Business

Sabah Hospitality Fiesta banks on a lopsided deal

When forgoing a million ringgit profit is an opportunity cost

Contestants don’t lack ideas in concocting their best culinary fare.

Trade exhibitions are big money spinners. And so, it surprises that the Sabah and Labuan Chapter of the Malaysian Association of Hotels and ATI College have given up staging their very successful food and beverage exhibition which they launched just last year to Informa Markets, a British firm reputed to be one of the leading organisers of exhibitions. Instead, they have partnered Informa in what looks like a lopsided deal to host the “trade-only” Food and Hospitality Malaysia, Borneo Edition, a very much smaller version of its FHM expo in Kuala Lumpur that brings sellers and buyers together. And in the process MAH-SLC and ATI College handed to Informa about RM1m ($235,000) in profit for hosting the three-day FHM, Borneo Edition, from September 26 to 28 at the Sabah International Convention Centre in Kota Kinabalu. Both MAH-SLC and ATI College have gained nothing more than the free use of one of the three exhibition halls from Informa for their popular Sabah Hospitality Fiesta which is in its 24th year.

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Sports

World’s toughest mountain race is back with a bang

Mount Kinabalu International Climbathon has not lost its shine after a six-year absence

Kilian Jornet Burgada, 36, Spain’s fastest mountain runner

Top mountain runners have made a beeline for the Mount Kinabalu International Climbathon which is making a comeback on October 6 after a six-year absence. And this proves that the world’s toughest race up and down Malaysia’s tallest peak at 4,095 metres (13, 435 feet) in Sabah has not become less appealing although the field has been kept small. They include Spain’s record-breaking Kilian Jornet Burgada, 36, who was the fastest man at the 2007 race by clocking two hours, 39 minutes and 10 seconds over a 21-km (13-mile) distance. He also holds the record for being the fastest man at the Matterhorn (4,478 metres) and Mont Blanc (4,805 metres) in the Alps in Europe. There are 206 participants, six more than targeted, in three categories: men (74), women (60) and veteran men (72). There is no veteran women category because previous races weren’t encouraging, according to the race officials. The distance for this year’s race is 26km. Before the 2015 earthquake which killed 18 people on the mountain, the climbathon, held over two days, attracted 700 runners

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Environment

An eyesore that is a pot of gold

Poor Sembulan Tengah villagers stand to be millionaires overnight

Dilapidated wooden stilt houses at Sembulan Tengah water village.

To say that Sembulan Tengah is an eyesore is an understatement. The 42-acre (17-hectare) water village whose history dates back to the early 20th century with the setting up of an ethnic Chinese fishing settlement has become not just an obnoxious rubbish dump but a shelter for illegal immigrants and criminals. Yet about 3,000 of the villagers, who are mostly locals, are defying eviction. Their 200 wooden stilt houses surrounded by high-rise buildings which include luxurious hotels, shopping malls, shops and offices, are standing on a pot of gold in the heart of Kota Kinabalu. Land here fetches a premium. And the villagers are looking forward anxiously to another meeting with the Kota Kinabalu mayor on October 8 to resolve the problem. The first one ended without a definitive solution on September 21 but with City Hall and the Lands and Surveys Department saying that the villagers would not be evicted for now.

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Tourism

Power to the people

Tanjung Aru Beach Festival has galvanized Sabahans’ opposition to TAED

Sunset at Tanjung Aru Beach – Picture by Sri Pelangcongan Sabah

Ten years after its launching, the 7.1-billion-ringgit Tanjung Aru Eco Development to turn Sabah’s most famous and spectacular 2-km beach into a tourism hub remains in limbo all because of opposition from Sabahans and environmentalists. And this has led Christina Liew, minister of tourism, environment and culture, to quip that she has been reminded of “how powerful our community is” in a speech to launch the two-day Tanjung Aru Beach Festival at Prince Philip Park in Kota Kinabalu which ended on September 22. Her speech, which was delivered by her assistant Joniston Bangkuai, paid tribute to Sabahans for being a “living testament to their talent, creativity, and resilience” in their participation of the festival. And if the bosses of TAED think that the festival will mitigate the people’s objection to their project, they are wrong. Rather the festival has galvanized Sabahans’ opposition to it.

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Health

A preventable cancer keeps spreading

Colorectal cancer patients are getting younger

From left: Dr Ida Normiha Hilmi, gastroenterologist and hepatologist of the Universiti Malaya Medical Centre, Dr Raman Muthukaruppan Chettiar, president of the Malaysian Society of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, and Dr Raja Affendi Raja Ali, dean and professor of medicine at Sunway University. –
Picture courtesy of Sri Pelancongan Sabah.

