Hornbill Unleashed

December 28, 2010

Sarawakians Wake Up: Development Is Not Reward For Supporting BN, But Your Rights

Filed under: Alternatives,Human rights,Politics — Hornbill Unleashed @ 12:01 AM
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Karim Raslan

Travelling through Sarawak has prompted me to think about the fundamental paradoxes that lie at the heart of governance in Malaysia.

While they’re at their most pronounced in Sarawak, the themes and challenges are pretty much uniform wherever you go in the country.

As in the peninsula, the cities and towns of Sarawak have turned against the BN. At the same time, most rural areas remain solidly ‘blue’. It’s a mirror of image of what is happening across the South China Sea, with the notable exception of Kelantan.

So what’s the contradiction? Well, those who’ve benefited the most from the BN development policies and politics – viz the urban Malaysians of all races — have become the ruling coalition’s toughest critics.

They’re not thankful supplicants — kissing the hands of the local MP or state assembly member. Ordinary Malaysians want more and they want it now. In their eyes, legislators are just ‘public servants’ – whose basic obligation should be on serving.

The critical factor is that urban Malaysians are no longer dependant on the BN for basic amenities like water, housing or electricity. Besides that, many now work in the private sector. Their livelihoods are no longer solely dependent on political influence.

Because of this, they’re able to turn their backs on the patronage and service ‘machine’ that empowered them and indeed their parents’ generation.

Educated and well-informed, they’ve started questioning the way the BN has governed for decades. They deplore shady back-room deals and controversial use of public funds. They want greater openness and transparency. Of course, the BN has proven deeply resistant to greater freedoms of any kind, especially for the media.

But the voters are smart. They understand the connection between civil liberties and government services. They know that a strong media will question and probe the deals that have driven up the cost of many public projects.

Still, tight media controls have not stopped the public from being highly critical of the leaders proffered by the BN.

I find it hard to believe that Khir Toyo and Noh Omar are the best Malay leaders that can be found in Selangor. Surely there must be hundreds — if not thousands — of highly-educated Malay professionals to be recruited from Subang Jaya, Kepong and Melawati — the ‘cream’ of the NEP?

Why don’t these men and women want to join Umno?

The failure to recruit the best human resource lies at the core of Umno’s continuing failure to win back the urban Malay middle classes. It also reinforces my point as the products of the NEP turn their back on the original ‘agent’ of change — namely Umno.

The same dilemma is slowly emerging in Sarawak.

Take Sibu, the business hub of the Rajang river basin, for example. The city is remarkably clean, organized, and safe. Indeed, the covered market — surely one of the largest in the country — is an impressive sight.

As we all know, the city’s voters rejected the BN in spectacular fashion at a by-election only months ago. This was a calculated, considered move by Sibu’s predominantly Foochow Chinese community, who knew they could manage without government assistance.

However, the same is not true of the small long-house communities beyond the city limits. The disparities between these areas and the urban centers are stark. Roads shrink and eventually disappear in rural Sarawak.

Running water is also a major problem — especially during the dry season. Many of the longhouses must rely on large water tanks and elaborate rain-water traps to survive.

In certain cases, the local rivers have also been polluted by the use of industrial-scale fertilizers in nearby plantations or pig farming.

Difficulties in enforcing the Native Customary Rights (NCR) over the land also often results in the dislocation of these communities.

The haphazard access to public utilities and property rights – have made rural Sarawakians very dependant on developmental politics.

Sarawak’s rural poor realize that only the state government of the day can help them. They therefore keep voting for BN representatives in the hope that their needs will eventually be met.

Therein lays the contradiction for the BN: providing these services would mean an inevitable loss of rural support.

As a consequence, Sarawak’s piece-meal development of the interior reinforces the BN control. Indeed, it makes communities more wary of challenging authority.

Needless to say, this is no way to achieve the ETP, NEM, 1Malaysia or any of the ambitious goals we have set for ourselves as a nation.

