Tag: sabah

  • Alfian Sa’at: Government Reaction To Sabah Tragedy Not Opportunistic Propaganda

    Alfian Sa’at: Government Reaction To Sabah Tragedy Not Opportunistic Propaganda

    Today is the National Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Sabah earthquake.

    I’ve seen some commentators wondering if there is some political mileage to be extracted from this observance. Whether there is opportunism involved, in putting a caring face on a government otherwise known to be indifferent to all the quieter tragedies happening in our country–like poverty, or the poor treatment of migrant workers.

    And I’d have to respectfully disagree that it is ‘propagandistic’. One can make the case that the SEA Games can be propagandistic. The flag on the winner standing on the rostrum, the currency of national pride in precious metals, the torch relay featuring Singapore’s favourite son (Fandi, and its favourite grandson? Irfan), the rah-rah of the Opening Ceremony.

    The Mount Kinabalu tragedy is so senseless–many of the victims so young, the disaster so unforeseen–that it beggars belief. And I doubt that anyone has any standard operating procedure for public mourning. Can one fly the flag at half-mast for ordinary civilians rather than statesmen? Should one enforce that minute of silence at SEA Games venues before the competitions? But I also think these kinds of state rituals are an attempt to give some meaning to something that resists any kind of meaning. People are trying to comfort one another as best as they can, and if they can’t bring the lost ones back to life then they’ll try to do something exceptional, including flying flags at half-mast and declaring a day of remembrance.

    And they do this not to demonstrate that they have the power to do so, but because they are powerless to do the one thing we all sometimes wish we could do. And if calling the children ‘little heroes’ and the teachers and guides ‘selfless spirits’ gives some amount of consolation and closure then oh God let them have this spoonful of mercy to help them face the void.

    Maybe it’s because I’ve lost someone recently, but when I think of this National Day of Remembrance I don’t think of the government or the PAP at all; I think only of the grieving families. I think of those bedrooms that you no longer simply walk into but which you have to confront and which confronts you. I think of my mother’s own bedroom, which I can’t walk into without feeling that it’s all too much. The watch I bought for her, whose battery had died, which I always thought of replacing but somehow never got round to it. The moisturiser we used to rub on her legs when she was undergoing chemo and then beside it the Johnson’s baby oil that I rubbed on her joints just after she passed away, on the doctor’s instructions, so that she would not stiffen into a crooked shape. All the things she used to keep–the pens (tested periodically for ink), the towels, the paper bags, stacked neatly but their handles an impossible jumble of plastic and twine–but never used because like all hoarders she believed that the day will come when they will be awakened from their slumber and find their use…but when they wake how do I tell them their owner has gone? And why do I invest those inanimate things with consciousness, as if…if they were alive then it would mean so is she.

    So maybe I can’t keep a critical distance and see some bigger picture, but on this National Day of Remembrance, I am thinking of those families, only those families, and the hairbrush that still has hair stuck in it, the set of keys with the keychain worn down by fingerprints, the exercise book only half-filled, the dent in the bolster foam, the cabinet shelf which someone could have reached one day without tiptoeing, and all those tender dreams where the loved one returns, the dreams that you don’t ever want to wake up from.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at

  • SEA Games Athletes Pay Tribute To Sabah Quake Victims

    SEA Games Athletes Pay Tribute To Sabah Quake Victims

    SEA Games athletes and officials observed a minute of silence at all competition events on Monday (Jun 8), a day of national remembrance for victims of last week’s Sabah earthquake. At least 19 people died in the disaster, eight of them from Singapore.

    #SabahQuake: A minute of silence is observed before tonight’s SEA GAMES 2015 swimming final. (Video: Jack Board) cna.asia/sabahquake

    Posted by Channel NewsAsia Singapore on Monday, 8 June 2015

    Singapore’s footballers wore their hearts on their sleeves for Tanjong Katong Primary School, which lost six students and a teacher to the quake, and still has one student and teacher missing. The Young Lions wore t-shirts that had “We are with you TKPS” emblazoned on them while warming up for their match against Cambodia.

    Singapore footballers warming up before their match against Cambodia. (Photos: Ngau Kai Yan)

    Swimming champion Joseph Schooling also dedicated his wins to the students from Tanjong Katong Primary School after taking gold for the men’s 50m Freestyle and 200m Butterfly finals on Monday.

