Wednesday, June 8, 2011

3000 villagers need help with their plea for electricity and water.

During a Gawai visit to the Iban villagers staying in Kampung Pasir, Kampung Pangkalan, and Kampung Api-api many villagers approached Dr. Teo for help in their plea to receive electricity and water for their houses. There are 800 houses and approximately 3000 villagers living in this area as 'squatters'.

The residents sought the help of Miri PKR leader, Dr. Michael Teo recently. The residents are upset after their appeals for a basic electricity and water supply have been rejected time and time again. After 40 years of disappointment, they have held protests in hopes of rallying support for their cause. They are currently using generators which are expensive and cumbersome to run; each house spending RM10 per night on fuel, for just 6 hours of electricity. In some homes where there is no generator supply, the school children find it difficult to study at night, resorting to using candle to finish their homework. The villagers do not want to be squatters, but cannot afford 'legal accomodation'. They only hope for cheaper housing in the Miri area, as there is currently no affordable housing available to them. The cheapest homes they could find were houses priced RM 130,000 and above.

"It is unjust that these residents be labeled as squatters, when no help has been offered to them for the past 40 years" said Dr. Teo.
Dr. Michael Teo attended the event and showed support during the protest. He and his legal team are bringing this issue to the authorities concerned.

The villagers have also invited Anwar Ibrahim to come and visit on the 24th June during his scheduled visit to Miri, for the PKR Gawai Celebration Dinner. The dinner is planned to be held at Eastwood Golf and Country club.












Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Observers to tell UN the true Sarawak story

(http://www.malaysia-today.net/)

The highly disputed Senadin win by Sarawak United People's Party (SUPP) will be the leading example of polls malpractices which will be presented to the UN.


KUALA LUMPUR: The incident in Sarawak’s Senadin constituency involving PKR candidate Dr Michael Teo will be presented to the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva today.
The disputed results on April 16 will form the spine of a presentation to be made by Sarawak Report (SR) and other observers of the recently concluded 10th Sarawak election.
According to SR blogger Clare Rewcastle Brown, “we will tell exactly what happened (in Sarawak)”.
Citing Senadin, she said PKR was leading by 1,000 odd-votes during the last ballot counting in Miri City Stadium when suddenly a blackout “conveniently occurred”.
The blackout, she said, lasted an hour during which time the Election Commission (EC) continued counting.
“Suddenly they brought in ‘postal’ votes at an illegally late hour and SUPP was declared ‘winners’ with a slim 58-vote majority.
“The EC also announced 158 spoiled votes favouring PKR. The commission refused a recount despite the fact that there was a clear case for it,” she said.
Brown added that the Senadin incident was only one example that SR was planning to present to the UN.
She said SR’s report to the UN would include the “mass disenfranchisement of much of the population in the interior”.
This, she said, enabled Taib to operate a “rotten borough system” where seats are decided by just a tiny number of people whom he can pressure and influence.
“Some 470,000 natives do not voting rights out of Sarawak’s 2.5 million population.
“There is also the illegal touting of projects and votes by Barisan Nasional politicians, including the prime minister, in the run-up to the election.
“These are used as a direct bribe and form of blackmail. They tell the voters that they will not get the projects and worse, may be discriminated against in the provision of basic amenities if they do not vote BN, ” she said in her posting on SR.
Postal votes and bribery
On postal votes, she said this was another issue which would be made known to the UN.
She said SR would inform the UN about the abuse of postal votes and the “outrageous targeting of postal votes at single constituencies” BN wants to influence.
“We will also tell them about the practice of doubling up by sending in postal votes by the army and then bringing in plane loads of the same soldiers to vote in person as well and the introduction of suspicious last-minute ‘postal votes’ in order to try and boost BN’s tallies far later than legally allowed.”
The other areas that the report will highlihgt include the use of gangsters to intimidate and turn away voters from the polling stations, the abuses by the EC which included switching voters’ polling stations away from their home areas to distant places they cannot get to and hiding ballot boxes.
The UN will also hear of the tampering of Form 14, cutting off mobile phone networks on polling day as well as the “naked bribery by BN” of poor voters on the eve of the election.
Brown said the scale of these bribes went sky high at this election and was indicative of how unpopular BN is.
BN secured 55 seats against the opposition’s 16 in the April 16 polls.