KUALA LUMPUR: Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Fadillah Yusof assured that the issues related to the Malaysia Agreement 1963 (MA63) will be resolved in a collaborative and inclusive manner to benefit both Sabah and Sarawak.
He said although he is from Sarawak, it does not mean that the resolution would be to the state’s advantage.
"I am deputy prime minister not only for Sarawak but for all.
“The MA63 committee also consists of an implementation action council led by the Prime Minister (Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim) and its members include Sarawak Premier (Tan Sri Abang Johari Tun Openg) and the Chief Minister of Sabah (Datuk Seri Hajiji Noor)," he told
Bernama in an interview recently.
Fadillah who is responsible in ensuring that the outstanding issues concerning the MA63 are resolved, said the implementation of Sabah and Sarawak’s demands which were different, also involve agencies from the federal and state governments.
"The two states have different backgrounds, the laws in the both states are different ...that’s why the outcome of the implementation will not depend on the (existing leader’s) position as this has to do with the state’s background and as such, Sarawak’s demand could be resolved much earlier than Sabah," he said.
Explaining on matters in MA63 that have yet to be implemented even though the agreement was signed in 1963 by Malaya (now Peninsular Malaysia), Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore (which later left Malaysia in 1965), Fadillah said it involved an annex that contained findings and recommendations by the Inter-Governmental Committee (IGC).
"There were recommendations that should have been followed with the formation of Malaysia, that's what Sarawak and Sabah are demanding to be implemented. There were also matters that were ignored and which should be under the jurisdiction of Sabah and Sarawak, for example those under the Continental Shelf Act.
"If we look at the border for Sarawak, it used to be 200 km, the definition of the continental shelf includes the land beneath, which means that all the oil and gas are rightfully Sarawak’s, but when there was an emergency, the power to make laws came under the federal government," he said.