    (Photo: Jack Board)

    The Games organisers said in a statement they are deeply saddened by the earthquake in Sabah. They reminded the sporting community to unite amid the tragedy even as Singapore continues with the Games. They also urged participants and officials to keep praying for those still missing.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Tourists Who Allegedly Angered Mount Kinabalu Spirits To Be Charged In Sabah Native Court

    Tourists Who Allegedly Angered Mount Kinabalu Spirits To Be Charged In Sabah Native Court

    The seven tourists who allegedly posed in the nude for photographs on top of Mount Kinabalu and whose actions are said to have angered the spirits there which unleashed Friday’s earthquake, will face charges in a native court for violating local native laws, said the chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Sabah Parks.

    Datuk Seri Tengku Zainal Adlin told reporters at the Sabah Park headquarters in Kundasang last night that the tourists were in police custody in Kota Kinabalu and could be charged as early as tomorrow.

    He, however, could not say if they would be charged in the court in Kota Kinabalu or the one in Kundasang.

    The death toll from the quake that hit Sabah on Friday morning is now 13, while six people remain missing.

    Most KadazanDusuns interviewed believed in their ancestors’ belief in the spirits of the mountain, and that the spirits were provoked by the tourists’ reported nude jaunt at the summit of the mountain last week.

    The tourists also allegedly urinated in “improper places” at the summit.

    “It’s akin to someone going to a mosque or temple and urinating in them,” said Zainal, describing the act as desecration.

    Photos of their antics were posted on Facebook, which quickly went viral.

    Even Sabah deputy chief minister Datuk Seri Joseph Pairin Kitingan shared the sentiment that the Westerners provoked the spirits and that they  should be punished.

    He reportedly said a ritual would be conducted to appease the angry spirits.

    The mountain is revered by locals who called it Akinabalu, which in the native language means resting place of the dead.

    “Kadazandusuns have long believed the mountain to be sacred, and in the past even pointing at the mountain was absolute taboo,” said Zainal.

    “They still believe it to be sacred today and that is why the sogit (a sacrificial ritual) is performed at the end of every year to appease the spirits and seek their permission to climb it for another year,” he said.

    “They (the tourists) have no respect for local beliefs. It is only appropriate they be punished for disrespecting  and breaking local native laws.”

    Even though he is Muslim, Zainal believed there is “something” in the mountain from personal experience.

    The former Royal Air Force pilot narrated how a Frenchman in the 50s refused to perform the sogit before climbing the mountain and was seriously injured in a fall.

    He said a series of unusual and unexplained incidents also occurred in the attempt to take the injured Frenchman to hospital.

    The incidents, said Zainal, so unnerved the Frenchman that he later had the sogit performed.

    The sogit is a ritual where seven white “kampung” chickens are slaughtered and seven of everything including beetlenut leaves and kapor, are offered to appease the spirit before any climb.

    Seven, said Zainal, is an important number in ancient Kadazandusun religious belief.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Local Teacher: Singapore And Malaysia Need To Ban Nudist Prick And Crew For Disrespecting The Victims Of Sabah Earthquake

    Local Teacher: Singapore And Malaysia Need To Ban Nudist Prick And Crew For Disrespecting The Victims Of Sabah Earthquake

    Admin,

    I teach at a primary school. It’s been almost 8 years since I first started teaching. I did not become a teacher because I love children. I became a teacher for the opportunity it affords me to help mould the lives of these little ones. Over time, I learnt to love them. Even the naughty ones. They fill you with such joy with their earnestness and innocence.

    Needless to say, I was overcome with grief when I first heard of the losses by TKPS. As a teacher and as a parent of a toddler myself, I was devastated. I thought of my own little one and how I would feel if I lost him. It scares me. So, I cannot imagine how it is for the parents to deal with their loss. Like other Singaporeans, I can only emphatise and offer my deepest condolences.

    There are some who say that the Malaysian government’s rescue efforts was found wanting. I don’t know. Maybe it is still too early to say. For me, now’s the time to focus the effort on working together to look for those still missing. The review can come later. Then we’ll have a better idea of what went right, or wrong, during the search and rescue.

    But what I cannot understand and forgive is these foreigners who react with not an ounce of sensitivity in their being.  Go and see Emil Kaminski‘s fb profile and his page, Monkeetime.

    Emil Kaminski 2

    Emil Kaminski 1

    Monkeetime A

    Monkeetime Badpackers Behaving Badly 2 Monkeetime Badpackers Behaving Badly

    Many have slammed the foreigners who chided and ridiculed their guides before taking naked pictures of themselves on Mount Kinabalu. Many Malaysians, including government officials, have blamed them for the disaster. I agree that it is a bit far-fetched.

    But what I’ll say is what they did really disrespected the culture and traditions of people who treat the mountain as sacred. It is not their place to ridicule or to “liberalise” the Sabahans.  They do this for what? Entertainment? I am very appalled by his reactions, to say the least.

    They need to stop with the white men’s burden mentality and stop imposing their values on others. Even with all the grief sadness, this a**hole still posted on his timeline with the semi-naked photos of his trip and captioned it, “Mount Kinabalu. Time of my life”. This was last night when more or less, a lot of the students were confirmed dead. That is being very provocative. So no, you don’t call these people who blame you for the earthquake, stupid.

    Stupid is one who had caused an uproar only to pour scorn on the loss of young lives. Stupid is one who is disrespectful of local customs in their search of fun. You may not have directly caused the earthquake. But that does not give you the right to mouth-off and ridicule, and rub slat into the fresh wounds of the parents who loss their children in the earthquake.

    The Singapore government keep saying that we need foreigers. This kind of foreigner we don’t need. Instead, we need to keep them out. Our social compact is too fragile to cope with these rude people who with big egos who are resistant to learning, as well as showing compassion and humility.

    Singapore and Malaysia should bar him and his nudist bunch from entering ever again.

     

    Teacher Teaching

    [Reader Contribution]

  • Sabah Quake: Peony Wee Says Bye To Parents In Poignant Video Before Quake

    Sabah Quake: Peony Wee Says Bye To Parents In Poignant Video Before Quake

    At the end of a video on a blog documenting her Kota Kinabalu expedition, Tanjong Katong Primary School pupil Peony Wee waved at the camera and said “bye” to her parents.

    Beside her, a schoolmate said: “We’re safe here in Malaysia lah.”

    They laughed and giggled throughout the video, which was uploaded on June 4, as they talked about waking up in the cold on Mount Kinabalu.

    In the video, they were asked about their “expectations of the day”.

    “Reach Pendant Hut safely, as a group (laughter) we have to motivate each other… see nobody give up along the way,” said Peony’s schoolmate.

    Peony interjected: “Help each other.”

    That was one day before a 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck Sabah on Friday (June 5), killing 12-year-old Peony and some of her young friends.

    As of Sunday (June 7), six pupils and one teacher from the school are confirmed to have died. The Singaporean adventure guide who was with them also died. Another pupil and a teacher are still unaccounted for.

    The victims were part of a group of 29 pupils and eight teachers on an overseas learning journey.

    They were starting on Via Ferrata when the quake struck, sending rocks and boulders tumbling down from the mountain top. Via Ferrata, which means Iron Road in Italian, is a route where cables, metal rungs and bridges are set into the rocks to help climbers ascend the steep trail.

    The school blog, titled ‘It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves’, documented the group’s progress before that fateful day.

    The pupils were in high spirits as they prepared to ascend the 4,095-m high Mount Kinabalu. The expedition, called Omega Challenge, is an annual programme organised by the school for their student leaders and sport leaders.

    An entry in mid-May showed the participants training for their trek by climbing steps while wearing backpacks.

    When they left on June 3, their flight was delayed. But they updated later: “After the long delay, we are finally here!”

    In a subsequent post on the same day titled ‘Dinner at D ‘ Villa Lodge’, pupils and teachers grinned at the camera as they ate dinner.

    “What a day! Tomorrow, we will start our hike up to Mount Kinabalu!,” said the post.

    The next morning, they were up bright and early to start a roughly 6km hike to Pendant Hut, which is 3,289m above sea level.

    The checkpoint is where climbers stay before they attempt the challenging Via Ferrata route.

    A blog post on June 4, titled ‘Getting ready…moving off soon… Pendant Hunt, here we come!’, showed several pictures of the group making preparations.

    The final entry was “Reached! Pendant Hut” posted on the same day.

    “Though it was an exhausting hike to Pendant Hut, step by step, inch by inch, we All made it up!” said the post.

    “It wasn’t easy but they all succeeded getting up there. How did they make it up? How did they endure the cold wind and rain? How did they overcome the steepness of the mountain?

    “The answer? Each other. They encouraged each other. They hSaelped their friends by retrieving water bottles from their bags when it was hard to reach. They checked in with their friends by asking ‘How are you?’, ‘Are you okay?’ They were effective. They pressed on. They utilised each other to give them strength. Eventually, they reached Pendant Hut. Together.”

    The post ended with: “Tomorrow, we will take on the next challenge. VIA FERRATA! Bring it on, I say!”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com