Sabah: Ground Zero
The current political landscape in Sabah is dominated by two heavyweights – Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman and Federal Minister for Rural and Regional Development Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal.
It is a fact that Musa Aman and Shafie Apdal are currently the two most powerful politicians in Sabah, each with their own supporters and detractors.
But it is also no secret that Musa Aman and Shafie Apdal don’t see eye to eye, let alone talk to each other.
Even if their paths do cross inadvertently, be it at official functions or party gatherings, they quickly shake hands, mumble greetings and turn the other way around.
But more than a decade ago, both men were good friends.
Situation,
circumstances and the people surrounding them is certainly to be blamed
for the animosity between these two astute, intelligent and shrewd
politicians.
There
is also a third force active in Sabah politics that want to see both
men removed from their respective positions and this was the group that
initially started to pit Musa with Shafie, and vice-versa.
This
third force comprises few shadowy characters within Sabah Umno itself
and from component parties in Sabah, not to mention those who have a
beef with either Musa or Shafie.
Some party veterans in Sabah claim
the political rift between Musa and Shafie is beyond repair, but others
believe they will readily bury their hatchet if the situation warrants
the need for them to work together for a greater cause.
Shafie hails from a family with deep political ties with Umno.
His uncle (mother’s brother) is Tun Sakaran Dandai, Sabah’s first Chief Minister from Umno.
For more than three decades, the families of Sakaran Dandai and Shafie Apdal have worked and struggled for Umno.
There is no question on their loyalty to the party.
Sakaran
Dandai and his colleagues prepared the framework that played a pivotal
role in Sabah Umno becoming a dominant party in the state in the 90s.There is no question on their loyalty to the party.
Shafie
is a close confidant of Prime Minister Najib Razak and served as Deputy
Defence Minister when Najib was Defence Minister between 1999 and 2004.
Over the years, Shafie has earned Najib’s trust and their relationship has grown beyond politics.
Najib
feels secure when he is with Shafie. He never has to second guess or
doubt Shafie’s loyalty unlike a few other politicians within the party.
Musa on the other hand, never had that kind of relationship with Najib.
But he made efforts to become close with the First Family and eventually earned the trust of First Lady Rosmah Mansor.
It is a known fact amongst senior Sabah politicians that Musa has Rosmah’s ears.
And in his own way, Musa has proved his loyalty to Najib and takes great effort to maintain strong ties with Putrajaya.
Much of the bad blood between Musa and Shafie started more than a decade ago when both politicians’ careers started to rise.
Shafie rose to prominence in the Federal scene while Musa took the top job of running the state.
While
it is not really possible to pinpoint the one single cause that led to
the cracks in their relationship, many believe it was over the way
Shafie and Musa handled the state’s coffers.
Shafie was known to be generous while Musa was very selective about spending, to a point that prudence was the keyword.
Camps
aligned to Shafie become unhappy with Musa’s management of the state
while camps aligned with Musa became unhappy with Shafie’s way of doing
things in the state as well as federal level.
All
this infighting gave a splendid opportunity for the third force within
Sabah’s political echelons to further aggravate the situation between
Musa and Shafie.
There
are also stories on how Shafie’s powerful Rural Ministry with billions
under allocation refused to hand over it funds for Sabah to Musa because
of the people associated with Musa.
It is learned that Shafie’s
camp was concerned that the funds might not reach the intended people
but end up in the wrong hands.
Musa’s
camp, on the other hand, was angry that only people deemed aligned to
Shafie were getting lucrative infrastructure contracts.
Each time the rift became wider, and more controversies surfaced, the third force was smiling gleefully.Malaysia-Today
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