
Malaysia's Dayaks mark rice harvest end with colourful parade
Marchers gathered from early Saturday under the blistering tropical sun, many of them travelling long distances by bus to walk in the parade along the banks of the Sarawak River.
"This gathering is something that is very important to me," said Joel Zacchaeus Anak Ebi, sporting the traditional Iban headgear worn by one of Borneo's best-known tribes.
People "must know and realise that Sarawak has traditions and cultures that must be preserved," he told AFP ahead of the march, which was also attended by Sarawak Premier Abang Johari Tun Openg.
"A day like this brings our people together, especially the younger people, who can easily lose touch with their roots when they move away from Sarawak," said Dayak village elder Ngindang Rambo, 61.
Watching the parade, Masha Timosha, 34, a tour guide from Russia, said she was amazed by the costumes and atmosphere.
"This is just very impressive. I even have my own Sarawakian costume but I didn't put it on," she told AFP.
Malaysia's Dayak people are mainly riverine and hill-dwelling, made up of dozens of ethnic groups, each with their own distinct dialect, customs, laws and practices.
Dayak communities however have become increasingly under threat from encroaching palm oil forestry and industrial logging, human rights groups and Indigenous groups have said.
Many Indigenous communities in Sarawak face challenges in accessing basic services, Human Rights Watch said in a statement last month, including access to running water, electricity and land titles.
Local groups and international observers have also called on the government to "urgently legislate Indigenous customs and traditions through which Indigenous people have acquired rights to their lands, territories and resources," the Sarawak Dayak Iban Association (Sadia) said last year.
Rainforest-clad Borneo is the world's third-largest island and is shared between Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 days ago
- France 24
Switzerland comes to the aid of Red Cross museum
The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum has been a national institution in Switzerland for nearly four decades, playing a key role in promoting and explaining international humanitarian law and principles in the birthplace of the Geneva Conventions. But the museum hierarchy was shocked to learn last September that its fate was, apparently inadvertently, under threat from a government savings drive. Since 1991, the private museum has received an annual subsidy from the Swiss foreign ministry of 1.1 million francs ($1.4 million), accounting for about a quarter of its overall budget. But cost-cutting measures transferred responsibility for subsidising the museum to the culture ministry. However, the culture ministry requires museums seeking its funding to take part in a competition -- facing off against hundreds of other museums. On Tuesday, the culture ministry announced it would give the museum 170,000 francs a year, while the Geneva canton, and, once more, the foreign ministry, have each decided to give 400,000 francs annually. "Although this total amount of 970,000 francs remains lower than the government support we currently receive (1,072,900 francs), it allows the museum to operate," museum spokeswoman Alice Baronnet told AFP. This agreed solution "for the period 2027 to 2030 is a relief", she noted, adding that while the museum welcomed this step, "further efforts will be needed to bridge the gap". The museum, built adjacent to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) headquarters, opened in 1988. It welcomes around 120,000 people annually, ranging from elementary school classes to visiting dignitaries. It keeps a collection of around 30,000 objects, including the first Nobel Peace Prize medal, given in 1901 to Red Cross founder Henry Dunant, an award shared with the French pacifist Frederic Passy. It also houses the archives of the ICRC's International Prisoners of War Agency -- established to restore contact between people separated during World War I -- which have been listed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis said he was pleased a solution had been found to "guarantee the future" of the museum. It "embodies the humanitarian tradition" of Geneva and "recalls the importance of international humanitarian law", he said on X.


