By FMT Staff
KOTA KINABALU: Sabah Progressive Party president Yong Teck Lee has claimed that the ceding of Sabah’s oil-rich territories in Blocks L and M to Brunei was the price that the state had to pay for being the “fixed deposit” of the Barisan Nasional.
Putting the blame squarely on Umno, he said: “It seems that Sarawak, which has no Umno in their state, is doing far better than Sabah which ironically is dominated by Umno.
“It is also time for the federal officials to stop insulting the intelligence of Malaysians in Sabah for thinking that we can be easily taken in by their flimsy arguments,” said Yong.
The former Sabah chief minister also accused the BN-led federal government of trying to justify an illegal and unconstitutional act in the ceding the territory to Brunei.
“Our Foreign Minister Anifah Aman also tried to justify the loss of Sabah’s three million acres in Blocks L and M by relying on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982 (UNCLOS 1982) which gave the areas to Brunei.
“If UNCLOS 1982 is so clear cut that the three million acres belong to Brunei, then why did Malaysia award the same area to an oil company (Murphy Oil) in January 2003?” he asked.
The explanation by the foreign ministry that Petronas has been given commercial rights to operate oil Blocks J and K in Brunei under commercial arrangement CA1 and CA2 (also known as Blocks L and M in Malaysia) has exposed the fact that the federal government has sacrificed Sabah’s rights and interests, he said.
“The ministry is trying to explain an illegal and unconstitutional act. Does the ministry think the people have forgotten that the previous month (December 2002), Malaysia had just won the Sipadan/Ligitan case at the International Court of Justice?
“Malaysia was already an expert on international law on territorial disputes. Surely our government and Petronas lawyers were already convinced about the Malaysian status of Block L and M before awarding them to Murphy Oil.
“Were our foreign ministry officials, our government’s lawyers, our mapping department, Petronas and other agencies so incompetent not to have known whether the areas were within Malaysian or Brunei territory?” Yong asked.
The assertion that the key elements of the Exchange of Letters in Brunei on March 16, 2009 between Malaysia and Brunei was the delimitation of maritime boundaries, maritime access, commercial arrangement for oil and gas and land boundaries was also questioned by the former chief minister.
Yong said the then prime minister (Abdullah Ahmad Badawi) did not mention anything about oil and gas and the loss of maritime territories when he proclaimed that Brunei had agreed to drop their claim on Limbang after the Exchange of Letters on March 16, 2009 between him and the Sultan of Brunei.
In fact, immediately after Abdullah’s declaration that Brunei had dropped their claim on Limbang, the Brunei Second Foreign Minister issued a vehement denial that Brunei had dropped their claim on Limbang.
Said Yong: “There was no response from Malaysia. So, at the time, I thought that it was the Bruneians who had got themselves a bad deal. I was doubtful that Malaysia would make such a mistake in bilateral negotiations.
"As we now know, our then prime minister had told only half the truth by disclosing the Limbang issue but not the loss of the oil blocks. Instead of disclosing the loss of our maritime territories, the then prime minister chose to declare only that Brunei has dropped its claim on Limbang.
Musa denies loss of territory
Meanwhile Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman has denied ceding any state territory to Brunei.
He said this after chairing the second state security committee meeting yesterday.
He said the state government had been briefed about the matter by Wisma Putra twice, but he did not say when the meetings took place.
Local media also quoted him as saying that the state attorney-general had advised that no Sabah areas had been ceded.
He said that there was no need to bring the issue to the state assembly given that no territory had been surrendered as has been demanded by state opposition leaders.
KOTA KINABALU: Sabah Progressive Party president Yong Teck Lee has claimed that the ceding of Sabah’s oil-rich territories in Blocks L and M to Brunei was the price that the state had to pay for being the “fixed deposit” of the Barisan Nasional.
Putting the blame squarely on Umno, he said: “It seems that Sarawak, which has no Umno in their state, is doing far better than Sabah which ironically is dominated by Umno.
“It is also time for the federal officials to stop insulting the intelligence of Malaysians in Sabah for thinking that we can be easily taken in by their flimsy arguments,” said Yong.
The former Sabah chief minister also accused the BN-led federal government of trying to justify an illegal and unconstitutional act in the ceding the territory to Brunei.
“Our Foreign Minister Anifah Aman also tried to justify the loss of Sabah’s three million acres in Blocks L and M by relying on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982 (UNCLOS 1982) which gave the areas to Brunei.
