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The Spirit of Sarawak for Sarawakian is getting stronger everyday!

Is this Sabah and Sarawak fate?

Sabah and Sarawak were promised to have a Self-Government. But what happen after 50 years forming The Federation of Malaysia?

Sabah 50th Independence Day

Sabah or formerly known as North Borneo was granted an Independence by British on 31 August 1963

Sarawak 50th Independence Day

Sarawak was granted Independence by British on 22 July 1963

Sunday, 15 December 2013

STAR SABAH: Build Monorail Not Tram - DATUK DR. JEFFREY KITINGAN


Build Monorail Not Tram – Dr. Jeffrey

Datuk Dr. Jeffrey Kitingan is the Chairman of STAR Sabah and State Assemblymen for N33, Bingkor, Sabah.
He also contested in P180, Keningau garnering 11900 strong votes
If the federal government refuses to fund the KKMR, the Sabah MPs just need to take a simple step to leave the Umno/BN coalition. By just leaving, the Umno/BN and the Pakatan Rakyat leaders will be sending a VVIP delegation with a RM15 billion cheque to fund the KKMR to persuade the Sabah MPs to join in a new federal government. That is the power of Sabah and Sarawak and the leaders from Sabah should leverage on this for the benefit of our beloved Sabah Tanah Airku and not just allow our oil and gas to be siphoned anymore.

Image“The Sabah government should build a new Monorail transport system in Kota Kinabalu and not just sweet-talk the people with promises of building public transport systems to alleviate the growing and snarling traffic jams especially during rush-hours but with no concrete action beingtaken” said Datuk Dr. Jeffrey Kitingan, STAR Sabah Chief in response to the Minister of Industrial Development’s statement of considering the building of trams for Kota Kinabalu during the courtesy visit by the new Counsel and Vice-Counsels from China recently.

The Umno/BN government owes the people a social responsibility as the government of the day and as part of this responsibility, they need to address the social needs of the growing population especially in Kota Kinabalu.

This responsibility is not better said than by the Chief Minister himself who last week said that the government will make all cities in Sabah “liveable” cities. And all growing cities need to solve the ever-present traffic congestion problems.

However, the Chief Minister and his government need to put words into action to make Kota Kinabalu a “more liveable” city.

This is more so in the case of Sabah which is a world-renown tourist destination with a growing and thriving tourism industry with yearly increasing tourist arrivals. We should not be putting off foreign tourists from visiting Kota Kinabalu again due to bad traffic jams.

Building 2 or 3 more flyovers, although they are badly needed especially in Inanam and the intersections along Jalan Lintas in the city, may reduce traffic jams but they do not resolve the problem long term.

“What is needed for Kota Kinabalu is a good public transportation system!” stressed Dr. Jeffrey.

A monorail public transport system is a proven system. If not, there is no reason for the federal government to invest RM36 billion to build the Greater Klang Valley Monorail Transit System.

The Kota Kinabalu Monorail can link the Kota Kinabalu city centre to major centres in 1 Borneo, University Malaysia Sabah, KKIP, Karambunai Nexus and Sepanggar and back to Donggongon and Putatan and include stops at Likas Hospital, Museum, Queen Elizabeth Hospital and the Kota Kinabalu International Airport.

The construction and building of the Kota Kinabalu Monorail will create a further boost to the local economy. This economic vibrancy will also generate new employment and business opportunities and at the same time transform Kota Kinabalu into a modern and progressive city.

Funding the Kota Kinabalu Monorail or KKMR should not be an issue.

If Putrajaya can finance RM36 billion for the Greater Klang Valley Monorail Transit, there is no reason for the federal government NOT to finance up to RM12 to RM15 billion to build the KKMR.

Sabah will be contributing an additional RM8.70 billion in oil and gas revenue to Petronas and the federal government in 2014 increasing from RM17.88 billion in 2012 to RM26.60 billion in 2014. It is expected that this oil and gas revenue will further increase to more than RM50 billion in 2015/2016.

If the federal government refuses to fund the KKMR, the Sabah MPs just need to take a simple step to leave the Umno/BN coalition. By just leaving, the Umno/BN and the Pakatan Rakyat leaders will be sending a VVIP delegation with a RM15 billion cheque to fund the KKMR to persuade the Sabah MPs to join in a new federal government. That is the power of Sabah and Sarawak and the leaders from Sabah should leverage on this for the benefit of our beloved Sabah Tanah Airku and not just allow our oil and gas to be siphoned anymore.

