Posts Tagged ‘Poverty’

ASW Bandar for the poor

July 2nd, 2010
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A good move, even though its not much. The return per year may be around RM600 to RM800 only, but still can be used to help families during start of school or celebrate festive season, or with medical expenses.

KUALA LUMPUR: The Amanah Saham Wawasan 2020 Bandar (ASW2020-Bandar) has been launched with an allocation of RM100mil to help the hardcore and urban poor.

The scheme, launched by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak yesterday, is aimed at benefiting 8,439 poor families who had been identified through the “eKasih” programme earlier.

Under the scheme, each family will be allocated a principal investment of RM10,000 of ASW2020-Bandar shares under the name of the head of the family. The unit trust is managed by Permodalan Nasional Bhd.

“The principal investment will remain the Government’s money but you will take home all other returns. The returns may be about RM600 and RM700 a year which may not be much but I am sure it will go a long way in improving one’s quality of life,” he said at the launch of the scheme at Tasik Titiwangsa here yesterday.

Najib said the allocation was for the life-time of a recipient and was not transferable to other family members in the event of his or her death.

In such a case, the principal investment would be offered to others in the group, he said.

He said although 8,439 families were eligible for the scheme, only 4,976 would receive it as the others had yet to be located.

“Maybe they are no longer under the hardcore poor category, have moved elsewhere or simply are not interested in the ASW2020 shares.

“Nevertheless, we will ensure that those eligible will benefit from the scheme. We are very committed to the Government’s inclusiveness approach outlined in the New Economic Model,” he said.

Najib also presented the ASW2020-Bandar account passbooks to 196 recipients.

the children ate stones without parents knowing

June 1st, 2010
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the update to yesterday’s soil eating children provides more twists and turns.

While the earlier report says the children ate soil, today’s report says they ate stone and have been doing it for some time eve after being warned by the father. The father is not unemployed, but working as a laborer. He’s 43 years old, not in the 30s. I wonder how the same newspaper publish so many discrepancies without checking first.

So, looks like its a low income family but no negligence on the parents’ side.

“It tasted like chocolate, that was why I ate them,” said Year Four I. Yogeswary who was admitted to the Sultan Abdul Halim Hospital here with her two younger sisters and a cousin for eating stones.

The girls were hospitalised after they vomited and suffered stomach pains for eating stones collected from the compound of their house in Kampung Padang Lembu, some 20km from here.

Yogeswary, 10, her sisters Nageswari, eight, and Ganggadevi, six, and their cousin N. Vikneswary, nine, were admitted to the hospital after one of them revealed their condition to Jerai MIC division chairman R. Supramaniam on Friday.

They were admitted to the hospital’s intensive care unit here but on Sunday have since have been moved to the observation ward.

Accompanying them at the hospital was their 61-year-old grandmother N. Bathumalai.

A visit to the ward yesterday showed that Yogeswary, Nageswari and Vikneswary’s condition had improved while Ganggadevi was still weak.

Yogeswary said she had been eating stones since last year, adding that it was very crunchy and tasted like chocolate.

Admitting that she was the one who had introduced the stones to the three girls, the schoolgirl from SJK (T) Kalaivani in Kampung Padang Lembu said they secretly ate the stones behind their parents’ back.

“I collected the stones and hid them in my schoolbag and would eat them in my room. One day, Nageswari saw me eating the stones and joined in while the others did so later.

“My sisters, cousin and I are never full after eating food prepared by my mother. We will only feel full after eating the stones.

“My father had caught me eating the stones a few months back and punished me but I was soon back to the habit,” she said.

Her mother V. Sarojini, 27, when met at home, said the girls were admitted to the hospital after her husband, R. Inderan, 43, searched their room and found plastic packages containing stones hidden in their schoolbags and closet.

“I had warned them numerous times about it but they denied doing it. Ganggadevi and Nageswari were admitted to the hospital for the same problem last June and in January this year.

“My husband may earn a small salary working as a labourer but we are never out of food. I am unable to visit my daughters and niece as I have two other daughters and a son to take care of at home,” she said.

Inderan said he and his wife had been branded as unfit parents by his neighbours after the media highlighted the matter, adding that the accusations were unjust as they had done their best for the children.

NST reported the following version:

Four children are in hospital after eating soil for a week, claiming they did so because they did not have enough to eat at home.

The four girls, between the ages of 6 and 9, claimed to have eaten pebbles and soil as their parents could not provide them with enough food.

The four are in the same ward at Sultan Abdul Halim Hospital, where doctors are conducting tests to determine their condition.

They have been vomiting and complaining of stomach disorder. Three of them are said to be out of danger while the fourth child is still weak.

Their plight was highlighted by Jerai MIC chairman R. Supramaniam, who will accompany State Welfare Department officers to visit the children and their parents today.

The four have been identified as sisters Yogeswary, 10, Nageswari, 7, Ganggadevi, 6, and their cousin, Vikneswary, 9.

On Friday, Yogeswary, a Year Four pupil of SJK (T) Kalaivani, was rushed to the hospital, after she admitted at a medical camp organised for poor children, that she has been regularly eating dirt and soil due to the lack of food at home.

She also said that two of her younger sisters and a cousin suffered the same fate. School authorities sent all four to the hospital.

Yogeswary’s mother, V. Sarojini, 27, however, was aghast when confronted at her home in Kampung Baru Padang Lembu in Gurun, near here, yesterday.

She claimed her daughter had been eating soil to spite her and her husband, R. Inderian. She described Yogeswary as rebellious and always full of anger.

