Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, The Edge 
I see the Ministry of Information has taken out full page  advertisements in the major Malay newspapers to argue that Kelantan has  no right to oil payments under the Petroleum Development Act because the  oil resources in question lie outside the 3 nautical mile limit that  delimits state versus federal jurisdictions. The advertisement fails to  point out that almost all the oil found in Malaysia is located more than  3 nautical miles offshore, and Petronas has nevertheless been making  oil payments to the states.
By the argument deployed in the  advertisement, Terengganu, Sabah and Sarawak too are not entitled to the  “cash payments” of 5% of profit oil (commonly and a little inaccurately  referred to as “oil royalties”). Everything is at the arbitrary behest  of the Federal Government.
Yet last year, according to its annual  report, Petronas paid out RM6.2 billion in petroleum cash payments,  with RM3 billion to Terengganu, RM2.3 billion to Sarawak and RM0.9  billion to Sabah. One wonders what basis this payment was made on since  none of this was for petroleum found within 3 nautical miles offshore of  these states.  The argument for depriving Kelantan of 5% cash payments  on the basis of its petroleum resources being found beyond 3 nautical  miles is an insult to the intelligence.
I have spoken and written  at length on this issue and had been reluctant to say more on it.  Moreover, as a member of the ruling party I am embarrassed to have to  belabour elementary points against the government. This information  campaign, whether through a leaflet campaign in the schools or through  newspaper advertisements paid for with taxpayer money, implies either  culpable stupidity or gross deceitfulness on the part of agents of the  Federal Government. I had hoped to avoid that implication.
The  government’s advertisement also exhumes a ten year old mis-quotation in a  government newspaper to allege that I once denied that Terengganu had  any right to the 5% cash payment. I said no such thing. If the  government media is to be believed I also once converted to Christianity  by wearing Kadazan headgear just in time to be exposed amidst a General  Election campaign. Why does the government rely on a ten year old  misquotation? Well, these days we have our own blogs.
In fact, as  a BN backbencher at the time I opposed the Federal Government’s  intervention to prevent Petronas from making oil payments to Terengganu  and the move to channel those funds instead into “wang ihsan”. Tun  Salleh Abbas and I offered ourselves as witnesses to the Terengganu  state government in the suit it filed against the Federal government to  recover those oil payments. Between the 2000 and 2009, RM15.8 billion  was paid out through the legal black hole of wang ihsan, not to  the rightful party as specified under the Petroleum Development Act,  which is the state government’s consolidated fund, but to agencies more  amenable to vested interests linked to the central government. The  outcome of that spending is the Monsoon Cup, a Crystal Mosque in which  it is impossible to pray, a leaking swimming pool, a collapsed bridge  and a collapsed stadium. The people of Terengganu remain poor while  Billions have been paid out in their name.
I am said to have  changed my mind or somehow ignorant of the fact that Kelantan’s  petroleum resources all lie offshore when the fact is that, on the  instruction of the late Tun Razak, I drafted the Petroleum Development  Act precisely because we wanted to ensure that Kelantan, Terengganu, and  potentially Pahang and Johor would benefit from the 5% cash payments.
We did precisely because we knew that these states did not have oil  onshore or within their territorial waters. The device we used was a  Vesting Deed by which the states vested, in perpetuity, all their  petroleum resources to Petronas, onshore or offshore. In return for this  Petronas guaranteed the cash payment of 5% from oil found anywhere,  offshore or onshore, of the state. This rendered any consideration of  federal/state boundaries whether at 3 or 12 nautical miles or whatever  irrelevant for the purpose of reckoning the payment. I traversed the  country to sign this agreement with each Chief Minister of each state  government. Tun Razak was driven by the nation-building concern that  these poorer east coast areas, which are also predominantly Malay areas  should benefit directly from offshore oil, and I drafted the Petroleum  Development Act to reflect that concern.
It is this benefit to  the people which Umno Kelantan opposes 34 years after the death of Tun  Razak. It is also Razak’s legacy that they make a mockery of. It is a  mark of how far Umno has strayed off course that the leadership of Umno,  and in particular Umno Kelantan is doing its utmost to deprive the  people of Kelantan of sovereign rights secured by an UMNO-led government  of another day. No one in their right mind could mistake this as  behaviour that is beneficial to Umno’s long term standing in Kelantan,  let alone elsewhere as people observe this behaviour.
I am  accused of putting state interest before party interest. However the  issue goes far beyond Kelantan. The arguments used in yesterday’s  newspaper advertisement undercut the rights of all the states in respect  of a natural resource which is theirs as a sovereign right. It violates  a contract between Petronas and the states, denies the Petroleum  Development Act, denies the raison d’etre of Petronas (which was in the  first place formed to ensure the integrtiy of the federation by way of  an equitable sharing of this valuable resource) and sets the Federal  Government in contravention of an Act of Parliament.
One  immediate implication of the argument laid out in yesterday’s official  clarification from the Ministry of Information is that Terengganu is  also ineligible for the oil payments. This means that after cutting off  oil payments when Terengganu fell into Opposition hands and replacing it  with “compassionate payment” there is absolutely no basis for the  government’s promise to return Terengganu to cash payments again. All of  Terengganu’s oil is found very far offshore. In this matter whatever  holds for Kelantan holds for Terengganu and vice versa.
In the end  this is not a question of politics or personality. It is not about what I  or anyone else says, nor of  where Umno or PAS stand. It is about the  government complying with written agreements governed by an Act of  Parliament and respecting parliamentary democracy. The rights of the  people are not to be fulfilled or withheld depending on who they have  voted for. In treating Terengganu and Kelantan in this manner we are  depriving them of money that is rightfully theirs, undermining sovereign  state rights, and eroding parliamentary democracy. We should do the  right thing by the people at whose pleasure we serve.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Tengku Razaleigh Answers to Government Advertisement last Sunday
Posted by the Milestone at 5:51 AM
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