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

Saturday, 14 December 2013

Newly register political parties: Rebuilding Sarawak-based opposition front


Rajah Raqafluz (Pen name) is the admin for "STAR TODAY". Believe in STAR Sarawak and United Borneo Front (UBF), advocate of Borneo Agenda, Friends of the Trust and a firm follower of Harunyahya.

There has not been much movement from Parti Ekonomi Rakyat Sarawak Bersatu (PERSB), Parti Bumi Kenyalang, Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak Baru (PBDS Baru), People’s Alliance for Justice of Peace (Peace Party) and Parti Tenaga Rakyat Sarawak (Teras) in the last three months.

With the current political landscape, I don’t see these new parties getting the support from people of Sarawakian, either in the rural areas or urban areas.

Political analyst, Dr Jeniri Amir said that:

“Basically, these parties need support from rural voters because in the urban areas there is no way the Chinese or the middle class will support these mosquito parties.

“There is no light at the end of the tunnel for these five new parties,” he stated.

The analyst noted that Sarawak’s political landscape was heading towards a two- party system but the emergence of these five new parties was not really good for the scenario.

While the increase in political players is good for democracy, it splits and diluted the support for opposition parties, Jeniri added.

Rajah Raqafluz political analysis:

However, because of the political landscape was heading towards a two-party system where the other parties of opposition are Malaya-based parties (PR), it was an actually ingenious move and covert operation for Sarawakian politician landscape.

These scenarios  actually opening up a new political landscape where these new parties in the future will make an allegiance either to become BN-friendly parties, PR-friendly parties or UBF-friendly parties. And the last alternatives, standing alone by their own.

The good thing about these new parties registrations is that the formation of opposition parties in Sarawak will increase as well which will become a rival for Malaya-based parties such as PKR, PAS and DAP. These new parties will strengthen the opposition voice of Sarawakian itself by rejecting the Malaya-based opposition parties either they're in the government front or opposition front.

These healthy environments where opposition voices will also consist of Sarawakians instead of Malaya proxies of PKR, PAS and DAP as being dictate currently in the political landscape, is good especially in the long run for the protection of Sarawak sovereignty from foreign power and puppet masters such as Malaya.

This is a hard lesson from Sarawak counter-part in Sabah, where politician have become merely a puppets led by Umno from Malaya-based parties.

This situation, where Malaya-based parties (PR) become dominant will not blend well with the Sarawakian especially for the long run of political progress in this biggest country of Sarawak in the Malaysia federation.

After all, all politicians, political analyst, scholars and Sarawakian alike should always remember that Malaysia is a federation of Sarawak, Sabah and Malaya.

Sarawak sovereignty must be protected on all fronts, at whatever cost it should be. And this time, opposition front should be protected from Malaya-based parties of PKR, PAS and DAP.

Sarawak for Sarawakians. Vote for Sarawak-based parties only.

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

Friday, 13 December 2013

Kennedy School Graduate Held Prisoner - DATUK DR. JEFFREY KITINGAN


Datuk Dr. Jeffrey Kitingan is the Chairman of STAR Sabah and State Assemblymen for N33, Bingkor, Sabah.
He also contested in P180, Keningau garnering 11900 strong votes

Kennedy School Graduate Held Prisoner

The Malaysian government is charging Jeffrey G. Kitingan with sedition and corruption. But the free Far East press and human rights groups say the Sabahan government official is a political prisoner.

----------------------------------------------

Many people associate a Harvard education with a bright future. Some Harvard graduates lead corporations; some win Nobel prizes; some become world leaders.

But for one, the future may lie in a jail cell.

Jeffrey G. Kitingan, a 1981 graduate of the Kennedy School of Government and a 1984 graduate of the Harvard-Tufts Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, is currently being held in a Malaysian jail. He is being charged with corruption and sedition by the peninsular Malaysian Kuala Lumpur (KL) government.

The KL government says it had a valid reason to arrest Kitingan, but the free Far East press and human rights groups such as Asia Watch believe he and possibly his brother, the chief minister of their native Sabah, to be political prisoners.

Harvard's John Fairbanks Center is currently working with the KL government to study the country's economic development and related social issues.

Kitingan was attempting to institute broad political and social reforms in his native Malaysian state of Sabah, according to Asia Watch.

Asia Watch is part of Human Rights Watch, an umbrella organization that targets countries known to violate human rights.

The State of Sabah

Sabah, once a British colony, joined with mainland Malaysia in 1963 to form a coalition government known as the National Front.

Sabah joined the coalition under a 20-point agreement that gave it some degree of autonomy over such areas as language, education, religion and finance, according the Far East Economic Review, a magazine which focuses on economic and related issues of that region.

"Sabah understood the guarantees to be in perpetuity," according to the magazine. "Federal leaders saw them as a transitory arrangement which would eventually fade away, leaving Sabah...with the same status as the [12] other states in the federation."

But Sabah's status began to change, culminating in the 1976 rewording of the 20-point agreement. Sabah was demoted from one of three major components of the National Front to just another state among the 13 in the federation.

Located on the island of Borneo, Sabah differs socially and culturally from mainland Malaysia. The state is largely composed of non-Muslim Malays, while the peninsular Malaysian population is 57 percent Muslim Malay.

Sabah went through a number of governments from 1963 to 1985 as its relations with peninsular Malaysia worsened. In 1985, the Berjaya party, composed of Malaysian Muslims sympathetic to the KL, was defeated by the Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS).

The PBS, until recently part of the National Front, advocates greater autonomy for Sabah, saying the state should have more control over its resources and their development as well as a more democratic form of government. The party is dominated by the Christian Katazans.

Under the PBS, Sabah's new chief minister was Joseph P. Kitingan--Jeffrey Kitingan's brother. Kitingan himself became director of Sabah's Institute for Development Studies and director of the Sabah Foundation, responsible for investing Sabahan timber earnings and developing natural resources.

Timber production is the dominant industry in Sabah. The chief minister has traditionally allocated timber concessions, using his position to accumulate money and power. In addition, Sabah is rich in oil and mineral resource.

The Kitingans were at the forefront of those demanding more equality for Sabah in the form of redistribution of revenue from Sabahan resources, such as changing Sabah's off-shore oil drilling profit share from five percent to 50 percent.

The KL government, headed by Prime Minister Sari Mahathir, saw Sabahan requests for more autonomy as a threat. Tensions between the local Sabahan government and the KL government escalated as the KL government began to pressure the Kitingans, major players in the PBS.

In early 1990, Jeffrey Kitingan was arrested on charges of corruption. Despite the charges, Kitingan held on to his positions and witnessed his party's reelection in July 1990 on a platform of greater Sabahan autonomy.

Following the elections, the PBS withdrew from the National Front in October 1990, joining the opposition. The KL government responded by vowing to introduce competing Muslim Malay parties in Sabah.

Then, at the beginning of 1991, the KL government arrested Joseph Kitingan on charges of corruption. Several months later, Jeffrey Kitingan was arrested again, this time with six others said for plotting to separate Sabah from the Malaysian federation. Joseph Kitingan's status is at present unknown.

Since then, Jeffrey Kitingan has been in jail. He calls the multiple charges "political persecution," according to Far East Economic Review.

The Role of Religion

Observers say they are unclear how large a role religion plays in tensions between Sabah and pennisular Malaysia but say it is a factor. Although the mainland has a strong Muslim population and government, most Sabahans are non-Muslim. The PBS is dominated by the Christian Kadazans, and the Kitingans are both Roman Catholic.

Ambassador Leonard S. Unger '39 says he feels that, "The government in Kuala Lumpur...took measures to prevent local Christian officials from exercising authority...and did everything [it could] to discredit them. If there was to be a Christian government, they wanted to keep it under their thumbs."

An anonymous source, who is an expert on South East Asian politics, says the Malay government is becoming more fundamentalist. "There is a group of hunters and gatherers on the Malay peninsula, the Orangasli, that have their own religion. I've heard that officials have said, 'Once they become Muslim, our work is done,'" he says.

"Malaysia's a Muslim country and is growing more fundamentalist," says Charles H. Abelmann, a friend of the Kitingans. "The federal government doesn't like having a Christian state in a Muslim government."

Kitingan's 1991 arrest was under the Internal Security Act (ISA), which allows the government's security officials to arrest anyone posing a security threat without a warrant, according to Asia Watch.

"Those arrested can be detained for 60 days without charge or review, and the Minister of Home Affairs has the authority to extend the detention orders for up to two years, renewable indefinitely," said Asia Watch in a 1991 article on Malaysia detainees.

