Saturday, December 02, 2006

YTL's hotels and resorts great escapade

Packages for great escapades
By Chow How Ban
Saturday December 2, 2006

THOSE looking for holiday packages can check out The Great Escape, a showcase of YTL's hotels and resorts that is being held until Dec 10 at Starhill Gallery in Kuala Lumpur.

The showcase features award-winning properties like The Ritz-Carlton Kuala Lumpur, JW Marriott Hotel Kuala Lumpur, Pangkor Laut Resort, Tanjong Jara Resort in Terengganu, Cameron Highlands Resort and The Spa Village.

At a press conference held recently, YTL Hotels & Properties Sdn Bhd brand communications executive vice-president Kevin Tromp said while visitors found out more about the packages, masseurs from The Spa Village would be around to offer them mini-massages.

“With the purchase of any of these packages, they will get a free one-year YTL Platinum Plus membership which is a fabulous award programme offering things like beauty products and luggage within Starhill Gallery and spa treatment and vacations at Tanjong Jara Resort and Pangkor Laut Resort,” he said.

Tromp then briefed the media on the latest offerings and development at The Ritz-Carlton Kuala Lumpur, JW Marriott Hotel Kuala Lumpur, Pangkor Laut Resort, Tanjong Jara Resort, Cameron Highlands Resort and The Spa Village.


Tromp (right) and Cokkinias posing with a model of The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Kuala Lumpur. “The Cameron Highlands Resort is doing very well. Many executive groups are choosing it as their retreat to get away from Kuala Lumpur as it has a nice environment,” he said.
Tromp (right) and Cokkinias posing with a model of The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Kuala Lumpur.
“The Cameron Highlands Resort is doing very well. Many executive groups are choosing it as their retreat to get away from Kuala Lumpur as it has a nice environment,” he said.

Meanwhile, Tanjong Jara Resort, he said, had made it into the top five of the Best Overseas Hotel Spas in Asia and top 100 spas worldwide in the Conde Nast Traveller Readers' Travel Awards 2006.

He said the resort had launched The Spa Village which housed five new treatment pavilions, each of which featured an outdoor sunken bath and a designated Malay flower bath facility.

He said the spa facility at the resort offered guests an authentic spa treatment using traditional Malay techniques and recipes handed down from generation to generation.

“We have a strong brand in the making. At the moment, we have The Spa Village at Tanjong Jara Resort, Cameron Highlands Resort, Pangkor Laut Resort and The Ritz-Carlton.”

At the internationally acclaimed Pangkor Laut Resort, he said, the hill villas would be upgraded in time for Christmas and a few more restaurants offering Thai cuisine would be opened.

“Pangkor Laut Resort is a product that we are all proud of. We are taking the resort to another level and at the same time keeping its position for many years to come,” he added.

He revealed that the ground-breaking ceremony for the Majestic Hotel in Malacca had been held and the would be include a heritage building.

The Ritz-Carlton Kuala Lumpur general manager Steve Cokkinias said the hotel was departing from its traditionally classic image and transforming into a contemporary hotel catering for a younger market.

“The guestrooms were renovated recently. The new tower of suites was completed last year and we now have The Spa Village,” he said.

He added that the guestroom layout had been reorganised with iPod docks and other communication ports, enhanced lighting, new bedding, flat panel TV, CD and DVD players, marble bathrooms and flooring. - The Star


See additional info:
  • YTL Cameron Highlands Resort and Spa Village
  • Pulau Pangkor


  • Monday, November 20, 2006

    Stabilizing the price of vegetables

    Distribution centres to be set up in Perak to stabilise prices of greens
    Monday November 20, 2006

    PUTRAJAYA: Two distribution centres will be set up in Perak in an effort to stabilise the prices of local greens, especially in the run-up to the festive season.

    Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Shafie Apdal said these centres would act as a converging point for vegetables and fruits grown in Cameron Highlands.

    “At these centres, vegetable and fruit farmers will be encouraged to sell their produce directly to the wholesalers, without having to go through many middlemen.

    “In the long run, we hope such a move will benefit consumers by reducing the prices of greens, particularly when there are still some unscrupulous traders who continue to take advantage of the festive season by increasing the prices of goods during the festive season.

    “We have found out that usually, the prices may increase during this period by a few sen, but by the time these reach the consumers, it will have increased manifold,” he told reporters after launching the Smart Consumer Day seminar here on Monday.

    Shafie said the ministry was currently discussing with hypermarket chains Tesco and Giant to manage these centres, which would serve markets in the northern and southern regions of the peninsula respectively.

    “We hope to set up these centres by the middle of next year, the latest by August or September.

    “We will continue to monitor the effectiveness of such a scheme because we hope to set up similar centres in other parts of the country as well as to handle the distribution of fish and marine products at the country’s many jetties,” he said.

    On the supply of sugar in the country, Shafie said the manufacturers in the country were still required to increase production by 50%.

    “The directive is for them to increase production until such time when the ministry feels is no longer necessary,” he said. - The Star.

    Saturday, November 04, 2006

    Council issues second stop work order

    Council issues second stop work order
    Saturday November 4, 2006

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS district council has issued its second order against a developer to stop work on an eight-unit shoplot project in Tanah Rata.

    Council president Datuk Mohd Noor Abdul Rani said for the time being, the developer was only allowed to build a new retaining wall after the existing one collapsed following a landslip last week.

    The landslip had cut off portions of a hill right in front of two houses in Lorong Perdah, raising fear among residents living directly above the project site.

    “We have been monitoring the project from time to time. From now on the developer has to adhere to our safety requirements before they can continue,” said Mohd Noor when contacted yesterday.

    It was reported on Wednesday that one of the residents, housewife Caroline Tuijthof, 46, claimed the project had caused cracks to appear in the foundation of her house.

    ”We hope the developer could at least build a stronger retaining wall with proper drainage to check landslides,” she said.

    However, another resident who only wanted to be known as Chendru, 39, denied that cracks had appeared in his house after the project started.

    “The cracks have always been there,” he insisted.

    Lebih Jaya Development Sdn Bhd director Low Ah Keong had said they had started building the second retaining wall in stages. He said the wall would be 9m high and would be completed in three months. - The Star.

    Wednesday, November 01, 2006

    Residents living in fear after landslip

    Wednesday November 1, 2006

    By Christina Koh

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS: Portions of a hill in Tanah Rata here has been cut for an eight-unit shop lot, allegedly causing cracks and fear to families living on the same slope.

    Just above the project of the affected slope in Lorong Perdah lives housewife Caroline Tuijthof, 46, who claimed that the project had caused cracks to appear in the foundation of her home.

    The final straw was when a landslip occurred last week, aggravated by heavy rain, causing a 3.6m-wide section of the foundation of a neighbour’s house to collapse, said Tuijthof.

    The landslip had also caused the collapse of its existing retaining wall that had helped support the slope, she said.

    LIVING ON THE EDGE: Workers building a retaining wall after the first one collapsed last week during heavy rain. A resident, Tuijthof, is complaining that the construction of an eight-unit shop lot is causing cracks to appear in the foundation of her home.

    “At its worst, there is only one metre of ground from my neighbour’s house and the edge of the cliff. I don’t dare let my five-year-old daughter Joy play around here,” she said.

    “We want to know how the Department of Environment (DOE) allowed the project.”

    Tuijthof wanted the construction to stop until the developer could guarantee their safety, failing which, the family wanted the developer to at least build a stronger retaining wall with proper drainage so that their homes would not be vulnerable to landslides.

    Her jewellery seller husband Ong Boon Beng, 51, said it seemed as if the developers were only concerned about finishing the project, which began in May this year.

    Another resident K. Mogan, a nature guide, said the developer cut a large part of the hill, right up to their houses, until he felt like his home was at the edge of the hill.

    “I’ve been scared out of my wits but feel a bit safer now that the developer has put in some sheet piling,” he said.

    Cameron Highlands DOE branch head Ajis Hamjah said the department approved the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the 0.2ha project on March 31 this year.

    “As far as I know, this is the smallest project in Malaysia with an EIA. Under the Environmental Quality Act, an EIA is only needed for projects exceeding 50ha. However, an EIA was provided here under the development guidelines,” he said.

    Lebih Jaya Development Sdn Bhd director Low Ah Keong said they had started building a second retaining wall in stages, which would measure over 9m high, in three months’ time.

    “It’s very safe. We have already received all the approvals and documentation from the DOE and council,” said Low.

    Asked if their piling works could have caused the landslip, Low said: “We do not know. Since it has already happened, what matters now is building the retaining wall to rectify the situation.” - The Star

    Friday, October 27, 2006

    Camerons still place to relax in

    Friday October 27, 2006

    I REFER to the letter, “Bad holidays in Camerons” by Anita Qiu of Penang (The Star, Oct 26).

    To me, spending your holidays in Cameron Highlands isn’t bad at all. It is just a matter of when you go there.

    Qiu went to the highlands two days before Hari Raya. Therefore, she should expect that there would be a terrible traffic jam as people were rushing back to their hometowns or heading for holidays.

    Illegal parking at Cameron Highlands could be avoided if one visits the resort during a non-festive season.

    Parking has always been a problem as there is not enough parking space. The problem becomes worse during festive seasons.

    However, I agree the multi-storey car park does not serve its original purpose of providing parking space for buses.

    This is because of the poor architectural design. The building is too low and narrow for any vehicle.

    Water supply has been insufficient on the highlands since a long time ago and during a festive season, consumption increases.