France 24
3 days ago
- France 24
'Every day I see land disappear': Suriname's battle to keep sea at bay
For years, endangered leatherbacks and green turtles have emerged onto Braamspunt beach to lay their eggs. But the land spit at the tip of the Suriname river estuary is rapidly vanishing as erosion, caused by rising sea levels linked to climate change, gobbles up entire swathes of Paramaribo's coastline. "Maybe we'll get one more season out of this," Kiran Soekhoe Balrampersad, a guide who accompanied a group of tourists on a recent expedition to see the nesting turtles, told AFP. "But after that there'll no longer be a beach," he added dolefully. Suriname, South America's smallest country, is one of the most vulnerable in the world to rising sea levels. Nearly seven out of ten people in the former Dutch colony of 600,000 inhabitants live in low-lying coastal areas, according to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. "Every day I see a piece of my land disappear," said Gandat Sheinderpesad, a 56-year-old farmer who has lost 95 percent of his smallholding to the sea. Local authorities have for years been trying to find a way to hold back the tide. "Some areas are not problematic because we have 5, 10, even 20 kilometers (3, 6 or 12 miles) of mangrove" acting as a buffer between the waves and the shore, Minister of Public Works Riad Nurmohamed told AFP. But near Paramaribo, "there is just one kilometer so it's a very vulnerable zone," he added. In 2020, a program to restore the capital's mangroves was launched. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres sought to add VIP power to the initiative in 2022 by wading into the mud to personally plant seedlings. But five years later, Sienwnath Naqal, the climate change and water management expert who led the project, surveys a scene of desolation. The sea is now lapping at the edge of a road and the wooden stakes to which he had attached hundreds of samplings are largely bare. High seas carried away the substrate sediment, leaving the roots exposed. "Over the last two to three years the water forcefully penetrated the mangroves, which were destroyed," Nurmohamed said. The dredging of sand at the entrance to Paramaribo estuary to facilitate the passage of boats headed upriver to the port also contributed to the erosion, said Naqal. But like the Amazon rainforest in neighboring Brazil, the destruction was also deliberate in places, with farmers uprooting mangroves to make way for crops. 'No time to waste' With the water lapping at the feet of Paramaribo's 240,000 people, Suriname has changed tack and set about building a dyke. For Sheinderpesad, the levee represents his last chance of remaining on his land. "I have nowhere else to go. When we have the dyke, I will be safer, although I'm not sure for how long," he said. The 4.5 kilometer-long barrier will cost $11 million, which the government has vowed to fund from state coffers. "If you go see donors it takes years before you can start to built. We have no time to waste, we'll be flooded," Nurmohamed explained. But plugging one hole in the country's maritime defenses will not suffice to keep the mighty Atlantic at bay. The government wants to build up the entire network of dykes that dot the country's 380-kilometer coastline. It's just not sure where to find the money. "It's a colossal investment," Nurmohamed said. The country's newly discovered offshore oil deposits may provide the answer. Last year, French group TotalEnergies announced a $10.5 billion project to exploit an oil field off Suriname's coast with an estimated capacity of producing 220,000 barrels per day.


France 24
6 days ago
- France 24
'We must help them': Morocco students get peers back in school
"We must help them come back," said Rifai, who goes to middle school in Tiflet, a town east of the capital Rabat, and has already helped several of his friends back to school as part of a national youth-led effort. To tackle the problem, which educators and officials warn exacerbates social inequalities and drives poverty, Moroccan authorities offer dropouts a chance back in with support from fellow students. One of Rifai's classmates, Doha El Ghazouli, who is also 15, said that together they had helped several friends return to school "before they abandoned their future". Huda Enebcha, 16, told AFP how she and her friend Ghazouli managed to convince a neighbour to resume her studies. "We helped her review the most difficult subjects, and we showed her videos of some school activities", said Enebcha. "She finally agreed after a lot of effort." To ease the transition back into the education system, the "second chance school" scheme offers some teenagers vocational training alongside remedial classes, with an emphasis on giving former dropouts agency and choice. Hssain Oujour, who leads the national programme, said 70 percent of the teenagers enrolled in it have taken up vocational training that could help them enter the labour force, with another 20 percent returning to the traditional school system. Across Morocco, a country of 37 million people, classrooms are often overcrowded, and the public education system is generally viewed as inferior to private institutions, which charge fees that can be prohibitive for many families. 'Lend a hand' Around 250 million children worldwide lack basic literacy skills, and in Morocco, nearly one in four inhabitants -- around nine million people -- are illiterate, according to the UN children's agency UNICEF. Dropout rates tend to be higher in rural and impoverished areas, said Said Tamouh, the principal of the Jawhara School in Tiflet that the students interviewed by AFP attend. An NGO-run "second chance school" nearby has some 110 students, who can sign up for art classes, hairdressing training or classical Arabic language courses. Sanae Sami, 17, who took up a make-up class, said she was "truly" given another shot at pursuing education. "When you leave school, there's nothing for you," she said. "That's why I decided to come back, especially thanks to the teachers at this centre." Hafida El Fakir, who heads the Salam association which runs the school, said that "support and guidance" were key in helping students "succeed and go far". Amine Othmane, a student who had re-entered the system last year with encouragement from his friends, is now helping others. To convince dropouts, he said, "they first have to regret leaving and want to return". Back in school, 18-year-old Aya Benzaki now hopes to achieve her dream of graduating with a diploma, and Jihane Errafii, 17, said she was grateful for the friends who had supported her journey. "I just needed someone to lend me a hand." © 2025 AFP