The ISA, effective since 1960, was originally intended to deter Communist insurgency. Tunku Abdul Rahman, prime minister at the time of Malaysia's formation, pledged that "the immense powers given to the government under the ISA would never be used to stifle legitimate opposition and silence lawful dissent," according to Asia Watch.

However, many charge that the ISA is being used exactly for these purposes in Sabah. Washington, D.C. director of Asia Watch Mike Jendrzejczyk says, "We believe that these arrests are in violation of international rights prohibiting arbitrary arrest and protecting the right to freedom of expression."

"Asia Watch has urged the Malaysian government to free the ISA detainees and to review the law as a step towards repealing it," he says.

In 1989, the ISA was amended by the Malaysian parliament, prohibiting courts from hearing habeas corpus petitions by ISA prisoners. Consequently, Kitingan can be held in jail indefinitely.

Mahathir, who doubles as the home affairs minister, is in charge of administering the ISA. Asia Watch reports that he "has acknowledged that the [amendment] was intended to strengthen the hand of the executive personnel, lest they become too 'wary' of detaining people under the ISA."

People familiar with the Kitingans and their recent arrests say they believe the two brothers were trying to improve Sabah through reforms.

"This guy is a crusader. He does everything for the people of Sabah," says Abelmann. "Unfortunately, in his position of advocating states' rights, he goes a little overboard...He's extremely motivated for his cause."

Abelmann lived with the Kitingans in 1989-90 as a worker in the People Development Program of the Yayasan Sabah Foundation, headed by Jeffrey Kitingan.

Kitingan was concerned about Sabah's control over its own resources and its own destiny, says Abelmann. "What you have here is a wealthy state with lots of natural resources that has become a poor state. The rate of development hasn't been what it should based on Sabah's natural resources."

Unger, who was one of Kitingan's professors at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, says he concurs with Abelmann's opinion. Unger says of his former pupil, "He was a good student [who] had more first-hand knowledge. He had good academic preparation, [but] was very lively and interested in the topic, not a bookish type at all. That doesn't mean that he didn't read and think about his country."

Unger, who was instrumental in the founding of the South East Asia Treaty Organization, says "Jeffrey was looking for an extension of democratic principles in a country with limited experience of democracy. He [attempted to] improve the rural situation by introducing new crops and... irrigation improvements." Unger says he served as an unofficial advisor to Kitingan.

The anonymous source, who is also familiar with the Kitingans, described the pre-Kitingan governments as being "extremely corrupt." Under Joseph, Sabah had its first modern government in which party politics were "not based on religion or ethnicity," says the source, who is familiar with Sabahan politics.

"You can't be a politician there without corruption...bribes...payoffs...this is the way that politics are run out there," he says.

"The Kitingans, to me, run a clean government," the source says. "Why weren't previous governments who were scandalously corrupt brought up on charges? The corruption was incredible."

What is to Come?

Jeffrey Kitingan and some of his supporters are currently in jail awaiting trial. But their future and the future of their country is uncertain, says the source. "No one knows what's going on over there," he says.

The situation is "nasty," says the source. "Jeffrey is in detention. The federal prosecutor...needs testimony from people in Hong Kong [to strengthen the KL's case]."

The KL government is attempting to build part of its case in the Hong Kong courts. But Kitingan supporters are asking people to testify before the Hong Kong courts and say that the KL case is politically motivated.

Hong Kong does not allow testimony about politically instigated charges on its territory. "The issue now is can enough information be provided to Hong Kong court to show that these are politically motivated charges?" says the source.

The source adds, "If [the government] overthrow[s] PBS by attempts to press charges against major figures of the [local] government and if [it] continue[s] to harass native leaders and the native government personally with threats of the ISA, so that people are unable to speak freely of their opinions, it hearkens a return to a more authoritative regime under the thumbs of the central government."

"It confounds me that there are so few people in America concerned with these human rights violations in Malaysia," the source concludes.


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By, Rajah Raqafluz

UPDATE ON IDRIS BUANG DEBATE - LINA SOO (916 OCCUPATION DAY)


UPDATE ON IDRIS BUANG DEBATE

My response to the latest from the debate saga:

Dear readers, first I apologize for this late response as I had been on the road for the last 10days, and only got myself updated this morning. 

No.1: I, Lina Soo as the admin of 916 Occupation Day is responding to Idris Buang’s posting recently where he agreed to accept a debate challenge from several fb groups and names, including ‘frances Dorus’. As FD is a member of 916, and he has given consent to 916 to represent him, we responded appropriately and positively to IB’s posting on his behalf. Please be informed that we are representing FD in 916; and not SSM or SSKM, nor do we speak for MAR/DJ, nor can these names speak on 916 or FD behalf. 