Gastroenterologists (specialists in digestive diseases) may differ on diagnosis and treatment of many digestive and liver disorders. But they are agreed that colorectal or colon cancer is the most preventable, treatable and beatable cancer. And this has become their mantra. But who is listening? Colon cancer has unwittingly become the second most prevalent cancer after breast cancer in Sabah. What is worrying is that patients are getting younger. Many of them are in their 30s or even younger. Four-fifths of them turn up in later stages of the disease, according to Dr Raman Muthukaruppan, president of the Malaysian Society of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. And this has sent doctors searching for answers.

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Health

A Duchenne dilemma

Malaysian sufferers of a deadly muscle-wasting disease are denied the latest drugs

From left, Dr.Heng Hock Sin, Consultant Paediatric Neurologist at Sabah Women and Children’s Hospital, Murad Abdul Rashid, Deputy Senior Assistant Secretary General of the Integrity And Special Task Office (KePKAS), and Catherine Jayasuriya, founder and executive director of Coalition Duchenne with Rayce Low Rok Chun, a 12-year-old Duchene patient from Kuala Lumpur

There is still no cure for a fatal but rare muscle wasting disease named after a 19th century French neurologist that affects about 300,000 boys worldwide. About 3,000 Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients are in Malaysia and as many as 300 of them are in Sabah. But new drugs developed in the last six years that hold promise of a cure have been denied them because of their prohibitive costs. Ironically, it is a Sabah woman, whose son suffers from Duchenne, who has contributed significantly to the development of the first three exon skipping drugs ever to have been approved by the American Food and Drug Administration to treat the deadly disease. More recently, the FDA has approved the first gene therapy which doctors say may be close to a cure for Duchenne. But none of the Malaysian patients, particularly those in Sabah, can avail themselves to these. A year’s treatment with Amondys 45 (casimersen), an exon skipping drug, can cost as much as RM6.5m ($1.5m) while a one-time gene therapy with Elevidys (Delandistrogene moxeparvovec) costs RM14.2m, making it one of the most expensive drugs in the world.

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Education

Now everyone can study

ATI College and Curtin Malaysia cash in as Australia tightens student visa rules

Wong Khen Thau, ATI’s executive chairman

Although they didn’t plan it that way, Australia’s tightening of student’s visa rules to weed out job seekers and migrants is a blessing to ATI College and Curtin University Malaysia. Last month, both signed a collaboration agreement to launch a one-year master degree course in international business. The first intake of 40 students mostly from China is expected in July. The next in February. This collaboration has brought Malaysia into focus as a centre of good and relatively cheap higher education. And this has prompted ATI College to change its tagline to “Now everyone can study”.

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Education

The road less travelled

Three girls beat the odds in their tourism studies to come up on top

ATI College’s top students: from left to right: Iman Maryam, Melissa Wong and Nurul Syahanah.

School leavers are at a crossroad when it comes to choosing their careers. Many would take the traditional path: study law, accountancy, medicine, dentistry, engineering or architecture. Some would be happy just to grab the first job that comes along after obtaining their Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (school leaving certificate). But ATI College’s top students Iman Maryam, Melissa Mercedes Wong Thien Eng and Nurul Syahanah binti Annuar have taken the road less travelled and proven themselves right in choosing tourism. It is Sabah’s fourth most important industry contributing about 10 per cent to its gross domestic product (GDP). Tourism earned the state RM13b last year and employs 430,000 people, about a fifth of Sabah’s 1.9m workforce. The hotel and food and beverage industry employs 193,000 people, about half of all tourism employees.

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Business

Hajiji’s TAED dilemma

After 10 years, a grandiose playground for the super-rich remains in limbo

An artist’s impression of the Tanjung Aru Eco Development project.
Hajiji Noor

It was to have rivaled Bali. But Sabah’s grandiose multi-billion-ringgit playground for the super-rich at Tanjung Aru beach never took off. The two-km long beach is reputed to be one of the world’s best offering spectacular sunrise and sunset. Launched by former chief minister Musa Aman in 2013 during a ground-breaking ceremony, the project has stalled because of objections from the public and environmentalists over a massive land reclamation plan, sales of the reclaimed land, and doubts over public access to the beach. And after 10 years, the project remains in limbo as the vagaries of politics have dampened investors’ interest. Now chief minister Hajiji Noor has given the Tanjung Aru Eco Development (TAED) which would have then cost RM7.1 billion a glimmer of hope.

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Education

A friend indeed

Founder says ATI College owes its success to former tourism minister Bernard Dompok

Wong Khen Thau (left) and Bernard Dompok

It was a poignant moment for Wong Khen Thau, the founder of ATI College at its 26th convocation on February 29 at the Magellan Sutera Resort in Kota Kinabalu. Twenty-eight years ago, the hotel industry didn’t think much of his tourism school founded in 1996 which was offering short courses in food and beverage, housekeeping and front office operations. But one man had faith in him: Bernard Dompok, then Sabah tourism minister. His instinct as a trained property valuer told him Mr Wong would succeed. He despatched the first batch of 40 government sponsored students to the Asian Tourism Institute as it was then known. From that small start, the ATI College has produced more than 12,000 skilled workers for the hotel industry.

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