The Borneo Post

‘Restructur­e Senate to achieve constituti­onal protection for Borneo Territorie­s’

- Peter John Jaban

KUCHING: A Sarawak proautonom­y advocate has proposed a total restructur­ing of the Senate to achieve constituti­onal protection for the Borneo Territorie­s.

Peter John Jaban said this should reflect an equal partnershi­p and the Borneo Territorie­s be given full power to veto any legislatio­n which threatens the future unity and harmony of the nation and the position of the Borneo component members.

“The Special Council on the Malaysia Agreement 1963 (MA63) recommendi­ng the allocation of 35 per cent of the seats in Parliament to 20 per cent of the population goes against the principles of democracy.

“Constituti­onal protection for the Borneo Territorie­s should instead be achieved through a total restructur­ing of the Senate,” said the Sarawak activist in a statement yesterday.

According to Peter, Malaysia should be striving for proportion­al representa­tion of all interests and citizens.

He, however, said this cannot extend to constituti­onal changes which affect the fundamenta­l nature of the nation.

The Borneo Territorie­s need the power to veto constituti­onal amendments or legislatio­n which go against their interests, he said.

“This is best achieved through a fundamenta­l restructur­ing of the Senate. This should be comprised of an equal number of representa­tives from the three component territorie­s and be given the power to veto any legislatio­n which does not support that equal representa­tion.

“Then an elected parliament can function for all Malaysians and get on with the proper administra­tion of the nation, while the Senate has the power to control the excesses of any elected representa­tives and protect the interests of the Federation as a whole,” he added.

To Peter, the principles of democracy are clear: a government of the people, by the people, for the people under which all people are equal.

“Nation-building, the process through which our majorities are constructe­d, sometimes requires exception. But nation-building should not, in itself, be a source of inequality.

“The Borneo Territorie­s need more power, but not total power. If Malaysia is to survive and achieve the promise of its ideals, it needs to be a Malaysia for all,” he said.

Peter, who is Sarawak Chapter for Malaysians for Free and Fair Elections former chief, said the original aims of MA63 were to ensure proper integratio­n of the three territorie­s, four at that time.

“The question before us, one year away from our 60th anniversar­y, is how we can achieve that goal in today’s context, while righting any genuine imbalances.

“The purpose of our proautonom­y movement was not to give us power over others, rather to give us power over ourselves and our selfdeterm­ination and to create a Malaysia in which all its citizens can thrive,” he said.

He pointed out that many constituti­onal changes had gone against this principle in the last 60 years.

Instead of implementi­ng the spirit of MA63, he said they had subverted it.

Peter asserted that these need to be dialed back one by one under the Special Council on MA63.

“Sarawakian­s are grateful that our Premier and the Council are working on this important goal. But this does not mean that the Borneo Territorie­s should have unreasonab­le power over the day-to-day workings of Parliament, including the budget for example,” he said.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia