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Monday, March 31, 2008

Funny These Two-faced Sabahan Politicians...

Now, all of a sudden Sabahan BN politicians are jumping on the bandwagon ... criticising the Barisan Nasional government for their unfair handling of various issues involving Sabah when all the while they are BN members. Only now they dare voice their concern for Sabahans?!! Where were these politicians all these while? On 8th March 2008 when they were give the chance, did they choose to exercise their right and voice their so-called genuine concern for Sabahan rights? On 8th March 2008, they had their chance to tell their BN masters what they thought about all the unfair policies that the BN were dealing Sabahans? And what did these politicians (who are only now criticising) do? They voted BN right back to power knowing fully well how unfairly the BN have treated Sabahans all along? You, the same politicians who have been licking the crumbs off the BN table, kowtowing to your masters in Kuala Lumpur, only now you say KL is taking us for granted and have been unfair to us. I was expecting the opposition people to highlight these issues as it was the opposition who push and paved the way for the political change that is beginning to transform the political landscape in Malaysia. Instead, all I see is a bunch of BN politicians in Sabah who are trying to salvage their reputation, and trying to win back the people (read, revive or prolong their political career).

In the local dailies yesterday, one Sabahan BN politician was whining about how the BN takes Sabah's contribution for granted, and another groveling that it's time KL review 'unfair' policies in Sabah. The BN government has been taking this unfair stand vis-a-vis Sabah since God knows when. And only now they suddenly realise that Sabahan have been taken for a ride for the past 45 years? Pelizzzz... It is funny how these two-faced politicians think that people on the street are too stupid to see right through them. We see right through you, misters! Behind the garbage that are gurgling out of your mouths, we can hear you loud and clear saying : "I can now afford to criticise the BN a bit because there is a 'Goverment-in-waiting'. Datuk Seri Anwar's Barisan Rakyat (BR) will certainly be impressed when I try to act smart and academic and speak up for Sabah's rights, that they will surely offer me millions to join BR."

To DSAI, be aware of politicians such as these. When you trudged and campaigned in the State leading to GE2008, these same politicians were singing to the high heavens the so-called goodness and glories of BN. Only now, they dare change their tune and openly criticise the BN. Of course now they dare change their tune, only because the PM and BN are at the most vulnerable, and then there is that Government-in-waiting akin to a safety net for them. I knew the minute DSAI spoke of the Government-in-waiting that they will a flurry of opportunist politicians bearing application forms rushing to get into the Barisan Rakyat coalition. They are just too many political frogs in the country, and Sabah is full of them, these opportunist frogs. These kataks have been responsible for bringing down good governments in Sabah, and have created much havoc for the State in the past.

These sort of politicians think they are showing some sense of bravery konon, but all we see is a bunch of opportunists! Yes, that what these politicians are. They jump to the fore and take credit of the situation created by the Barisan Rakyat to revive their own dying political careers. As one opposition leader in the State puts it, the Sabah BN leaders are now singing the same song as him with regard to the treatment of Sabah by the Federal Government. Only now these politicians show their so-called bravery to criticise the BN. Why? Because the BN and the Prime Minister are at their weakest, and this is the opportune time for blackmailing. And if all does not go well with the BN, there is now that other option... the Government-in-waiting of DSAI, or so these politicians think. Well, think again, misters! You are all political has-beens. Some of you only won the election because they made use of the postal votes - the contingency votes.

If you think about it, these are the sort of politicians that we should keep away from. Prior to this, they were singing BN praises, and kissing the hands of leaders in spite of Sabahans being treated unfairly. Now that the BN leaders are seen as vulnerable and weak, only then these politicians start coming out and criticising BN and the Federal government. It's like stepping on your opponent when he has already fallen to the ground. That's taking advantage of another's vulnerability. And that's the type of politicians we should be wary about because these politicians are, in effect, cowards.

To these politicians, I say, show your principles and bravery at all times. Stay committed to your vision and political values at all times and speak without fear or favour. We expect you to do so. That was why we voted for you in the first place. Don't just speak up and pretend to be brave when others, especially your bosses, are weak and vulnerable. Be consistent with you values and your principles. Speak without fear or favour on behalf of Sabahans who voted for you. And never forget WHO or WHY we voted for you. Looks like you have already forgotten why you are where you are today. So before, the voters make you fall with such disgrace that you've never seen before, it's best for all around that you just vanish into the night...