Development is not a reward, it is a right. Solving the paradox, however, comes at an exceedingly high political cost. But then again, the BN has no choice: we simply cannot go on like this. — Bintulu Org

17 Comments »

  1. Karim Ruslan article amplifies the “value” of expanding economic development to the rural area, beyond mere economics but to extend it for the purpose of liberating people,even while recognising that free people may not necessarily appreciate their liberator; freedom as many Americans would exclaim with passion, is the endgame.Is that not the endgame for Pakatan Rakyat for rural folks ?

    It remains a riddle, as to whether Pakatan Rakyat presumed interest in rural Sarawak can be construed as a political cause for liberation -even while it is clear that Barisan National is cementing their “manipulative” relationship with the native leaderships (Penghulu, Tuai Rumah)through RM 420 monthly disbursement.Or is the “presumed” interest, primarily arise from electioneering, as BN would be quick to spin the propaganda ?

    So while the riddle persist, the rural folks may remain firmly in the bosom of their BN local handlers, properly satiated with liquor,food and entertainment to engender a sense of TLC from the YBs and their entourage, even if its ever so fleeting.

    The riddle can be broken. In the long term, if and when – the politicians ever become philosophers/liberators and would spread the nations wealth beyond the natural confines of economic laws (which must have prevented the hard-nosed economists in the state and federal planning units from expending more than the usual MRP disbursement for rural development)rural folks would join their urban brethren and be set free.

    What about, in the short term ? $ for $, Pakatan Rakyat can never match BN in rural Sarawak. So “breaking the riddle” with $ is not on. But if the currency is “liberation” not the almight $, Pakatan Rakyat may have a chance.The difficulty, of course, is that a cause as noble as “liberation” – can’t be faked. But as an added incentive: I reckon the support, once it is secured through sincerity, would surely be a notch higher than those obtained through BN method of carrots and stick.

    In any Election, the reality of resource,time and other constraints will set in. Pakatan, may choose to concentrate their effort in town and cities, to make best use of their resource – leaving the rural Peninsula (except Kelantan) and Sarawak to BN. Then again, if the coalition start to be seen as solely urban-based and not bothering with the rural issues, it will also stand to lose – both in the short and especially the long term. Left to rote, and not liberated – the rural population will bring home their problems to the urban centers. Thus it would also be a challenge for Pakatan to be both practical (with resource) and idealist (with objective).

    All said: true – rural Sarawak is BN to lose, but I dare say in the upcoming 2011 GE/SE – anything can happen; when fueled by lots of guts,sweats and tears (in a duel with $corruption).

    Comment by MERAMAT TAJAK — December 29, 2010 @ 12:27 PM | Reply

    • BN YBs are well known not only for telling lies on behalf of their puppet master but when they have no choice but to speak the truth they will choose to tell half the truth and accused Pakatan for instigating the people against development and a few were telling the Tuai Rumah that Pakatan should be stopped from entering longhouses or villages? A “split” or “disunited” rural folks are certainly no good for BN the colonial master of the rural poor. DAP has been representing Bukit Bintang since the 1960s and that constituency is the most developed in the whole of Malaysia. Shopping malls, Twin Tower, KL tower, International hotels and excellent roads and infrstructures, high office rentals and a vibrant city within a city. Why BN Sarawak did not reward the Tuai Rumahs by paying for their trip to Kuala Lumpur and see for themselves what kind of development is Bukit Bintang constituency getting?

      Alfred Jabu, the most popular traitor of the Ibans even told the simple minded rural folks that DAP is supporting communism. What an idiot!

      Comment by Bidayuh Headmaster — January 1, 2011 @ 10:18 PM | Reply

  2. Parti Bohong Bumiputra (PBB) has emulated UMNO to colonize the minds of the simple minded Sarawakians to vote UMNO controlled BN in exchange for development. The time is now to liberate the minds of the rural folks enslaved by PBB and its Dayak stooges. The time is now to enlighten our rural brothers and sisters that development is not a reward from BN but the rights of Sarawakians and the responsibility of the government of the day entrusted and mandated by us.

    Now that the UMNO dominated BN has failed to deliver effectively, competently and with transparency and has abused its authority, the rakyat of Sarawak shall demand the return of power to be given to a new government of Pakatan.

    Comment by SK Subramaniam — December 28, 2010 @ 8:25 PM | Reply

  3. Bravo Karim Raslan – a sobering and thought provoking article,similarly to those posting comments. I share the dilemma and I see it as our duty as Sarawakians to stand up and be counted to spread the message of CHANGE. We have to walk the talk, as the saying goes – every journey starts with the first step. ‘Cyber campaigning’ is definitely a plus factor, as the amount of info vis-a-vis the misdeeds of Taib’s BN can for once be documented. We (small group of us) download these write-ups (Sarawak Report is great), print them and distribute to those who have no access to internet. We just have to do it, no two ways about it, each and everyone of us. Guided by our conviction and not forgetting divine help, we will prevail. Good will always win over evil.

    Comment by Sir Noet — December 28, 2010 @ 5:55 PM | Reply

  4. This is a long drawn up battle to inform the Sarawakians of their right. Every avenues of communication must be deployed to achieve the objective of reaching every Sarawakian.

    One by one, every ‘rakyat’ must be make aware of their rights to pursue a happy life in this beloved nation.

    No one is indebted to the politicians. In fact the true politicians are duty bound to serve the ‘rakyat’ and not enriching themselves like CM Taib Mahmud and his cohorts.

    It is time for the Sarawakians to say ‘No’ to the corrupted leaders now !

    Comment by PH Chin — December 28, 2010 @ 4:51 PM | Reply

  5. “..Development is not a reward but a right – please read “we are paying for the development” yes we are paying thru our noses for these projects. – eureka

    …We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

    If you go into the rural places, you’d be surprised, still many do not yet feel they have rights. The native lands controversy makes this big time. Amongst those who still don’t, it has to be repeated in one way or another, seen on shirts and placards, sung and parodied, danced and laughed for.

    But even in urban areas, after years of conditioning, leaders, some people seem to say that they are the “boss”. They can well do what they bloody like.

    Bosses should respect your rights for when they don’t, they too themselves will have lost all of it.

    If you vote them out, it’s not your fault. It’s not their rights!

    Comment by ctzen — December 28, 2010 @ 10:58 AM | Reply

    • Did not the biggest shithead, George Chan says Taib Mahmud would not bow to pressure or listen to anyone except the leaders from Sarawak Useless People’s Party? The shithead even bragged that the Chinese community leaders would benefit the most by bringing their problems and grievances to him to be conveyed to his Godly master.

      This is the biggest insult to all Sarawakian women who gave birth to the intelligent men in Sarawak !

      Comment by Lee Hui — December 28, 2010 @ 8:33 PM | Reply

  6. WE SARAWAKIAN HAVE TO PAY MORE BUT TAIB AND HIS CRONIES PAY FOR FREE..USING OUR TAXES, DAM IT!IT’S THE PEOPLE’S RIGHT TO CHANGE THIS, NOT ALWAYS BE GOVERNMENT DECISION.WHAT A CORRUPT GOV!

    Comment by babai — December 28, 2010 @ 10:30 AM | Reply

  7. THE CONTRADICTIONS OF DEVELOPMENT POLITICS and PAVLOV’S THEORY
    _______________________________________________________________________________

    Lim Mun Fah and Karim Raslan have both made to the point observations on the nature of the electorate in Sarawak.

    M F Lim talked about the importance of “Cyber Campaigning”. While this is the wonderful new age “thing”, the negative part of cyber campaigning as many HU readers have commented is that this technology is limited to the tech smart people but not easily available or understood by the ulu people who have been kept backward for 47 years!

    A more relevant point made by the writer was that the old opposition political parties actually got down to the grass root level to win support and mobilise the people to effect political change.

    Now this method may appear dated but it is the only effective method to win the hearts and minds of the people. The Opposition parties are stronger in the urban areas but do not appear to made real headway among the ulu grass roots. If the ground work is not done, the ulu will remain “blue”.

    An example is the new Baram dam/environmental destruction project.

