Friday, December 31, 2010

Tourism industry a revenue generator for Bario

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=83435

Tourism industry a revenue generator for Bario

by Justin Yap
justinyap@theborneopost.com.

Posted on December 31, 2010, Friday

KUCHING: Tourism in Bario has grown from its accidental beginnings to being a mainstay of the local economy evolving along the way into various niche markets including ecotourism, adventure tourism, cultural tourism, research tourism and the latest manifestation of development conferencing.

Bario is the traditional homeland of the Kelabit people, one of the Borneo’s smaller ethnic minorities numbering around 5,000 people with an estimated 1,000 still living in or around Bario.

“The growth of tourism in Bario is closely interwoven with other aspects of the social and cultural development of the community which it has grown alongside,” said one of the homestay owners in Bario Jaman Riboh Tekapan, who has 22 years of experience in the tourism industry in the community.

“Tourism has been recognised as a small-scale and non-agricultural activity that can constitute an important source of revenue generation and thereby create new venues for economic growth in Bario,” he pointed out to The Borneo Post in a recent interview.

He further noted the recent road linkage as well as the airstrip made it possible for tourist to visit Bario and the closest house was also the home of the headman. However, guests did not feel obliged to pay for their keep until the headman’s son placed a sign on the house proclaiming it as a ‘homestay’.

“That is how the tourism industry started in Bario,” he pointed out.

According to research, the next major stimulus to tourism was the recent infrastructure development, the eBario project which introduced telecommunication services into the community.

“The latest project we have for Bario is the community radio slated to be launched in March next year,” said eBario Sdn Bhd’s (eBario) project director John Tarawe.

“eBario has been recently granted the content applications service provider (CASP) class licence by the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC). With the CASP class licence, we will be the first company to deploy a community radio station in Malaysia,” added Tarawe.

By connecting the community to the outside world, the eBario project has had a profound impact on the community. The project has provided a significant boost to the tourism industry by facilitating the growth of websites for promotion and the exchange of information between potential visitors and the homestay operators in the community.

“From a slow beginning in the late 1990s, when there was only a single guest house, there are now around a dozen. Trekking tours range from a few days hiking with overnights in the scattered longhouses to more arduous expeditions of up to a week or more including jungle survival training,” Tekapan highlighted.

Adventure tourism involved exploration or travel to remote hostile areas, while cultural tourism was a genre of special interest tourism based on the search for and participation in new and deep cultural experiences.

“Cultural tourism in Bario is boosted by the ‘Bario Slow Food Festival’ which was established in 2005 and was held for its fifth year in June 2010,” he pointed out.

Research tourism in Bario, on the other hand, was a recognised concept that valued the contributions that researchers could make to the communities. The community was now adopting a more proactive approach towards any research to which they would consent that was to be conducted on their environment, he highlighted.

Accordingly, the benefits of research in Bario now far exceeded the contributions that researchers made to the local economy through their presence as it contributed knowledge that would underpin their own development objectives.

“In this regard, the eBario telecentre plays a vital role in providing communication and data processing facilities to visiting researchers. Coupled with the ready availability of research assistants who have gained experience in research in the social and natural sciences, researchers from outside could hit the ground running when they come to Bario.

“Research tourism has therefore developed into a critical component of the community’s economic development plans,” Tekapan explained. “Development conferencing is another type of tourism that is being pioneered in Bario.”

In December 2007, eBario organised the ‘eBario Knowledge Fair’, a multidisciplinary conference held in Bario. ‘The Knowledge Fair’ was held to showcase how a remote and isolated indigenous community had appropriated ICTs. It brought together more than a 100 participants from 15 countries.

Tarawe shared his view that travelling to attend a conference was a form of tourism. It was a particular type of tourism in which groups of people were brought together to share knowledge and promote their products.

“The term ‘pro-poor tourism’ has emerged as a mechanism for ensuring a larger proportion of tourism revenue. It is earned by the poor residents of popular tourism locations, something that is not an automatic outcome of the growth of global tourism,” he added.

Tourism in Bario is making contributions to the Bario community that go beyond increase in incomes and the creation of ‘income-earning’ opportunities. The combined effects of improved communications and road linkages has resulted in a further opening up of Bario and the Kelabit culture to the wider world.

In spurring an increase in the number of flights and in feeding off as well as contributing to the growth in use of ICTs, tourism had become intertwined with local development, growing from its accidental beginnings to a mainstay of life in the Highlands.

Bario is globalising on its own terms and tourism is an integral component of the process.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Bridging the digital divide through eBario concept

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=83149

Bridging the digital divide through eBario concept

by Justin Yap
justinyap@theborneopost.com.

Posted on December 30, 2010, Thursday

KUCHING: Bario known as the ‘Land of a Thousand Hand-Shakes’ is the homeland to the Kelabit ethnic minority. The indigenous community that emerged from isolation only within the last half century has shown massive positive development from the results of eBario projects.

PHOTO: John Tarawe

eBario began in 1998 as a research project undertaken by the Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (Unimas) with the support of the International Development Research Centre of Canada and the government of Malaysia. The objective was to demonstrate opportunities for sustainable development in a remote and isolated rural community from the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs).

“The project was undertaken against the background of the government’s aggressive adoption of ICTs for national development and the underdeveloped infrastructure as well as the scattered population of the nation’s largest state,” eBario Sdn Bhd project director John Tarawe told The Borneo Post during an exclusive trip to Bario.