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Election Irregularities, Votes-Buying, Postal and Phantom Voters Impacting the Sabah GE2008 Results

As mentioned in a previous post, there surely will be complaints on polling irregularities and elections petitions emerging after the dust settles post GE2008. PKR Sabah has announced it would file 7 petitions over the Pensiangan, Papar, Kota Belud and Tuaran Parliamentary results and over the outcome of the State seats of Api-Api, Pantai Manis and Kimanis. My gut feeling is there are more than the afore-mentioned but it would be hard to file petitions based on gut feelings.

Election Irregularities

The election irregularities this time around involve the use of postal votes (called them contingency votes?!) to plus or minus to the total votes cast into order to come to the exact outcome that they want. It goes without saying that this entails friendly SPR or government officials, right? Other complaints include the refusal of election officials to a recount, and BN announcing themselves as winners before 8pm when counting of votes were still going on in a number of tallying centres at midnight.

Vote-Buying

Election irregularities seem not only the main issue, there are also complaints of rampant votes-buying which candidates are no longer afraid to do so openly. People are talking about and comparing the amount of cash each voter got in last weekend's polling, with figures ranging from RM20, RM30, RM50 to RM100 and some even to RM600. Others get cash for airfares and hotel accommodation. The hotter the seat, the bigger the cash payment. So my friends and I joke about planning to turn our respective constituencies into hots seats so that we can maximize the cash we get through our votes. It's a sad day for democracy to see our votes being exchanged for money. But personally, only if one is governed by good principles, I doubt that the cash can change a voter's choice if he/she had already made up his/her mind. Your vote speaks your belief, your principles. So even if someone offers me RM1000 or so, I'd take the money and still vote for what I believe. No one can change that. And there's no need to feel guilty if I didn't vote for the party which gave me the money because that money came from us, the people who paid taxes. In effect, the money was mine in the first place. But still, it is a sad day when people think that principles can be bought and sold.

Phantom voters

Has phantom voters become a bad part and parcel of Malaysian Elections? I hope not. Previously, there have been numerous stories of bus loads of strangers coming into town to vote. I observed that this tactic (i.e., the bus loads of outsiders coming into town to vote) is on the decrease. I guess the news about the Kuala Penyu 1999 incident traveled far and wide in Sabah and frightened a lot of people. In that incident, a few bus loads of foreigners (mostly Indonesians) came into town to vote in the district and were ambushed by the locals as they cross the ferry into town. Their accent gave them away when they tried to find their way to polling stations in the district. There were stories that some were badly beaten, one died and thrown into the river, and others after being chased like dogs around in the small town had to jump into the Kuala Penyu river to escape the wrath of the locals. I, personally, witnessed in the late afternoon that polling day the two bus loads of foreigners holed up in the BN headquarters in town which was surrounded by angry locals who were shouting and cursing and holding big sticks and what-not. The police had to be called in to escort the foreigners out of town. After that incident, I didn't hear of similar stories any more. But then again, people are ingenious and can think of many ways around a problem... like using smaller, inconspicuous cars and coming in just before closing time when most of the locals have gone home. I thought I saw that happening last Saturday...

My last two posts have been a wee bit hard on Sabahan voters. Forgive me, but in my disappointment I had ranted a bit. I thought the cash that they were distributing to almost everyone on polling day somehow managed to buy votes, and that was upsetting. However, they were a number a number of slim majorities and recounting of votes. In a number of polling stations, after the first count, the opposition had clearly won. However after recount, that opposition had lost. These irregularities are evidence enough that all is not well with our election machinery.

Like it or not, all these things are still going on and happening right before our eyes. Any monkey is capable of thinking that if you put all the above together, they can make the election outcome go a certain way.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Fellow Sabahans...Let's Analyse Ourselves Post GE2008

Fellow Sabahans, why do you think we voted as we did in the General Elections of 2008? Can we do ourselves a favour? Let's look at ourselves long and hard. What happened to us? Have we turned into cowards? Why are we putting up with the bread crumbs that the BN Kuala Lumpur and their stooges in Kota Kinabalu are throwing out at us?

Since the election results of 8th March '08 polling, I couldn't stop trying to figure out what happened to the true fighting spirit that is Sabahans. What happened to the tough, defiant Sabahans that once easily overthrew a government overnight? We fought alone a losing battle for nearly a decade. Did we lost that tough Sabahan spirit? Have we no hope left?

