Concrete plan to tackle infra woes, says DCM

LocalPolitics
22 Aug 2025 • 12:00 AM MYT
Daily Express
Daily Express

Daily Express Online (Malaysia) is Sabah's top-ranked & most viewed English news site. It is also Sabah's leading & most circulated daily English newspaper.

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Kota Kinabalu: The Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) government has a concrete plan to tackle basic infrastructure woes, as opposed to the “empty promises” made by some parties ahead of the Sabah election, said Deputy Chief Minister III Datuk Seri Shahelmey Yahya.

He said while every party was entitled to pledge solutions to the people’s woes, only long-term planning could deliver real results.

“If anyone promises that these problems can be fixed immediately once they gain power, those are nothing more than empty promises.

“What is needed is long-term planning. GRS already has a comprehensive plan in place, it just needs to be implemented according to schedule,” said Shahelmey, who is also State Works Minister.

Last week, Warisan President Datuk Seri Shafie Apdal told FMT that his party’s priority, if it won the Sabah election, would be to improve water, electricity and road infrastructure.

The former Chief Minister acknowledged that these issues were not resolved during his 26-month administration from May 2018 to September 2020, but cited constraints brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Giving the example of Sabah’s water supply issues, Shahelmey said the Warisan government at the time decided to halt maintenance works for water treatment plants in the name of cost-cutting.

“But maintenance costs are unavoidable. Operations that previously ran smoothly deteriorated because of a lack of proper planning, including maintenance and equipment replacement. This undermined production and efficiency at water plants. The GRS government has since appointed maintenance contractors, but such problems cannot be solved overnight – it takes time,” Shahelmey said.

He expressed hope that the implementation of GRS’s plans could continue with a fresh mandate from the people in the coming state election, supported by larger allocations, particularly from Sabah’s push for 40pc of the state tax revenues.