Before the eBario project, communications were limited to rudimentary radio links and electricity was obtainable from household generators or solar panels. “At the heart of the Borneo island, Bario represents an extreme example of the digital divide,” said Tarawe.

According to Tarawe, a baseline study was conducted in order to understand the conditions of life and computers were progressively introduced, beginning with schools. “With the assistance of Telekom Malaysia, a community telecentre was established which consisted of computers with satellite (VSAT) access to the Internet as well as public phones and a reliable generator-driven power supply.”

In July 2002, the project was handed over by the research team to the community, with a local project manager and management committee. The project demonstrated that access to ICTs, specifically the Internet could precipitate significant improvements in the lives of such communities.

E-Bario has won many awards and was featured by the International Telecommunications Union as ‘one of the most notable of Malaysia’s Internet development initiatives.’

Due to the great success of the eBario project, the Unimas team was given the opportunity and honour by the government to replicate the same implementation model to five other nationwide remote sites throughout Malaysia.

Tarawe, who is also the telecentre manager for Centre of Excellence for Rural Informatics (CoERI) said the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (Mosti) had allocated RM4 million for the project. “Four projects have been implemented at Long Lamai and Ba’Kelalang in Sarawak, Kg Buayan in Sabah and Larapan Island in Semporna. The remaining will be used to upgrade the telecommunication facilities in Bario.”

With the implementation of telecommunication services in community villages, Bario is finally on the global radar. Riding on the new visibility, Bario is currently enjoying a steady trickle of visitors who are attracted by the unique culture and hospitality of the residents as well as the pristine highland rainforest environment.

Tourism is now a significant contributor to the local economy. There has been an increase in the number of lodges and restaurants providing accommodation and meals since eBario began. The increase in tourism has had the effect of doubling the number of flights between Bario and Miri.

“This has had a knock-on effect on the agricultural economy. Bario is famous for its rice, which is grown organically and is highly sought after due to its light taste and delicate fragrance. The increase in the

number of flights has allowed the farmers in Bario to send more rice to the urban markets and this in turn has stimulated rice production during that period,” Tarawe pointed out.

However, he also revealed that Bario’s rice production had drop significantly during the last few years because of the lack of manpower. In order to overcome this issue, CoRIE was currently working with National Padi and Rice Board (LPN) to introduce SMART farming concept for the community.

Another benefit relates to the use of the telecentre by the local clinic which became the first rural clinic in Sarawak with internet access. The medical technician at the clinic has been able to share medical information with doctors in the towns, obtain better information about the drugs at the clinic and about the common ailments among the residents.

The Kelabit community regularly conduct online discussions on topics that affect their future. “The eBario telecentre now allows Kelabits living in the highlands to participate in these discussions on an equal footing with their compatriots in the towns and overseas,” said Tarawe.

“Moreover, the entire Kelabit community is now developing online facilities to preserve their cultural heritage by capturing the recollections of the old folks and by assembling a digital library of Kelabit writings,” he added.

According to a study, the improved communications that Bario now enjoys with the outside world has lead to a number of significant changes. Family interactions have greatly improved and this had

been most keenly felt at the time of family emergencies, such as at times of sickness and bereavement.

Previously, relatives often heard about such emergencies well after the event when it was too late to act.

Additionally, the telecentre played a crucial role in coordinating search and rescue operations after a helicopter crashed in the nearby rugged highlands. Flight operations have also been enhanced by the improved communications that provide pilots with vital weather conditions that could be highly variable over short distances in the highland terrain.

“The eBario experience has been shared nationally and internationally with several agencies, including presentations organised by UMDP, UNESCAP, IDRC and the government of Malaysia,” said Tarawe, who is also the chairman of Kelabit Association of Sarawak and chairman of the Heart of Borneo Forum (Formadat).

The project team adopted Participatory Action Research (PAR) as the research methodology. Adopting PAR led the researchers and the community to jointly agree on a community development agenda that would be based on the use of the telecentre. The agenda consisted of a set of activities in which information systems and ICTs were embedded, but which also included associated human activities as well.

“The agenda serves as a long term vision for community interaction with itself, with the wider Kelabit diaspora, researchers and other external agencies leading to community development that is mediated by ICTs,” Tarawe explained.

Monday, December 20, 2010

RM90m to fight non-communicable diseases

http://www.thesundaily.com/article.cfm?id=55373

RM90m to fight non-communicable diseases

Opalyn Mok

newsdesk@thesundaily.com

GEORGE TOWN (Dec 20, 2010): The federal government has allocated RM90 million under the 10th Malaysian Plan to combat the rise of non-communicable diseases (NCD) such as diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease and high cholesterol.

The first programme under this allocation, which is community empowerment to combat NCD, has already started in several states in the last two months, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai.

"We are giving more power to the Village Development and Security Committee (JKKK) to implement the health agenda," he said at a press conference after the launch of the Bandar Baru Air Itam Health Clinic here today.

The clinic started operations on June 16 and it is the only government health clinic in the country to have a six-storey structure. It can cater to about 350 outpatients each day.

Liow said the JKKK will be the role model, adviser and leader in the health agenda.

"We are looking at appointing between 20 and 30 volunteers in each village to be part of this programme so that they could reach out to the community and spread awareness while educating and encouraging a healthy lifestyle and to cultivate good eating habits," he said.

He said there are other programmes to combat the rise of NCD in the pipeline which will be rolled out in stages in future.

On top of the allocation, Liow said the cabinet has approved the forming of a cabinet committee to manage the rise of NCD.

