Keynote Speech by Lim Kit Siang when launching the DAP
Kadazan-Dusun-Murut (KDM) Declaration at a DAP KDM convention at Ruby
Hotel, Kota Kinabalu on Saturday, 19th January 2008:
DAP KDM Declaration a stirring call for justice for the
Kadazan-Dusun-Murut community to ensure that 44 years after the
20-Point Agreement on Sabah’s formation of Malaysia, the largest
community in the state does not end up at the bottom of the heap as to
become “outsiders” in their own land
The launching of the DAP KDM (Kadazan-Dusun-Murut) Declaration at the
DAP KDM convention today is a historic moment in the political history
of Sabah and Malaysia as it represents a stirring call for justice for
the Kadazan-Dusun-Murut community to ensure that 44 years after the
20-Point Agreement on Sabah’s formation of Malaysia, the largest
community in the state does not end up at the bottom of the heap as to
become “outsiders” in their own land!
I am very impressed by the seriousness, fervour and sense of mission
of the DAP KDM leaders who took the initiative to formulate this
historic KDM Declaration, as is evident by the commitment and sense of
mission demonstrated by the five presenters at the convention on the
plight and promises facing the KDM community and which formed the basis
of the DAP KDM Declaration, viz:
- The Kadazan-Dusun-Murut (KDM) Crisis
- Pastor Jeffrey Kumin (DAP Karambunai branch chairman)
- Squatter colonies of illegal immigrants and
Sabah land problems - Steven Jimbangan (DAP Kepayan branch
chairman)
- Kadazan-Dusun-Murut (KDM) Unity - Paul
Kadau (DAP Interior leader)
- Poverty and Education in Sabah - Justin
Sabran (DAP Kuamut branch chairman)
- Impact of illegal immigrant presence to
Kadzan-Dusun-Muruts (KDM) - Edward Mujie (DAP Tamparuli branch
chairman)
The DAP KDM Declaration in a most dramatic and eloquent manner
highlights the grave problem of the political, economic, educational,
social, cultural and religious marginalization of the KDM community when
it posed the question, “Can a KDM ever become a Sabah Chief Minister
again?”
This is a question which every KDM, nay every Sabahan and every
Malaysian, should ask as its brings to the forefront the grave problem
of the marginalization of the KDM community as to become the new
underclass in Sabah and Malaysia.
In the first three decades of Sabah’s nationhood in Malaysia from
1963-1993, anyone posing the question “Can a KDM ever become a Sabah
Chief Minister’, would be regarded askance as someone who is not only
politically uninformed but with questionable intellectual capabilities.
Today, it is those who think such a question utterly irrelevant who
will be regarded as politically uninformed or even intellectually
handicapped!
What is the reason for such a sea-change in the Sabah political
landscape in a matter of 15 years when what was once held as virtually
as a birthright is regarded by many as “lost for good” as to be
irrecoverable?
When Sabah helped form Malaysia in 1963, the first Sabah Chief
Minister was a KDM – Donald Stephens/Tun Fuad Stephens, who held the
post for a year, returning briefly as Sabah Chief Minister for 44 days
until the tragic “666” helicopter crash on June 6, 1976 which wiped out
the multi-ethnic Sabah leadership of Fuad Stephens, Peter Mojuntin,
Chong Tian Vun and Salleh Sulong, and forever changed the course of
Sabah history.
The next KDM Sabah Chief Minister is Datuk Seri Joseph Pairin
Kitingan who held the post for nine years from 1985 to 1994.
This works out to a KDM being Sabah Chief Minister for less than 11
years in the 44-year history of Sabah in Malaysia, i.e. less than 25% -
which is clearly a poor reflection of the proper place that should be
occupied by the KDM community in Sabah politics as it was the largest
ethnic community in 1963.
In the 1994
Sabah state general election, Barisan Nasional promised a “Sabah Baru”
to the people of Sabah, including equal political partnership and
power-sharing in the state with the rotation of post of Chief Minister
among the three major communities under a Barisan Nasional state
government.
What is the
record of this “equal political partnership and power-sharing” in the
past 14 years of Barisan Nasional rule in Sabah?
In the past
14 years of Barisan Nasional rule, the post of Sabah Chief Minister was
held by bumiputras for 10 years or 71% of the period and non-bumiputras
(Chinese) for four years or 28%. If the bumiputra Chief Ministership
for the period is further examined, it will break down to nine years or
65% of the 14-year BN rule for Muslim bumiputras and nine months or
six per cent for non-Muslim bumiputras (Tan Sri Bernard Dompok).
If anyone
should challenge or doubt the statement that the Kadazan-Dusun-Murut
community have been marginalized and become a new underclass, the
history of the Sabah Chief Ministership whether of the past 14 years
under Barisan Nasional rule or of the past 44 years in the history of
Sabah in Malaysia would be an irrebuttable response.
The grave
problem of the KDM marginalization in Sabah after nearly half-a-century
of nationhood in Malaysia can be illustrated by a catalogue of grim
statistics. Suffice here for me to refer to two such grim statistics,
viz:
-
Under the Ninth Malaysia Plan, Sabah has the worst poverty incidence
of all states in Malaysia, higher than Kelantan and Terengganu, with
hard-core poverty incidence at 6.5% as compared to Terengganu 4.4% and
Kedah and Kelantan 1.3%. Among the poor and hard-core poor, the KDM
occupy the bottom of the heap.
-
In 1963, Sabah’s population was 454,421. This has jumped more than
seven-fold to 3.2 million in 2005 primarily because of the
uncontrolled influx of illegal immigrants who have become citizens and
voters through false identity cards – to the extent that it is
believed that foreigners have outnumbered local Sabahans in the state.
No wonder the KDM regard themselves as having become strangers in the
land of their ancestors.
The DAP KDM Declaration a stirring call for justice for the KDM
community to ensure that 44 years after the 20-Point Agreement on
Sabah’s formation of Malaysia, the largest community in the state
does not end up at the bottom of the heap as to become “outsiders” in
their own land.
Sabahans and Malaysians must be reminded of the fundamental
principles on which Malaysia was founded – the 1957 Merdeka “social
contract” when Malaya achieved independence and the 20 Points Agreement
when Sabah, together with Sarawak and Singapore, joined Malaya to form
the new Federation of Malaysia in 1963.
Many who talk about the 20 Points do not know what they contain. Let
us harken back to the 20 Points, starting with the first of the 20
Points, viz: