Kampung Buah Pala : A test for the Pakatan government

CM should reach out to the people

The Kg.Buah Pala issue in Penang seems to reveal that goodness and righteousness alone on the part of a political leader is not enough to overcome the multitude of problems facing the people. What is equally important is political shrewdness and astuteness of the leadership that only comes with experience and maturity. A leader may be good and righteous but unless he has the shrewdness to avoid offending the electorate unnecessarily, he may not survive politically.

The issue of Kg.Buah Pala is not something that sprang up overnight but has been going on for some time from the time of the previous government. Evicting long-staying residents on public land had always been a very thorny problem that is closely inter-twined with social and human rights issues that are easily sensationalised by the media and exploited by opportunist political opponents.

Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng’s decision to allow protest by unhappy residents against his government and his willingness to accept their memorandum is a cordial atmosphere by his representatives must be commended. Such an accommodative stance towards protestors is indeed rare. However the absence of his personal involvement was regretted by the people who had high expectations in his new government which they thought would be different from the previous one.

Lim had the opportunity to turn the problem that he inherited from his predecessor to his advantage by paying a visit to the village during the early days of the crisis to express his solidarity with the people there. He should have revealed to them the truth of what really happened to their land and the tremendous limitations under which he has now to work to bring an amicable solution. He should have advised the aggrieved parties to turn to the Federal Government for help.

Although there may be residents who are out to take advantage of the situation for massive monetary gains, there are those who are genuinely desperate and living in fear of losing their livelihood and homes. It is the duty of the state government to protect the interests of these desperate residents regardless of who caused their hardship and predicament. A simple courteous visit to explain the limitations of his government would have gone a long way to win the hearts of the majority of the residents.

Lim had missed the opportunity that was available to him to show that his government is a people-friendly one, willing to go out of the way to relief the people’s burden, which was not his making, regardless of race or creed. Failing to do that has resulted in he being accused of being heartless, cruel, racist and taking sides with the developer for commercial gains over the people’s welfare which most Penangites know is not true. He is being accused of being arrogant for not wanting to meet the residents to listen to their grouses when they came to see him. He is being accused of violating human rights, the very harsh criticism he had for the previous government.

The land that houses the ‘High Chaparral’ has been sold and development project planned by a private developer well before the Pakatan government came into power. From the way the issue had developed we are aware that there is not much the state government can do to save the ‘High Chaparral’ as the proceedings were done legally. Even the Federal Court has ruled in favour of the developer against the residents. The present state government is not being blamed for the crisis but the way the it handled the problem had created a lot of unhappiness among the people who had voted for the Pakatan Rakyat, which they expected to be more people-friendly than its predecessor.

The lesson to be learnt from this issue is that the government should accountable and forthright in its dealings at all levels. The truth must be revealed and not submerged by false promises made for political gains. The truth, that the residents will have to finally vacate, may be bitter but will eventually be accepted by the people.

The Kg.Buah Pala dilemma may be a political issue for some and a legal or commercial one for others. For the genuinely desperate residents it is an emotional issue that affects their livelihood and the very existence of their homes where they have been living for over a century. The only solution is by way of negotiations, not force, possibly involving the federal government in a considerate, fair and humane manner for a win-win situation.

Published in:  on July 4, 2009 at 4:22 am Leave a Comment