"The deputy prime minister will chair this committee and 12 other ministries, such as the local council and housing, youth and sports, education and transport ministries, will be involved in the committee," he said.

"The committee will be discussing the ways to combat the rise of NCD and obesity, which is the main cause for NCD, and come up with national strategic plans and policies to fight it," he said.

On another matter, Liow said young doctors must accept being posted to rural areas, especially Sabah and Sarawak for at least two years.

"I have received a lot of appeals from doctors who want to remain in the cities like Kuala Lumpur, (in) Selangor and do not want to be posted to rural areas," he said, adding that they should accept such postings as they must have the spirit to serve the community.

"Due to this, we have in place an incentive for them. Those who accept postings to the rural areas will only serve there for a maximum of two years and after that they will get a transfer back to the cities," he said.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

NCR land perimeter survey in Ulu Tinjar to start this week

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=80999

NCR land perimeter survey in Ulu Tinjar to start this week

Posted on December 18, 2010, Saturday

MIRI: Land and Survey (L&S) Department will be carrying out a perimeter survey for Long Aton, Ulu Tinjar in Baram starting this week.

FIRST HAND LOOK: Lihan uses a theodolite to make an area survey while others look on.
Land officer Mohamad Asri Haji Jaya said the size of Long Aton which will be surveyed is about 1,207 hectares and belongs to some 3,329 landowners.

“Long Aton, Tinjar is the second in Miri to be surveyed under the Native Customary Right (NCR) new initiative. The area was requested for survey by the Kayan-Kenyah community here and I am happy that the L&S is able to fulfill their request,” he said during a dialogue session with Long Aton community yesterday.

Mohamad Asri said the department would continue to engage and consult the Long Aton community to enable the people to express their opinions and thoughts.

In ensuring the success of the implementation of NCR new initiative, he urged landowners to render their full co-operation to the department when the survey work is carried out this week.

“Our target is to complete perimeter survey of Long Aton within a month and hopefully with assistance from the landowners, the department will be able to achieve its target,” he remarked.

After the completion of survey work, the land will be gazetted as Native Communal Reserve under Section 6 of the Sarawak Land Code.

Mohamad Asri assured the community can immediately detect any intrusion on their land when their land is already gazetted.

Survey of NCR land under the New Initiative is an ongoing process and will continue until the end of 10th Malaysia Plan which or by 2015.

Meanwhile, Telang Usan Assemblyman Lihan Jok has expressed his gratitude to the government in speed up the perimeter survey process at one of his areas.

“Don’t be misled by the opposition party as the perimeter survey has no hidden agenda to seize the people’s NCR land.

“In fact the Land Code has stated clearly that there is alternative way to claim your NCR land,” he remarked.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Mawan rubbished Larry Sng in Meluan rumour

http://sarawakupdate.com/home/10th-state-election/mawan-rubbished-larry-sng-in-meluan-rumour/

Mawan rubbished Larry Sng in Meluan rumour

SIBU, Dec.16 (Bernama) — Talk is rife that the Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party will swap Meluan for Kidurong with the Sarawak United People’s Party for the state election, which must be called before June 2011.

SPDP president Datuk Sri William Mawan Ikom is not amused, not least of all because Meluan is a Barisan Nasional stronghold while Kidurong is the DAP’s.

He dismissed the speculation as “coffee shop talk” and asserted that Meluan will always be SPDP territory.

Mawan questioned the motive of the speculators, with rumours of personality clashes abounding as politicians jockey for position for the coming polls.

“Are they trying to get me to be at loggerheads with (SUPP president) Tan Sri (Dr George) Chan?”

According to one scenario, SPDP’s Wong anak Judat, serving his second term as Meluan assemblyman, will not be re-nominated and his Iban majority seat will be contested by a Chinese candidate from SUPP.

In the exchange, SPDP treasurer-general and Bintulu MP Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing will vie for the mixed Kidurong seat held by DAP deputy state chairman Chew Chiu Sing, now in his fourth electoral term.

SUPP is said to be planning to field Pelagus state assemblyman Larry Sng, an assistant minister in the chief minister’s office, in Meluan.

Sng has been sacked from Parti Rakyat Sarawak after a falling out with PRS president Datuk Sri Dr.James Jemut Masing.

This means that Sng, seen as a upcoming Chinese leader by some, will have to join SUPP first.

But Meluan voters are not likely to lay out the red carpet for Larry Sng although his father Datuk Sng Chee Hua had been a two-term MP for Julau.

The many press statements issued recently advocating that Wong’s replacement should be a local-born and an Iban are indicative of the sentiment on the ground.

At least five locals have lobbied to be candidate in place of Wong, who has been criticised for alleged aggressiveness and lack of tack in handling certain issues.

So does this mean the end for Wong?

Mawan said that SPDP had endorsed Wong as candidate, but the final say would have to come from Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak as Barisan Nasional chairman and Tan Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud as state BN head.

He believes that Wong can defend Meluan.

“If he can retain around 40 per cent of his voters, and leaders and supporters of BN component parties continue to support him in the interest and spirit of Barisan, he can and will deliver,” Mawan said.

Mawan, who is the State the Minister of Social Development and Urbanisation, said SPDP would give special attention to the Ba Kelalan constituency.

Parti Keadilan Rakyat state chief Baru Bian, a leading Lun Bawang lawyer on native customary rights to land, is expected to challenge incumbent Nelson Balang Rining, the SPDP secretary-general, for the seat.

