Anwar plays political poker in Sabah
Tuesday, 16 April 2013 Super Admin
Sabah Pakatan Rakyat is yet to consolidate its list of candidates as it toys with STAR and SAPP.
Pushparani Thilaganathan, FMT
With
nominations just days away, speculations are rife that Opposition
Leader Anwar Ibrahim is engaging Jeffrey Kitingan’s State Reform Party
(STAR) in a 11th hour bid to find a solution to what promises to be a
crippling election for Pakatan Rakyat if it remains adamant and
uncompromising on Sabah seats.
Nomination is set for April 20 and by tomorrow all state Barisan
Nasional component parties would have announced their list of
candidates.
In Sabah, KadazanDusunMurut (KDM)-based Upko and
Parti Bersatu Rakyat Sabah (PBRS) have already announced their
candidates. Umno, Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) and Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) are expected to follow suit.
Amidst this, Sabah Pakatan Rakyat is yet to consolidate its list.
A
pre-emptive announcement of some candidates by PKR Tuaran division
chief Ansari Abdullah earlier this month, which was later rubbished by
party deputy president Azmin Ali, has made clear the depth of distrust
and angst within PKR members of the PKR central leadership.
As such, these late-in-day “talks” with local parties can only mean that Anwar is troubled.
Barely
a week ago, Anwar said he would direct Sabah Pakatan to re-open talks –
which he had himself terminated – with Sabah Progressive People’s
Party (SAPP).
Anwar had, at one point, ridiculed SAPP when he
asked the party to prove its worth. And this too after incessant
meetings dating back to 2011 to discuss possible straight fights.
But SAPP sources said today that they have not been approached “as yet and time is running out”.
SAPP is aiming to contest in 20 state and about 10 parliamentary seats.
STAR, meanwhile, is targeting to contest in at least 40 state and up to 20 parliamentary seats.
Word is that STAR, while weak on infrastructure, has a KDM-reach that outruns PKR’s and Anwar knows this.
Thus,
this explains the move to reach out to Jeffrey. According to sources,
Anwar’s man spoke to Jeffrey late last week and “made him an offer”.
Meanwhile,
rippling through the grapevine here are talks that Anwar’s partiality
towards Wilfred Bumburing and Lajim Ukin has backfired. Both defected
from Barisan Nasional in July last year, pledging their allegiance to
Anwar vis-a-vis PKR.
Anwar had left Bumburing to harness the KDMs and Lajim to look into the Muslim votes.
Herein lies the hiccup. Rumours are that Pakatan needs a bulk of KDM votes and that it doesn’t have it yet.
A wily politician
Said
a PKR member, who declined to be named: “The situation has changed.
The Muslim seats can go anywhere. Lajim has influence over a few Bisaya
seats.
“But Wilfred [Bumburing] is in trouble. People don’t
trust him. Our members are saying if he [Bumburing] is sincere, then
why is he not a PKR member? They will not support any of his
candidates.”
Both Bumburing and Lajim are MPs and are likely to
defend their Tuaran and Beaufort seats under the PKR banner. Both have
also been pushing for their own followers to be given seats and that
has not gone down well with members.
But Anwar is going all-out
to get Putrajaya and has declared that he needs the numbers from Sabah
and Sarawak to cap their quest.
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