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PRESS STATEMENT
In Kota Kinabalu, 10 June 1998

HENRYNUS : JUSTIFY THE 20 PERCENT INCREASE IN 1994 VOTERS REGISTRATION

KOTA KINABALU – Member of Parliament for Kinabalu, Henrynus Amin, in a statement today asked the Election Commission to justify the 20 percent increase of registerd voters in Sabah since 1994.

He said the 100,000 increase from 600,000 in 1994 is a shocking development in Sabah’s political scene given its small population of 1.5 million minus the 500,00 or so foreigners recently legalized by the current BN administration under the amnesty program.

Henrynus was commenting on the statement by the Chairman of the Election Commission, Datuk Harun Din, who had disclosed that there were now 697,336 eligible voters in Sabah, an increase of almost 100,000 from 598,312 in 1994.

Henrynus said the huge increase raises serious questions as to the validity of the electoral roll and that there have been mounting calls for more government accountability and transparency.

He said public confidence is now at an all time low and said that there should be a full and immediate enquiry by the Federal Government in order to dispel public fears and suspicion.

He said the issue of faked identity cards and phantom voters were old issues raised by Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) since its inception in 1985.

"Unfortunately, there is yet any concrete proof that the Federal authorities have acted conclusively to settle the issue of phantom voters once and for all," he lamented.

He said with about 700,00 foreigners in Sabah out of a combined population of 2 million, there are now roughly one foreigner for every three Sabahans walking down the streets.

"I am puzzle as to why the Federal authorities continue to fail to monitor their movement and identify their whereabouts?" he asked.

He said he is even more concerned that these foreigners were now being legalized and given jobs at the expense of national security.

"Not only that the security of the state is at stake, now the intergrity of the country is being challenged by these foreign elements," he said.

He claimed that with about 700,000 eligible voters out of the 1.5 million local population, there seem to be an equal number of adult Sabahans with those under 21 years old.

"Is it logical to have one children for every adult in the street or is there sometyhing wrong with the statistics?" he asked.

He said given Sabah’s young population, there ought to be proportionally more children and less adults.

"The fact that Sabah seems to have an ageing population suggest that the population increase was almost certainly due to the influx of foreigners who have since obtained their Malaysian identity cards and are now duly registered as voters.

According to Henrynus there had been a sudden surge of adult applicants as voters in the last ten years which were largely concentrated in the east coast of Sabah.

"Just look at some details of certain identity cards registered as voters. They were mostly from Tawau, used "surat akuan" instead of their birth certificates to obtain their identity cards, frequently acquired them between the age of 26 and 40 years old and had their first registration as voters in coastal towns," he said.

Henrynus said he suspected that these were mostly foreigners of Indonesian and Filipino descent working in plantations.

He said there had been documented cases in the past of these foreigners being arrested for possession of false identity cards and later confessed to police to have voted in previous elections.

He said if indeed these confessions were true, then these are only the tip of an iceberg.

"I am yet to see those responsible especially organized syndicates be arrested and charged in court," he said.

Meanwhile, Henrynus said he regret that the Federal Government had rejected his query on the status of certain names he suspected to be foreigners registered in the electoral roll.

He said he has some records of dubious names registered as voters in the Sabah electoral roll but the Federal government had refused to furnish information as to the status of these names when asked in parliament recently.

"I received a written reply from the Prime Minister’s department telling me that the information I asked from them were official secret and therefore can not be given," he said.

"What is so secret about enquiring the citizenship status of certain people suspected to be foreigners registered as voters?" he asked.

"Am I not entitle to these privilege informations as a Member of Parliament or are they trying to hide the truth from the public?" he asked

 

 

 

 

 

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First published: 22-SEP-1997   Updated: 07-MAY-2003 Email: webmaster