Sabah dan Sarawak adalah BERSTATUS NEGARA dan bukannya Negeri.

Sabah dan Sarawak adalah sebuah Negara yang MERDEKA DAN BERDAULAT yang mana kedua - dua NEGARA ini telah bersama-sama dengan Singapura dan Malaya untuk membentuk Persekutuan Malaysia pada 16 September 1963.

Happy Sabah (North Borneo) Independence Day 51 Years

Sabah or previously known as North Borneo was gained Independence Day from British on August 31, 1963. To all Sabahan, do celebrate Sabah Merdeka Day with all of your heart!

Sarawak For Sarawakian!

Sarawak stand for Sarawak! Sarawakian First. Second malaysian!

The Unity of Sabah and Sarawak

Sabah dan Sarawak adalah Negara yang Merdeka dan Berdaulat. Negara Sabah telah mencapai kemerdekaan pada 31 Ogos 1963 manakala Negara Sarawak pada 22 Julai 1963. Sabah dan Sarawak BUKAN negeri dalam Malaysia! Dan Malaysia bukan Malaya tapi adalah Persekutuan oleh tiga buah negara setelah Singapura dikeluarkan daripada persekutuan Malaysia.

Sign Petition to collect 300,000 signatures

To all Sabahan and Sarawakian... We urge you to sign the petition so that we can bring this petition to United Nations to claim our rights back as an Independence and Sovereign Country for we are the Nations that live with DIGNITY!

Decedent of Rajah Charles Brooke

Jason Desmond Anthony Brooke. The Grandson of Rajah Muda Anthony Brooke, and Great Great Grandson of Rajah Charles Brooke

A true Independence is a MUST in Borneo For Sabah and Sarawak.

Sabah (formerly known as North Borneo) and Sarawak MUST gain back its Freedom through a REAL Independence.

Wednesday 10 December 2014

UN puts Malaysia on 'CAREFUL WATCH' after Najib's Sedition repeal U-turn

PETALING JAYA - The United Nations (UN) will follow closely Malaysia’s progress in reforming the Sedition Act 1948, after the federal government did an about-turn on earlier pledges to repeal the controversial law.

The UN’s resident coordinator for Malaysia, Michelle Gyles-Mcdonnough, said the world body is keeping “careful watch” on Putrajaya’s decision to retain the legislation, especially after having made a string of statements urging the country to do away with the colonial-era law.

“The UN has made very clear publicly our position on the Sedition Act... we do believe it restricts freedom of expression,” she said at a public forum last night in conjunction with World Human Rights Day 2014.

Late last month, Prime Minister and Umno President Datuk Seri Najib Razak announced at his party’s annual general assembly that the Act will be retained, after intense pressure from conservative groups within his party and among NGOs opposed to its repeal.

The announcement followed a series of arrests and legal action taken against opposition lawmakers, activists, academics and a journalist over the year under the Sedition Act.

Prior to this, Najib pledged in 2012 to replace the Act with laws on national harmony — a pledge he repeated twice more — as part of legal reforms to afford Malaysians greater civil liberties.

Despite Malaysia’s recently election as a non-permanent member on the UN Security Council, Gyles-Mcdonnough stressed last night that the UN does not have the power to compel Malaysia — or any country for that matter — to repeal any questionable legislation.

This, however, does not mean Malaysia is spared public and international scrutiny, especially since the country has yet to ratify core conventions on human rights prescribed by the UN, she noted.

Gyles-McDonnough said the country needs to make sure that whatever proposed amendments to the Act need to bring it in line with international standards on human rights, especially in providing “more clarity and precision around the fences” so the public know what constitutes seditious behaviour.

“We will continue to urge Malaysia to be responsible in enabling the freedoms and the full realisation of rights of citizens in this country,” she said. -Malay Mail

 
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