    How did the PBB BN so easily convinced ulu folks like the Kayans to sign away their priceless heritage land to build another dam?

    This could have been stopped if the opposition parties had thrown in their resources and spent a few years working to warn, inform, educate and create resistance among the grass root. The same criticism could be applied to the previous projects. The ground work at grass root level should have begun the moment the projects were announced. Criticisms are made world wide anti-dam awareness campaigns completed and dams completed. The ulu people remain largely unaware until they get kicked out of their land.

    Resistance must come from the people. It is no use just making noises in the towns or world press. UMNO PBB BN are comfortable with that.

    Karim Raslan in his article has pinpointed some of the fundamental problems and contradictions facing the opposition. One of them is that the ulu people are hopelessly dependent on and controlled by the UMNO PBB BN machinery.

    In their isolated jungle paradise or hell depending on your view, the people are always waiting expectantly for some government hand outs. These are usually timed with the election fever and the tap is turned on for some “goodies” to flow to the people.

    This is the Pavlov’s dog method of civil control. The people are reluctant to bite the hand that feeds them. Taking the analogy further, if you kick your dog it still comes back and lick your hands. Strange psychology but real and rather pathetic. Dayaks used to be fierce fighters and not easily kicked around!

    UMNO PBB BN gangster regime has been kicking the ulu people with hobnailed boots for 47 years till they are black and blue yet they continue to put the crooks back in power and meekly let them rob and plunder their land wealth!

    On top of this, the people in power have got it all sewn up with the appointment of headmen etc who have previously served them well as public servants, soldiers policemen etc. These are the people who are involved in the signing of any agreement for dam building. They are not the true elected representatives of the people (as before) and do not work for them but for UMNO PBB BN. So we can only helplessly look on and criticise that such agreements are illegal and void. But that will not stop more dams from being built.

    This system has to be broken and or circumvented before the message for change could possibly get through to the people.

    Many of the ulu people including those in the Baram now threatened with being made homeless by any dam project are still living in the 50s or 60s. Many of them are years behind the savvy urban netizens because the BN failed to provide the proper education health and other basic amenities every citizen should be entitled to.

    Any opposition political party worth its salt should establish deep roots among the people and work with them and show then that it can offer a real alternative to the corrupt UMNO PBB BN regime.

    To win their support they must have a social political and economic programme that gives hope and inspire the people that they can change things for the better.

    To do all this the opposition parties must get off the armchairs and get out in the hot sun and spit on their palms and start the hard work with the people.

    Don’t wait another 5 years!
    ————————————————————————————

    Comment by Abang — December 28, 2010 @ 10:25 AM | Reply

    • As said by one of our HH, how many people has access to all these cyber things…probably you have to spend $100 ringgit or more just make a phone call! Transportation cost….if you are young lady, probably you risk of being rape!

      The only phone booths in Apoh Tutoh, Baram is only in Long Bedian or the e-bedian.
      Baram/Akah area is only Long San/Long Lellang and Bario for the Kelabit highland!
      So we are talking nonsense about cyber campaign here. For the org ulu, the best way to get noticed is by face to face campaign. PR hasn’t made headway into the heart of Borneo..to win the heart of the people out there….nothing concrete done in the past 5 years, so what you expect to gain in coming months just before the election from the org ulu people.

      “Karim Raslan in his article has pinpointed some of the fundamental problems and contradictions facing the opposition. One of them is that the ulu people are hopelessly dependent on and controlled by the UMNO PBB BN machinery”

      Yes, we voted for BN for so-called development and we paid dearly for it but that calculated mistake; we have to sacrifice our lands otherwise dirt/timber road access…otherwise we cannot bring in our supplies….generator, zinc, what not if we can afford them….we use this short opportunity/opening thou it’s only going to last only for 3-4 years but at least we had something; we don’t have choice since PR had done nothing to-date to help the already neglected orang ulu!

      We cannot wait for PR to be next govt…in 5, 10 or 20 years from then on….Yes, for now we hopelessly depend on BN to survive.

