By Queville To
Kampung Tambatuon villagers remind the MPs pushing
for the dam that they were elected to serve the people and not threaten their
livelihood.
KOTA KINABALU: The villagers of
Kampung Tambatuon in Kota Belud unanimously rejected the state government’s
offer of an “annual gratuity” of RM500,000 as well as a study tour to Kedah as
an inducement to make way for the construction of a dam in their village.
The mostly
farming community, who have been battling the government relocation, plan
pointed out that they are already earning far more from their agriculture
activities which include padi and rubber plantations as well as orchards.
The amount
offered by the state government works out to about RM500 for each of them
annually. The village currently consists of 898 villagers.
According
to Singkui B Tinggi, the former village chief of the picturesque and fertile
village located at the foot of Mount Kinabalu, most villagers are currently
earning between RM5,000 and RM10,000 per month.
He noted
that a majority of the villagers there owned rubber plantations ranging from 10
acres to more than 20 acres, besides farms for other agriculture produce.
Two Barisan
Nasional elected representatives have been pushing for the construction of a
dam at the site which they said could generate RM500,000 for the villagers.
In a
statement issued on Tuesday, Singkui disclosed that the decision to reject the
offer made by Kedamaian state assemblyman Herbert Timbun Lagadan in July this
year was reached at an emergency meeting held by the Tambatuon Dam Action
Committee (TDAC) at the village’s mini hall on Sept 11.
“We hereby
reject all the offers made to us by Herbert and Abdul Rahman Dahlan (MP for
Kota Belud). We do not wish to sell our village,” he said.
He reminded
the two that the villagers voted for them in the last general election so that
they could further improve the economy of the place, rather than threaten their
livelihood and destroy their village.
Poor irrigation, not water shortage to blame
The Village
Action Committee recently also submitted a memorandum on the matter to Chief
Minister Musa Aman and his deputy Joseph Pairin Kitingan.
Kampung
Tambatuon is nestled on the banks of Sungai Kadamaian and Sungai Kilombon which
are fed by waters running off Mt Kinabalu.
The place
is popular with tourists who flock to the village to see the unique “tagal”
practice in Sabah, a sustainable freshwater fishing practice that allows
harvesting only once a year.
Since news
of the proposed construction of the RM450 million dam first surfaced early last
year, it has drawn strong protests and criticism from hundreds of villagers,
environmentalists and academics.
Villagers
said they would lose their homes, land and source of income if the project is
to proceed while conservationists noted that it would affect the environment in
the area, which is located near Kinabalu Park, a World Heritage Site.
The proposed
dam would force the resettlement of around 600 villagers who have lived a
relatively prosperous life without much government assistance.
However,
Rahman is adamant that the village must make way for the dam to boost rice
production in the Kota Belud plains, the rice bowl of Sabah, and avert a
recurrence of the 2008 rice shortage.
He said
that the construction of the Tambatuon dam would help to irrigate 25,000
hectares of unproductive paddy fields in Kota Belud.
Agriculture
experts also questioned the cost of the project which is estimated to reach RM1
billion. They pointed out that poor irrigation rather than shortage of water is
the main cause for the low yields from the area.
Suhakam’s
2010 report also criticised the government for failing to consult the villagers
prior to proposing the dam.
Source : FMT
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