Precarious life for unwelcome guests thesundaily.my - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thesundaily.my Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
20 May 2021 / 09:01 H. Pix for representational purpose only. -Bernama
KUALA LUMPUR: Abdullah Abbass, 25, wants to get the Covid-19 vaccine once it is available to everyone in Malaysia. But one thought is holding the Rohingya refugee back.
“I’m not afraid of the vaccine. I’m afraid I will be deported if I get it because I cannot go back to Myanmar,” he told Bernama through an interpreter.
On the other side of the Klang Valley at an old folks’ home, Jenny (not her real name), is the opposite.
The 36-year old undocumented worker from the Philippines does not want to take the vaccine but will probably have to as a condition of her employment.
Migrants must overcome COVID-19 vaccination fears harakahdaily.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from harakahdaily.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SunStar Crisis or not: Cash management services help business thrive during pandemic
BDO. Alex Ong, who owns Transorient Container Terminal Services (TCTS), said BDO’s cash management services allowed his company to continue its operations despite quarantines. (Contributed photo)
BDO. Alex Ong, who owns Transorient Container Terminal Services (TCTS), said BDO’s cash management services allowed his company to continue its operations despite quarantines. (Contributed photo)
BDO. Alex Ong, who owns Transorient Container Terminal Services (TCTS), said BDO’s cash management services allowed his company to continue its operations despite quarantines. (Contributed photo)
+ January 11, 2021 SMALL and medium enterprises (SMEs) serve as the lifeblood of the economy. Thus, support for these enterprises is essential to keep the economy going.
Published on: Sunday, January 03, 2021
By: Kan Yaw Chong
Text Size:
New Sabah Times printing press-cum-editorial office.
IT NEVER crossed my mind to write this Special Report in the Daily Express. Last week, Editor-in-Chief, James Sarda, approached me and said: “Can you write something on Sabah Times – since you once worked there for many years?”
But obviously, what triggered this unusual story idea had to be a profoundly sad end of Sabah Times – Sabah’s first English daily closing for good on Dec 31, 2020 – 66 years after it was first founded by the late Tan Sri Yeh Pao Tzu who was also the founder of Daily Express in 1963.