I simply couldn't stop trying to figure out why. Why did we vote in the Election 2008 to return a State BN spineless government that only do the bidding of their KL masters. At the smallest issue that we face in Sabah, the State BN leaders keep running to Kuala Lumpur to kowtow and get the approval of their BN masters. Just to form a State Cabinet, even as we speak, our State leaders have to run to KL to get big daddy's approval. Isn't that pitiful?

So what happened to us when we voted as we did last weekend? Are we so politically oblivious to the happenings in the rest of the country? Are we that politically stupid? Don't we care what can happen to our judicial system? Don't we care what will happen to our children and their children because we allow the PTIs to economically take over Sabah? Are we going to allow the federal BN extract every drop of our precious oil reserves and continue to get back peanuts from them? We are pitifully happy with the 5% royalty we get from our own oil? Until when? Petronas is controlling the 95%. Until when are we going to wake up to the fact that we are being robbed a full 95% of our oil revenue? On the first day of government, the Barisan Alternatif in Penang is already going to ask for money from state oil from Petronas to fund Penang's new bridge project:

"PENANG, Malaysia (Reuters) - Malaysia's opposition-held state of Penang will lobby the prime minister to use cash from state oil firm Petronas to fund a new $940 million bridge project, Penang's new chief minister said on Tuesday..."

What about us? We have been giving away our black gold to Petronas for years, billions and billions worth that could have build Sabah into the most developed and beautiful State in Malaysia. That black gold should have been ours because it is from beneath this Land Below the Wind. Petronas have gotten billions from Sabah. And what do we Sabahans have in return? We should be nearly as rich as the King of Brunei. Again, I ask, what do Sabahans have? What we have is the POOREST BN-ruled State in Malaysia! That's what Sabah is...the POOREST state in the whole of Malaysia! We also have a 10-year old who committed suicide by hanging himself because he was too ashamed of being poor anymore, thinking that if he died, his mother would have one less mouth to feed and a little bit more extra to take care of her medical problem. Have we forgotten that? What kind of human beings are we turning into?! If a 10 year old can think so selflessly, what does that make the rest of us?

So, help me here. Pray, tell me what happened the last time we voted just this last weekend. I have problem coming up with our good excuses. Some that I could think of:

  1. We are too afraid to vote back the opposition because we don't want to go back to that 'black period' in the past when we were an opposition and were denied developments that should have been our right too (from the human rights' perspective).
  2. We are too afraid to freely speak our minds because the BN government can just throw us in jail under ISA.
  3. We are too afraid to speak because we can lose our jobs, then who will take care of our family, pay our bills? Hence, it's not worth speaking up. I am already surviving hand to mouth as it is.
  4. We are too afraid and too coward to act because the past BN Government had successfully planted in all of us the fear of speaking up and taking action.
  5. ... (What else...I am running out of excuses here...we must just be a bunch of frightened Sabahans)
Please help me out here. What else? What other excuses can we give for voting as we did last Saturday? Did the cash that ALL the BN candidates handed out on polling day did the trick? Did we trade our children's future for a mere RM20, some RM50, Rm100, others plan tickets and hotel accommodation? Votes buying were so rampant last Saturday. All the BN candidates were not even afraid to do it openly. Some villages were partying and giving money to voters while ceramah-ing for the whole 10 days prior to polling. Have we stooped this low?

I didn't know that analyzing ourselves can be hard. I guess it's hard because we don't even know who or what we are anymore. Maybe, we have all become afraid, cowardly, corrupted, selfish (because we only think of ourselves and not of our children), with no principles and backbone. We keep referring back to the BN masters in KL for every little thing that concerns our future. Again, have we stooped this low? Guess, it has all become management-by-example now. Are we all a reflection of our leaders or is it the other way around?

Right now, I am not particularly proud of being a Sabahan. What are we?! What excuse can we give for being the chicken and disunited Sabahans that we are this moment?

Monday, March 10, 2008

(West) Malaysian Voters Rule! ...Sabahan Voters, What Happened?!

Congratulations West Malaysian voters! You knocked some democratic sense into the thick skulls of the arrogant BN leaders. Sabahan Voters, have we failed? Right now I am very disappointed, devastated by the elections results. They have labeled Sabahans as not prepared for change! Aren't we?

The last couple of days have been the greatest in Malaysia's political history. I have been glued to the TV screen hungry for the latest developments and news in Peninsular Malaysia where the winds of change have knocked down those arrogant top BN has-beens. From Sabah, from the silent majority in Sabah, we extend our congratulations to all voters over in Peninsula for your bravery and having made this possible. Malaysians have truly spoken through the ballot boxes last 8th of March 2008.

This is the Malaysia I have always wanted, and I am sure I'm not alone on this, of this I am absolutely sure. I know there is a silent majority here that has been stifled because the fear of speaking up has been successfully planted amongst us from what we have been through all these years. This is the Malaysia we longed for and proud to be part of. I thought the shouts for justice in Peninsular Malaysia was deafening to us here, I thought we were listening. Guess I thought wrong.

Dear Sabahan voters, what happened to us on 8th March 2008? Are we that politically unaware, politically stupid??! Can we not remember what Sabahans went through all these years? What about all those years of being sidelined, divided and ruled, opposed and oppressed for so long? We have been fighting a losing battle alone for so long, we have been the opposition state with Kelantan back then for quite a bit...it had been tough fighting a losing battle on our own. Have we given up hope? The nincompoops we have in power here are simply the miniatures of that in the Federal BN. The earlier BN autocracy had succeeded to divide and rule us because our nincompoop State leaders are so power crazy that they are willing to kowtow so low to lick the bread crumbs off the feet of the Federal BN leaders just so they can hold on to power! Just so they can hold on to power, the State BN leaders allowed Sabah to be ruled on a two-year rotation basis. Then, Chief Minister after Chief Minister plundered and raped our beloved land to enrich themselves and their cronies! Where on God's given earth has a State been so divided and ruled through a so-called two-year rotation basis???! Why have we allowed this? We were one of the richest States in Malaysia? How did we allow them to rob our lands, our island, our oil resources? We were once rich and now we are the second poorest after Kelantan! But remember, Kelantan is an opposition State. So counting out an opposition state, that makes Sabah the POOREST STATE in Malaysia!

And those are not enough, isn't it? The BN govt allowed the PTIs to further destroy Sabah; the project IC and the phantom voters helped rigged any election; our poverty is such that it embarasses our children, to the point of driving a 10 year student to commit suicide; our oil resources are being extracted to enrich a few and soon will be channeled to Sarawak by Petronas as if Sabah cannot manage its own oil resources? the JPS build RM15 million schools in the middle of nowhere where there is no student population while our government controlled schools (formerly mission schools) in urban areas are so crowded and don't even have space for a padang; the price of fuel and cooking gas have increased...and so on and so forth. And yet, dear Sabahan voters, we keep mum. What are we afraid of?

The alternative coalition that is now ruling Penang, Selangor, Perak and Kedah...isn't that what we actually are and what Sabah has always been, a multiracial, tolerant community. All through the recent election campaign, I had thought PKR is very acceptable to us, especially in the grassroots.

Since the results were out Sunday (9th March 08), what I felt was general subdued feeling all around, or is it just me and my friends? Yeah, Sabah BN won by a landslide, but there is no feeling of jubilation, excitement and hope. We don't see it, we don't feel it. The only happy people are the State BN winners and their cronies. And right now, even as I write, those state BN leaders are in Kuala Lumpur, unahamedly lobbying for state cabinet posts and the blessings of their BN masters. The impression the people get is that all the state leaders ever care for are positions and money! Can Sabahans not see this? Are we so blind?

At the grassroots, all we feel are disappointment, confusion and embarrassment. I don't know about you, but for many of us, somehow, something just doesn't feel right with the recent elections results. Something's amiss... something just doesn't feel right about the whole thing. The general undercurrent that was strongly felt at the grassroots throughout the recent campaign period somehow did not surface in the election results. You see, throughout the campaign period, when the Sabah Development Corridor (SDC) was showcased around Sabah, with exhibitions in major towns and used as a campaign tool that moved around the State, we kept tracked. What we observed was that the reception of the masses to the SDC was not even lukewarm. Many knew it was just another election gimmick. Among the professionals, the kampung folks and the young, we whispered amongst us: the decision have been made...that, yes, we know that BN will rule again both in State and Federal, but we want a strong opposition in Sabah and Malaysia. We want a multiracial vehicle that tolerates our multiracialness and let us live in peace. We, the silent majority, spoke quietly among ourselves, we shook hands, we knew, we have decided. We want justice, transparency, good governance and to live freely, in harmony; not oppressed, divided and ruled. That was what we felt.

