Malaysiakini
A leaked US embassy cable has lent credence to Pakatan Rakyat leader Anwar Ibrahim’s claim that a group of Sabah and Sarawak politicians had planned to defect from the BN on Sept 16, 2008, over the marginalisation of the two states.
A leaked US embassy cable has lent credence to Pakatan Rakyat leader Anwar Ibrahim’s claim that a group of Sabah and Sarawak politicians had planned to defect from the BN on Sept 16, 2008, over the marginalisation of the two states.
An entry in the cable, posted by Wikileaks, quotes former Sabah chief minister Salleh Said Keruak (right) as telling US Embassy officials that potentially more than half of the 25 Sabah MPs were ready to abandon the BN.
The cable claimed further that embassy officials
found “no expressions of support” for Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad
Badawi’s leadership among the senior Sabah politicians they met in a
series of meetings in the state from June 18-20 that year.
“Matter-of-factly, Salleh stated that between eight
and 14 BN MPs (out of Sabah’s 25 MPs) would leave the BN, naming five
from Umno and four from Upko, in addition to two from Sapp,” the cable,
dated June 24, 2008, reads.
This is the first time a source outside of Pakatan has lent any legitimacy to Anwar’s Malaysia Day claims, which eventually turned out to be a dud despite months spent declaring that the opposition would take over the federal administration on the symbolic date.
Talk of the purported defections were not helped by a “study tour”
in Taiwan organised by the BN backbenchers club (BNBBC) – consisting
largely of MPs from Sabah and Sarawak – in the weeks before Sept 16,
with claims that it was to block attempts to woo the MPs over to the
other side.
The situation became even more suspect when a five-memberteam from
PKR followed suit a few days later, with vice-president Tian Chua –
then the publicity chief – confirming that they would be meeting “some
MPs” to rethink their positions in the BN.
BNBBC chief and Bintulu MP Tiong King Sing,
however, denied that the tour had any objectives outside the official
line that they were there to learn about Taiwan’s agriculture industry.
Loathing Abdullah, distrusting Anwar
However,
the cable, marked confidential, said that while senior Sabah
politicians were unanimous in their disgruntlement over Abdullah’s (right) leadership, they at the same time had little support for Anwar.
This appeared to be the case across political
lines, with old wounds clearly still raw over Anwar’s purported role in
the toppling of the PBS state government in 1994, when he was deputy
prime minister in Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s administration.
The cable said Salleh, described as an “Umno
warlord”, and Sapp president Yong Teck Lee – also a former chief
minister – had both pointed out Anwar’s popularity in Sabah, especially
among local Malays, but stated little else in terms of support for the
former Umno stalwart.
PBS
president Joseph Pairin Kitingan, a direct casualty of his party’s
downfall in 1994 from a string of defections to BN, made his stand clear
against Anwar, who he described as someone who “is only interested in
becoming prime minister”, as quoted in the cable.
More intriguingly, however, is the alleged
statement of the then-state DAP chief and current Kota Kinabalu MP Hiew
King Cheu, who the cable quoted as “scornfully” saying; “why should
anyone sacrifice for Anwar’s ambitions?”
The cable also cited discussions by “some Sabah
politicians” of forming a third block outside of BN and Pakatan, with
support – especially from DAP – for Umno veteran and former Semangat 46
chief Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah to lead a third parliamentary block
incorporating “disaffected MPs” from Umno, East Malaysia and opposition
parties PKR and DAP.
“Other politicians, including PBS leader Pairin,
simply appeared to endorse DPM Najib taking over immediately from
Abdullah,” the cable added, in reference to Prime Minister Najib Abdul
Razak, who served as deputy premier during Abdullah’s term.
Defections needed to clean out EC
A separate cable, issued a month earlier on May 13,
also classified as confidential, quoted the then PKR vice-president
Azmin Ali as saying that some BN parliamentarians were expected to
announce their defections between May 17 and 18, describing it as an
important move to avoid “manipulation” of the electoral rolls ahead of a
planned by-election that eventually saw Anwar elected to Parliament.
The by-election was on Aug 26.
The
cable quoted Azmin, now the party’s deputy president, as claiming that
the Election Commission would delay any by-election to the very end of
the 60-day period to give BN and the commission time to “manipulate the
electoral roll” and guarantee that Anwar would lose.
Azmin had apparently argued that it was better for
the opposition to first take in BN defectors and form an interim
government, before having a by-election to allow Anwar to contest and
win a parliamentary seat.
“Once the Peoples’ Alliance (Pakatan) obtains the
mandate to form the government, it will immediately oust the current
Election Commission chairman, who is seen as able to block Anwar’s
chances of becoming an MP,” the cable said.
The EC chief at the time was Abdul Rashid Abdul
Rahman, who served until his retirement in December, 2008 after
overseeing seven general elections. He was succeeded by the then Home
Ministry secretary-general Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof.
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