Mawan said: “There may be people out there who think that Balang is not as strong as we think he is. But this is disputable. I have been to the area.”

Mawan believes that Balang can pull through although with a reduced majority.

If Baru is indeed contesting, the Kelabit community will be for Balang. But the Lun Bawang community will be split, he said.

On the party’s overall preparations for the state elections, Mawan said the SPDP was fully ready to defend the eight seats it holds.

“We want to deliver Pakan, Meluan, Krian, Marudi, Tasik Biru, Bekenu, Batu Danau nand Ba Kelalan again to Barisan Nasional,” he said. –BERNAMA

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

PKR calls for review of flying doctor service

http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/sabah-and-sarawak/14170-pkr-calls-for-review-of-flying-doctor-service

PKR calls for review of flying doctor service

Tue, 14 Dec 2010 15:44

By Joseph Tawie

KUCHING: Sarawak PKR has called for a full review and renaming of the Flying Doctor Service (FDS) in Sarawak.

Its health bureau chief Dr Francis Ngu said the FDS should be renamed as Flying Medical Services (FMS) providing paramedical staff and community nurses instead of doctors.

"We would achieve the same or comparable public health outcomes with paramedical staff as with the current doctors. Currently the FDS is highly expensive for both logistics and personnel," he said.

Ngu said that while the FDS should not be restricted to one or two sorties per day, it must however improve ground personnel through village health promoters, facilities and equipment rather than focus on improving service delivery.

“Should there not be health promotion talks, demonstrations instead of just ‘pills-for all’ services?”

“Should there not be rural health promoters at all locations, to provide continuous synergism to the service of the FDS/FMS staff?” he asked.

Ngu was responding to Chief Minister Taib Mahmud's call on Saturday urging the federal and state governments to map out a more “realistic” plan in view of the scattered population in the state.

He reminded the governments that Sarawakians were spread out in 6,000 settlements, out which 60 percent consisted of fewer than 50 families.

“As long as the population was not concentrated and without easy transport, more efforts must be placed on the flying doctor service,” Taib had said.

Commenting on Taib's statement, Ngu suggested that where small plane landing airstrips are made available, for instance at Bario, Ba’Kelalan and Long Seridan, the FDS should be upgraded by using fixed winged aircrafts.

He also proposed that more landing strips be built for fixed winged aircrafts at remote locations, if population concentration justifies.

“Such a service would allow more staff and equipment to be flown example for dental service and eye screening,” Ngu said.

He added, that FDS/FMS would be better served by a full time Flying Medical Services Corps, thereby developing special expertise in rural medicine and dentistry.

“While consolidating and even vastly improving the FDS, the stronger emphasis must be steadily increasing the rural reach by land and riverine transport infrastructure, and establishing static facilities where population numbers justify cost effectiveness,” he said.

Contract irregularities

The FDS was launched in September 1973 as a pilot project to bring modern medicine to people in very remote areas of Sarawak.

Among its aims were to medically treat people in remote areas and help them improve their health status so that they would be economically productive.

It was also to narrow down the disparity in the provision of Medical and Health Services between urban and rural and remote interiors which are not easily accessible by normal means of communications.

In addition the government also hoped to make its presence felt in these remote locations which otherwise could easily fall prey to the influence of the insurgents.

Following the initial success of the white-coated doctor's visit to the longhouses which had never seen such personnel before, the government decided to have the FDS as a permanent service.

However recently FDS has been seeing a series of setbacks.

“The FDS is an expensive service which was put in place as much for political expediency of government rural reach in the 1970s, as for focused service provision," said Ngu.

"It was meant to be a stop-gap measure till the development of transport infrastructure, whence static service will replace the FDS.

"In recent years, there have been widespread service disruptions, leading to much dissatisfaction from rural communities concerned.

“Much of this failure has been traced by an opposition legislators to contract irregularities, involving political cronies,” he added.

Unique plant with anti-cancer agent garners interest

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=80253

Unique plant with anti-cancer agent garners interest

by Johnson K Saai.

Posted on December 14, 2010, Tuesday

KUCHING: Several renowned universities and commercial companies were enquiring about the availability of silvestrol which has a remarkable potential to be developed as an anti-cancer agent.
“This plant is found in Ba Kelalan and is known as ‘Segera’ to the Ibans and ‘Kellabuno’ to the Orang Ulu community. It contains a potent compound called silvestrol which has been patented worldwide by the Sarawak government, covering at least 16 countries,” Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Patinggi Tan Sri Dr George Chan disclosed.

He said the state government was reviewing the agreements to be signed with the interested parties now and when these collaborations take off, Sarawak Biodiversity Centre (SBC) will be the main agency to coordinate the supply of this drug candidate.

Dr Chan was speaking at the official opening of Sarawak Biodiversity Centre administration building and Karnival Biodiversity 2010 by Chief Minister Pehin Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud at Km20, Jalan Puncak Borneo near here.

He said earlier, the ‘special plant’ found in the Laila Taib Ethno-Botanical Garden in SBC, which contains a potent compound called silvestrol and has remarkable potential to be developed as an anti cancer agent, had drawn intense attention from a number of high profile international research groups.

“Furthermore, a related patent is now being filed by SBC that enables the DNA identification of plant species that produces this compound. This is very important in the event that collection and mass propagation of this plant becomes necessary,” he added.

He also pointed out that National Cancer Institute of USA; a leading agency in cancer research and clinical trials has teamed up with the prestigious Ohio State University, known for its clinical development of therapeutic drug for cancer, especially leukaemia, to work with SBC to conduct pre-clinical and clinical trials for silvestrol.

Meanwhile, Dr Chan, who is Tourism and Heritage Minister, said since the state was rich in biodiversity, it was advisable that local communities take the initiative to establish nurseries and gardens of useful plants.

He suggested that the establishment of such nurseries and gardens will not only facilitate conservation effort of the biodiversity but it can also become tourist attractions.

He said one good example was the herbal garden established by the Penan community of Long Iman near Mulu National Park where a minimal fee of RM1 will be charged for a guided garden tour.

“Another potential tourist draw is the establishment of a garden for useful plants and the distillation of aromatic essential oils by the Bidayuh community of Kampung Kiding in Padawan,” he said.

Dr Chan said that the Laila Taib Ethno-Botanical Garden will give a lasting impression to anyone who walked through it.

The plants in this unique garden were contributed by many communities, namely the Bidayuh, Penan, Selako, Iban, Malay, Melalau, Berawan, Lun Bawang, Kayan, Kelabit, Bisaya and Kenyah.

“Communities that participate in SBC’s Traditional Knowledge Documentation programme are also encouraged to set up their own nurseries and gardens of useful plants as part of the conservation efforts,” he disclosed.

He said that many opportunities for research could be done on the biodiversity present there and more importantly was how the research could help mankind in terms of pharmaceuticals, medicines, and health as well as tourism.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

MASwings rewards UPSR high scorers

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=80072

MASwings rewards UPSR high scorers

by Anasathia Jenis.

Posted on December 12, 2010, Sunday

TWENTY Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah (UPSR) high scorers went on a three-day education familiarisation tour of Kuala Lumpur under MASwings ‘Our Children Our Future’ project to foster academic excellence among Malaysia’s future generations.

EDUCATIONAL TRIP: The students and teachers at Subang airport. In the background is MASwings ATR 72-500 aircraft.

The students were from eight rural primary schools in Sarawak and Sabah. They were and accompanied by 10 teachers.

MASwings also invited the media from the two East Malaysian states along to share the experience.

Among the programmes were visits to Malaysia Airlines Complex in Subang and the Planetarium and Petrosains in Kuala Lumpur City Centre (KLCC).

The highlight was a tea reception, hosted by Datin Paduka Seri Rosmah Mansur, wife of the Prime Minister, at Seri Perdana.

For the four-hour flight to Kuala Lumpur, the group gathered at Miri Trails Guesthouse where they were met by MASwings staff. It was an exciting moment — a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity — for the students who got to explore the ATR 72-500 aircraft that flew them to the national capital. Who knows, one day some of them might decide to become a pilot or an air steward.

At Subang airport, the group were warmly greeted by MASwings managing director Dato’ Mohd Salleh Ahmad Tabrani and MASwings staff amidst the beats of kompang.

Souvenirs were presented to the students and teachers. This was followed by a briefing at the Malaysia Airlines Complex from Abdul Rashid Sharif, MAS manager Staff Affairs and Human Resources of Engineering and Maintenance Division.

Later, the group were taken on a tour of the engineering and maintenance building, the hangar and the training centre in the Complex. At the training centre, the group were shown an ATR72-500 aircraft simulator for enhancing crew efficiency.

The following day, the group visited the Planetarium and the tunnel-shaped aquarium before heading to the science gallery. They were treated to a popular cartoon animation ‘Upin Ipin’ at the Planetarium.

The next stop was Petrosains in the same building. Here, the group took about three hours to explore the exhibition gallery, showcasing the ‘wonders’ of science and technology related to the petroleum industry.

At KLCC, the group watched the 3-D animation cartoon of ‘Rapunzel’. It was something new to most of them.

For dinner, the popular Nasi Kandar was served.

Early the next day, before tarvelling to Putrajaya for a date at Seri Perdana, the group toured Kuala Lumpur city in Malaysia’s famous Hop-On Hop-Off bus, soaking in the view in a two-hour drive on the double-decker from Kuala Lumpur to Putrajaya. Along the way, they saw the new Istana Negara and another landmark still under construction.

Finally, on reaching Putrajaya, the group toured the area and lunched at Alamanda Shopping Mall before arriving at Seri Perdana around 2pm. There, the students performed the ngajat, and a traditional Sabah dance to the tune of a Gunung Kinabalu song for their gracious host.

Rosmah is patron of MASwings ‘Our Children Our Future’ project, a top-priority in MASwings community agenda.

At the tea reception, Rosmah handed over school bags and uniforms to the students. Also present was MAS managing director and MASwings chairman Dato’ Seri Azmil Zahruddin Raja Aziz.

The trip was a great opportunity for the students to experience life outside their rural settings.

A student of SK Pekan 2 Pitas Sabah, Cerollyn Carmila said she was happy to have had the opportunity her to visit other parts of the country.

“Thanks to MASwings for the familiarisation trip. It was an eye-opener,” she said.

Cerollyn’s friend, Beatrice Rinai Joannes, said she was grateful her hard work in obtaining As in UPSR had been rewarded by MASwings.

The eight rural schools from Sarawak are Sk Long Banga, SK Long Akah, SK Ba’Kelalan, Sk Bario, SK Mulu, SK Long Lellang, Long Seridan and SK Marudi. The two schools from Sabah are SK Rusop Pitas and SK Pekan 2 Pitas, in Tawau.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

RM100 mln boost for affordability

http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=79745

RM100 mln boost for affordability

by Margaret Ringgit.

Posted on December 11, 2010, Saturday

80 per cent of state to enjoy benefits of Price Standardisation Scheme next year

MIRI: The federal government’s Price Standardisation Scheme will cover 80 per cent of the state next year.

Deputy Minister of Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Datuk Tan Lian Hoe said RM100 million had been allocated to ensure that essential items are more affordable state-wide.

“For this year, with a total allocation of RM67 million, we have covered about 30 per cent of Sarawak’s areas, mostly in the interior, which was known as the Community Drumming project,” she said.

With the increased allocation for next year, she said, the number of distribution areas would increase from 191 at present to 269 next year.

Among the areas which will be covered are Mulu, Bakun, Belaga, Sungai Asap, Long Simut, Bario and Tutoh Apoh.

Tan added that the government is concerned and aware of the rakyat’s plight, especially after the increase of the RON95 petrol and diesel prices on Dec 3.

She said the Community Drumming project would help to lighten this load.

Tan told reporters this at Yu Lan Plaza after handing over Letters of Intent (LOI) to 27 appointed point of sale distributors for controlled items such as diesel, sugar, and LPG in rural areas in Miri, Bintulu and Limbang yesterday.

Among those present at the function were Domestic, Trade Co-operative and Consumerism’s state director Wan Ahmad Uzir Wan Sulaiman and theMinistry’s head for Miri branch Zakaria Awang.

“Sarawak is our main priority area due to its geographical size. We are serious about this project so that the people living in the interior areas of Sarawak can afford to buy controlled items such as diesel, petrol,LPG or sugar at affordable prices.”

She urged members of the public to be the Ministry’s eyes and ears to ensure that the elected point-of-sale distributors in their respective areas did not hike the prices of controlled items.

“We will not compromise with those who increase the priced controlled items,” she cautioned.

In 2009, Sarawak received RM57 million out of a total RM96 million approved nationwide for the programme, which encompassed 15 per cent of the state.

113 Students from 12 ethnic groups take part in skills training

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/12/11/sarawak/7594112&sec=sarawak

Saturday December 11, 2010

113 students from 12 ethnic groups take part in skills training

By ZORA CHAN
zora@thestar.com.my


JOSEPHINE Bujang, 18, may be the only female trainee among 60 others in an automation technician course, but she is not someone who is easily overwhelmed.

Aspiring to be an engineer, this Berawan lass from Rumah Kajan Sijeh, Long Tru, in Tinjar, about four hours by express boat or car from Miri, said she did not take up a childcare-provider course like her peers as she wanted a more challenging career.

“I’m applying for scholarships to further my studies at diploma and degree levels at a private college in Miri,” she told StarMetro after receiving her certificate from Yahos Sdn Bhd in Kuching yesterday.


Graduation: Fatimah (right) presenting a certificate to Betty Laweng, 22, a Kenyah from Sungai Asap for completing the childcare-provider course.
Yahos Sdn Bhd is a training provider appointed by the Economic Planning Unit under the Prime Minister’s Department via the State Planning Unit under the Chief Minister’s Department to train students from minority ethnic groups in Sarawak.

Its skill-based Sijil Kemahiran Malaysia (SKM) courses are accredited by the Department of Skills Development.

A total of 113 students from 12 ethnic groups in the state joined the programme which had its first intake in July this year.

The ethnic groups they represent are Beketan, Berawan, Kayan, Kelabit, Kenyah, Kiput, Lahanan, Lun Bawang, Murut, Penan, Punan and Sekapan.

A total of 63 students took up the Automation Technician and Mechatronic Level 2 course while the remaining 50 took up the Childcare Provider Level 2 course.

Minister in the Chief Minister’s Department Datin Fatimah Abdullah, who officiated at the certificate presentation, said the courses were tailored to meet the needs of industries and the trainees should be able to find employment soon or further their education.

She said the state introduced SKM for the minority groups because of its inclusiveness policy to ensure no ethnic group was left out from the mainstream of development.

Earlier, Yahos Sdn Bhd managing director Natasha Nasa Douglas Uggah said a new course would be introduced next year namely Beautician and Aesthetician Level 1 and 2 to train students in make-up, facial treatment, pedicure, manicure, hair-do and daily operations of a beauty centre.

Another new course would be Culinary Level 1 and 2 to train students to prepare various local and international cuisines, she added.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Kafe Canaan promisi makanan eksotik



http://www.malaysiazoom.com/kafe-canaan-promosi-makanan-eksotik/

Kafe Canaan promosi makanan eksotik

Posted by admin on Dec 10, 2010


MIRI 10 Dis. – Suku kaum Kelabit dari tanah tinggi Bario sememangnya terkenal dengan sikap peramah dan lemah.

Namun, selain daripada sikap kaum itu kepada masyarakat luar, kesedapan makanan disajikan kepada tetamu juga sukar untuk dilupai sepanjang hayat.

Berteraskan sumber hutan, pelbagai jenis sayur-sayuran dan buah-buahan disajikan dalam daun dan buluh beserta nasi lembut yang berbungkus dengan daun.

Selain itu, hasil buruan seperti rusa, kijang atau pelanduk dan ikan dicampur dengan tumbuhan hutan lain juga dihidangkan di atas daun yang menjadikannya kelihatan cukup eksotik.

Namun tidak perlu bimbang, meskipun tidak berpeluang berkunjung ke Bario, hidangan eksotik Kelabit ini masih boleh dinikmati di Kafe Canaan yang terletak di Pusat Komersial Centre Point, Miri di sini.