“I found out that she had started eating dirt and soil from the front yard in June last year after my third child fell ill.

“We scolded her for the bad habit and for instigating her younger sister to follow her. We thought she would stop, but she obviously remained stubborn,” said the housewife.

Sarojini said Yogeswary remained rebellious because she and her husband would always reprimand her for misbehaving and not give in to her demands.

“How could any parent not reprimand his or her child for misbehaving or behaving strangely, like eating dirt?”

Meanwhile, Inderian, 43, said if they were bad parents, the children would have long died from starvation. “We are not rich but we try to give our children the basic needs. We even send them to school.

“I earn about RM400 a month as an odd job worker but I have managed to meet the basic needs of my wife, six children and a niece.

“We also have good neighbours who sometimes cook for us and even give us money to buy food and other items.”

Yogeswary, however, remained adamant.

At the hospital, she said her parents never provided enough food for the children. “I would swallow some small red pebbles with soil whenever there was not enough food at home.”

She admitted sharing her “strange” eating habits with her sisters and cousin.

Yogeswary is thin and appears weak. Her medical chart reveals she weighs only 16kg, about 12kg lighter for a normal child her age.

family in Sungai Petani too poor until eat soil!

May 31st, 2010
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I was shocked to read this in the Star today. While people may question the parents (and rightly so), what about the social welfare nets that failed to catch this family?

This family has five children, the last just born 10 days ago. The father not working (reason not given, but pick your choice from: illiteracy, attitude, health problem (including alcoholism), social stigma (ex-convict perhaps?), physical disability). Why end up in this situation? Both self-help and external-help not available?

Why low income families seem to have more than the average number of children? I think there have been some research on this already.

Would the parents be charged for negligence?

The neighbors probably did what they could by giving food and stuff.

Just imagine the fate of the 10 day old baby or the education of the other four children.

Four siblings who allegedly ate soil for a week to stave off hunger are undergoing treatment at the intensive care unit of a hospital here.

They had vomited and complained of stomach pain earlier.

The girls, aged seven, eight, nine and 10, were taken to the Sultan Abdul Halim Hospital after one of them revealed their condition to Jerai MIC chairman R. Supra maniam last Friday.

The matter came to light when the eldest girl was taken by her 70-year-old grandfather to a medical camp organised by the division at Kampung Padang Lembu, some 20km from here.

The girl suddenly vomited when the doctor was about to examine her.

Supramaniam said he was about to send the girl to the hospital when she told him her three younger sisters at home were also in pain.

“She told me that they had eaten soil as they were very hungry and there was not enough food for them,” he added.

Supramaniam said he visited their house and found the girls groaning in pain.

“They were weak and could barely move,” he added.

The children’s mother, who had just given birth 10 days ago, and their father were at home then.

Supramaniam said he then took the children to the hospital and they were admitted to the intensive care unit.

“I was told by a doctor who examined them that the children must undergo blood transfusion since they had eaten soil for a week.

“The girls are in stable condition but have to be warded for a week,” he said.

It is learnt that their father, who is in his 30s, was unemployed and the family relied on food donated by neighbours.

However, the amount of food was insufficient to feed the family.

Supramaniam said he would monitor the health condition of the children and assist the family.

SJKT Ladang Escot gets piped water after 50 years!

May 4th, 2010
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This is happening in the most developed state in the country.

Interesting to note how the executive chairman of a utilities company says that its to reciprocate support given by people during the by-election. So, in other words, the utilities company works not based on public need, but on whim and fancies?

Anyway, good to see the project successful within a month, and at such big cost of RM600,000.

With just 60 students, won’t be long before this school faces extinction or relocation to better populated areas.

HULU SELANGOR, May 3 — After more than 50 years depending on spring water, Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Tamil (SJK) Ladang Escot here finally received piped water today.

SJK Tamil Ladang Escot has an enrolment of 60 pupils, who are mainly children of oil palm estate workers, and 11 teaching staff.

Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor (Syabas) executive chairman Tan Sri Rozali Ismail said the utility swung into action on learning of the predicament the school was facing during the just-concluded Hulu Selangor by-election.

“This is to reciprocate the support given by the people in Barisan Nasional’s win in the by-election. As a government-linked company, we will support the government’s aspirations,” he told reporters after checking on the pipe-laying work to supply water to the school today.

He added that the job entailed a 1.5km pipeline with the overall cost of the water supply project to the school totalling RM600,000.

Also present was the newly-elected MP for the constituency, P. Kamalanathan. — Bernama

After a Cabinet Committee, we have a Taskforce

April 24th, 2010
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I’m sure readers will remember the cabinet committee set up in 2008 to solve problems among the Indian community. Well, recently, a task force was set up as well, headed by Dr Subra, the HR minister. Its known as the Special Implementation Taskforce which will be reporting to the cabinet committee. Its purpose is “to monitor and strengthen service delivery and implementation to ensure that poor and low-income Indians take part in government programmes”.
Tamil Nesan reported that the Prime Minister’s Office will monitor efforts to help the poor and low-income groups in the Indian community through a taskforce.
It said the taskforce would ensure that the groups could benefit from the Government’s efforts to help them in poverty eradication programmes, getting affordable housing and participating in educational programmes.
Dr Denison Jayasooria has been appointed secretary of the task force while Human Resources Minister Datuk Dr S. Subrama­niam, who is also a member of the Cabinet Committee on Indian affairs, would head the task force.
He said the formation of the task force proved the Government’s commitment in assisting the community.
I hope the taskforce will come out with regular reports to indicate what they have done.