    If there are fewer people on the highlands, then the problem with the water supply could be avoided.

    In conclusion, Cameron Highlands should not be classified as a poor tourist spot because these problems occur mostly during the festive period.

    It is indeed a great spot to relax in if you choose the correct time to spend your holidays there.


    LIM ZHI YUEN,
    Teluk Intan.

    Thursday, October 26, 2006

    Bad holiday in Camerons

    Thursday October 26, 2006

    IF the authorities have no idea how to deliver the promise of local tourism, then please don't bother to promote it.

    My family came to Cameron Highlands on Sunday. We rented one of the apartments, and within a span of just slightly over 24 hours, we began to regret spending our holiday in this so-called highland resort.

    First, the traffic jam was terrible. I am not talking about the jam on the highway. That was insignificant when compared to the traffic jam in Cameron Highlands itself.

    Illegal parking was rampant along the main road in Tanah Rata as everyone parked everywhere except in a building designated as a car park.

    Their inconsiderate parking (and even double-parking while waiting) narrowed the already narrow street, causing massive jams to build up.

    There is a reason why no one wanted to park in the designated multi-storey building. The new building's design is very bad. The lanes leading to and from the car park are so narrow that motorists will inevitably scratch the sides of their vehicles.

    Even the clock has also stopped working in the building. Buses and taxis which are supposed to use the building are also avoiding it, thus adding to the congestion.

    It is a sheer waste of taxpayers' money. But no one is learning because new traffic lights (which serve no real usefulness except to take up valuable parking lots) have also been set up along the narrow street.

    Our woes culminated the next evening with the water authority cutting off water supply. Though a second dam has already been built, they claimed there is not enough water.

    If that is the case, then Cameron Highlands should be taken off the list as a local tourist destination.

    Can you imagine no water to wash our dishes and crockery during dinner time?

    And not enough water to wash, bathe or flush the toilet?

    Can the town council and water authority please explain?


    ANITA QIU,
    Penang.

    Wednesday, September 27, 2006

    Ramadhan Buka Puasa Time!

    It is the start of Ramadhan, and boy, it is that time of the year where a whole lot yummy delicious food stalls are set up everywhere. Just behind my office, as usual there will be this long row of stalls selling all kinds of food from Malay style mixed rice selection, nasi lemak, barbequed chicken, and grilled seafood.

    Yes, the ever popular grill seafood guy here is back again! And he remembered me and my wife too! After a one long year of absence, his stall has now been upgraded from the simple giant umbrella shelter to that of a small roof tent! It is a much better shelter than that of a flimsy giant umbrella. Sure it takes a little longer to set up and pack away when the day's activity is over. It makes for a very presentable Hari Raya Buka Puasa stall!

    And yes, the sound of sizzling seafood grilling on his hot pan, and the wonderful aroma sure attracts lots of patrons. Me included! If my wife was around, she would certainly 'ta pau' his tilapia fish, giant sotong and ikan pari-pari (stingray). Hey, we are not taking any revenge on the stingray for piercing our beloved Animal Planet Crocodile Dundee guy - Steve Irwin; we Malaysians just love to eat just about anything that's worth eating or allowed!

    My wife and I are not the only guys who are fond of his grilled seafood varieties, the long waiting list from patrons standing around for their order to be fulfilled is a tantamount to his great tasting fare. I think it must be his delicious marinating sauce. He applies quite a generous amount on his cooking, sandwiched with banana leaf to give that oo-la-la one of a kind mouth watering taste to his seafood.

    And if I pack back the food, my pet cat Casper will be clamoring for a piece of it. He would stare at me and make sad sounding cat meows, and if I ignore him too much, he would jump onto the dining table, resulting in a quick reprimand for his drastic action!

    "No, Casper! Down boy!" and of course I will get an earful from my wife about having a cat that just wants his own way and cannot quite be properly trained, and how unhygienic it is for a cat to walk around the dining table where the food is laid and so forth and so on... I think I spoil my pet cat too much! And yes, he will get a few pieces of it and he would gladly munch it all down and having satisfied himself. Will sit around enjoying our company. Sheesh, my cat has it way too easy!

    Well, the Ramadhan will go on for a month till the Hari Raya Puasa which falls on the 24th and 25th October. So I will get to savour all the buka puasa delicacy just behind my office for one whole month and yet again!

    And as for Cameron Highlands? Well they still have the night market, and they do have lots of food to offer. But you won't be able to find any grill seafood there; perhaps you might want to start one yourself?

    Wishing all my Muslim readers and friends a happy Hari Raya Puasa!


    See also my last year blog/article:
    Buka Puasa Time!

    Thursday, September 21, 2006

    Hotel Equatorial Promotion

    Hotel Equatorial Cameron Highlands Direct Access credit card promotion vouchers.

    As the Ramadan fasting month draws near, there will be a flurry of promotion going on with the various hotels. Hotel Equatorial Cameron Highlands is no different and has tie-in with a Southern Bank Direct Access credit card.

    I received this voucher together with my recent credit card statement. And it says here RM388 per room for 4 nights consecutive stay, but as usual there is a limitation, you can only stay during the weekdays from Sunday to Thursday.

    These are the low visiting period that's when the tourist visiting Cameron Highlands are few and in between. Still at RM388 per room for 4 nights consecutive stay, that comes to about RM97 per night. That's not too bad considering that if you stayed at the shop house hotels like Jasmine Hotel, Parkland, Kowloon etc in Brinchang or Tanah Rata would be about around this price range already.

    But wait, there is more! They are also offering:

    Equatorial Hotel Cameron Highlands - the spacious lobby area• Simpang Pulai Toll Rebate - Enjoy a rebate off your one way Simpang Pulai entry toll receipt. Terms & Conditions apply (yea, yea as usual please read the fine print!)
    • Discount for Breakfast - Stay and enjoy a 20% discount on Food & Beverage at Coffee Shop.

    But do take note that on the weekdays, the Brinchang night market will not be open except during the school holidays. So if you really enjoy going to "pasar malam", don't be disappointed that it is not available during your weekday stay. But I do know we Malaysians has the "shop till you drop" kind of syndrome, or even window shopping if you just take a look at the crazy traffic at the various giant malls that we have during the weekends!

    Well you could carry out other healthy activities instead of just shopping! There are many sights and attractions and things to do in Cameron Highlands.

    If you are a Southern Bank Direct Access credit card holder and plan to use your vouchers you can find out more about it at: http://www.equatorial.com/da or give them a call at 1-800-88-1800.

    For more info check out Hotel Equatorial Cameron Highlands webpage.

    Aw, not a SBB Direct Access credit card holder? Well you could check out the Cameron Highlands Hotels and Accommodation list which I have compiled.

    Happy traveling!

    Tuesday, September 19, 2006

    Stay for free at Teluk Dalam Resort


    Could this be true? Stay for free at Teluk Dalam Resort Pangkor? Not really. There is a catch; it says here just pay RM70 per person per night for breakfast and dinner. So if you are going on a twin share basis that comes to about RM140 per night. Not entirely free if I would say so.

    The reason they are coming up with this promotion from 25th September to 20th October, 2006 is because of Ramadan fasting month. I guess it will be low peak season until the Hari Raya weekend begins from 21st till 25th October.

    Well if you think this is a good deal you can call them and make a booking.

    Oh, you may be wondering why I'm promoting Pulau Pangkor. Well, I'm just taking a break from my usual Cameron Highlands articles. But if you want to find out more about Pulau Pangkor you could check out Peter's Pulau Pangkor website.

    But he is not here in Malaysia at this moment. He emailed me to inform that he is now in Laos for a short cycling adventure. Ah, he seems to have all the time in the world to bike around all day long! Well, not all of us mortals get the luxury to go for holiday whenever we like. Hopefully one day I will have the same kind of luxury.

    Meantime, I owe, I owe, so off to work I go! :)

    Cheerio!

    Friday, September 08, 2006

    Farms and agriculture in Cameron Highlands

    Fama To Build RM10 Mln Collection And Distribution Centre

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS, Sept 8 (Bernama) -- The Federal Agriculture Marketing Authority (Fama) is setting up a collection and distribution centre for agricultural produce to help farmers maintain the quality of their products.

    Its chairman, Datuk Abdul Rahim Bakri, said the centre would also serve as a training centre to prepare farmers in facing the global challenges in the agriculture sector.

    He said the collection and distribution centre, costing RM10 million, would be built on a two-hectare site in Sungai Burung here.

    "The free trade agreement with Thailand and Indonesia will bring huge challenges and competition in the distribution of agricultural produce, especially for local produce," he added after a dialogue with farmers' associations here.

    He said the proposed centre would also serve as a centre for packaging and grading of the farmers' agricultural produce.

    "Most of the farmers here use rattan baskets to carry their agricultural produce and this damages the vegetables, while they also do not have facilities to grade and pack their produce," he said, adding that this resulted in the vegetables not meeting the wholesalers' standards, causing the goods to be sold at lower prices. -- BERNAMA

    More info about Kea Farm and Markets.

    Wednesday, August 16, 2006

    Are you having your cuti-cuti in Malaysia?

    Are you planning a holiday this coming National Day on the 31st August? Yes, the public holiday falls on Thursday, and many people (me included) is eyeing to take Friday off thus making it into a one long weekend. Yea!

    So where do you intend to head off? Within Malaysia or go for an overseas adventure travels? Sure got our Tourism Ministry worried.

