THE ITCC (International Technology & Commercial Centre) is the only shopping complex in the country now where you may stumble across signage in Kadazan, besides English and Bahasa Malaysia.
KOTA KINABALU: Learning a native tongue can be fun and easy – this is the message a teacher here is trying to convey to potential students in her effort to preserve the Kadazan language.
Published on: Sunday, May 16, 2021
By: Lorena Binisol
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The Chuah and Bajagap families in a group photo with the newly weds clad in their traditional attires.
IT was a fusion of two different cultures when a young couple decided to make their “I Do’s” official and witnessed by only the closest relatives from both sides during the Covid-19 pandemic.
It was made more complicated when it involved two parties from east and the other, from west of Malaysia.
However, everything went well with complete compliance of the standard operating procedures (SOPs).
Kampung boy, Dr Jude Bajagap, 29, from Kg Kohizan, Penampang met his sweetheart, Dr Carmen Chuah, a city girl from Penang, while studying in the same university.