Taking Kaamatan to Penang

Penampang: The rich cultures of the Kadazandusuns in Sabah will be showcased in Penang next month as the Kadazandusun Cultural Association (KDCA) branch on the island will be organising the Harvest Festival celebration there for the first time. It will be a Penang state level event with cooperation from its State Government and the Ministry of Tourism and Culture, universities and the private sector, including Sada Borneo, a popular band comprising Sabahan and Sarawakian musicians who only play traditional acoustic instruments. KDCA Penang Deputy Chairman II Murasun Murphy said the main event will be held on May 13 at Kompleks Bukit Jambul. "Our main objective is to enable Sabahans here to celebrate the harvest. Aside from that, we want to share the Kadazandusun ethnic cultures and traditions with people of other races here, including tourists," he said. He said there are younger generation of Sabahans who have been living in Penang and other states in the peninsula for a long time and are no longer familiar with their cultures and traditions, hence the importance of the celebration. He said they expect Sabahans who are residing in other states in the peninsula to come to the island to join the celebration. There are more than 40 indigenous ethnic communities under the KDCA. Penang is one of three KDCA branches in the peninsula. The other two are Klang Valley and Johor. Murasun said the highlight of the event will be the Unduk Ngadau and Sugandoi finals. Currently, organisers are calling for interested individuals nationwide to register as contestants for both contests. He said they must be Malaysian citizens above 18-year-old from any of the more than 40 ethnic groups of the Kadazandusun, or at least either parent is of that race. Auditions will be held on April 28-29 at the KDCA office at Goldhill Complex, Ayer Itam in Penang. "We will select seven finalists for the Unduk Ngadau and five for Sugandoi," he said. The prizes for the Unduk Ngadau winners are RM1,200 cash, not including products and accessories, RM700 (second place), RM500 (third place) RM150 each for the fourth and fifth place. Prizes for the top three Sugandoi winners are RM700, RM500 and RM300. The winners will represent Penang for the finals in Sabah during the state level Harvest Festival celebration on May 30 and 31. Source: Daily Express
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Upgrade KK Central Market to attract tourists – Yong

KOTA KINABALU: The Kota Kinabalu Central Market is a scenic destination that allows tourists, especially from China, to enjoy the beautiful seaside sunset view while having dinner, said Datuk Yong Teck Lee, the honorary legal advisor of the Kota Kinabalu Hawkers Association. “The last major renovation on KK Central Market was more than 20 years ago, and it is high time now to upgrade and modernize it to international standards,” said Yong, who was also former Sabah Chief Minister. “The next major upgrading is long overdue. We hope the government in the near future will invest in it, make it clean and safe to make our city’s central market an international class market and a tourist attraction. We can make the upper floor of the central market into a more comfortable place to view the seaside sunset. Have clean toilets with safe car parking area to become an international class market. What’s more, tourists are now looking for the famous ‘under the overhead bridge fruit stalls’ that are next to the central market,” he said. Yong said this in his speech at the KK Hawkers Association annual dinner on Saturday night. The association’s annual dinners have been held continuously for the past 30 years without fail. KK Hawkers Association is one of the oldest registered organisations in Sabah, which is now 61 years old. Yong said KK Central Market is still an important landmark and a prestigious market out of many newly bloomed markets, some of which are operated by private individuals. “I know that there are now other markets in KK, but the KK Central Market will always remain as the central market – central is central. The central market is our centre of attraction. Therefore, our central market must get the sufficient support and funds from the government, especially City Hall (DBKK),” he said. “The KK city population has grown from 100,000 to 500,000 people and is now considered an international city. We have visitors from all over the world, as tourists as well as business people. We now have many students at UMS from other parts of Malaysia and also overseas. This is an opportunity for KK Central market hawkers. “Thus, the central market needs to be upgraded continuously. We now see foreign tourists visiting the central market. We see them shopping. Our food stalls now cook seafood for visitors. This is new business. This service (cooking for foreigners who buy their own fresh sea food at the fish market) will become more and more famous internationally, especially in China. I heard that some China and Hong Kong tourists even contact our food stalls’ owners via WeChat,” he added. Yong also offered his expertise on the Registrar of Societies’ requirements for the association when comes to legal advice, in order to prevent being deregistered as was the case of the Putatan Hawkers Association. Source: The Borneo Post
