The Sun (Malaysia)

Gignored WHY DOE

- BY IAN MCINTYRE, EDMUND LEE, IMRAN HILMY LEE HOOI BOON

GEORGE TOWN: The Penang government ignored the Department of Environmen­t’s ( DOE) reservatio­ns about the 50-storey affordable housing project i n Tanjung Bungah, where a landslide killed 11 workers, after the majority of the vetting agencies gave their thumbs up.

At a meeting to approve the commenceme­nt of earthworks, the Penang I s l and City Council approved the project after listening to deliberati­ons from 20 federal and state agencies.

“The developmen­t complied with the ‘Safety Guidelines for Hill Site Developmen­t 2012’,” Penang Island Mayor Datuk Maimunah Mohd Shariff told a press conference yesterday.

The agencies, including the state minerals and geoscience department, who are technical experts on hillslope developmen­t, gave their approval, she said.

Maimunah confirmed that DOE was not in favour of the project because of its proximity to a granite quarry, but accused the agency of practising double standards.

She said DOE had previously supported two other projects that were even closer to the quarry, that had been in operation since the 1960s.

One was for 28 units of threestore­y condominiu­ms and the other was for expansion of the Tunku Abdul Rahman College campus.

Maimunah, who was present with Penang Housing, Local Government and Traffic Management Committee chairman Chow Kon Yeow, also said that after getting feedback from all agencies at the meeting, there were just one or two which had reservatio­ns.

She could not tell offhand which agencies objected but promised to declassify the minutes of the meeting. She did not state when this would be done.

Maimunah said DOE has the right to offer its opinions but in the end, the council has to make a decision.

Approval was given on June 6, 2015 with 20 conditions imposed on the developer.

“(Approval for) commenceme­nt of work was given on Jan 18, 2016,” she added.

In the landslide on Saturday, 11 workers, including a Malaysian project supervisor, died when tonnes of earth, debris and constructi­on material came crashing down on them.

Chow said, in the name of transparen­cy, the state government has ordered the council to lodge a police report to urge police to investigat­e the incident.

Based on an initial assessment made by the council’s engineerin­g division, there was profession­al negligence.

The state has classified the issue as “constructi­on site mismanagem­ent” rather than a landslide.

Chow said the state will proceed with forming a commission of inquiry, that will likely take months to come up with a report on the tragedy.

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REUTERSPIX ... A group of 245 thrill-seekers, tied to ropes, leap from a 30mhigh bridge in a world-record attempt for ‘rope jumping’. The death-defying event took place in Brazil’s Hortolandi­a on Sunday. The previous record, set on the same bridge last year,...
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