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PRESS RELEASE
KUALA LUMPUR, 2 APRIL 1998

ONGKILI: KL SHOULD ASSIST TO ALLEVIATE DROUGHT EFFECTS IN SABAH

KUALA LUMPUR, Thurs. - Bandau Member of Parliament Dr Maximus Ongkili today urged the Federal Government to take concrete steps to assist drought victims in Sabah in view of the limited financial resources of the State Government.

Speaking in support of the motion of thanks for the Royal Address in parliament last night, he said the adverse effects of the prolonged drought in Sabah have reached magnitude proportions.

"To date about 152,000 people in Sabah are facing acute water shortage and desperately require the assistance of the government for their daily water requirement.

"Most of the hill padi farmers in Kota Marudu, Kudat, Pitas, and Sugut literally did not have any harvest from their crop this year because of the destruction caused by the prolonged drought," he claimed.

Dr Ongkili, who is also Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) deputy president said many households in the hill areas of Kota Marudu and Pitas were already facing food shortage.

"If the destructive drought continues, we estimate about 50,000 households or one-third of those currently affected by water shortage will also face severe food shortage by June because of their failed padi crop," he stressed.

He said the Federal Government should view the drought problem in Sabah and Sarawak as a national problem and assist in providing relief assistance to affected groups through the Federal Ministry of Rural Development.

"The Ministry should also encourage and coordinate contributions by the private sector national and international Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) to supplement the efforts and assistance given at the State level," he urged.

On the national economy, Dr Ongkili cautioned that the present measures introduced by the government to restore confidence in the capital market and the economy as a whole may be ineffective given that the problem is essentially private-sector in nature.

"The standard prescriptions of reducing government expenditure, curtailing borrowing, promoting savings, and increasing taxes may not be effective and perhaps misplaced for an economic problem that is private-sector driven and not public-sector in nature," he argued.

What is required is clear, transparent policy measures to assist firms and other market players to plan, cope and adjust structurally to the external economic turmoil facing the nation," he added.

Dr Ongkili stressed that the government must be consistent and transparent in its policies and economic reforms in order for the market to pick the right signal and make the necessary economic adjustments to cope with the crisis of confidence in the capital market.

He urged the Finance Ministry to continue examining the impact of successive policy initiatives introduced by the government, which he claimed "thus far have failed to restore investor confidence especially in the foreign exchange and capital markets."


 

 

 

 

 

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First published: 22-SEP-1997   Updated: 07-MAY-2003 Email: webmaster