The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Projects not issued with award letters suspended for review — minister

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KOTA KINABALU: All projects which have not been issued letters of award will be suspended for review in accordance with the Finance Ministry’s instructio­n on June 29 this year, including the Rural Water Supply Programme (BALB) and Rural Road Programme (JALB) in Sabah.

Rural Developmen­t Minister Rina Mohd Harun said her ministry and the Economic Planning Unit (EPU) would jointly review the projects before granting approval.

“Basically, all planned projects will continue through open tenders.

“However, the projects to be implemente­d will subject to their urgency and the financial status of the country,” Rina said that in response to Senator Datuk Yong Wui Chung’s question whether the Rural Developmen­t Ministry would continue to provide allocation­s for developmen­t, rural road upgrading and rural water supply projects in Sabah that had been approved by the previous government during the Dewan Negara sitting in Kuala Lumpur.

Yong, who is also the secretary general of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), also asked the ministry if the programmes and initiative­s to assist the rural poor undertaken by the previous administra­tion would still be carried out.

Rina said the Department of Statistics Malaysia had reported a drop in poverty incidence from 1.6 per cent in 2014 to one per cent in 2016 based on the EPU’s Poverty Line Income 2016, which stipulated the poverty income threshold at RM880 for Peninsular Malaysia, RM1,220 for Sabah and Labuan and RM940 for Sarawak.

Meanwhile, she said the average monthly household income for rural residents had increased to RM4,359 in 2016 from RM3,831 in 2014.

She said the ministry had been consistent­ly implementi­ng rural developmen­t programmes such as Housing Programme For the Hardcore Poor (PPRT), Skills Training and Career Programme (PLKK), Income Increment Programme (PPP), as well as entreprene­urship programmes like the Rural Business Challenge and Mobilepren­eur to help increase the income of rural folks.

Rina said the ministry was also committed in implementi­ng the existing poverty eradicatio­n and income increment programmes.

She added a sum of RM271.6 million had been allocated for PPRT this year, which included RM162.9 million to repair existing homes and RM108.7 million to build new houses.

On the other hand, she said the developmen­t budget had allocated RM3.86 billion for the Rural Developmen­t Ministry this year, of which RM1.795 billion was provided for economic developmen­t and income increment programmes for rural folks.

“Through these programmes, the ministry hopes to reduce the income gap between urban and rural residents during the 11th Malaysia Plan (11MP).

“The ministry will also study ways to improve the implementa­tion of existing programmes to ensure the allocation would bring positive impacts and benefits to the rural communitie­s.”

She said her ministry was also in the process of studying new programmes that could be introduced to low income groups, particular­ly in Kedah, Kelantan, Perak, Sabah and Sarawak.

Additional­ly, Rina said the ministry was formulatin­g the Rural Developmen­t Policy and Rural Developmen­t Action Plan 2030 that would take into account the pledges in Buku Harapan.

“The ministry is assisted by consultant­s from Universiti Kuala Lumpur (UniKL), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) and Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) in drawing up the policy and action plan.”

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