No.2: We salute IB for taking up this challenge on a matter of such public interest and importance; this debate reflects our concerns for the future of Sarawak, and IB’s positivity and willingness to engage with the community is admirable. We cannot let this golden opportunity pass. 

No.3: Quote, ‘No statement or words that are unworthy of good character may be published at anytime,nor anything defamatory,deragotary or ludicrous shall be used at any point of time. Genteel & decorous conduct ,respectability and gentlemanliness shall be the mutually agreed hallmark of this fb debate’, unquote. We agree wholeheartedly on this; after all is not gentleness and mutual respect an admired attribute of Sarawakian character and culture? 

No. 4: Other terms and conditions. We agree that this debate be held in Kuching – stadium, pustaka, old dun or old courthouse, and we believe that IB would be easily able to secure the venue. Debate in English which is our other state official language. Three debaters per team – 7 minutes each and 3 mins rebuttal, Oxford or Australasia format. Date be set for Sunday, 2 March 2014, to give time for Sarawakians to plan to come back to give support to a matter of such importance and of public interest. 

No.5: That IB will issue the invitation to our Chief Minister and all elected lawmakers, parliamentary and DUN to attend this debate. It is important that they are the witnesses to this state matter to truly represent their constituents. 

No. 6: As for personal attacks, I will not respond. This is a lady's response to a gentleman's statement. Once again, thank you.

Lina Soo is a candidate for State Reform Party (STAR) for P196 Stampin, Sarawak in GE-13 and the author of popular book "Sarawak the Real Deal"


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By, Rajah Raqafluz

Thursday, 12 December 2013

CELL CAGE FOR THE BRUNEI UPRISING INDEPENDENCE FIGHTERS - LINA SOO



CELL CAGE FOR THE BRUNEI UPRISING INDEPENDENCE FIGHTERS

and enclosed together with common criminals!
This is the cell cage where the prisoners are kept, one said there were 12 to 1 cage, another remembered there were 25 in his cage. One remembered that in his cage there were also some rogue soldiers detained for kacau kampong girls. He could tell from their bahasa and their behaviour that they are not sarawkian soldiers. The foreign soldiers did things which were not done by our swak rangers, the british or the gurkhas. it is too horrible to recount.

Lina Soo is a candidate for State Reform Party (STAR) for P196 Stampin, Sarawak in GE-13 and the author of popular book "Sarawak the Real Deal"

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

ARMED FORCE TO REPRESS OPPOSITION TO MALAYSIA PLAN - LINA SOO



COLONIAL GOVERMENT USED ARMED FORCE TO REPRESS OPPOSITION TO MALAYSIA PLAN IN 1ST WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 1963 DURING UN ASSESSMENT IN VIOLATION OF UN DECOLONIZATION DECLARATION 1960

Britain/Malaya/UN cooked up the UN Assessment to deceive the Borneons and international community. despite the use of armed force to repress opposition, the Report said "no articulate oppostion"


Lina Soo is a candidate for State Reform Party (STAR) for P196 Stampin, Sarawak in GE-13 and the author of popular book "Sarawak the Real Deal"


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By, Rajah Raqafluz

BRUNEI UPRISING - BEKENU KEDAYAN PERJUANGAN - LINA SOO



BRUNEI UPRISING - BEKENU KEDAYAN PERJUANGAN
"Kami Mau Merdeka"
"Kami Tak Mau Di Jajah"

On 8 December 1962 just after midnite, abt 600 villagers from Sibuti area of whom the majority were Kedayan with a few Malay converged upon Bekenu. The polis at the station surrendered without further ado. The British flag was lowered down, and in place was raised the tnku flag. The fighters worked round the clock on shifts to cover the town, making sure the town was calm. There was no rioting, no looting or violence. Every one cooperated.

On 14 December the polis, British troops and the swak rangers comprising the Malay/Kedayan/Iban descended upon the town and gunfire broke out on both sides. In the crossfire, 5 Kedayan were sacrificed, no casualties were reported on the other side. 

I visited their memorial today. This memorial was built by private means only two years ago, after 48 years of saving and scrimping by one of the living survivors. Gone but not forgotten. 