      As we all know the vote suppose to be secret…but how can it be a secret? Once the voting is complete, the ballot box is brought back to the HQ or where ever for counting. If the vote from your village is 50 or 100 vote, sure people will know who this villager support! Worse still if the vote were counted on the spot, they will catch you right on.

      It’s not like raffle tickets where all the ticket goes into one big container…..if its handle that way, probably no one know who you vote for! Anyway, it still not secret proof…serial no still can check. If we don’t vote for BN, our village for neglected for the next 5 years.

      I still can re-call when, BN lost their vote in Long Sebangang/Long Tuma during Micheal Lisa term (BN won the election anyway)…only in part of Lawas/Ba Kelalan.

      Few days after the election, all the JKR machineries that were send in to repair/repairing the road from Lawas/Merapok main road to Long Sebangang village before the election were all pull out from the area! The people were punished by BN because they exercised their right.

      For the past few years, we see the PR lawyers are busy with defending/suing the govt over NCR lands…which I think; a way of making money…Business for them…you know, they still charged the people for their service….or some might be free or minimal charges. Otherwise, how they feed their family!

      Comment by Headhunter8million — December 28, 2010 @ 3:18 PM | Reply

      • Yah, HH8H we need plenty of your type of on the ground insights and reports on the local conditions to give flesh to all the rhetorics of change.

        “Reward and Punishment” we are familiar with that trick for 47 years- That’s how UMNO PBB/Taib maintain his master/slave relationship with the people.

        We can look at the simple allegory of Animal Farm and substitute the actors in the story and come up with the solution.

        We have talked about our woes ad nauseam.

        The big question is how to overthrow this corrupt regime?

        Imagine a group of headhunters huddled together in some jungle campfire thinking of ideas to take back our country.

        To take back our country means to seize political power whether by ballot or bullet.

        We have tried using the ballot box to secure a majority at the polls for years and yet do not seem to learn any lesson on how to win.

        In contrast, in the Philippines, Thailand and even Indonesia the political movements have made advances and politics can be decided by the people if they are united. The rural people in these countries are awakened to demand change.

        Now what is wrong with Sabah, Sarawak and Malaya? Why are we so politically backward?

        One of the problems faced by the opposition parties is unity among themselves and then to unite the people for change. Spontaneous uprisings seldom get far. It must be organised.

        For the Opposition it is no use prancing about the stage like a comic opera show once in a while before the showdown at the polls. You need to urgently organise especially in the ulu everyday with a programme that can inspire and give people confidence that you can be trusted to change things.

        Headhunters and all put your heads together and think.

        How to rouse the people from their UMNO PBB BN induced drugged slumbers and out of their timidity? How to galvanize their will to overcome the things HH8H talked about so they can rise up to fight? How come they do not express extrem outrage over what is happening to them. Where is their fighting spirit? Where is the sound of WAR DRUMS.

        Our country has been invaded by a new group of plunderers. Taib his family and his towkay cronies made a deal with Malaya and sold out our national independence for the licence to strip the country’s land wealth. Their being local people makes it harder for the innocent folks to tell the difference and are easily misled by these crooks who say we are now “independent” and rule ourselves. Yes Taib and cronies have their independence to rule and rob at will. That leaves the majority of us in the lurch.

        The situation remains that “Countries want independence, nations want liberation and the people want revolution…”

        This means “National Independence for Sarawak , liberation from plunder and want for Sarawakians and a revolution in the political system to that of a Government of the Sarawak people by Sarwakians for Sarawakians.

        We have achieved NONE of these.

        Comment by headhunter1million — December 28, 2010 @ 8:13 PM | Reply

      • Aiya! There is one way — we educated people need to take back the ulu, lah! All of us, where ever we are now, if we have roots to the longhouses and kampongs, we need to take back our heritage. We don’t need to go back there to live because after all we have jobs in cities or even foreign countries to feed our families, but we must make the effort to connect and visit our longhouses/kampongs and believe me, if we all do that, we will influence those that are still living there. I am not suggesting that we preach or tell them who to vote but we can start dialogues with people about politics, the land, etc. on an informal basis.

