When the Prime Minister announced the government will repeal the Internal Security Act and other important reforms Datuk Johnny  Information  Chief, PBS celebrated, saying it was a clear proof that the Barisan  Nasional (BN) government is responsive to the people's feelings. He  claimed that "These important reforms vindicate the decision by our  President, Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan, to rejoin the BN 10 years  ago. Today Pairin's faith in the BN to do the right things for the  people and nation has been proven correct."  
But  he has spoken too soon. Now, the proposed repeal has boiled up a storm,  with Tun Mahathir expressing worry that irresponsible people may abuse  the freedom, and a national security expert in Singapore  saying it is a dangerous thing to do. But while we are glad that the BN  is opening doors to more freedom, we have to realize that there are  still many repressive laws out there that are suppressing our freedom  and giving Malaysia a bad reputation among in the regional and international communities. Such laws include Official  Secrets Act (OSA), the Universities and University Colleges Act (UUCA),  the Multimedia and Communications Act, the Public Order (Preservation)  Ordinance. Instead of celebrating too soon why doesn’t Mositun make a  call to urge the PM to repeal all these laws as well?  
Many  opposition leaders and NGOs have expressed strong suspicion that the  PM’s announcement was just a sandiwara, or an act to put old wine into  new bottles and to make it even worse by introducing two new laws. There  is no guarantee that the new laws will not be as draconian as the ISA.  And the proposed repeal will only be done next year which raise the  question: Will that be after the general election? If so, Najib is only  performing a clever vote-fishing trick. And may I ask: If the new laws  are still having ISA-like provisions as demanded by Ibrahim Ali, will  Mositun demand that PBS leaves the BN, because the PBS would then be  “unvidicated”? Mositun’s habit of jumping the gun and apple-polishing  for the BN had made him lose his political character and credibility,  and may very well be a liability to his own party.  
Also,  Mositun and the other leaders in PBS must understand that many PBS  members and supporters still believe the PBS shouldn’t have rejoined the  BN because of bigger issues, not just because of the ISA. Just because  ISA will be repealed, doesn’t make the members and supporters any  happier. The whole issue about PBS re-joining the BN in 1998 centres on  the question of principle and the spirit of the struggle of the  Kadazandusuns. If the PBS undertakes an independent survey today I  sincerely believe it will confirm the fact that most Kadazandusuns don’t  think too highly of the Huguan Siou anymore, and that PBS’ struggle is  more for personal interests than for the people’s long term vision. The  fact still stands that by joining the BN, PBS had become subservient to  Umno, which had a strong effect on the morale of the Kadazandusuns.  
The  unhappiness about PBS is not limited to members and supporters only but  among its leaders. There is now the possibility of revolts by leaders  in the PBS due to unhappiness over choice of candidates, and Pairin’s  insistence on contesting in both Keningau and Tambunan again after three  decades. Their impatience over the long-standing issue about the  illegal immigrants from the Philippines and Indonesia  is just about to boil over because they believe the party’s top leaders  have been kowtowing to Umno too much too long. To them the so-called  deadline PBS had given the BN to solve the illegals problem by 2012 is  not enough, and seem just a ruse to cool down their impatience.  
The  other prickly issue facing the PBS is the unfair power-sharing formula  in the state BN in which Umno takes more than half and the rest split  between the rest of the components. Because of this, an online portal  reports that PBS divisional chairman for Sook, Bernard Maraat, is a  potential rebel to stand as an independent in the coming election.  
In  an effort to convince the people that PBS is really fighting for their  interests in the BN, the PBS Secretary General, Datuk Henrynus Amin had  also made a statement this week that the PM’s announcement to repeal the  ISA “showed BN was responding to the grouses of the people and  therefore a victory for democracy, human rights and civil liberties.”  But by saying that he was also admitting that all these years when the  ISA used, it was a defeat for democracy, human rights and civil  liberties! So why did the PBS support the BN all those years, knowing it  was wrong and humanly immoral?  
Henrynus  also proposed on how BN should adopt “winnable policies and winnable  political strategies” for the next general election. He should be  reminded that for the BN to win the next election, it doesn’t have to  hire any world-class think tank to come up with complicated strategic  plans or use billions of ringgit to corrupt the voters. All it has to do  is to list all the grouses raised by the people and resolve these  within the next few months!  
Henrynus  and Mositun need to ask BN if the federal government and UMNO will ever  agree to reinstate the original promised rights and autonomy for Sabah  and Sarawak, to establish the RCI to look into the Project IC, to raise  oil royalty to 20 percent or more, to reform many government  institutions (such as the police, the judiciary, the MACC, the election  commission, the Malay-dominated education system), to wipeout  corruption, dirty cronyism and political patronage, to stop the many  abuses of power, to stop the suppression of the Christians (by allowing  the Bible to be printed in any language in Malaysia), to shut up the  mouths of mad Malay nationalists like Ibrahim Ali and to end the  seditious speeches about Malay supremacy, to implement true meritocracy,  transparency, accountability and openness which are the epitomes of  good governance.  
And  there is also the problem of the depressed and down-sliding economy,  the high inflation rate and the worrying depletion of our purchasing  powers, the brain drain, the cabotage policy, the Malay-centric public  service, the border security problem, the high rate of violent crimes,  the yo-yo experiments with the education system, the highly contaminated  electoral rolls, the non-transparent and very suspicious election  process, the lack of independence of the judiciary, and so on and so on.  If the BN will listen to the PBS and do all these, ONLY then PBS will  truly be vindicated. When this happens, I am certain not just the PBS  leaders and members, but the opposition leaders and supporters as well,  will join in the celebration with dancing and fireworks! And the  opposition will have no more issues to talk about!  
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