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Sarawak's renewed political hopes PDF Print
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Tuesday, 16 December 2008 09:11


Illustration of Dayak people, dated 1864 (Public domain; source: Wikipedia.org)

The grand finale should culminate in Kuching on 19 Dec, where 8,000 people are expected to turn up to welcome Anwar. The people of Sarawak are now stretching their necks forward to see whether there will be more elected representatives and Dayak voters joining the PKR.

Sim Kwang Yang, The Nut Graph

SARAWAK'S Dayaks seldom feature with any significance in the national imagination of Malaysia, and certainly do not make headlines in the national media. This reflects the political marginalisation of the Dayaks in their home state. 

The Dayaks collectively make up nearly half the state's population, and by the logic of communal politics, they should dominate politics in Sarawak. They did, briefly, during the early years of Merdeka, when their political vehicle was the Sarawak National Party, or SNAP. The president of the party then, Datuk Stephen Kalong Ningkan — an Iban — was the first chief minister of Sarawak, serving from July 1963 to September 1966. He was removed from office by a federally initiated Declaration of Emergency and a constitutional amendment resulting from a protracted constitutional crisis. Since 1970, the office of the chief minister has been held by two Melanau Muslims.

The dream of Dayak leaders since has been the restoration of what they consider their political glory: the installation of a Dayak chief minister. Formed in 1983 as a splinter group from SNAP, the Parti Bangsa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) was the vehicle for this mission. The PBDS applied and was accepted as a member of the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition.

In the Ming Court affair of 1987, the PBDS left the BN and joined forces with Persatuan Rakyat Malaysia Sarawak (Permas) to form the opposition Maju alliance. They mounted a credible challenge to the BN in the subsequent state elections, but failed to dislodge Chief Minister Tan Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud from office. Campaigning on the nationalist slogan of Dayakism, they won 15 seats, but eight of their elected representatives then defected to join SNAP and Taib's Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB).

After another unsuccessful election in 1991, the PBDS finally ran out of gas and rejoined the BN in 1994.

More power struggles

A power struggle within SNAP in 2002 led to its deregistration and the formation of the Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party (SPDP), which was registered three days after application.

In 2004, there was another power struggle, this time within the PBDS, following the retirement of their long-serving president, Tan Sri Leo Moggie. Like SNAP, the PBDS was also deregistered; the new splinter, Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS), was formed and registered on the same day. One year later, there was an open acrimonious power struggle within the PRS, and it was resolved only after April 2008. 


Tan Sri Leo Moggie (Source: uniten.edu.my)

You have to wonder at the power and efficiency of the Registrar of Societies over the fate of political parties. Does this suggest that there are unseen federal government hands working in collusion with the Sarawak chief minister?

And if you've had the patience to follow this tale of Dayak politics in Sarawak thus far, what kind of impression would you now have of Dayak politicians?

Many of these Dayak politicians are my long-time personal friends, and I would cringe to criticise them in public. I also have a lot of respect for many well-known Dayak leaders, especially Datuk Seri Daniel Tajem. Whatever his faults may be, he has shown tremendous strength of character and personal integrity in his long and difficult political career.

Nevertheless, one has to painfully conclude that in the evolution of Dayak politics, personal ambition, vested interests, and the inability to forge consensus have fractured and destroyed one Dayak political vehicle after another. Today, they are divided into so many miniscule Dayak parties that they have no hope of realising the dream of having a Dayak chief minister. The nationalist spirit of Dayakism has been all but self-extinguished.

That is a pity. The Dayaks are now wallowing in socioeconomic backwardness, and some consider themselves third-class citizens after the Malay-Melanau Sarawakians and the Chinese Sarawakians. Hundreds of thousands of Dayak youths have left their homes in search of better job prospects in Singapore and West Malaysia, leaving the old and the very young in the longhouses. The rural communities have been stripped of their youthful forces for regeneration. In pockets of abject poverty, alcoholism is rife.

Sarawak's new dawn?

Recently though, the Dayak community among the educated class and the longhouse folk have been humming with a new kind of excitement. 

Slightly more than a month ago, during a dinner in Sibu organised by Friends of Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), 4,000 people of all races turned up to welcome Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim. They were also witness to a public ceremony in which Gabriel Adit Demong, the current independent Ngemah state assemblyperson and former vice-president of the now-defunct PBDS, submitted his application to join the PKR. His application form was accompanied by 12,000 others.

Another mammoth 6,000-strong sit-down dinner was planned for 14 Dec 2008 in Miri. The grand finale should culminate in Kuching on 19 Dec, where 8,000 people are expected to turn up to welcome Anwar. The people of Sarawak are now stretching their necks forward to see whether there will be more elected representatives and Dayak voters joining the PKR.

The term of the present Sarawak state assembly will not expire until 2011. There is current speculation, however, that the next state elections may be held as early as 2009. The success of the PKR in the 8 March 2008 general election has made the party attractive to Dayak politicians and their supporters.