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CNY marks highest arrivals of China tourists – Pang

KOTA KINABALU: The number of Chinese tourist arrivals in Sabah in the first two months this year increased by 52 per cent to 113,296 compared to the corresponding period last year. Tourism, Culture and Environment Assistant Minister, Datuk Pang Yuk Ming said that the Chinese New Year week in February also recorded the highest Chinese tourist arrival in a week at 67,000. “This is in line with our target of receiving between 550,000 and 600,000 visitors from China this year,” he told reporters when met at the ‘Passion of Minnan Culture on Maritime Silk Road’ cultural show at the Culture and Arts Department Complex here yesterday. The event was organised by the Xiamen Municipal Tourism Development Commission who were on a cultural tour on a cruise ship along the Maritime Silk Road in South East Asia. According to Pang, he had requested the Xiamen Municipal Tourism Development Commission Deputy Director General, Zhong Hai Lin who was present, to consider re-launching direct air link between Xiamen and Fujian with Kota Kinabalu, to be serviced by Xiamen Airlines. He said that the airline is currently servicing Fuzhou – Kota Kinabalu route and Beijing – Kota Kinabalu route. “Xiamen is a tourism hub of China which received some 78 million tourists, mostly domestic visitors last year. So if we can link these two cities, we can tap to the vast tourism market and promote Sabah to the rest of China. “Now visitors come to Sabah through Fuzhou but Xiamen is a better known city and it is close to Taiwan. “Malaysia Airlines used to fly to Xiamen from Kota Kinabalu but it stopped in 2004. Things are different now,” he added. Pang also hoped that the Xiamen Municipal Tourism Development Commission cruise ship, Neo Costa Romantica, would call on Kota Kinabalu in its scheduled service. He said although visitors arriving on cruise ships are not counted as tourists because they stay on the ship instead of in a hotel, they also contribute greatly in terms of tourism receipt. “With passengers’ capacity of 1,800 and crew of 1,200, the Neo Costa Romantica would benefit the city,” he said. Source: New Sabah Times
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KL gives RM 250,000 to set up Lotud Research and Learning Centre

Tuaran: A Suang Lotud Research and Learning Centre will be set up in a private land in Pogun Lawit here, said Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation Datuk Seri Wilfred Madius Tangau. He said the upcoming building worth RM250,000 will be equipped with learning and teaching facilities as well as placing a Lotud Community Learning Centre (LCLC). "The Suang Lotud Research and Learning Centre will not only be the benchmark for Tuaran but it will become the identity of multiracial Malaysians with diverse backgrounds who can live together in harmony through unity and camaraderie spirit. "Such initiative has invaluable meaning and has its own historical value towards uplifting the cultural heritage, language and tradition of Lotud ethnic race in Sabah," he said. Tangau, who is also the Tuaran MP, said this after handing over a contribution of Federal funds to build the Suang Lotud Research and Learning Centre, at the Tuaran District Council. He said different views and understanding would not prevent any effort to fortify culture and races in Sabah to continue be united and live harmoniously. Meanwhile, Suang Lotud Sabah Association President Dato's Fredie Sua said the proposal to establish the centre was made two years ago and forwarded to Tangau. He said the Suang Lotud community is pleased with the Federal Government for channelling the funding for the cost of building the centre here which showed its concern on the need of ethnic groups in Sabah. "This is the initiative of Tangau …and this will definitely create history to the Suang Lotud community in Sabah. "The site for the centre was donated by Suang Lotud leader Balanting Erom and we are most grateful and thankful to him for his generosity. His sacrifice would always be remembered, including by the next generation," he said. He said the upcoming centre also has the potential to be developed as an attraction for tourists when it is completed. "Our vision is we want our cultural heritage, language and tradition of Dusun Lotud in Sabah known to the world," Fredie said. - Hayati Dzulkifli Source: Daily Express
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A victory for the environment

