Showing posts with label Engkilili. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Engkilili. Show all posts

Saturday, January 29

Scorned ex-wives could ruin ‘Randy’ Rayong’s political career

(This story has appeared in Free Malaysia Today on Jan 24, 2011 and is reproduced for the readers of The Broken Shield)

KUCHING: Are conversions and polygamy the new political ball game in Sarawak? It appears that a rising number of political aspirants and have-beens are rumoured to be converting from Christianity to Islam to better their chances of currying favours with Chief Minister Taib Mahmud, who allegedly discriminates against non-Muslims.

Whether this new game plan will work for them in the coming state polls is left to be seen. But political observers are betting that a number of Barisan Nasional candidates “will fall” in the polls for these very reasons.

Meanwhile, the “hottest” gossip to hit Kuching streets is Engkilili state assemblyman Johnical Rayong’s recent conversion. Most of his constituents were in shocked disbelief at his conversion that is until his angry wife, Patricia Dexter Sudok, a Christian staff nurse in Kuching, spewed her angst.

She reportedly leant of her husband’s infidelity, marriage and conversion from an SMS message he sent her.

According to the reports, Rayong was caught for “khalwat” and was forced to marry one Kamasiah Abdul Jalil, a divorcee in her 30s with two children, who works in the chief minister’s office.

Rayong had apparently converted on Jan 29, 2010. (was it coincidence then that partyless Rayong who had waited four long years outside Taib’s door was suddenly accepted into the fold in 2010, courtesy of Sarawak United people’s Party whose decision to take him in has cost them dearly?)


Deceiving the Dayaks

The story gets better, Patricia also said that Rayong had been harassing her to return and campaign alongside him as a “Christian couple” in order to mislead his Dayak voters.

Rayong and apparently quite a few other “new converts” such as Mambong MP James Dawos Mamit and Marudi assemblyman Sylvester Enterie are seeking to conceal their new status from their Dayak constituents.

Dawos, incidentally, is Deputy Tourism Minister and Enterie is an Assistant Minister in the Sarawak cabinet.

All this is more fodder for the opposition, it appears. In the case of Rayong, who seems to have a cup-board-full of “skeletons”, he may have lost it all even before the race. According to a SUPP leader, the party is uncomfortable with Rayong’s “history” and is re-assessing his candidacy.

“The voters in Engkilili are not against him converting to Islam. Far from it. In fact, Christians and Muslims in Engkilili sit side by side in coffee shops or restaurants. They also visit each other during Hari Raya and Christmas celebrations. They always live in harmony.

“But they do not like him because he failed to inform them (of his new status) as well as his failure to look after his two Iban wives,” said the leader who refused to be named.

Rayong, he claimed, has neglected his two families. His two wives were said to have complained to Deputy Chief Minister Alfred Jabu Numpang. They alleged Rayong had failed to come “home” for the past three months or so. His first wife, Patricia, is related to Jabu.

So angry and disappointed are his wives that they are prepared to campaign against Rayong if he does defend his Engkilili seat.

Besides his scorned wives, Rayong will also have to contend with issues over the authenticity of his degree “as a medical doctor” and his political track record.

His opponents have claimed that Rayong is only a doctor of homeopathy, but had presented himself as a medical doctor and opened up a clinic where he dispensed medicines and treated patients.

They alleged that when the authorities demanded for his certificates, Rayong closed shop. It has also raised questions about his integrity.

In the 2006 state election, Rayong won the Engkilili seat on a Sarawak National Party (SNAP) ticket. During his campaign, he attacked BN coalition partner SUPP and its candidate Jonathan Krai Pilo.

But less than a month after his win, Rayong declared that he was independent and a BN-friendly representative. His angry supporters called him a “political frog” who is only interested in his own personal affairs.

He subsequently applied to join an off-shoot of SNAP, Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party (SPDP) led by William, Mawan Ikom. His application was initially accepted in 2007, but faced with strong opposition from SUPP and Taib’s Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu (PBB), he was forced to resign.

There was also a time when he wanted to join Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) if the Engkilili seat was to be given to PRS under a swapping arrangement with SUPP. But that arrangement failed to materialise and as a result, he lost interest In PRS.


SUPP reassessing Rayong

In the meantime, Rayong had applied to become a SUPP member and for two years he was left waiting. Then suddenly in September 2010, SUPP approved his application, much against the wishes of majority of its members.

