Malaysia

Floating garbage: Rohingya colony off Langkawi badly needs sewage system, govt told

Living conditions must be improved before Bukit Malut becomes eyesore, says Malaysian Nature Society

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 20 Sep 2021 7:00PM

Floating garbage: Rohingya colony off Langkawi badly needs sewage system, govt told
The Bukit Malut colony mostly comprises refugees of Burmese descent who fled the strife in Myanmar before being given amnesty here. – Screen grab pic, September 20, 2021

by Ian McIntyre

LANGKAWI – The authorities need to construct a sewage system for the sprawling colony of Rohingya refugees in Bukit Malut if they are serious about preventing sea pollution, said the Malaysian Nature Society.

Its vice-president Eric R. Sinnaya said that the culprit for this wave of plastic containers and rubbish besieging the island’s pristine waters is most likely Bukit Malut itself, where it has been going on for the past several years.

The colony, whom authorities believe to have mushroomed to roughly 10,000 residents from just some 500 in the 1980s, mostly comprises refugees of Burmese descent who fled the strife in Myanmar before being given amnesty here.

Some quarters allege that the group was originally from Langkawi and had migrated to Thailand and Myanmar before deciding to move back to the island in the 1980s.

They were resettled in Bukit Malut before Langkawi became a leading tourism site.

Commenting on the rubbish floating off the district’s township of Kuah here, Sinnaya said the drift pattern showed that it likely originated from Bukit Malut and not neighbouring Kuala Perlis, Kuala Kedah, or the nearby Thai islands.

“The community mostly lives in stilt homes, from which the rubbish is easily discarded from their houses. There is no sewage system as far as I know,” he said.

He said that the colony’s living conditions need to be improved before it becomes an eyesore to tourists passing through.

Eric also stressed on the risk of damaging the coastline if indiscriminate littering continues to occur.

He was commenting on a viral video, believed to be shot by a tourist, showing rubbish floating near Kuah.

The area is close to two prominent resorts – the St Regis Hotel and the Westin Hotel.

Meanwhile, the Langkawi Tourism City Municipal Council agreed with Sinnaya in pointing at the Bukit Malut settlement.

MPLBP president Radzuan Osman said that the floating garbage seen in the island’s waters had been washed out to the ocean by high tides due to the monsoon season in the northern region.

He promised that the local authorities would work to clean up the site in view that the island has been reopened to a tourism bubble here.

Langkawi MP and former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamed had also tweeted about the video, citing that the island is a jewel of Kedah that needs to be preserved from pollution.

Kedah had announced plans to relocate Bukit Malut’s residents to other parts of the island within the next five years.

The area would be transformed into a tourism project with plans to construct an international racing circuit, resorts as well as luxurious condominiums. – The Vibes, September 20, 2021

Related News

Opinion / 1mth

How can a state make people stateless? – Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury

Malaysia / 2mth

Bidor depot breakout: MSF highlights poor conditions at detention centres

Malaysia / 2mth

Roadblocks, aerial fly-bys jolt Perak as authorities hunt for 130 escaped migrants

Malaysia / 2mth

Search intensifies for 130 Myanmar migrants who escaped from Bidor detention centre

Malaysia / 4mth

We’re not here to steal jobs, take over country, says Rohingya group

Malaysia / 7mth

Rights group calls on UNGA to end Rohingya plight

Spotlight

Malaysia

Chegubard charged with sedition, again

Malaysia

MACC questions Perlis MB over investigation into his son

Malaysia

Malaysian youth’s stint with Tesla opens doors

By Sophia Ahmad

Videos

Chinese accountancy graduate earns coveted Green Beret

Malaysia

Jho Low suspected owner of seized Bugatti car

Malaysia

MyPPP returns after long hiatus

By Ian McIntyre

You may be interested

Malaysia

I’m still not sure why I’m being investigated, says Perlis MB

Malaysia

MCA man urges govt to address economic impact of boycotts

Malaysia

Papagomo arrested over alleged seditious remarks against king

Malaysia

Woman with 44 grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren weds at 78 

Malaysia

Hoteliers can expect more occupancy growth driven by foreigners, says MAH

By Noel Achariam

Malaysia

Berjaya Corp wants police to identify source behind casino report

Malaysia

Why didn't local academics question Gilley at forum, says Gerak

Malaysia

Details of proposed paired road project to be made public soon, says Penang CM

By Ian McIntyre