Last Sunday morning, 9th March, many of us woke up stunned by the results of the 2008 State Elections. Yes, Sabah BN won by a landslide. But there was no feeling of jubilation among us, only sadness, disappointment and confusion. And I repeat, somehow, the general undercurrent that was strongly felt at the grassroots throughout the campaign period somehow did not materialise in the election results. What I knew we all felt strongly about just did not tally with the election results. What happened? Could it be that the silent majority was denied its true voice by some treacherous election machinery? If the MP of Pensiangan, Sabah with the help of the SPR officials cheated in broad daylight to win unopposed in Pensiangan, then wouldn't it be so much more easier to do likewise during a heavily rainy night at tallying stations in remote constituencies? These are only some of the questions that have been heard. Another question was (remember, it was raining heavily all day all over Sabah that polling day making our interior muddy roads difficult to pass through) how could the Papar Constituency and its 2 State seats of Kawang and Pantai Manis announced themselves as winners just TWO (2) hours after polling closed at 5.00pm, when some tallying stations under Papar have NOT even finished counting the ballots?! In a neighbouring state seat, how could a majority of 805 in the 2004 elections become a majority of 5730 votes in 2008, with the same candidate standing and had several issues floating around during the campaign while the constituency's sentiment had clearly remained the same? Can someone enlightened me on how the 5000 votes came about?

Barely two days after polling, slow but surely, complaints and grouses related to polling irregularities are beginning to surface. Many of us are puzzled about a lot of things that happened after polling was closed at 5.00pm on the 8th of March 2008. I know a lot more questions will come up from a lot more places in Sabah in the next few days. Could all these events orchestrated by some unseen hand be the reason why whatever we felt before and on polling day did not translate into the election results over the weekend?

In the end, my fellow Sabahans, we will be the ones suffering the consequences of our action. We did not use our brains when we voted, we did not vote wisely for the sake of our future and that of our children's children. While our West Malaysian fellowmen and women are prepared and daring to change the future for the better of all Malaysians and our children, I am so disappointed that we Sabahans want to remain disunited and oppressed forever!

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Of Elections, The Development Promises, The Betrayal

It is election time again in my corner of the world, general elections, that is. Just the 12th one as my nation turns 50. Polling is on 8th March 2008. Quite a number of livelihood could be changed by the election results.

Somehow, the election this time around is a bit sombre, at least in my Malaysian State of Sabah. It's not the usual circus-like merriment, battle-of-the-posters/banners/billboards with politicos up in arms with fiery rhetorics and blazing slogans. Previously, you always know the 'circus' is coming to town because the banners and posters lining up the graveled and dusty, dusty roads provide a bit more colour to your otherwise dust-colored, quiet and time-forgotten tiny little town. My town couldn't even qualify as a town, I'm sure, because there are only two blocks of occupied semi-concrete shop houses. The supposedly new 'also 2-blocks' of shophouses remained almost unoccupied, and now nearly dilapidated, because there's no consumer buying power that should have been created by our so-called elected leaders to bring in progress and development in the last 40 years or so. Although my town under the Kawang Constituency is a mere 20 km from Sabah's capital of Kota Kinabalu, nothing has changed much since independence (50 years for the nation, and about 45 years or so for the State). The earlier mentioned 2-blocks of occupied shophouses stand on the same foundation which the British built during their administration.

I have always wondered why my town was never developed (I've not even started talking about my village and its neighbours). We have an elected State Assemblyman who was even the Chief Minister for Sabah from 1999-2001. Development projects should be pouring into the constituency by now! Or so we thought, then. Still, our pride that the Chief Minister of Sabah was actually OUR very own home-grown kampung boy got the better of us. So we never really complained nor made much noise. Our representative, being the Chief Minister of Sabah then, will DEFINITELY bring in the long-awaited developments, we keep reminding ourselves. We waited…


And waited…and waited, and hoped and waited some more. Only to wait in vain. Then, in July 2005, we received the answer to the question why our villages and towns in the constituency were never developed. The answer was splashed all over local, national and international media. The extract from published reports gave us the answer:

The affidavit of the Gaming Manager of The Ritz Hotel Casino (“the Club”) , Robert William Whitehall dated 29th May 2003, in the suit against Osu, which has not been contradicted by the former Sabah Chief Minister, alleged that Osu had submitted his application for membership of the Club on 8th July 2000 (when he was Sabah Chief Minister), that Osu “gambled on almost a daily basis” in his various trips to London in February, April, May and September 2002; that on a single day on May 11, 2002, he gambled British Pound 1.5 million with a loss of British Pound 1,499,000; and that Osu was also gambling in other London casinos…


Can you feel how we felt?! No, of course you can’t because you were never in our shoes!

