Bill passed to define ‘resident’, lower eligible age to be YBs

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THE Sarawak State Assembly (DUN) today passed a Bill to amend Article 16 of the State Constitution to lower the minimum age required for a person to become an elected representative from 21 to 18 years old.

The Constitution of the State of Sarawak (Amendment) Bill, 2020, which was tabled by Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Abdul Karim Rahman Hamzah was passed with more than two-thirds majority as only nine assembly members were against it.

He originally tabled a similar Bill last Tuesday but Speaker Datuk Amar Mohd Asfia Awang Nassar decided to defer it as there were “obvious anomalies in definitions” in the Bill that had to be addressed then.

Announcing the withdrawal of the original Bill today to pave the way for the new one, Abdul Karim said it was done to avoid the people of Sarawak from being confused by the Opposition as to the real intent and objective of the amendment.

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“This Bill which I am now introducing will remove all interpretative ambiguities or uncertainties as to the real intent and objective of the proposed amendments,” he said when tabling the Bill.

Abdul Karim said that the amendment would align the State Constitution with the amended Article 47(b) and Article 119(1)(a) of the Federal Constitution which had reduced the qualifying age for the election to the Dewan Rakyat and to be an elector or voter, from 21 years old to 18 years old.

“Article 16 of the State Constitution complies with the mandatory provision in Section 5 of the Eighth Schedule of the Federal Constitution which sets out the qualification of members of a State Legislative Assembly,” he said.

For the second part of the Article 16 of the State Constitution, which had been the focus of the debate for the Bill, the amendment would see only two categories of persons qualified to be defined as ‘resident in the State’.

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They are citizens born in the State whose parents or either of them was also born in the State and normally residing in the State; or citizens, though not born in the State, whose parents or either of them was born in the State and normally residing in the State.

“People with no Sarawakian connection either by birth or the birth of their parents and not normally resident in Sarawak will be disqualified,” he added. – Bernama

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