewan Rakyat | 222 |
Barisan Nasional | 138 |
Pakatan Rakyat | 77 |
Majority | 61 |
Independents | 7 |
Balance of power | |
Sabah | 25 (BN 22 Ind 2 DAP 1) |
Sarawak | 31 (BN 30 DAP 1) |
"We can capitalise on this situation and actually bring the federal government to the table and negotiate a new deal, a renewed Malaysia Agreement, a renewed 20 Points,” he said.
However, he would need the backing of Sabah's BN leaders to make such a meeting happen.
"If they don't use this opportunity to capitalise on the advantage, that means our leaders are not interested in solving Sabah's problems and are only interested in money."
Earlier this month, Jeffrey, who is PKR's chief for Sabah and Sarawak, led a delegation from the so-called Common Interest Group of Malaysia on a visit to London where they met members of the British Parliament to present the East Malaysian states' grievances over the Malaysia Agreement, to which Britain was a signatory.
"We consider the British government still responsible for our welfare, our interests and our rights in the Federation of Malaysia as Britain was the one which had handed us to the federation," he said when announcing the visit last month.
“Sabahans have been warned that their marginalisation will become irreversible unless they retake control of their destiny from the ruling elite in Putrajaya’, Jeffrey said at the public forum organised by a group of citizens calling themselves “Saya Anak Bangsa Malaysia”.
READ MORE HERE at FMT: Change or be forever on the margin, Sabahans told
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