Shady truths in ‘fancy’ Sarawak
Sarawak which is the richest state in Malaysia has the poorest population. More than 60% of the population are said to be statistically living in poverty.
Free Malaysia Today
FEATURE Members of the Sarawak government are always accusing people who criticise their policies of being enemies of ‘progress, development and modernisation’.
But these policies have reportedly stripped the country of its rainforests and taken away Native Customary Rights (NCR) lands from natives and turnd them into endless stretches of oil palm plantations.
Who is really profiting?
Chief Minister Taib Mamud has for years promised the people of Sarawak that in return for their land and destruction of the rainforest they would receive a future bathed in wealth and prosperity. He promised them a modern standard of living comparable to advanced countries.
But what is the evidence of this?
Sarawak which is the richest state in Malaysia has the poorest population. More than 60% of the population are said to be statistically living in poverty.
Over the years the poor have gotten poorer and hungrier without their lands to live off from.
In contrast the people around Taib and his friends have become richer, living a life in splendour that would have amazed Rajah Brooke himself.
Everything has been taken from the once fabulous interior of Sarawak and given to the rich businessmen from the coastal cities.
Deal that left Ibans in debt
In Batang Ai, the Iban community is struggling as in other parts of Sarawak. They were promised good compensation when they were forced from their homes to make way for the building of the dam.
But, like so many communities in Sarawak, they soon discovered their mistake. It turned out the government wanted to charge more for their new homes than the compensation for their old ones!
Now the Ibans are in debt to the government and have lost their valuable lands.
They were told that they would receive free water and electricity from the dam, but this promise has since been broken.
Most families have to use rainwater to cook and wash and to flush their toilets. At night the Ibans in this longhouse share electricity with their neighbours.
The roads to their longhouses have caved-in and the palm plantations around them have clogged up the river and are threatening dangerous mud-slides into their town.
Farmers have to walk many miles to reach their allocated fields and can no longer catch fish. There is no longer food from the forest.
The only ‘modern’ jobs on offer are the very lowly paid jobs on the oil plantations run by SALCRA, which is managed by Taib’s family and friends.
Ibans are paid RM8 a day – compare this with the RM165 million that Taib’s family allegedly made from the Bengoh Dam project in just a few weeks!