PARLIAMENT | The decision to postpone the reopening of Malaysia's international borders from March 1 to April 1 was made out of fear that the Johor state election could have caused a spike in the number of new Covid-19 cases, said Deputy Health Minister Dr Noor Azmi Ghazali.
In answering a question from Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman (Muda-Muar), the Bersatu minister also slammed "certain quarters" that wanted to have an election when the country is still struggling with a pandemic.
"The decision to postpone (border reopening) for about a month was based on several matters that were brought up by the health minister for discussion.
"If I remember correctly because the Johor state election was around the corner then, we were worried. Because the decision we had to make was a major one.
"To reopen the borders requires focus on more important matters so that the rakyat and our country is safe.”
Syed Saddiq had requested the Health Ministry to provide a scientific explanation to the Parliament why Putrajaya decided to postpone the reopening of borders just a month away from March 1 as what had been proposed by the National Recovery Council.
Stopping voters
The Muar MP demanded an explanation saying many speculated the postponement was aimed at stopping hundreds of thousands of voters from returning to cast their votes in the Johor state election.
The state election was triggered when the then Johor menteri besar Hasni Mohamad requested for dissolution of the state legislative assembly in February, an action that Umno claimed was necessary to bring back political stability in Johor.
It saw Umno-led BN getting a landslide victory when it gained a supermajority, bagging 40 out of 56 state seats.
According to DAP MP Teo Nie Ching in January, there are around 400,000 Malaysians currently working in Singapore, many likely to be Johoreans. - Mkini
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.