The reports said he lost RM7.1 million in British casinos. Other reports alleged he gambled up to RM28 million! Is that even humanly possible! Those are supposed to be OUR money, to build schools, roads, bridges and provide water and electricity for us and our children. How can he do that???!! We had elected him to the State Assembly, to give us voice, to give us developments. And he had just handed our people's money to those filthy rich people in Britain!!! To this day, there is no piped water supply to my family house in my village! We STILL depend on gravity water. Can you even remotely understand how we feel?!!!

And hurray! Our former rep even made it to the online wikipedia!

“From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Osu Sukam


12th Chief Minister of Sabah

In office
19992001

Preceded by


Succeeded by



Political party


Religion


Osu Sukam, or Datuk Seri Panglima Osu Bin Haji Sukam, is an ex-Chief Minister of the state of Sabah, Malaysia. He became the 12th Chief Minister of the state in 1999 and took over the post from .... Following the rotation system in place at that time, Osu, an ethnic Bajau, held the post for two years representing the Muslim bumiputras of Sabah. In 2001, he was replaced …. Until July 14, 2005, he was a member of a ruling United Malays National Organization party, which he resigned from due to gambling debts totalling at least USD$1.8 million he accumulated from Ritz Hotel Casino in London and another casino.[1] He bears a striking resemblance to Roland Gift, the lead singer of the pop group the Fine Young Cannibals.

Gambling controversy

The casino obtained a judgment in the High Court in England to recover debts owed by Osu. The casino sought to enforce the judgment in Malaysia by registering the judgment in the High Court of Sabah and Sarawak in July, 2005. The High Court at Kota Kinabalu refused to register the judgment on grounds of public policy. However in 2007, the Court of Appeal ruled in favor of the casino allowing the debt to be recovered.”

So why do I keep harping on an old story, you may ask?

Because, betrayal hits deep. We waited for the promised developments and a better quality of life for us and our children. They never came! Anyway, it is not even an old story. We are still reeling from the effect of that man’s stupidity! Most of my fellow villagers are hardcore poor. Our teenagers tried to help their parents by working with the local cable company…tukang tarik kabel. Some died from work hazards (My 17 year-old nephew was accidentally knocked down by a lorry at this workplace last month, and died instantly on the eve of Chinese New Year). Others turn to stealing, drinking and drugs. A 10 year old student hanged himself because he was too embarrassed by his family’s poverty. That poor boy (God rest his soul!) was attending school in this gambler’s constituency. While this tragedy may have been partly the result of the poor government delivery system in the district, but Mr. Kawang Gambler was the head of the State Government at some point and our elected representative and was in a position to resolve the numerous public sector problems. But he was too busy gambling away the people's money. Shame, shame on you, osu! To Mr Kawang Gambler, remember...karma is real and what goes around, come around. The people in your constituency may not be able to get even with you but there's a higher power who is looking out for us.

And I harp on this too because there should be lessons learnt from this disgusting story of the Kawang gambler. Come this 2008 General Elections, be very, very wise:

· Never choose a gambler as your State Assemblyman just because he is seen as a diehard political party member.

· Cast your votes wisely.

· Don’t become fanatic fools like us!

· Use your head not your heart when voting.

· Don’t be Fanatics who listen to local and national rhetorics!

· Don’t be Fanatics, religious or otherwise!

· Don’t be Fanatics, racial or otherwise!

· JUST DON’T BE FANATICS!

· Use your head, and vote wisely!

So, friends, fellow Malaysians, Sabahans. Come 8th March 2008, it is time to make better your future. We don't need people who have been around for donkey years and have not done anything to change your village, your community for the better. Look at their track record. What have they given back to you? Think of the future of your community, your children's future and vote OUT the USELESS & GOOD FOR NOTHING politicians! It is your right to choose, to vote. Choose wisely. Cast your vote wisely!

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