The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Classes on public safety for flat dwellers

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KUALA LUMPUR: Not only chairs, even cupboards and live cats have been thrown to the ground from the upper floors of high-rise flats.

Sardine cans and soiled diapers have also been discarded by flat dwellers out of their doors or windows.

Irresponsi­ble acts without any civic-mindedness.

Last Monday, a 15-year-old boy, S. Sathiswara­n, died after he was hit by a chair thrown out of a unit of the Seri Pantai People’s Housing Projects (PPRs) flats in Pantai Dalam. Social activitist Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye said civics classes should be made compulsory to help educate flat dwellers on the importance of public safety.

He said massive and sustainabl­e awareness campaigns also had to be organised at low-cost flats to inform the residents on the consequenc­es of their irresponsi­ble acts and the need for change.

“This is important as the throwing of things from the upper floors at the People’s Housing Projects (PPRs) flats have happened frequently and, from what has been reported, even sardine cans, soiled diapers, live cats and cupboards have been thrown from the upper floors,” he said in a statement yesterday.

Referring to the incident that killed Sathiswara­n, Lee said it had brought out the ugly side of Malaysians who had no regard for public safety and the environmen­t, and also showed the irresponsi­bility of some flat dwellers.

He said the authoritie­s must play their part to provide more basic amenities for garbage disposal and practise a good maintenanc­e culture so that facilities such as lifts were always functionin­g.

The installati­on of closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras would also help to monitor the activities in the high-rise flats as well as deter acts of vandalism and littering, he said. - Bernama

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