(© Tryatna Anto / Dreamstime)

But the PKR is a multiracial party. It would mean that the PKR and Dayakism are mutually exclusive. Perhaps the brand of Dayakism portrayed by the PBDS ought to be laid to rest anyway. Only by building meaningful bridges with other ethnic communities can the Dayaks lift themselves from their political and socioeconomic limbo. In that context, the PKR is indeed a suitable vehicle for the redemption of Dayak politics.

To dethrone Taib and replace the Sarawak BN as the next state government, there must be a congruence of all opposition forces within the state. The divisive bickering between opposition blocs must now indeed end for a new dawn of democracy in the Land of the Hornbill.

The Dayaks of Sarawak will then make headlines again.

Comments (8)Add Comment
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written by loosecannon, December 16, 2008 10:00:01
As usual, SKY has a good read of the situation in Sarawak. The Dayaks biggest problem is their divisiveness. For example the Ibans can't even get on with one another what more to say with the other native groups. No body knows this better than Taib Mahmud and he plays this to the hilt. To say the ROS is Umno controlled is rather an understatement. It's very easy to stir Dayaks' emotion and play them against each other. If they can overcome this problem which I think is a gargantuan step, they will be able to consolidate their power. As far as the other races are concerned, having a Dayak as the CM is never an issue as long as he is fair to all.

The next state election is more likely earlier than later. Taib knows that RPK is gaining strength and people are turning more and more against him, his family and his government. The longer he delays, the less chances he'll have to stay in power. RPK has to ride on it if they want to make headway.
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written by asguard, December 16, 2008 10:26:23
Now is up to the people of sarawak be an idiot under BN or be a masters of own destiny....
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written by ahmadneil, December 16, 2008 11:07:54
With Gabriel Adit been the first dayak YB ,Nyemah,to join PKR,many dayaks MPs and YBs are still fence sitters.Dayaks are very slowly in everything.Their jungle habits are to be blame becos staying in this forest for generations,they are use to slow living.
For the dayaks to move at a faster pace,they must have some dayak leader who can instill some dayakism into them and this person is non other than Leo Moggi,the official paramount chief of the dayaks.He command the respect of the majority and he is the only dayak leader who challenged Taib during the Ming court affair.It's this type of daring dayak leader who can lead his people and walk the talk,not like those so call masing ,mawan and Jabu.Leader like Leo Moggi who are not tainted and humble but daring and determine to help the dayaks.Been a ex leader of PBDS,he still have many followers.If not for masing's betrayal, he is still the leader of PBDS.We all need a leader like Leo Mggi and I hope he can come back to Sarawak to lead these 'wandering tribes' back to civilisation.
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written by Democrats, December 16, 2008 12:46:02
Sarawak is the most blessed state in Malaysia - rich in timber, oil, gas , fertile soil for plantation and fishery industry. UMNO have been vying to get into Sarawak for years to plunder its resources. Its up to the Dayaks to stop them. Win and unite the Dayak, you will win over Sarawak.
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written by borneoman, December 16, 2008 12:47:31
the politics of split,divide and rule used by yakub and taib is the most effective tools against the natives.
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written by Eonco, December 16, 2008 17:00:07
SKY more than anyone else knows the S'wak political scene from personal experience.
I can't agree more with his reasoning and thesis.

Being a Chinese I have always dreamed of the day when the Dayaks would rise again - we have more in common with them than the non-halal,non-drinking other bumis.

For the time being, PKR appears to be the only vehicle for Dayakism to appoint Sarawak's next Chief Minister - let's get rid of you-know-who before he has a chance to kick the bucket in office.

HIDUP SARAWAK - A DAYAK CM NEXT!
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written by OutsideLookingIn, December 16, 2008 18:42:07
Beautiful piece of journalism, SKY. Perhaps, the Dayaks can learn from history. In order to win government, they need to abandon racial politics. if Dayaks only make up about 50% of the population of Sarawak then they have to engage the other races to win. To do so, they must abandon racial politics. Political parties of the uni-racial type keeps forgetting that in democracy, one must rule for all citizens not just those that vote for you. You must look after all in the state (or country). You are going to have difficulty getting other "races' to vote for you if you are a racial based party.
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written by darrelwan, December 17, 2008 10:16:33
The politics in Sarawak relies on the ability of its leaders, rather than the people. Sarawakians are a gentle and laid-back people, often trying to avoid confrontation and rather negotiate like more mature adults. UMNO has been screwing up everything in west Malaysia, and that has been seen by the Sarawakian themselves. The UMNO ideology cannot be implemented in Sarawak, due to one thing; One Malay, for Malay, Malay only. Sarawak is so diverse that you cannot tell who is who; Wearing a tudung does not mean you're Malay or having a tattoo doesn't mean you're an Iban. Sarawakians relies on real leaders who can commit themselves to every one Sarawakian, without emphasizing who or his race is. Politics in west Malaysia will not work in Sarawak. What we need now is a Sarawak-based party who can think globally, not locally. West Malaysian cannot understand what Sarawakian think or (say perhaps) because in their minds, there are only 3 kinds of race in Malaysia ; MCI which means Melayu, Cina & India. We should look at the ability of the leaders, not race.
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