    SPECIAL GIFT: SailAsia Sdn Bhd executive chairman Datuk Syed Mustaffa Shahabudin (left) presenting a token of appreciation to Tengku Adnan in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.<br />He also said Malaysia had many attractive tourist destinations for people with different needs.
    SPECIAL GIFT: SailAsia Sdn Bhd executive chairman Datuk Syed Mustaffa Shahabudin (left) presenting a token of appreciation to Tengku Adnan in Kuala Lumpur yesterday. He also said Malaysia had many attractive tourist destinations for people with different needs.


    Tourism Minister wants Malaysians to holiday at home more
    Lack of Malaysians travelling locally worries tourism minister

    Wednesday August 16, 2006

    KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysians are not travelling a lot domestically and this gives the Tourism Minister much worry.

    “Our people are unaware that there are lots of places to visit in our country,” said Minister Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor.

    “We want our people to spend their vacations in Malaysia as we are worried that there may be more Malaysians visiting other countries than foreign tourists coming to Malaysia.”

    He said the ministry would re-examine its plans to encourage Malaysians to travel domestically.

    “For example, Gua Tempurung is for the adventurous traveller. If you want a change of weather, you can go to the highlands such as Bukit Tinggi, Genting Highlands, the Cameron Highlands and Fraser’s Hill,” he told reporters at the briefing on the Langkawi International Boat Exhibition (Libex) at the Putra World Trade Centre here yesterday. - The Star

    Wednesday, August 09, 2006

    Travel Malaysia, go Cameron Highlands!


    Recently spotted this hotel promotion in the News Straight Times (NST) papers on the 8th August 2006. It gives you a fair idea about the current room rates in Cameron Highlands. Perhaps it might interest you to take a holiday in Cameron Highlands?
    For more choices of hotel accommodations, apartments and guesthouses, check out the Hotel Accommodation, Apartment, Guesthouse list.




    Hotel Equatorial Cameron Highlands


    Equatorial Cameron Highlands' RM88 Giveaway Deal. Now faster with the New Simpang Pulai Route. Discounted rates starting from RM188++ per room per night with daily RM88 Food & Beverage spending credit, also accorded per room per night basis. Unsued credit will be refunded at 50% of its value upon departure. For reservation, please call 05-4961777, toll free Malaysia 1-800-88-1800 or access www.equatorial.com




    Iris Hotel


    Iris House Hotel located in Brinchang Town, Cameron Highlands. All rooms with private balcony. Restaurant, function room and seminar package available. Weekday room rate RM78 and RM98. Tel: 05-4911818, fax 05-4912828.




    Rosa Passadena, Cameron Highlands


    Rosa Passadena, Cameron Highlands. 3-star hotel with 120 rooms. Western, Chinese and local restaurant, function rooms, karaoke outlet. Weekday room rate RM128 nett/room/night (twin sharing) with breakfast. For rates during weekends/holidays, call 05-4912288, fax 05-4912688, email rospsdn@streamyx.com




    Strawberry Park Resort Cameron Highlands


    Strawberry Park Resort, Cameron Highlands.
    Package from RM198++ per Studio room per night (2 persons) including RM70 Cash vouchers! Commissionable to bona-fide travel agents. Tel: 605-4911166, Fax: 605-4911949, Email: reservations@strawberryparkresorts.com




    And don't forget to visit the wildly popular YTL Cameron Highlands Resort Hotel. Sure it is very expensive, at least have a cup of tea and scones there to enjoy its ambience!


    Friday, July 28, 2006

    A Light Hearted Cameron Highlands Trip Account

    I've just received an email from Idil, a regular Highlander Newsletter Reader, recounting his eventful trip to Cameron Highlands from Singapore to the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia, then from there travelled on to Cameron Highlands and finally returned to Singapore.

    Phew! I don't know how he did it, but it sure looks really complicated to me. Anyway here is his story. Read and enjoy!

    Jan.





    Allo'

    here is my "blog"...

    15 Jun
    - 0500 - Hired van and myself depart Singapore and proceed to North-South highway to Machap
    - 0630 - Exit NS Highway at Tangkak heading to Segamat
    - 0700 - Leave Segamat for Route 12 towards Gambang
    - 0800 - JPJ road block...
    i. Passenger Van got into trouble as no 3rd brake light... argued as the prior to entry permit approval, Puspakom have inspected and cleared the van.
    ii. Van driver not having "Malaysian" bus driving lesen - Told them to call Johore Bahru JPJ as they are "not aware" of Singapore lesen is "different" from Malaysia.
    After they called JB, they release the van with a warning to fix the 3rd brake light. Lost 1 hour at this road block.
    -1200 - Reach Cherating and have lunch beside The Legend
    -1300 - Proceed to Kuala Trengganu at 60kmh
    -1700 - Arrive Batu Buruk Beach Resort, BBBR
    -1730 - Quick visit to Pasar Payang as Friday most shops close
    -2000 - Dinner at Restoran Nil just beside BBBR - Good food and air-con makan place
    -2100 - Stroll along the beach front. Crowds ready for World Cup match
    -2230 - Lights out

    16 Jun
    0900 - Depart to Tasek Kenyir - look see look see. Met the construction workers for the new highway from Kuala Berang to Gua Musang... Highway still under construction.
    1030 - Depart to Sekayu Waterfall - piknik
    1330 - Return to Kuala Trangganu Pasar Payang
    1500 - Return to BBBR, R&R till dinner
    1930 - Dinner at "Satay Pantai Timur" Restoran also beside BBBR. Food not as good as Nil's
    2230 - BBBR and lights out

    17 Jun
    0930 - Depart to Cameron Highlands
    1100 - Reached Macang, Kelantan and take Route 8 to Gua Musang
    1400 - Reached Gua Musang and onwards to the highway to Kg Raja
    1700 - 3 km before Kg Raja, road detour to use the old road as the highway was blocked. Presumably due to repairs or landslide??? No signboard to say why-lah
    1800 - Reach Stesen Mardi, Tanah Rata and check in English Cottage 2 and 3 bedrooms. Kids run around the yard and surprised to have Astro... so World cup again lah. Cottage fully furnished with bedrooms at 2nd floor, cutleries, rice cooker, fridge,gas stove, tea sets etc.
    Parent-In-Law very happy....
    1900 - Tar pow dinner after a short walk to Tanah Rata

    18 Jun
    0730 - Breakfast at Mardi Cafeteria (Open 7am close at noon everyday. Closed on all Mondays)
    0830 - Visit BOH at Habu
    1000 - Visit Highland Apiary Farm on same road as BOH. This farm was being "built" in my last visit in December and now fully operational. The Towkay very friendly and the honey reasonably priced. A Tualang cost RM40 and if you buy two, he gives you a jam jar sized honey with propolis! Must check this place the next time you go CH.
    1130 - Visited the Lakehouse
    1230 - Reach Brinchang.... SHOPPING, lunch and tar pow for dinner
    1500 - Reach back Stesen Mardi for a walk about the field
    1700 - Dinner

    19 Jun
    0730 - R&R
    1230 - Check out Stesen Mardi (On the way to Tapah, surprised to find the restoren at Lata Iskandar already demolished!")
    1800 - Reach Guthrie Corridor - NKVE to Nilai Selatan - Purposely skirt around and avoid KL
    2130 - Reach Gelang Patah
    2230 - Singapore

    There you are, my road trip... 1800km start to finish... now my friend aim for December trip, my in-law request a Penang trip.........!!! Not again.....siong lah....maybe I fly with Berjaya air Ex-Seletar airport (Sg) to Redang!

    Idil




    Complicated...you bet! Road maps bought the latest and armed with at least 3 others such as the JKR road maps,tourist maps and other internet postings! A trip like this needs at least 3months of "research" as I have kids who will scream "toilet!!!!". Also I need to scan the routes with google earth and a few phone calls to friends in M'sia!

    The roads in M'sia are indeed getting better and better than say 5yrs before..It was good before but the upgrading is ever ongoing example Kota Tinggi-Mersing are widened and "straightened". Majority of T'ganu bridges are being replaced! Lebuh Raya Pantai Timur with the beautiful mountain scenery....just drive at speed limit and be defensive...the trip is enjoyable this way..trust me...

    The only "scary" highway I used before is the one from Kg Raja, Cameron Highlands to Simpang Pulai enroute to Penang....many of the turns are too tight coupled by the gradient and that road will catch you off guard as the speed increases! I passed by a wreckage of a CH 4X4 pickup that overturned after smashing head-on with a Perak registered car in Dec 05 trip... Hope no fatalities....

    Ciao....

    Idil


    Thursday, July 27, 2006

    17,000 Orang Asli Still Marginalised

    17,000 Orang Asli Still Marginalised
    Thursday July 27, 2006
    By Simon Khoo

    KUANTAN: About 17,000 orang asli in the state are still living in a “world of their own” in the fringe of the jungles.

    State Orang Asli Affairs Department director Bakar Yunus said the figure constituted some 31% of the orang asli population.

    He said there were about 55,000 orang asli living in 263 villages throughout the state.

    “A total of 87 villages are in the outskirts without proper basic amenities such as water and electricity.

    “The remaining villages are connected to towns and accessible by road,” he said in an interview.

    Bakar said among the isolated villages were those in Cameron Highlands, Jerantut and Lipis.

    “However, our records show that their numbers are relatively small and dwindling,” he said.

    In line with the country’s rapid development, the number was expected to decline further.

    “Besides, the pro-active action and measures adopted by the Government have improved their living conditions,” he said.

    Bakar said the indigenous people depended on small-scale agriculture and plantation for a living.

    “Back in those days, they hunted and collected grubs from the jungle.

    “Some are venturing into oil palm and rubber plantation and enjoy a steady income,” he said.

    He said the department would work closely with the authorities to ensure the orang asli stayed above the poverty line.

    Bakar said the orang asli were now more receptive to changes and willing to come forward to experience new opportunities.

    “On our part, we constantly remind orang asli parents on the importance of securing a good education for their children.

    “So far this year, a total of 26 orang asli students have registered at local universities,” he said.


    Saturday, July 22, 2006

    Indigenous Art on the Move

    Indigenous Art on the Move
    Saturday July 22, 2006

    Like a gypsy wagon, an indigenous craft stall has been making the rounds in Kuala Lumpur. Leong Siok Hui not only
    discovered some curios, but also got a glimpse into the lives of the
    artisans.


    So you forked out RM9.50 for a rattan bangle. Big deal, you say. But consider this: the jong betek nahat (arm ornament in the Penan language) was handmade by Stanley Jalong, a 30-something Penan who gathered the rattan from the jungle. The bangle was then transported from Ulu Baram in the deep interior of Sarawak by boat, van and airplane to Kuala Lumpur where you bought it.

    Now, we’re talking about the real value of this piece of handicraft.




     Bujam are small pouches crafted by the Mah Meri ladies which were traditionally used to store tobacco and sweets.
    Bujam are small pouches crafted by the Mah Meri ladies which were traditionally used to store tobacco and sweets.
    That’s what makes Gerai O. A. (Orang Asli/Asal) unique. Most crafts sold at Gerai come with individual tags naming the artisans, where he hails from and what the craft was traditionally used for. From Semelai weaved mats, Temiar blowpipes to Lun Bawang hand-painted clay beads and Rungus necklaces, Gerai’s products are a showcase of crafts from about 17 indigenous groups in Malaysia.

    Run by a bunch of dedicated volunteers, this non-profit mobile stall shows up monthly at the Laman Seni Kuala Lumpur (an arts and crafts bazaar at the National Art Gallery) or a handicraft event in the city.

    There’s no rent or utility bills to pay. Volunteers chip in to transport the crafts around, and Gerai’s coordinator Reita Faida Rahim’s apartment doubles as a storeroom. All of the proceeds from the sale of crafts go back to the artisans.

    “Gerai was never planned, it just happened,” says one of its founders, craft researcher Reita, 33. With her graphic design background, Reita used to teach design theory and has researched traditional crafts. Two years ago, she was approached by a group of villagers from an indigenous community.

    “They wanted help to sell their crafts as they were being exploited by middlemen,” says Reita who did her (diploma) dissertation on batik and later shifted her interest to textile, basketry and beads.

    Together with a friend, Raman Bah Tuin, a bamboo flute artisan from the Semai community in Cameron Highlands, they set up an impromptu stall at a college event in Oct 2004.

    “The Gerai just evolved from there. We started getting phone calls from buyers or people who wanted us to sell their crafts,” says Reita, whose volunteers include students, activists, craftspeople and even journalists.




    Handpainted beads made by the Lun Bawang ladies of Long Tuma, Lawas, Sarawak.
    Handpainted beads made by the Lun Bawang ladies of Long Tuma, Lawas, Sarawak.
    “We focus on the minority groups, the Orang Asli communities, because they have fewer avenues for help,” adds Reita.

    “It’s not realistic for the villagers themselves to come out and trade all the time. We are just giving them an alternative place to market their crafts.”

    Middleman syndrome

    For most indigenous craftspeople living in the remote interiors, they count on the middleman to sell their wares.

    “But each time a middleman monopolises the market in one village, it creates an avenue for exploitation,” explains Reita.

    Some middlemen buy the wares for a fraction of the price and sell them for a huge profit in the cities.

    “There were also cases where they took the crafts without paying, then told the villagers they had lost the things and couldn’t pay.”

    Reita hands out name cards of the craftsmen to interested buyers.

    “You can contact these craftsmen directly, and bypass the middleperson,” says the genial lady. “Hopefully, it’s the first step to empowerment.”

    Gerai doesn’t just sell crafts and help create awareness of our indigenous cultures, but it also provides technical help to the artisans. Last month, Reita travelled to Long Tuma, near Lawas, Sarawak to buy some clay beads from the Lun Bawang women.

    “We advise them on what designs are saleable in the market,” says Reita. “I taught the (Long Tuma) women how to do earrings, necklaces and beaded bracelets that are cost-effective.’’

    Chronicling tradition




    A flute made by the Dusun indigenous group. - Pictures by Tan Lee Kuen & Apoi Ngimat
    A flute made by the Dusun indigenous group. - Pictures by Tan Lee Kuen & Apoi Ngimat
    In 2003, with the help of the Centre of Orang Asli Concerns (COAC), 13 Mah Meri weavers formed the Tompoq Topoh – Mah Meri Women’s “First Weave” Project. In Mah Meri language, tompoq means the “first weave”, or it can be interpreted as the start of a new beginning.

    Grouped under the Senoi sub-ethnic group, the Mah Meri are coastal dwellers living on Carey Island and in Tanjung Sepat, Selangor. Traditionally, fishermen and padi farmers the Mah Meri today mainly work in the oil palm plantation or tap rubber.

    In the past, Mah Meri crafts were mostly utilitarian like tikar (mats) for the floor or sentung (basket) to keep rice. Today, Mah Meri craftsmen are renowned for their high-quality woodcarvings while the women fashion pouches, mats and baskets out of pandanus plants.

    “The Tompoq project is about weaving, documenting their heritage and earning extra income,” explains Reita. Gerai sells most of the craft made by the Tompoq group.

    Projek ini bagus. Dulu lepak saja, tak buat apa-apa, cuma borak kosong (This is a good project. Before, we did nothing and just chatted when we were free),” says Maznah Anak Unyan, 38, the project leader.

    When we dropped in on the ladies on a Saturday morning, they looked exhausted after staying up till 1am the night before to rush off an order of 150 pieces of sungu duri (weaved basket). The ladies get RM10 per basket and can weave up to three baskets a day.

    “Most of the kampung women have only primary school education thus the job choices aren’t that great,” Maznah adds in Malay.

    “Now, at least we earn an average of RM75 to RM200 a month, depending on the demand.”

    Occasionally, the women also perform traditional dances in cultural shows and get about RM50-RM70 per person per show.

    Other than Gerai, the ladies sell their crafts directly to visitors on the island or when they go to town.

    The concept of Gerai

    “Gerai is unique because it is run by dedicated people. And you cut out the middlemen,’’ says COAC coordinator Dr Colin Nicholas. There’s potential for it to be a commercially viable business.”

    “And it certainly puts to shame all those people getting profit from the craftsmen,” adds Nicholas.

    COAC also provides support for Orang Asli self-development.

    “It would be good if Reita takes Gerai online and sets up a handicraft portal. It’s not just for people to buy but to create more awareness,” said Nicholas. W



  • Gerai O.A.’s next “appearance” will be at Craft Complex, Jalan Conlay, Kuala Lumpur from today to July 30, 9am-6pm, for the Forest Products Promotion. For enquiries, call Reita Faida Rahim at 019-751 8686.


    Source: The Star


  • Saturday, July 15, 2006

    Scottish Scouts Help Orang Asli

    Scottish Scouts Help Orang Asli
    By Azliana Aziz
    Saturday July 15, 2006



     Clad in their Scout uniforms, complete with the kilt, the Scottish scouts are looking confident about their tasks ahead.
    Clad in their Scout uniforms, complete with the kilt, the Scottish scouts are looking confident about their tasks ahead.
    THE South Morningside Explorer Scouts from Edinburgh Scotland which arrived recently, set off from the Equatorial Hotel to Cameron Highlands where they will be spending nine days there helping out the villagers in Kampung Pos Terisu 3.

    The team of 22 scouts aged from 14 to 18 years together with six scout leaders will be undertaking two projects in the village, where an adventure playground will be built, and the community reconstructed and renovated.

    The projects that are to be carried out by the scouts were initially discussed with the head of Kampung Pos Terisu 3 and it was decided that a playground for the children is the most useful.

    “The village has about 70 children and there are no facilities for them,” said expedition leader Neil Mackenzie,

    He also added that this project is a good opportunity for the scouts to learn from the orang asli, and vice-versa hence promoting cultural exchange.

    There the orang asli villagers will teach the scouts how to select and cut bamboos from the jungle and tie them up to make flooring as well as show them various plants and vegetation growing in the area that can be eaten or used for medicinal purposes.

    The scouts will also share with the villagers, details of their lifestyles, culture and tell them about their homeland.

    Once their work in Kampung Pos Terisu 3 is completed, the scouts will proceed with three, three-day trips to Terengganu, Cherating and Malacca.

    Source: The Star


    Saturday, July 08, 2006

    Mystic Mountains of Malaysia

    There are plenty of beautiful mountains around Malaysia where one can go for a nice hiking trip. Cameron Highlands is not the only place to go for this kind of activities. Here read about the other mountains available in Malaysia where you can go for an adventure trek!




    The Mystic Mountain
    Story And Pictures By Chan Ah Lak
    Saturday July 8, 2006

    THE phrase “pergi hutan benom” is the equivalent of our consigning a person to the nether regions,” wrote Sturgnell and Willbourn in An Ascent of Gunung Benom from Raub in the 1931 issue of the Royal Asiatic Journal Malayan Branch.