Penderhaka/Pemberontak or Pejuang/Nationalist, it is up to you to intepret.


Lina Soo is a candidate for State Reform Party (STAR) for P196 Stampin, Sarawak in GE-13 and the author of popular book "Sarawak the Real Deal"

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

STAR SARAWAK: "The system which bring everyone down" - DR. PATAU RUBIS


State Reform Party, Sarawak (STAR) chairman Dr Patau Rubis

Zaid blames UMNO for the nature of the Malay race to-day. I totally disagree... I have known many good UMNO leaders who are more than willingly to die for a better Malaysia. They were all prepared to sacrifice for a better world for the others...

But it is the system which brings everyone down from Tunku AR to Tun Razak, Tun Hussien Onn, Pak Lah and next Najib...I personally to TUN MAHATHIR after I saw him cried on TV on handing over power to young people and Pak Lah.. I told him not to be so saddened for it is the system that was bringing him down as it has done to Tunku and the others even after he steps down..

I know Mahathir and his wife even before I enter the political arena in 1982.... I know he is concerned about the backwardness of the Malays...it is in his book too called the Malay Dilemma...only in trying to help he left a situation where now Najib is facing the Malay NIGHTMARE... the split in the Malay community because as Malay voters are getting more and more demanding on a better governance etc...but will PR a better alternative...NOT until they can become more INCLUSIVE including accepting that KITA and Zaid has some contribution to make...

It is the system based on KETUANAN MELAYU... it makes our Government incompetent but expensive to run because many rich Malaysia expected others to work and them to enjoy the beautiful cars, houses, mistresses as well as wives...it is absurd to know that initially UMNO leaders manned their own office as office boy and secretary combined as Tun Gaffar Baba was.... but now mistresses maybe???? Before the usual talk during UMNO conventions was about mundane things as how they get to the Convention center... next the talks were what they are now driving but now amongst men their new wives or mistresses or even focus who drinks... this is how UMNO is being degraded by the system which must appreciates the person status by the newness of their cars, wives or mistresses.... as the coffee shop talk about me as pitiful because i still drive my 1995 Mercedes.... How many UMNO leaders and followers could have refused Datoship or Tan Sri like i did , i would.. not knowing that these are expensive to keep as well as buttressing the concept of KETUANAN MELAYU and drive an old Mercedes like me....they may not win even the Divisional Head post.... as UMNO members may just sneer at him....!

Please think about it because I had the experience of being told by my colleagues in the Ministry of Health long before i enter the political arena that even Hospital attendants appointed on the request of UMNO politicians often did not worked as expected because they deemed themselves to be the BOSS, not the Medical Officer or others in charge.... this knowledge that office boys, hospital attendants, drivers, etc are the masters as long as they have positions in UMNO or know the UMNO leaders... worse i was told if they are friends of the Sultan, or Sultan family....It is the Ketuanan Melayu which ties every PM, their hands... TAR Tun Mahathir etc are victims of their success because they did not see the need for a more civilized society based on meritocracy....

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Malaysia grants political asylum to 8 TKNU prisoner escapees - WHY? - LINA SOO



MALAYSIA GRANTS POLITICAL ASYLUM TO 8 TKNU PRISONER ESCAPEES
Why?

This letter dd 26 July 1973 from Home Office Msia is one of eight letters only of such kind, granting political asylum to the 8 tnku prisoner escapees from brunei prison. The 8 tnku were given political asylum and some sent to libya for arms training. their task? azahari was bribed with position and their task was to create situation in brunei whereby brunei could be forced to join Malaysia. azahari turned down the offer flat. under british protectorate treaty, Brunei eventually became a fully independent nation in 1984. [read azahari interview on youtube)

Did brunei and singapore get attacked? NO. Are Brunei and Singapore two of the richest nations in Asia? YES. Which country got invaded? No prizes for the correct answer.

In Brunei, no income tax. Free healthcare, you pay just token $1. Free education as long as you have a place based on meritocracy regardless of race or religion. Electricity bill per month B$6. Each citizen and permanent resident, male and female over the age of 60 receives B$250 per month even if you receive a pension. B$250 for you to drink as much coffee and tea as you wish until your jaws drop!

Still listen to the lackeys who tell you life is good, be thankful? Who are they kidding?


Lina Soo is a candidate for State Reform Party (STAR) for P196 Stampin, Sarawak in GE-13 and the author of popular book "Sarawak the Real Deal"

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By, Rajah Raqafluz

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