Pemilik Kafe Canaan, Ranson Ballan berkata, kafe itu menyediakan 80 peratus hidangan tradisi kaum Kelabit antaranya hidangan wajib nubak layak (nasi yang dibungkus menggunakan sejenis daun), sayur-sayuran hutan seperti umbut, daun ubi, pucuk lemidin dan siput sungai.

Selain itu, beras Bario, pekasam dan kuih-muih yang diperbuat daripada beras pulut yang ditumbuk turut disajikan kepada pelanggan.

“Setiap hari, kita menyediakan kira-kira 13 hidangan termasuk daging ayam yang dimasak menggunakan buluh. Pengunjung boleh memilih untuk menikmati nasi Bario atau nubak layak,” kata Ballan kepada Utusan Malaysia, di sini semalam.

Mula beroperasi sejak lima tahun lalu, Kafe Canaan mendapat sambutan luar biasa daripada pengunjung termasuk pelancong dari Korea, Jepun, China, Eropah, Amerika Syarikat dan Australia.

“Tujuan kita ialah memperkenalkan hidangan yang diwarisi daripada nenek moyang kepada orang luar.

“Pada masa sama, kita mahu menyahut seruan kerajaan untuk menambah nilai komersial makanan tradisi tanpa menjejaskan keunikan makanan itu,” katanya.

Katanya, pengiktirafan Miri sebagai bandar raya lima tahun lalu telah memberi idea kepadanya untuk membuka premis makanan yang berbeza daripada yang lain.

Apatah lagi, dengan status sebagai bandar raya peranginan yang mempunyai hampir 30 suku kaum, Miri perlu menampilkan ciri-ciri keunikan itu melalui makanan tradisional.

Kata Ballan, pada masa itu, masih belum ramai di kalangan suku kaum di Miri menceburi bidang perniagaan makanan tradisi berbanding sekarang yang muncul ibarat cendawan tumbuh selepas hujan.

“Usaha ini sejajar dengan langkah kerajaan untuk menjadikan Miri sebagai syurga makanan di utara Sarawak,” katanya.

Menurutnya, dia tidak dapat melupakan pengalaman melihat pelanggan yang terdiri daripada pelancong asing menikmati nubak layak dengan pekasam di Kafe Canaan.

“Tidak semua orang pandai makan nubak layak apatah dengan pekasam yang rasa-rasanya masam dan masin. Justeru satu kepuasan apabila melihat kaum lain dapat menikmati hidangan kami dengan begitu berselera,” katanya.

Pengusaha kafe itu begitu puas kerana dapat mempromosi makanan eksotik Kelabit kepada pelancong luar.

Tambahnya, nubak layak amat sinonim dengan kaum Kelabit dan menjadi tradisi bagi kaum itu membawa nubak layak setiap kali pergi ke hutan atau huma.

Oleh kerana huma atau hutan terletak jauh dari rumah pada zaman dahulu, nenek moyang mereka membawa nasi bungkus yang sengaja dimasak dengan lembut.

“Dahulu mana ada bekas membawa sup. Justeru, nasi tersebut memang dimasak dengan air yang banyak agar ia lembut, mudah dimakan selain senang hadam,” katanya.

Katanya, nubak layak juga merupakan hidangan tradisi Orang Ulu seperti Kayan dan Lun Bawang.

“Apa yang membezakan ialah nubak layak Kelabit mempunyai tekstur yang lebih lembut berbanding nubak layak Kayan,” katanya.

Mungkin ramai yang tidak tahu walaupun kaum Kelabit terkenal dengan penanaman beras Bario, namun mereka menggunakan beras dari jenis lain untuk memasak nubak layak.

“Jangan terkejut jika berkunjung ke rumah panjang di Bario, kami tidak gunakan beras Bario untuk membuat nubak layak,” katanya.

Kata Ballan, beras Bario tidak sesuai dijadikan nubak layak sebaliknya lebih enak dinikmati dengan memasaknya seperti biasa.

Setiap hari, Kafe Canaan menyediakan sebanyak 100 bungkus nubak layak.

Melihat kepada sambutan baik, Ballan berharap dapat memperluaskan ruang perniagaannya memandangkan yang sedia ada tidak mencukupi untuk menampung jumlah pelanggan yang kian meningkat.

Seorang pelanggan, Sherman Meru Palong, 49, dari Lawas berkata, Kafe Canaan menyediakan makanan yang menepati selera orang kampung atau rumah panjang.

“Setiap hari menikmati hidangan di bandar bosan juga. Kita perlukan lebih banyak tempat makan seumpama ini, lagipun ia mendapat sambutan baik daripada orang ramai,” katanya.

Kafe Canaan dibuka mulai pukul 6 pagi hingga 3 petang setiap Isnin hingga Sabtu dan menyediakan hidangan sarapan pagi dan makan tengah hari.


Dipetik dari Utusan Malaysia

Saturday, December 4, 2010

On-board jumble sale and waterfront clean-up in Kuching

http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?sec=sarawak&file=/2010/12/4/sarawak/7556424

Saturday December 4, 2010

On-board jumble sale and waterfront clean-up in Kuching

LAYAR Warisan Sdn Bhd and Backtoback Ideas will hold a jumble sale on board the Sarawak River Cruise and a joint exercise to clean up the Kuching Waterfront tomorrow.

Backtoback Ideas is a Malaysian events solution company while Layar Warisan is the owner of Sarawak River Cruise.