    A friend handed me this interesting story before our own climb up Gunung Benom recently. I wanted to find out how hellish this particular mountain was, and, well, the “nether regions” is an archaic term for “hell”. So, it was with a slight sense of apprehension that I joined a group of Malaysian Nature Society members for the expedition.

    Gunung Benom, the 10th highest mountain in Peninsular Malaysia, is on the wish list of mountaineers aspiring to join the G10 Club, that is, a group of those who have successfully scaled all the 10 highest mountains. Benom is on a massif in central Pahang.

    The climbers met at Sungai Klau, a one-street outpost, 23km from Raub. Sungai Klau is also the gateway to Lata Berumbum, a beautiful series of waterfalls that attract picnickers and campers. The villagers ferried us to the starting point of the climb, on modified four-wheel drives. The dirt track winds through oil palm, cocoa, durian and rubber estates before entering primary jungle.

    At the 10km mark is a perfectly built concrete bridge spanning Sg Chalit, but it was not serviceable that day. The water level was too high for us to ford the river, and we had to wait till next day. After that, came the remaining 1.5km track, which had several deep ruts that tested the driving skills of the drivers.




    The beautiful Lata Berumbum waterfalls.
    The beautiful Lata Berumbum waterfalls.


    The starting point for the climb is just before the Lata Berubum waterfalls. The guide for the trip was Chin, vice-president of the Association of Backpackers Malaysia. He is better known within the mountaineering fraternity as Botak Chin.

    He came later with more hikers from Kuala Lumpur and we could only start at 11.15am. After 10 minutes of walking on level ground we had to cross a fast-flowing stream with slippery moss-covered rocks jutting out here and there. Fortunately the stream was shallow and most of us elected to wade through rather than hop from one rock to the next.

    There followed a steep climb through an overgrown track before we came to a ridge, which ran in an easterly direction until the half-way camp. En route, we had to negotiate eight smaller peaks and valleys. A couple of huge rocks and several fallen trees forced us to make detours. Other than that, the hike was uneventful.

    Botak Chin and his vanguards did a good job of clearing the prickly rattan branches from the track. Several flowering jewel orchid plants on the ground kept the shutterbugs busy.

    We arrived at the half-way camp (1,761m above sea level) and found ourselves in the realm of the mossy forest.




     The group of Malaysian Nature Society Members took a breather<br />while on their way to the summit of Gunung Benom.</

    The group of Malaysian Nature Society Members took a breather
    while on their way to the summit of Gunung Benom.


    The camp site was located just beside the track and the undulating terrain with scattered trees provided some respite from the elements. A 30-minute round trip hike down a steep ravine led to a small stream – our only source of water. The younger hikers graciously volunteered to collect water for us oldies.

    A heavy thunderstorm broke out soon after dinner and caused flooding in some of the tents. As we huddled in our tents, I recalled Sturgnell and Willbourn’s 1931 account of the climb.

    “The word benom is used by the Malays in the sense of hutan benom, which may be translated as ‘a faraway, dark forest of tall trees where no one lives’ ... Gunung Benom has a bad reputation for evil spirits. Noises of people talking and of rocks falling are heard ? and there is a tale, terrifying to the credulous Malay peasant, of a large berok, or monkey, which inhabits the mountain, a fierce animal standing five feet high on all fours.”

    Noises of people talking, eh?

    Well, I could certainly hear my camping mates in the next tent! And the only primates resembling giant monkeys I saw were four campers who had stripped to the waist after labouring to put up their tents. Anyway, almost immediately after I crawled into my sleeping bag I dozed off, giant monkey forgotten.



    The 10 highest mountains (G10) in
    Peninsular Malaysia:


    1. Gunung Tahan (2,190m)
    2. Gunung Korbu (2,183m)
    3. Gunung Yong Belar (2,181m)
    4. Gunung Gayong (2,173m)
    5. Gunung Chamah (2,171m)
    6. Gunung Yong Yap (2,168m)
    7. Gunung Ulu Sepat (2,158m)
    8. Gunung Batu Putih (2,131m)
    9. Gunung Irau (2,110m)
    10. Gunung Benom (2,107m)



    The ascent to the summit commenced soon after breakfast. A few hikers packed up all their gear so that they could camp at the summit. The rest of us opted for a light daypack loaded with food and water just for the day’s hike.

    The track now ran in a northerly direction. We traversed eight peaks and valleys, while another eight awaited ahead.

    The mossy forest of Gunung Benom is very luxuriant with all the trees and their boughs sporting a thick layer of moss. These forests usually invoke a feeling of being in a mystic world. Once it begins to get dark, and if there is a mist wafting in, then it begins to feel surreal. So maybe it is quite understandable that a normal-sized monkey may appear to look like a large berok.

    We came come across several botanical beauties too. Numerous species of arboreal orchids fight for a niche to survive. A few had beautiful blooms; many hikers broke their stride to admire vegetation like the pitcher plan Nepenthes sanguinea. It is only on this mountain that the pitchers grow to a giant size. Thirty centimeter-long blood red pitchers are commonly seen here.

    The summit, we found, has a conical metal-roofed survey station (trig point) and next to it is a relatively flat ground for camping. Unfortunately many trees block the panoramic view from the summit. By 3pm, all of us had managed to reach the summit.

    After admiring the scenery and taking some photographs we began our descent. It was almost dark when we reached the half-way camp. For most mountaineers, this was just another mountain under their belt. But, for the select few, climbing the pristine Gunung Benom was a very satisfying and an enjoyable way of achieving their G10 target.

    The writer would like to thank Jeffrey Yue from the 4 X 4 Club of Raub for his kind assistance in the trip and providing the references.

    Source: The Star

    Friday, July 07, 2006

    Enviromental Issues Highlights 2

    Stop rape of Camerons
    Friday July 7, 2006

    IT IS very disheartening to note that despite recent landslide tragedies in the Klang Valley, hillslope cutting is still being carried out in the heart of Tanah Rata and Brinchang in the Cameron Highlands.

    To make matters worse, the earth from these sites is dumped into the Mentigi Forest Reserve, which consists of predominantly montane forest and which is a water catchment area in Tanah Rata.

    Just next to the wet market in Tanah Rata is a hillslope with a gradient of more than 35 degrees. Heavy machinery is being used to cut this slope for a commercial project, though there are houses on and near the slope.

    It is indeed a disaster waiting to happen and many of us locals are wondering how this project could have been approved.

    Under the guidelines from the Study on the Sustainable Development of Highlands of Peninsular Malaysia by the Government in 2002, no development may be carried out in areas 1,000m above sea level and with a slope of more than 35 degrees in gradient.

    Similarly, another development involving the cutting of steep hillslopes is taking place in the heart of Brinchang near a hotel, shops and the fire station.

    Was an environmental impact assessment carried out for the earth from these sites to be dumped into the Mentigi Forest Reserve?

    The Cameron Highlands cannot afford any more destruction of hillslopes and forests.

    We need cleaner water in sufficient quantities. We do not need more apartments and houses or shoplots. We hope the relevant authorities will take note of this and help us preserve our beautiful forests and hills.


    SAVE OUR HIGHLANDS,

    Cameron Highlands.


    Source: The Star

    Thursday, July 06, 2006

    Enviromental Issues Highlights 1

    No logging in parts of Bukit Kinta forest reserve
    Thursday July 6, 2006

    IPOH: Parts of the Bukit Kinta Forest Reserve where the Sungai Kinta dam and treatment plant are located will be gazetted as a no logging zone.

    Perak Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohamad Tajol Rosli Ghazali said more than 4,000ha of the forest reserve in the vicinity of the RM234mil dam and treatment plant would be gazetted as permanent forest reserve.

    “We will not allow logging around the area because we want to protect the water quality,” he said after chairing the weekly exco meeting yesterday.

    “I have asked the Forestry director (Datuk Razani Ujang) to come up with a layout plan of the whole area to protect our water quality.”

    The dam, located about 17.5km from the Pos Slim road leading to Kampung Raja in the Cameron Highlands, was expected to be ready by end of next year, he said.

    Tajol Rosli said previous experiences revealed that cleaning up the muddy waters in the Kinta River could be costly.

    “It cost us RM4.2mil to clean up the river after a landslip occurred in the vicinity,” he said.

    He added that the state government was also planning to turn the area into a recreational spot for the people.

    “We will be preserving some trees such as tualang, meranti and cengal so that parents can bring their children there to learn more about the different variety of trees,” he added.

    On complaints that family entertainment centres at housing estates in Teluk Intan, Manjung and Taiping have become gambling dens, Tajol Rosli said the police and district offices must work together to monitor such centres.

    If they were licensed, the district office must monitor them and if they were illegal, the police should come in, he said.

    Source: The Star

    Thursday, June 29, 2006

    A wonderful muhibbah experience in the Camerons

    A wonderful muhibbah experience in the Camerons

    AFTER an enjoyable tea break at a tea plantation in Cameron Highlands recently, we started for home on the narrow, winding earth road.

    It was a lonely road with little traffic. As we approached a double bend, a car came round the blind corner and swept into our path.

    We had to swerve to avoid a head-on collision. Our car stopped abruptly and tilted sharply to the left. My brother, who was driving, yelled for us to get out of the car from the right side.

    When we got out of the car we saw that it was resting longitudinally with its two left wheels dangling in the air above a narrow path below the road.

    There was nothing we could do.

    Then a lorry with two workers stopped to help us. But there was no way they could do anything to get the car back on the road.

