In the years immediately before the formation of Malaysia, two  commissions of enquiry visited North Borneo (along with neighbouring  Sarawak) in order to establish the state of public opinion there  regarding merger with Malaya (and Singapore).
It is important to note that neither commission was mandated with addressing the legal status of North Borneo; neither were they 'referendums' in the proper sense. 
The first commission, usually known as the Cobbold Commission  was established by the Malayan and British governments and was headed  by Lord Cobbold, along with two representatives of Malaya and Britain  (but not either of the territories under investigation). 
The Commission found that 'About one third  of the population of each territory [i.e. of North Borneo and of  Sarawak] strongly favours early realisation of Malaysia without too much  concern over terms and conditions. 
Another third, many of them favourable to the Malaysia project (nonsense), ask, with varying degrees of emphasis, for conditions and safeguards.
The remaining third is divided between those who insist upon  independence before Malaysia is considered and those who would strongly  prefer to see British rule continue for some years to come' 
Indonesia and the Philippines rejected the findings of the Cobbold.  In 1963, a tripartite meeting was held in Manila between Indonesian  president Soekarno, Philippines president Diosdado Macapagal and Malayan Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman. 
The meeting agreed to petition the UN to send another commission of  enquiry and the Philippines and Indonesia agreed to drop their objection  to the formation of Malaysia if the new commission found popular  opinion in the territories in favour. 
The UN Mission to Borneo was thus established, comprising members of the UN Secretariat from Argentina, Brazil, Ceylon, Czechoslovakia, Ghana, Pakistan, Japan and Jordan. 
The Mission's report, authored by UN Secretary-General U Thant found ‘a sizeable majority of the people' (nonsense) in favour of joining Malaysia. Although Indonesia and the Philippines subsequently rejected the report's findings – and Indonesia continued its semi-military policy of konfrontasi towards Malaysia – the report in effect sealed the creation of Malaysia.
 
 
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