Sabah Barisan Nasional (BN)
parties are satisfied with the scope and duration of the Royal Commission of
Inquiry's (RCI) investigation on illegal immigrants here, saying it would
sufficiently address the state's decades-old problem.
Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan
Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS)
president Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan said his party was
"grateful" and confident of the government's sincerity in
implementing the panel's recommendations once its probe is complete.
"We are very happy indeed
with the RCI, the terms and the appointments. We are very grateful.
"Now, we come to the second
state - the implementation. And I do believe that the government will do its
level best to carry out the responsibilities and objectives of the RCI,"
he said after a press conference with Datuk Seri Najib Razak at the Sabah Umno
headquarters here.
Pairin added that with the RCI
established, any support that BN lost when two senior federal lawmakers left
the pact last month would likely be recaptured.
He pointed out that the RCI was a
longstanding demand from Sabahans themselves and its formation was a step in
the right direction for BN.
"Indeed this is what we have
all been waiting for. We believe this is something everyone must be supportive
of because after all, it came from them- they wished it, they wanted it and
now, they have it," he said.
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)
president Datuk V. K. Liew agreed, saying the RCI's terms were
"comprehensive" and covers all concerns raised by Sabahans over the
state's illegals issue.
"The prime minister has
listened to the voice of Sabahans," he said.
Both Pairin and Liew disagreed
that the panel's six-month term was insufficient to resolve the nearly
four-decade-old issue, pointing out that members could still apply for an
extension if they needed.
Earlier today, the prime minister
announced the terms of reference for the RCI, which will focus on investigating
claims that foreigners in Sabah have been unlawfully awarded blue ICs and
citizenships and registered in the state's electoral roll.
The panel will also probe study
the reason behind Sabah's growing populace, which saw a 390 per cent spike from
1970 to 2010 to hit its current 3.12 million mark, significantly higher than
the national population growth of 164 per cent.
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