    As we saw it, any attempt to shift the vehicle could make the car topple off the edge of the road and plunge into the ravine below.

    The two workers volunteered to drive back to the main road to get help. While they were gone another lorry stopped by.

    Then a third lorry driver stopped to help. Both drivers tried to call a tow-truck or a crane on their handphones. Alas, there was no tow-truck or crane available.

    The poultry farmer in the second lorry volunteered to get some help from a vegetable farm nearby.

    He was back in about 30 minutes with two large concrete slabs and a long rectangular concrete beam. He also managed to collect a beam jack.

    By this time there were about 20 passers-by in cars and lorries who had stopped by to help.

    The poultry farmer organised those around to lay the concrete slabs on the path below and then placed the beam above them. He then jacked up the two outer wheels to rest on the beam.

    The poultry farmer did a sterling job of directing all these wonderful people who had come to help.

    Among them were a haji in an immaculate sarong sporting a moustache, four tourists from Britain and Canada on foot, two visitors from Singapore and some local people.

    They finally pushed, and forced the two wheels up onto the road. My brother offered to pay the helpers but none of them accepted his money.

    It was a wonderful gift of help at a crucial time like this.

    Thank you, wherever you are now. May you all receive the same measure of help and kindness in your hour of need.



    LEONG WEI CHING,

    Shah Alam.


    The Star, Thursday June 29, 2006

    Wednesday, June 28, 2006

    Hills Worth Exploring

    Hills worth exploring

    PETALING JAYA: Many Malaysians do not know many of the local tourist spots, although they were written about in international magazines, said deputy MCA Youth chief Datuk Ling Hee Leong.

    “Many of us go to other countries for vacations and this is not wrong. But what about our own tourist destinations? Some of the best sight-seeing spots are in our own country,” he said.

    He told reporters this at a press conference to announce the MCA Youth sports bureau's “Together Forward” Hill Climbing events.

    The events are to be held at Bukit Larut (on July 1), Bukit Bendera, Mount Kinabalu, and the Cameron Highlands (dates to be confirmed later.)

    “These places are not only beautiful but historical.

    “One of our aims in these climbing expeditions is to promote local tourism and increase awareness of these sites,” Ling said.

    The main objective is to promote and enhance the patriotic spirit in MCA, apart from advocating a healthy lifestyle among the youths and educating them on nature and the history of the hills.

    Kg Tunku assemblyman Datuk Dr Wong Sai Hou said some 500 participants, mostly youths, were expected to take part.

    “We want the hikes to be a soul-searching experience for these backpackers, giving them a chance to absorb nature and learn important survival skills,” he said.

    The organising committee hopes to create two records at Bukit Larut – to plant the party's flags from the base to the top and plant the Jalur Gemilang at the peak.

    A midnight climbathon would be held for experienced climbers on June 30.

    The other record is for 200 climbers to jointly hike up Mount Kinabalu, known as the world's longest staircase.

    “We will get a special permit for the climbers,” Ling said.

    The events are organised by the bureau, the Taiping MCA Youth division, the Backpackers Association of Malaysia and the Kamunting Hash House Harriers.

    The committee welcomes members of the public to join in the climb.

    “They can turn up at the venues on the day of the event,” said Ling.

    The Star, Wednesday June 28, 2006

    Friday, June 16, 2006

    Errant resorts giving us bad name

    Looks like our Malaysian Resorts need to buck up on their services a little. Found this article in the newspaper. Hoteliers take note!

    Errant resorts giving us bad name

    I HAVE been reading some unbiased travellers’ reviews of several well-known resorts in Malaysia posted on the Internet.

    I feel embarrassed as a Malaysian after reading the reviews. What consistently show up are the poor service mentality, poor maintenance and upkeep and discourteous and rude staff.

    These are all well-known, so-called five-star resorts in the Cameron Highlands and Penang. Many of these reviewers say they will not return to these resorts again.

    In stark contrast, the reviews of the lesser resorts in Bali, Phuket and Vietnam are so much more complimentary.

    The people at these resorts are so eager to please their customers. The irony is some of these so-called third world countries are fast overtaking us in many ways.

    We may have the best infrastructure but if we do not have first-class mentality we will remain a third-class country forever.

    The management of our holiday resorts need to take customers’ feedback and complaints seriously.

    Service mentality needs to be their top priority.

    In this age of Internet and borderless world, bad publicity travels far and fast.

    S.H. TAN
    Penang.

    The Star, Friday June 16, 2006

    Thursday, June 01, 2006

    Berita tentang MARDI Agrotechnology Park

    Kajian tumbuhan MARDI berjuta-juta ringgit dicuri

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS 1 Jun - Kajian tumbuhan yang dihasilkan oleh Institut Penyelidikan Pembangunan Pertanian Malaysia (MARDI) melalui penyelidikan bernilai jutaan ringgit kerap menjadi sasaran pencuri termasuk di kalangan saintis.

    Ketua Pengarah MARDI, Datuk Dr. Saharan Anang berkata, kes kecurian yang biasanya melibatkan tumbuhan hibrid itu sukar dibendung kerana ia tidak melibatkan satu spesies penuh tetapi hanya bahagian tertentu sahaja.

    ``Selepas sesuatu lawatan, pihak MARDI dapati cabang atau batang sesuatu pokok itu sudah hilang,'' katanya pada sidang akhbar Prapelancaran Taman Agroteknologi MARDI di sini semalam.

    Katanya, kemajuan dalam bidang sains terutama aspek pengkulturan tisu membolehkan bahagian pokok yang dicuri itu dibiakkan kembali menjadi seperti pokok asal.

    Keadaan itu, katanya, menyebabkan kerugian kepada pihak MARDI yang bersusah-payah menghasilkan sesuatu spesies baru tumbuhan.

    Tambah Saharan, antara spesies yang kerap dicuri ialah hibrid baru bunga anggerik.

    Menurut beliau, kejadian curi kerap berlaku semasa pelawat dibawa melihat sekitar hasil penyelidikan baru yang dicapai oleh MARDI.

    MARDI memperuntukkan jutaan ringgit setiap tahun dalam program pembangunan dan penyelidikan tanaman serta haiwan bagi tujuan memajukan sektor pertanian negara.

    Sejak ditubuhkan, pada 1969 sehingga kini, MARDI dilihat sebagai salah satu agensi yang paling berjaya di bawah Kementerian Pertanian dalam memajukan teknologi pertanian negara.

    Tambah beliau, selain para saintis, pihaknya juga berhadapan dengan sikap pelawat awam yang turut membawa keluar sesuatu tumbuhan tanpa kebenaran MARDI.

    Ujar Saharan, kejadian di kalangan orang awam dipengaruhi oleh sikap suka mencuri atau kerana tertarik dengan sesuatu spesies yang sukar diperoleh di kawasan lain selain di stesen penyelidikan MARDI.

    Sementara itu, Taman Agroteknologi MARDI Cameron Highlands dijadual dirasmikan oleh Sultan Pahang pada 14 Jun ini.

    Taman seluas 42 hektar di Tanah Rata itu terbahagi kepada Taman Inggeris, Taman Herba, Taman Anggerik, Taman Ros dan pusat penyelidikan serta pusat maklumat pengunjung.

    Menurut Saharan, taman agroteknologi itu menggabungkan aspek pertanian, penyelidikan dan pelancongan.

    Ujar beliau, pelawat akan diberi peluang untuk mendalami aspek pertanian seperti teknik penanaman bunga ros yang sebelum ini agak jarang untuk dipelajari orang ramai.

    Selain itu, pengunjung ke taman tersebut akan berpeluang melihat Muzium Teh yang pada asalnya merupakan kilang teh yang pertama dibangunkan di negara ini.

    Kata Saharan lagi, inisiatif pihak MARDI menubuhkan taman agroteknologi tersebut akan menwujudkan satu lagi daya tarikan pelancongan di Cameron Highlands. -- Utusan Malaysia. (1-Jun-2003)


    Untuk informasi terlanjut, sila lihat Cameron Highlands Agrotechnology Park.

    Friday, May 26, 2006

    Visitors to Pahang

    Looks like there a lots of visitors coming over to Pahang for a vacation. There was approximately 5 million tourist coming over to Pahang in year 2005 generating about RM$2 billion (US$555 million) for the state. It was quite an increase too, about 13.3% increase compared against the previous year of 2004.

    The breakdown info of tourist was 3,725,237 locals and 1,305,425 foreigners. Pahang has the highest number of visitors when compared against the other states.

    So let's see where the popular tourist destinations in Pahang are:
    1) Genting Highlands = 3,202,823 visitors
    2) Kuantan = 973,807
    3) Cameron Highlands = 298,284
    4) Tioman Island = 154,552
    5) Fraser's Hill = 89,068
    6) Termerloh = 84,612
    7) Taman Negara = 74,811

    Interesting, looks like a lot people like to go to Genting Highlands. Perhaps its close proximity to Kuala Lumpur (only takes 45 minutes drive by road) makes it a convenient place to go for quick relief from the hot humidity of the tropics. While Cameron Highlands is the 3rd popular destination in Pahang for visitors to Pahang.

    For the nearest cooler climate Genting Highlands is pretty ideal, and one can just do a day trip without having to stay overnight making it very convenient. With its activity centered on theme parks (and the usual gamblers), and live shows sure attracts lots of people for its fun activities.

    However, Cameron Highlands is more of a peaceful kind of visit and taking in the natural breathtaking beauty of lush greenery and slower pace kind of lifestyle reminiscent of old English country side, well I'll take Cameron Highlands anytime.