        For the last 2 or 3 generations, our families have emphasised education and we migrated to the cities while neglecting our heritage. Now is the time to claim our longhouse heritage and NCR lands and that is one way that we will for sure get politicians that will represent us. As it is now, the politicians we elected are representing the ruling government to us where they go to villages to lecture the folks on what the government intends to do.

        Comment by TU Empowered — December 28, 2010 @ 11:45 PM | Reply

      • “One of the problems faced by the opposition parties is unity among themselves and then to unite the people for change”

        Yes, how can they unite the people when they themselves are fighting amongst themselves? How to convince the rakyat?

        “How come they do not express extreme outrage over what is happening to them?”

        The mindset of the orang ulu is totally different from what we see in the urban. Mostly the one who’s staying back are the old folks and few middle age people.
        Simple, they are not materialistic people, they don’t a lot of money (or someone in the city or somewhere is giving money to them…the old folk). So they are not bothered what going on around them…who ever rule, its same to them.

        “Whoever wins, its still the same for me. I still need to work my padi field tomorrow” It’s the normal phrase when you ask them about who they prefer to govern the state or country!

        “Outrage”
        Majority of the orang ulu are Christian; simple, the Bible says “if someone slap your right chick, give your left chick as well”…sorry…Correct me if I quoted it wrongly guys…that what they believe in and that what they practice.

        So the PR must really crack their head to win heart of the org ulu.

        Harrsion Ngau winning is just a game within the inner circle of the orang ulu elite (Kayan/Kenyah).

        For BN to wrest back the Baram seat, they has to spend money…When BN start pouring in money with their Mee Segera project; these elite few make money!
        We know loads of money being flown in with helicopters during the last election….we on the ground know but what we can do?

        To TU…
        “We don’t need to go back there to live because after all we have jobs in cities or even foreign countries to feed our families, but we must make the effort to connect and visit our longhouses/kampongs”

        To “Tu”…
        I am not sure where you come from, yes, you don’t need to go back to live in the village…I hope you walk the talk…

        If you are a Baram Kayan, I think you have to work extra hard to convince the fellow Kayan out their because I noticed that the Kayan Longhouse are the most neglected one… sorry to say that but it’s the reality and don’t take offence.

        Thank god that I am bless a job that make available or free every other month which able me to visit nearly the entire 90% Baram and the whole Lawas area…from Lawas till BaKelalan for the past 15 years! I spend ½ of my ‘rest day’ going around these areas and help the people when ever can afford.

        By the way, I am not associated with any NGO’s or any organization and god will; maybe join up with someone someday; so maybe I can do something.

        Comment by Headhunter8million — December 29, 2010 @ 2:41 AM | Reply

      • “Ask not for who the bells toll, they toll for thee”

        Comment by eureka — December 29, 2010 @ 11:32 AM | Reply

  8. Development is not a reward but a right – please read “we are paying for the development” yes we are paying thru our noses for these projects. Every time an election is around the corner, the BN unfolds bliztkrieg projects, – (unplanned, over price, and dominated by their cornies), after that we the fools who voted them in are then treated to “pay back time”, price increases for fuel, milk powder, kopi O, water & electricity et etc.

    The technique is simple, the coffers are empty? not a problem- print more money just before the election, give out to the fools, after election inflation sets in – The Spore dollar is 1 : 2.50 today, after the next Swak election its going to be about 2:80. Simple economics. 50 years we have suffered the folly of the BN, no more please

    Comment by eureka — December 28, 2010 @ 8:39 AM | Reply

    • Blitzkreig projects yes. But certainly planned for enlarging the corrupt gangsters’ wallets further if nothing else.

      Just wondering how much longer we can go on complaining about the corruption if we don’t do something about this.

      The movement for change needs real commitment. It needs alot of people who will give up their precious time to help in raising awareness among the ulu people. This is best done under an organised manner.

      NO PAIN NO GAIN!

      Comment by headhunter10million — December 28, 2010 @ 5:22 PM | Reply


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