The Borneo Post

Malaysia can meet 2030 SDGs if all pitch in, pressure group says

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The clock is ticking for Malaysia to achieve the 16 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG) goals by 2030.

For this to happen, the Malaysian CSO-SDG Alliance said public participat­ion would be essential.

“The very centre of SDGs is to leave no one behind,” said Malaysian CSO-SDG Alliance governance lead Jeffrey FK Phang.

Yet Phang said some Malaysians still face hindrances to their right to participat­ion even in 2024, such as through the lack of physical access during elections.

“According to the National Health and Morbidity survey, 11.1 per cent per cent of adults in Malaysia have disabiliti­es – that’s quite a big percentage,” he said.

In its 2023 policy brief, the Malaysian CSO-SDG alliance recommende­d the government take steps to improve accessibil­ity during elections.

This included installing ramps at voting centres, preparing Braille voting strips, and having sign language interprete­rs to make voting more accessible.

However, Phang conceded that this would not be possible at all voting centres.

“So, we’ve got to start thinking, can they be included in advanced voting?” Phang said.

Outside of elections, Malaysian CSO-SDG Alliance co-chair Lakshmi Lavanya Rama Iyer said inadequate physical access remained a barrier to participat­ion for people with disabiliti­es in the country.

“When you walk around the streets of Kuala Lumpur or any city for that matter, even Putrajaya, you find the facilities are not so enabling for our friends who are less able,” said.

From tactile paving leading the blind into dead ends or trees being planted in the middle of such pathways, she said the flaws in accessibil­ity infrastruc­ture in the country was “quite alarming”.

While much of this is dependent on the authoritie­s, the group said there were also many ways for ordinary Malaysians to help ensure that the right decisions were made.

Citing two instances in Kota Damansara and Bukit Kiara, Phang said residents were able to apply pressure on the authoritie­s to protect the forests in the areas.

“In Kota Damansara, it became an election issue, that if you don’t keep the forest we won’t vote for you, and that’s how we got it gazetted,” he said.

Phang also cited the example of the Kuala Lumpur Residents Actions for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Associatio­n that scrutinise­d the Kuala Lumpur Draft Plan 2020 when it was published by the Kuala Lumpur City Hall.

Despite such cases, however, Phang said Malaysians still have to fully appreciate the level of participat­ion available to them within public governance. — Malay Mail

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