    The Pahang state is targeting the tourists from Singapore, China, Hong Kong, West Asia, Thailand, Indonesia, Britain, Taiwan, Germany and India. But based on the visitors pattern to my website, the majority of the visitors to Cameron Highlands are from Malaysia and Singapore. Of course there are the usual amohs Mat Sallehs and Japanese visitors, the main bulk of visitors are from Malaysia and Singapore.

    But sad to say, some accommodation providers, though not all, do not seem to give equal services to the locals and seem to have a preferential to treat foreign visitors better. They should take heed that most of their income is derived from locals more than that of foreigners. Foreigner may be willing to pay more, but the main volume of visitors is us locals. So hoteliers take heed!
    Why I say this, because while trawling the forums for info, I noticed there were complaints about this lah, that lah, and the hotel can't seem to provide the services. But when a foreigner request for something, it was done immediately.

    As for me, I was fortunate not to have encountered bad service and so far my experiences were pretty pleasant. There is of course a trick to remember, you may be a customer, and customers are considered as king, and you rightfully want all the attention and service a hotel may render to you. But do note that the hotel staffs are human too. So a pleasant approach to the staff about your grouses and needs will translate to a better service by the hotel staff. Hey, no one like to deal with a customer from hell! That way your vacation will leave with you fond memories rather than one that was marred with bad service from a hotel.

    Have a happy vacation!


    Tuesday, May 02, 2006

    White Elephant of the Camerons

    I came across this editorial submitted by readers of the Star Newspaper published on 2nd May 2006. The writer highlighted the problem of the new bus terminal cum car parking lot in Tanah Rata which was badly designed. The narrow confines and steep turns make it really difficult for most people to move their vehicle within the building. Only the foolhardy or the very brave souls would attempt to drive their vehicle inside. So do make a note to avoid parking in it.

    Here's what the reader wrote:




    There is a "white elephant" on Cameron Highlands, and it is the multi-storey public car park, tax stand and bus station which, since its completion at end of last year, has not been in used for a simple reason: Use it at your own risk.

    The complex is the brainchild of the Cameron Highlands district council and was built with taxpayers' money.

    The design is so inane that a motorist must have great maneuvering skill and a daredevil's heart to make his way up its narrow and steep (often scrapping the underbelly of vehicles) slopping driveway.

    Of course, only those with old junk of no love for their vehicles would undertake the drive up in the first place. There are already many casualties, judging from the scratch marks on the sides of the walls.

    No wonder few people had parked their cars up in the building, with the majority preferring to risk getting police summonses by parking illegally outside and around the building.

    Even the taxi drivers have refused to re-locate to the premise. As for the bus drivers, they said it was near impossible for a bus to turn unless the driver is very skilful and prepared to maneuver in driving forward and backward a number of times. In the current situation of expensive fuel, all the bus drivers prefer to stay put in their old station.

    If only the council is open-minded in listening to the residents' feedback, the project which has already become an eyesore to the residents will not deteriorate to be the "white elephant" it now is.

    We are wondering too how soon is will take the council to rectify the problems.

    We are, however, hopeful that the new district officer may be more proactive than the council.

    After all, the district officer has recently made known his thoughts that the Cameron Highlands has been neglected in terms of beautiful landscaping.

    It is about time too that the council should do something about the landscaping as well as the "white elephant".

    SILHOUETTE
    Cameron Highlands.


    Wednesday, April 26, 2006

    Cameron Highlands Resort is now open!

    Cameron Highlands Resort Hotel (formerly known as Merlin Inn) located opposite the Golf Course is now open! It looks really good after its refurbishment and renovation. I just can't wait to visit it but I will have to satisfy with the pictures for now until my next plan trip to Cameron Highlands.

    Cameron Highlands Resort Hotel is now managed by YTL Corporation. Just to give you an idea, if you have been to JW Marriot Hotel, Starhill and lot 10 shopping center in Kuala Lumpur famous Sungai Wang shopping area, these buildings all belong to YTL Corporation. YTL Corporation has a tendency to do things in a grand fashion. So I suppose the brand new hotel will have a price tag to go with it if you intend to stay there.

    Francis Teoh, the current MD and owner of YTL not only do things big, he does it with much pomp and fanfair. I was fortunate enough to attend his Russel Watson concert and celebration last year, it was done in such a fabulous grandiose.

    So we shall expect Cameron Highlands Resort to be similarly of high standard and quality.

    Below is more write up and info about the new hotel.




    Kuala Lumpur, 25 April 2006

    On March 27th 1967, an American businessman disappeared during a visit to the Cameron Highlands. The famous Thai silk king, Jim Thompson, was on a holiday in the highlands with some friends when he went for a walk. The mystery remains to this day and Jim Thompson's name comes alive again in the Jim Thompson Tea Room, set in YTL Hotels & Properties's brand new 56-room boutique property in the Cameron Highlands: Cameron Highlands Resort.

    Enjoy English afternoon tea in an elegant setting at the Jim Thompson Tea Room.At the Jim Thompson Tea Room, the time-honoured tradition of English afternoon tea may be enjoyed in an elegant setting for the leisurely savouring of finger sandwiches, light-as-air pastries and home baked scones as well as fresh Cameron strawberries. Complementing this delicious spread is a wide-ranging selection of exquisite Cameron Highlands teas.

    YTL Hotels & Properties, a leading luxury hotel developer and operator in Malaysia, today opens the doors to its third luxury resort in Malaysia. Cameron Highlands Resort is conceived to complement the luxury collection of world-renowned resorts such as Pangkor Laut Resort and Tanjong Jara Resort.

    Located in the state of Pahang, approximately 200 km north of Kuala Lumpur, Cameron Highlands Resort is one of Malaysia's cool and picturesque hill stations, 1,467 metres above sea level, stretching along a plateau set high above the river valley.

    Discovered by British surveyor William Cameron on a mapping expedition in 1885, the fame of Cameron Highlands grew during the colonial era. British expatriates would frequent the highlands to relax and escape the lowland tropical heat, and British planters soon realised the potential of its fertile mountain slopes for growing tea, then a prized commodity.

    Today, Cameron Highlands is still home to many tea plantations, as well as strawberry and vegetable farms, jungle trails, cascading waterfalls and rose gardens. Much of the highlands' character remains unchanged, exuding an old English charm.

    Set on a lush hillock fronting the golf course, Cameron Highlands Resort, with the tagline Trails, Tales and Tradition, is surrounded by flourishing greenery and rolling hills. The property embodies the charm, the adventure and gentility of that old world practised in the colonial lifestyle during the '40s and '50s.

    In addition to the luxurious amenities and a level of service that symbolises the rich fusion of traditional English manners and discreet Asian hospitality, distinctive attributes of the boutique hotel include classic restaurants, a unique Spa Village with signature treatments based on ancient tea rituals and of course, the adjacent 18-hole golf course.

    Expect a four-poster bed and cosy settees in the luxurious room.Designed and conceptualised to complement its highland setting, the hotel's interior resembles a genteel English colonial home, with welcoming fireplaces in the Reading Room and Highlands Bar. Its 56 rooms and suites boast a distinctive sense for style and comfort and look out to panoramic, unobstructed views of Cameron Highlands. Standard features include four-poster beds, seating areas with comfortable settees and armchairs, and luxurious bathrooms.

    An array of dining experiences are set to attract locals as well as out-of-town guests. The Dining Room, with vista windows overlooking the golf course and an outdoor terrace, offers creative all day dining menus prepared using the freshest ingredients and local herbs and spices.

    Gonbei, a spin-off of the exquisite traditional Japanese restaurant made famous in the ritzy Starhill Gallery in Kuala Lumpur, is open for dinner and serves sashimi, soba, tempura and bento sets. For leisurely evening cocktails over a game of snooker or the traditional stengah, the Highlands Bar is a warm and comfortable venue.

    Cameron Highlands Resort also features the third wellness centre of the award-winning Spa Village, with a wide range of sophisticated treatments and healing therapies inspired by the restorative properties of tea. Each guest luxuriates in a signature tea bath before every treatment. The Cameron Highlands Spa Village offers tranquil indoor and outdoor treatment rooms, tea bath rooms and a fully-equipped gymnasium.

    The hotel's Grand Ballroom will provide for intimate and exclusive social and corporate gatherings in an elegant setting for up to 200 persons. Complementing this facility is a range of seven other functions rooms. Professional banqueting and meeting planners are at hand to work with every organiser to ensure successful events held here.

    With its magical hilltop location and cool refreshing climate, the boutique Cameron Highlands Resort will be the picture-perfect setting for the sophisticated traveller looking to escape humdrum routine and experience a sense of intimate country-style living with attentive yet unobtrusive service.

    For reservations and enquiries, please contact YTL Travel Centre at (603) 2145 9000 or e-mail travelcentre@ytlhotels.com.my. For more information on the Resort, log on to www.cameronhighlandsresort.com.


    Source article:
    http://www.ytlcommunity.com/commnews/shownews.asp?newsid=22837



    Want to know more about Jim Thompson?
    See also:
    The Mysterious case of Jim Thompson
    Jim Thompson House in Bangkok
    Cameron Highlands Resort


    Looking for a place to stay in Cameron Highlands?
    Look up the Cameron Highlands hotels, resorts, accommodations and apartments list.

    Sunday, April 23, 2006

    Crackdown on use of fake insecticides

    Crackdown on use of fake insecticides
    Sunday April 23, 2006

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS: Enforcement will be stepped up to check the use of illegal or fake insecticides on crops as it would affect the country’s reputation in exporting quality agricultural produce.