Kota Kinabalu: The series of hard news and special reports pertaining to the proposed construction of the Sukau bridge in the middle of the rainforest that led to it being cancelled was not done with the aim of winning the Prime Minister's Hibiscus Award for Environmental Journalism in mind, according to winner Kan Yaw Chong. The Special Writer who specialises on the environment and wildlife for Daily Express – which became the first East Malaysian newspaper to win the most prestigious environmental journalism award in Malaysia last Friday – even risked his life in the process. This was because he decided to go to the exact site where the bridge was supposed to be built and spent several hours walking the entire length of the area and observing the kind of wildlife and vegetation there. It is a known pygmy elephant habitat who have previously charged and killed "intruders" that included unsuspecting locals and even tourists. "I was lucky to manage to spend enough time to have a first hand look at the site without being attacked by the elephants although there was evidence of them from their faecal matter and footprints," he said. "Had they attacked me my career as a journalist would have ended there and then with perhaps the image of the charging bulls recorded on my camera," he said. One other thing he noticed was the many Orang Utan nests high up in the trees which would have to be felled if the bridge had to be built. Orang Utans are solitary animals and it is rare to find so many nests in a given area. Kan said if any, the award served as a formal recognition from KL for the successful rescue of a tourism vision that the Sabah Government set in the late 1980s and early 90s, i.e. to turn the lower Kinabatangan into a world class river wildlife ecotourism destination. What the then State Government proposed to do to accomplish the vision first spawned by Junaidi Payne – WWF's first Director in Sabah – was to gazette 60,000 hectares of Asia's only remaining forested alluvial flood plain which was filled with wildlife. The aim was to attract the world to pay top dollars just to look at the region's iconic wildlife at close quarters, namely the elephants, orangutans, proboscis monkeys, birds, a mighty river with gargantuan crocodiles, among others. Of course nothing near that ambitious 60,000ha wildlife sanctuary happened, partly because a change in government meant different people put in charge who had different ideas. "Nevertheless, that was the original vision, the plan which Datuk Wilfred Lingham, then Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Tourism and Environmental Development told me. " And that was how Sukau first entered my journalistic career way back in 1990 – 28 years go, when Irene Charuruks, then General Manager of Sabah Tourism Promotion Corporation, Board members Mina Hong, Chua Soon Bui and Noredah Othman, now deputy General Manager, wildlife tourism guru Stephen Liew, brought me to Sukau to kick-start a travel writing promotion campaign to popularise it, guided by now famed wildlife photographer, Cede Prudente," he recalled. "From Day One, I decided to use the power of the pen to campaign on behalf of wildlife and help the State accomplish that vision for Lower Kinabatangan and Sukau." To cut the story short – Sukau did become a world famous wildlife tourism destination 10 to 15 years later, supported actively by WWF-Malaysia to drive a balance between an aggressive oil palm sector, local folks and wildlife dubbed Kinabatangan-Corridor of Life. Kan said he foresaw that turning inward to oil palm or concrete and bitumen would trigger the onset of a severe balance disorder from which rescue may be impossible. Over the years, it became clear that inward turning to cash crops far exceeded the original outward-focussed visionary dream of gazetting the 60,000-hectare riverine forests set apart to care for wildlife. Delay after delay whittled the proposal down to a compromised 26,000 hectares when it was eventually gazetted in 2005 under the Wildlife Conservation Enactment 1997. Oil palms planted right to the river banks where they were not supposed to be by law, became increasingly a prominent part of the landscape. "So what happened on the ground didn't square with the original State Vision and Mission to accomplish a world class ecotourism destination. "The gradual erosion of Sabah's eco reputation became felt as tourists moaned about the loss of wilderness to excessive commercial palms. Then came the earth-shaking news about a Sukau Bridge that would cost up to RM700 million upon completion being lobbied at the expense of wildlife. "I asked known local elephant researcher Dr Raymond Alfred what he thought of the Sukau Bridge. He said it would pose a 'second dead end' to the herd of 350 elephants, after the Batu Putih bridge, trapping them in a much smaller and poorer feeding ground. "That inspired one of my early special reports entitled 'Bridge Over Trouble Waters'." "It surprised me a great deal when Rahimatsah Amat accepted an interview which resulted in a front page Daily Express lead voicing his objection on grounds that all State Wildlife Action Plans discouraged major infrastructures being built within the wildlife sanctuary of Lower Kinabatangan. "Strangest of all, nobody seemed sure exactly WHERE they were going to put the bridge, until I called a Sukau-based worker who said: 'The IOI jetty and dirt road across Lot 3 of the Wildlife Sanctuary'." Kan said he then asked Alexander Yee, then President of KiTA and said: "Nestle and Sime Darby are holding a joint ceremony to present Group Certification to about 100 oil palm smallholders at Myne Resort, Bilit, on March 6 (2016), can you provide a boat after lunch to send me to the IOI jetty?" Yee agreed and that one small event led to something big. "As I walked down the quiet 2km dirt road where I didn't encounter a single soul or vehicle , I was astonished to see orangutan nests everywhere on top of the trees along both sides of the dirt road and elephant foot prints! "It convinced me that a 1,000ft bridge followed by a busy highway cutting across all that would be a death sentence to wildlife and raised my concern with Forestry Director Datuk Sam Mannan. Then an unmistakable signal that the bridge was definitely going ahead became clear when Daily Express received a picture of a forested site which had been cleared to build the contractor's office! When Daily Express published that picture on the front page and posed questions, Forestry stepped in and slapped a stop-work order. NGOs picked up some public courage when Dr Marc Ancreaz spoke and Dr Benoit Gossens released scientific data on the elephant movements with the highest density in Sukau. Soon after, alarmed tour operators like Alex Yee, Datuk KL Tan the current Matta President and ecotourism guru Albert Teo also voiced objections. Probably the most powerful voice of local dissent came from former deputy Prime Minister Tun Musa Hitam, now Chairman of Sime Darby Foundation, who said he felt "uncomfortable" about the Sukau Bridge during a visit to the Foundation's funded forest restoration project in Ulu Segama. Tour operators in Sandakan – Johnny Lim, Amy Chin, Cede Prudente and Caesar now dared to go public in definite terms that a massive hardware across Sukau will terminate the wildness experience of Lower Kinabatangan once and for all! All these the Daily Express duty reported but still nothing changed. "Then one day, Express Editor James Sarda handed me a report that appeared in the UK Guardian and said 'Kan, you better process this. It may lead to something.' The Guardian report carried comments of Sir David Attenborough – the world's Number One conservationist and legendary wildlife documentary producer who praised the Lower Kinabatangan as one of the richest wildlife destinations on earth that he had visited and how the bridge would spell its sure doom. "I processed the report which was published and that, according to Mannan, was the straw that broke the camel's back," said Kan, adding that the credit is owed to a lot of people who played their role. "It was really team work at its best." Kan adds: "Going further, there was no way Sabahans would have known about Sir Attenborough's authoritative world voice when it counted in the hour of need, if not for Sabah Publishing House founded by the late Tan Sri Yeh Pao Tzu that publishes the Daily Express. "So the Prime Minister's Hibiscus Award is also a tribute to his journalistic vision and his wife, the late Puan Sri Yeh who sought me out in 1996 and recruited me and of course son Datuk Clement Yeh who now runs the show. "Up to the very last moment, many, many people had resigned to the fact that the Sukau Bridge was going ahead. "This is why I was frankly astonished when the State Government announced the bridge was scrapped. "In the end, this prestigious award is actually a tribute to the State and Federal Governments who did listen to the voice of reason and vision," added Kan. The possibility is open that the bridge and highway money can move to alternative choices to better the right to a decent life for poor rural folks in other ways while wildlife and economics get the same right at the same time. How to accomplish that outcome is to employ strategic environmental planning that advocates leaving sensitive areas alone, taking projects elsewhere and developing what one wants. Nestle promoted the operating philosophy of Creating Shared Value (CSV) through Sukau-based Project RiLeaf when it took over the Kinabatangan-Corridor of Life from WWF-Malaysia in 2011 and later joined by Sime Darby Foundation, by advocating the 3P concept – a balanced Triple Win practice that should benefit People, Planet and Profit simultaneously. Source: Daily Express
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