Layar Warisan managing director Fiona Marcus Raja said the proceeds from the events entitled Cash In On Cast-offs On Board and The Kuching Waterfront Clean-up will be donated to charitable organisations in Kuching and the Kelabit community in Bario.

The jumble sale would run from 9am to 3pm while the clean-up campaign would be from 3pm to 4pm, she added.

Several corporations are sponsoring the event while Sara Urusharta Sdn Bhd and Sarawak Economic Development Corporation will sponsor the use of the Waterfront Amphitheatre and volunteer manpower for the waterfront clean-up.

Computer Constraint Behind Race Blunder

http://www.brudirect.com/index.php/The-Borneo-Post-Online/computer-constraint-behind-race-blunder.html

Computer Constraint Behind Race Blunder

Written by Peter Boon and Margaret Apau

Saturday, 04 December 2010 10:52

William Ghani Bina

Kuching: When parents receive their children's report cards, they're usually concerned over grades but last week, six parents were fretting over race when their children received their mid- and yearend report cards.

In a letter to Sarawak Teachers' Union (STU) president William Ghani Bina last week, the parents complained that their children's racial status had been changed from Lun Bawang, Kelabit and Iban to ‘Keturunan Melayu'.

When contacted yesterday regarding the race discrepancy in the six students' report cards, principal Robin Udau explained that the submission of the students as ‘Malay' was non-political, but a makeshift remedy to an administrative problem with the computer programme.

"Since the exam analysis software that we are using is from Johor, it only provides four columns for race: Malay, Chinese, Indian or Lain-Lain," he said.

Since ‘Lain-Lain' did not include non-Muslim Bumiputeras, the school put them under the Malay category for the MoE's statistical purposes.

"That way they can see how each race group fares academically. While the system give us an overview of individual student performance over the course of the year, it also can help us gauge the whole school's academic performance," he said, adding that information on the latter would be forwarded to the MoE.

The computer system has been used for a year now, over the course of which they usually revert back the student's race to the original denomination on the report card.

"Within our own school's registration system, students are registered according to their birth certificates," he assured, stressing that the information on the exam analysis programme would not change the information on the birth certificate.

Ghani took immediate action, meeting up with the deputy director of the State Education Department, Jaidah Alek to discuss the matter.

"On Thursday, I sought clarification from the director-general of education Datuk Ghafar Mahmud on the matter and was told that this was due to the results from the examination analysis system or Sistem Analisis Peperiksaan (SAP) sent by the examination unit of MoE," he said yesterday.

As such, parents need not be unduly worried over the matter as it would be amicably resolved soon, he assured, thanking parents for highlighting the matter.

"We respect Islam as the official religion of Malaysia and, in this country, all races live together harmoniously like brothers and sisters," Ghani noted, thanking Ghafar for his rapid response in the matter.

He appealed to the parents not to blame the school or teachers on this matter as rectifications were underway.

"But I do hope such things will not happen again and hope that MoE will be more careful in handling such matters in future," he said.

Nonetheless, he believed that some schools still face such problems.

"Check with STU or the department concerned," Ghani advised. -- Courtesy of The Borneo Post Online

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

'Melayu' native kids: Ministry in the dark

http://freemalaysiatoday.com/fmt-english/politics/barisan-nasional/13584-melayu-native-kids-ministry-in-the-dark

'Melayu' native kids: Ministry in the dark .

Wed, 01 Dec 2010 14:17 . .

By Patrick Lee and Joseph Tawie

UPDATED KUALA LUMPUR: The Education Ministry is unaware that the race of indigenous children has been changed to Malay in their school report cards.

Deputy Education Minister Wee Ka Siong told FMT this was the first time he had heard of it.

He said the fault did not rest with his ministry, but the National Registration Department (NRD).

"It could not have happened under our education system, because the ministry follows the child's birth certificate,” he said.

“Any correction to this (a child's racial origin) must be done with the NRD, not us. This has nothing to do with the ministry. We have no right to say if you're Malay or Chinese. We've no right.

“As far as I know, a child is registered based on the birth certificate, which is downloaded, or based on the system,” he added.

Wee was commenting on a FMT report that native Sarawakian children were classified as Malays in their school report cards.

Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian, who raised the issue, said these children were identified as "lain-lain" in the past.

One parent even told Bian that the status of his child could not be changed back as it was already set in the system.

Wee also said that it was possible that the information in the report cards was not official and that it could have been changed.

"The report card is not an official document, it is a book... So you can change it, but I think it's more to do with amending the information,” he said.

Sarawak Dayak Iban Association livid

Meanwhile, the Sarawak Dayak Iban Association (Sadia) said the act of altering the children's race was "unconstitutional and wrong".

Taking the Education Ministry to task, Sadia president Sidi Munan said: "The ministry should know about the implications of such an act. This is a sensitive issue and affects us.”

"They should just go back to the constitution. It clearly defines the natives of Sarawak," he added.

Expressing puzzlement over the matter, Sidi said he did not understand why this was being done.

"Have they misunderstood... are they thinking that ‘Keturunan Melayu’ is the same as the Malay stock?

“But that is not what we are talking about here. This document (report card) has nothing to do with anthropological definition of ‘Keturunan n Melayu’. It does not make sense,” he said.

“If he is Kelabit call him Kelabit. If he is Iban call him Iban (Sea Dayak), Bidayuh (Land Dayak), and so on. The word of the constitution is law. It is the supreme law of the land. How can you go against it?” he asked.