    (from right) Mah, McGilivray and vegetable growers association chairman Tan So Tiok visiting an agricultural produce exhibition in Cameron Highlands on Friday.

    (from right) Mah, McGilivray and vegetable growers association chairman Tan So Tiok visiting an agricultural produce exhibition in Cameron Highlands on Friday.
    Deputy Agriculture and Agro-based Industries Minister Datuk Mah Siew Keong said poor quality produce due to the use of fake insecticides might even hinder the country’s plan to become one of the main global food exporters by 2010.

    “The use of these fake agrochemicals destroys the crops. In order to tap into foreign markets like Japan, West Asia or Western countries, we need to ensure the quality and safety of our produce,” he said after launching a manual on Good Farming Practices and Agriculture Chemical Safety here on Friday.

    Mah said farmers didn't know that although the fake insecticides saved them money, they might contain harmful additives.

    “We are stepping up enforcement to eradicate this problem. Some of these fake chemicals are produced locally and distributed through syndicates and we have identified a few,” he added.

    Syngenta Crop Protection Sdn Bhd general manager John McGilivray, who attended the launching, said the use of such fake products was one of the biggest problems faced by the local agricultural industry.

    McGilivray said that 15% of the RM420mil total market value of insecticides accounted for the fake products and the figure was rising.

    On an unrelated matter, Mah said the Government was reviewing a proposal forwarded by some 10,000 farmers who asked for subsidised diesel, like the one currently given to fishermen.

    The Federation of Malaysian Vegetable Growers Association proposed last December that farmers be given a “preferential diesel card” to alleviate the escalating production costs following the fuel price rise.

    “We sympathise with them but as this involves a substantial cost, we need time to review the matter,” said Mah.

    Source: The Star

    Tuesday, April 18, 2006

    Landslide Early Warning System?

    Ministry seeks more money

    KUALA LUMPUR: The Works Ministry will ask for more funds to install early warning systems that can detect earth movement on hill slopes near the main highways nationwide.

    Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said his ministry had earlier requested for RM168mil for the purpose but received only a small allocation.

    As landslides occurred quite often during the current rainy season, the ministry would seek more allocations from the Government, he told reporters after opening a seminar here yesterday.

    Samy Vellu said the Public Works Department had identified several hilly areas near the main highways, including along the North-South Expressway, Kuala Lumpur-Karak-Kuantan Expressway and federal highways that were prone to landslides.

    “The early warning system supplied by local experts, will be installed on the slopes and if there are landslides, early information can be issued quickly and accurately for further action,” he said.

    He was commenting on a landslide along a new bypass to Genting Highlands, known as the New Chin Swee Bypass last Thursday. The road has been closed temporarily.

    Samy Vellu said Resorts World Bhd, the operator of the Genting resort and theme park, would build three retaining walls to reinforce the slope around the landslide area.

    He said the operator had also temporarily closed all the buildings, including a temple and restaurant on the slope.

    On another matter, Samy Vellu said part of the existing Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) Complex in Johor Baru would have to be demolished to make way for a straight road to connect the complex to the Causeway.

    He said the ministry’s engineers sent to Johor to identify the route for the “very straight connection” from the new CIQ complex to the causeway had come up with the suggestion.

    “The only problem we face now is that the present CIQ complex is obstructing the construction of the proposed road,” he said, adding that the new suggestion would be presented to the Cabinet on Wednesday for approval. – Bernama

    Source: The Star

    Friday, April 14, 2006

    Mudslide danger not over

    Mudslide danger not over
    Friday April 14, 2006

    IPOH: Beware of mudslides when you use the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road to the Cameron Highlands. Motorists are warned that the incident along the stretch on Tuesday could recur.

    Perak Public Works Department director Datuk Wong Wai Ching said he could not rule out this possibility along the ungazetted stretch, as logs and rocks from the hilltop that caused the mudslide had not been completely cleared.

    “We have cleared the mud and debris from the road but not the logs and rocks from the 300-metre hilltop,” he told reporters outside the Perak state assembly here yesterday.

    Wong added that the department had requested the Works Ministry to set aside some funds for immediate remedial works along the stretch.

    He said clearing the logs and rocks at the top of the hill was costly but, in the meantime, the department would carry out aerial surveillance on the slope and hilltop from a helicopter.

    Tuesday’s mudslide, which covered 30 metres of the road, was triggered by water retention at the hilltop due to logs being stacked there.

    State Infrastructure and Public Utilities committee chairman Datuk Ho Cheng Wang had confirmed that logs and felled trees left behind by loggers caused the retention of rainwater and mud on the hilltop.

    Trader S. Nareshkumar, 21, was nearly buried inside his car during the incident.



    Source: The Star


    Thursday, April 13, 2006

    Highlands Road Reopened

    Highlands road reopened
    Thursday April 13, 2006



    One lane at Km13 of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road being cleared for traffic at 6am yesterday. A mudslide made the road impassable on Tuesday.
    One lane at Km13 of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road being cleared for traffic at 6am yesterday. A mudslide made the road impassable on Tuesday.
    CAMERON HIGHLANDS: One lane at Km13 of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road where a mudslide occurred on Tuesday afternoon has re-opened to traffic.

    “Both lanes will only be open once the slope is certified safe by the Public Works Department,” State Infrastructure and Public Utilities Committee chairman Datuk Ho Cheng Wang said yesterday.

    Ho said the mudslide covered 30m of the Pos Slim-Lojin road.

    The area recorded 30mm of rain on Tuesday, and the mudslide was triggered by water retention at the hilltop, he said, adding that the state JKR had asked the Works Ministry to get the Rural and Regional Development Ministry to check it.

    “This is because the hilltop is not under the jurisdiction of JKR. Loggers had placed logs on the hilltop which caused the water retention,” he said.

    Source: The Star


    Camerons Mudslide Survivor

    Mudslide survivor hopes to shake off phobia soon
    Thursday April 13, 2006

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS: Trader S. Nareshkumar, who escaped unhurt during a mudslide near here, will be staying off the ungazetted Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road until he musters enough courage to use it again.

    “I will be using the old road via Tapah for the time being.”

    Nareshkumar, 21, said he has always been fearful of landslides whenever he travels on the highway.


    Nareshkumar explaining how he escaped unhurt during the mudslide near Cameron Highlands on Tuesday.
    Nareshkumar explaining how he escaped unhurt during the mudslide near Cameron Highlands on Tuesday.

    “I would always speed past Gunung Pass as I was afraid that the earth would come tumbling down from the steep slopes,” he said.

    “I did the same thing on Tuesday but did not expect the mudslide 10km away.”

    On Tuesday, Nareshkumar was almost killed when a mudslide at the 13th kilometre of the highway nearly buried his car.

    Relating the incident yesterday, Nareshkumar said he stopped his vehicle, which he had taken delivery of just a week ago, when he spotted a boulder on the road.

    “I wanted to reverse my car but there was another car blocking my way.”

    He said he felt his car moving sideways and dashed out of it immediately because he sensed that a landslide was happening.

    “I just ran for my life and thought I was going to die,” he added.

    After surviving his worst fear, Nareshkumar, his mother A. Ramayee, 44, father S. Subramaniam, 46, brother Muniandy, 28, and sister Ratha, 24, performed a special prayer at the Subramaniam Temple in Tanah Rata here yesterday.

    Source: The Star


    Wednesday, April 12, 2006

    Mudslide at Cameron Highlands

    Narrow escape for trader b
    By Chan Li Leen
    Wednesday April 12, 2006

    CAMERON HIGHLANDS: Trader S. Kumar can only thank his lucky stars that he escaped unhurt when a mudslide occurred while he was travelling along the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road to Simpang Pulai near Ipoh.

    The 21-year-old managed to brake just in time to avoid being swept into a ravine by the mudslide, which occurred at the 13th kilometre of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road at 4.30pm yesterday.

    His car was, however, half-buried as the debris came gushing down onto the highway, covering almost 800m of the stretch.

    Fortunately for him, the railing that stopped his car from crashing into the ravine did not give way under the weight of the debris of mud, tree trunks and rocks.


    MUDDY TASK: Workers clearing the debris at the 13th kilometre of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road near Cameron Highlands after a mudslide occurred at the stretch.
    MUDDY TASK: Workers clearing the debris at the 13th kilometre of the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road near Cameron Highlands after a mudslide occurred at the stretch.

    The trader, who was the only motorist on that stretch of the road at the time of the incident, spoke to the media via walkie-talkie as he was at the other end of the mudslide.

    According to EEC Sdn Bhd resident engineer Yong Loy, who was one of the first at the scene, Kumar could only sit and wait until rescuers got him out of his damaged car some 90 minutes later.

    Yong said other motorists had reported the incident to him at his office in Gunung Pass, about 10km away.

    EEC is the consultant engineer of MTD Construction Sdn Bhd, which has been awarded the contract to construct the Kampung Raja-Pos Slim road from here to Ipoh.

    “We immediately deployed our workers and machinery to the scene to start clearing the debris and fallen trees,” he said.

    Yong said the mudslide was not due to an existing cut slope.

    “We believe it occurred at a catchment area at the top of the hill slope,” he said.

    Perak Public Works Department director Datuk Wong Wai Ching said it was the first time a mudslide of such a magnitude had occurred along the highway.

    “It is the worst as the affected stretch has cut off traffic flow completely,” he said.


    Source: The Star