The SUPP’s decision resulted in the resignation of the Engkilili branch chairman and the former five-term elected representative, Toh Heng San, from the party.

But by joining SUPP, Rayong has left behind at least 60% of his supporters who were either members of SNAP or the defunct Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) and supporters of the stillborn Malaysian Dayak Congress (MDC) of which he was the protem deputy president.

In fact, his supporters are still angry with him for switching parties as they had voted him in on a SNAP ticket. Many SUPP members in Engkilili, too, may not vote for him as they consider him a “frog” that has upset their branch leaders including Toh and Krai.

After more than 20 years as elected representative, Toh has a strong following not only among the Chinese, but also among the Ibans in Engkilili. Toh and Krai’s supporters will certainly not vote for Rayong for his criticisms against SUPP and for neglecting the welfare and interest of the Dayak community during the last election.

Today, Rayong joins the party that he had severely condemned. In September, when accepting Rayong into SUPP’s fold, the party president George Chan described him as the most “suitable”candidate to represent the party as he was not only close to the people, but also popular with the rakyat.

Now, in the wake of Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s brazen command to give him “only winnable candidates”, Chan is being forced to acknowledge Rayong’s weaknesses and eat his own words of the latter’s “suitability” as Engkilili 2011 candidate.

Thursday, July 29

More blows expected for SUPP?

ENGKILILI: Sarawak United People’s Party is expected to receive more quit letters from the party in the next few weeks or so, judging by the ‘planned’ resignations that are taking place, said a source from the SUPP Engkilili branch.

“You have heard some from Sibu, Miri and Bengoh who have resigned from the party,” he said.

“We are supposed to have synchronized resignations from all these branches, but they cannot wait any longer,” he said.

The source who pleaded not to be identified said that for Engkilili Branch more than half of the committee members and a few hundreds of ordinary members are just waiting for the right time to quit the party.

“We have our meeting on Sunday afternoon regarding our decision to quit the party. It is just a matter of time,” the source said.

“Please do not expose my name as this is very sensitive and explosive,” he stressed.

“Like our friends in the Bengoh Branch and else where, we also have no more confidence in the leadership of the party. Many of the things that the current leadership promised us did not materialise,” he said.

“We will not join any party because we still love the party. But we do not like the leadership because it is weak and incapable of helping the people,”
he said, predicting that the current leadership will lead us to disastrous results in the coming election.

He confirmed that the Engkilili chairman Toh Heng San had received a show-cause letter for threatening to resign from the party if the independent state assemblyman for Engkilili Johnichal Rayong was to be nominated by the party to contest in the coming election.

Toh, he said, refused to reply to the show-cause letter.

The committee members of the Engkilili branch have been embroiled in a dispute over the decision of the party to admit Rayong who contested and defeated SUPP-BN candidate Jonathan Krai in the 2006 state election.

Toh and some of the committee members are against Rayong’s admission, while his deputy Nyambong Anak Maweng and branch secretary Sibat Krutap and some members are pro-Rayong.

Until now the SUPP leadership has not made any decision whether to accept Rayong or not.

Rayong was a Sarawak National Party candidate, but resigned from the party after the electoral victory. He has been knocking on the doors of the component parties of the Barisan Nasional.

The same source disclosed that committee members from branches in Sibu, Sarikei, Meradong and Kuching are also waiting for the right time to resign from the party.

“Like us, they are waiting to explode the bomb,” he said, pointing out that all these branches are members of the 28 branches that wanted George Chan to step down as president.

This was written in the 2006 Forward Plan for Chan to step down, but until now he is still the leader of the party, he added.

These branches which are aligned to Soon Choon Teck, the state assemblyman for Dudong, had also submitted a joint requisition in 2009 calling for a special delegates conference to solve the problems affecting the party.

But the president and the central working committee rejected their demand although they had the required number to ask for the SDC.

On Saturday, 14 committee members of the Bengoh branch and six ordinary members had submitted their letters of resignation to the secretary general Sim Kheng Hui, citing unhappiness and loss of confidence on the leadership as the main reason.

Meanwhile, the chairman of the branch, Jerip Susil said that the resignation of some of the committee members from his branch had caught him by surprise.

“Nobody told me about their resignation, but I will sit down and try to persuade them to reconsider their decision,” he said.

Source: www.thebrokenshield.blogspot.com