“If UNCLOS 1982 is so clear cut that the three million acres belong to Brunei, then why did Malaysia award the same area to an oil company (Murphy Oil) in January 2003?” he asked.
The explanation by the foreign ministry that Petronas has been given commercial rights to operate oil Blocks J and K in Brunei under commercial arrangement CA1 and CA2 (also known as Blocks L and M in Malaysia) has exposed the fact that the federal government has sacrificed Sabah’s rights and interests, he said.
“The ministry is trying to explain an illegal and unconstitutional act. Does the ministry think the people have forgotten that the previous month (December 2002), Malaysia had just won the Sipadan/Ligitan case at the International Court of Justice?
“Malaysia was already an expert on international law on territorial disputes. Surely our government and Petronas lawyers were already convinced about the Malaysian status of Block L and M before awarding them to Murphy Oil.
“Were our foreign ministry officials, our government’s lawyers, our mapping department, Petronas and other agencies so incompetent not to have known whether the areas were within Malaysian or Brunei territory?” Yong asked.
The assertion that the key elements of the Exchange of Letters in Brunei on March 16, 2009 between Malaysia and Brunei was the delimitation of maritime boundaries, maritime access, commercial arrangement for oil and gas and land boundaries was also questioned by the former chief minister.
Yong said the then prime minister (Abdullah Ahmad Badawi) did not mention anything about oil and gas and the loss of maritime territories when he proclaimed that Brunei had agreed to drop their claim on Limbang after the Exchange of Letters on March 16, 2009 between him and the Sultan of Brunei.
In fact, immediately after Abdullah’s declaration that Brunei had dropped their claim on Limbang, the Brunei Second Foreign Minister issued a vehement denial that Brunei had dropped their claim on Limbang.
Said Yong: “There was no response from Malaysia. So, at the time, I thought that it was the Bruneians who had got themselves a bad deal. I was doubtful that Malaysia would make such a mistake in bilateral negotiations.
"As we now know, our then prime minister had told only half the truth by disclosing the Limbang issue but not the loss of the oil blocks. Instead of disclosing the loss of our maritime territories, the then prime minister chose to declare only that Brunei has dropped its claim on Limbang.
Musa denies loss of territory
Meanwhile Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman has denied ceding any state territory to Brunei.
He said this after chairing the second state security committee meeting yesterday.
He said the state government had been briefed about the matter by Wisma Putra twice, but he did not say when the meetings took place.
Local media also quoted him as saying that the state attorney-general had advised that no Sabah areas had been ceded.
He said that there was no need to bring the issue to the state assembly given that no territory had been surrendered as has been demanded by state opposition leaders.
11 comments:
A further & more detail explanation need to be done by the government to clarify this issues..but i believe that the government know what their are doing & doesn't secede the area without getting anything...
Prime Minister chose to declare only that Brunei has dropped its claim on Limbang? Well, that's hard to believe, but I'm sure our Sabah will surely get something out of this. The goverment won't let anything get ceded without getting anything back. Only former PM and now CM Sabah knows what they are doing.
Denying? Well, It was one of the major acts that the government had caused his downfall the following year. But the deal is done, what can we do now? We can't get the land back after agreement is settle. We just have to face the fact.
well, just wait and see how things going...there's nothing to worry about...the govt won't simply ceded any territory without any approval...i'm sure there be an explanation according to this matter..
People keeps wondering, did we lose the rich oil land? If we did, we have lost RM 320 Billion in oil that has the area that is as large as the combined sized of the states of Perlis, Penang, Melaka and Selangor. That's waste, but can we get the land back from Brunei or Brunei will just keep quiet??
SAPP has too much to blame.
Tidak payahlah terlalu banyak drama. Penat sudah mata melihat, telinga mendengar dan otak berjalan.
Yong, please clarify your statement then.
Isn't it obvious that Yong trying to flame up the issue so that people will be annoyed with the current government. If the people vote Opposition, Yong will become CM. That is his aim.
SAPP dramas is soo over-rated..So far, Brunei haven't said anything yet. Meaning this issue is not confirmed. Only Wisma Putra release a statement. We need to hear both side of explanations.
SAPP blames UMNO? Right..Ini isu boleh bikin otak go overdrive bah kan..Suda2 lah YTL..Bawa2 lah berehat..
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