logo
Speaker: Sabah State Assembly to dissolve automatically on Nov 11

Speaker: Sabah State Assembly to dissolve automatically on Nov 11

Borneo Post2 days ago
Datuk Seri Kadzim M Yahya
KOTA KINABALU (July 6): The 16th Sabah State Legislative Assembly will be automatically dissolved on Nov 11 this year if it is not dissolved earlier, said Speaker Datuk Seri Kadzim M Yahya.
He said the five-year term of the assembly is calculated from the date of the first sitting of the 16th Sabah State Assembly, which was on November 12, 2020, making Nov 11 this year the end of the term.
He noted that there is some public misunderstanding regarding the date the assembly will automatically dissolve, with some assuming the term began on the polling day of the 16th Sabah State Election on September 26, 2020, or on Sept 22 for early voting.
'There are outsiders who misunderstand the dissolution date. Some count from polling day, others think it starts from the date the elected representatives were sworn in (October 9, 2020).
'(In fact) it (the five-year term of the Sabah assembly) is not counted from the polling day, the announcement of the election results, or the swearing-in of assemblymen. It is counted from the date of the first sitting of the new legislative term,' he told Bernama.
Kadzim said if the assembly dissolves automatically on Nov 11, Sabah Yang Dipertua Negeri Tun Musa Aman and the Election Commission (EC) would be formally notified of the matter.
'An election for the state must then be held within 60 days from the date of dissolution,' he added.
Commenting on the upcoming Sabah State Assembly sitting scheduled for two days starting tomorrow, he said four bills will be tabled, covering supplementary supply, state sales tax, forestry, and climate change and carbon governance.
'We normally have at least three sittings a year, so (this time) there's more attention because if the State Assembly dissolves after this, it will be the final sitting of the term. If not, it will be the third sitting this year. Nothing out of the ordinary this time, just a regular sitting,' he said.
Kadzim also said that broadcasting the Sabah assembly sitting live on social media, including YouTube, enables the public to follow debates, especially those concerning state policies, without needing to attend in person.
'I think it's better for people to watch it live because our focus is solely on the debates… there are many benefits to live broadcasts,' he said.
He added that the live telecast also encourages assemblymen to maintain decorum and proper conduct during proceedings, and ensures quality debates as they are aware they are being observed by the public.
'If I were an assemblyman, I'd also be more disciplined, knowing that I'm being followed live by the public. The good thing is, the coverage will be wider since not everyone can come to the assembly,' he said.
He stressed that the Sabah State Assembly building is gazetted as a security zone, and therefore, certain restrictions must be adhered to in the surrounding area to avoid it becoming an uncomfortable environment for official matters.
'It's not that we're stopping people from coming, but we don't want the assembly to feel like a convention centre with crowds swarming around. Since the area is already gazetted as a security zone, there are limits – please observe them,' he said.
When asked about the use of artificial intelligence (AI), Kadzim said they have not yet been able to fully utilise the technology due to some limitations, especially regarding language translation.
'If one day AI can be used for legislative sittings, we could use it to assist in our work, including producing the Hansard and so forth,' he said. dissolution election kadzim m yahya lead state assembly
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sabah's interim payments hit RM600m in 2024
Sabah's interim payments hit RM600m in 2024

The Sun

time14 hours ago

  • The Sun

Sabah's interim payments hit RM600m in 2024

KOTA KINABALU: The strengthened partnership between Sabah's state leadership and the federal government has resulted in a significant increase in interim payments under Article 112D of the Federal Constitution. Kadamaian assemblyman Datuk Ewon Benedick highlighted the growth from RM26 million in previous years to RM125.6 million in 2022, RM306 million in 2023, and RM600 million this year. Ewon, who is also the Penampang MP, credited Chief Minister Datuk Seri Hajiji Noor for securing higher revenue collection, ensuring Sabah's rights and development needs are met. He made these remarks during the debate on the Supplementary Supply Bill 2025 at the Sabah State Assembly. The bill, involving RM1.186 billion, marks the highest allocation in the state assembly's history. Combined with the RM6.421 billion budget approved last November, Sabah's total budget for 2025 stands at RM7.607 billion. Ewon, serving as Minister of Entrepreneur Development and Cooperatives, emphasised the budget's focus on operational and development expenditures. Key allocations include RM11 million for scholarships and student aid, with 35 scholarships awarded to Sabahans at Universiti Keusahawanan Koperasi Malaysia (UKKM). Additionally, RM150 million is set aside for road and bridge maintenance. He expressed optimism that the Kadamaian constituency and Penampang parliamentary area would benefit from the supplementary budget's implementation. – Bernama

Australia wants to bar children from social media. Can it succeed?
Australia wants to bar children from social media. Can it succeed?

The Star

time17 hours ago

  • The Star

Australia wants to bar children from social media. Can it succeed?

SYDNEY: Australia has long been one of the most proactive countries in the world in trying to police the Internet. It has clashed with Elon Musk over violent videos and child exploitation on social platform X, forced Google and Facebook to pay for news, and tried to filter out large swaths of online content. Its latest aim may be the most herculean yet. By December, the country wants to remove more than one million young teens from social media, under a groundbreaking law that sets a minimum age of 16 to use the platforms. But with fewer than six months before the new regulation goes into effect, much about its implementation remains unclear or undecided. YouTube, which young teens in Australia report using more than any other service, may or may not be covered by the law. Authorities have yet to lay out the parameters of what social media companies need to do to comply, and what would constitute a violation, which could lead to fines of A$30mil (RM82.69mil) or more. The government has studied how to verify users' ages but has not released the full results of an extensive trial. 'We may be building the plane a little bit as we're flying it,' Julie Inman Grant, the commissioner of online safety who is tasked with enforcing the law, said in a nationally televised address last month. 'I'm very confident we can get there.' The law could have far-reaching influence if Australia can succeed in getting substantial numbers of teens off social media. Several governments around the world and in various US states are in the process of or planning to impose their own rules on social media for young people, as alarm over the platforms' mental health effects and addictive nature has reached a fever pitch. Passed late last year, the Australian law was billed as one of the first nationwide endeavors aimed at getting children off social media. In May, New Zealand introduced legislation closely modeled on the Australian one, which puts the onus of verifying users' ages on the social media platforms. In June, President Emmanuel Macron of France said he wanted to bar children under 15 from social media within months. The questions that remain unsettled in Australia should be a sign to other countries of the thorny path ahead – starting with how to define social media. In Australia, authorities had initially planned to exempt YouTube from the law. But the online safety agency last month advised that it should not be excluded, noting that it was the most popular platform – used by three-quarters of 10- to 15-year-olds – and had features that could lead to excessive use, like infinite scroll and short-form videos. YouTube has strongly objected to the recommendation, saying that it was a video streaming platform rather than a social media service, and that more than four out of five teachers use its videos in the classroom. In an interview, Inman Grant said her office began consultations last week with tech companies to set expectations on what 'reasonable steps' they need to take to comply with the law. The companies will have to demonstrate, to her satisfaction, that they are doing enough to identify underage users and remove their accounts. They will also have to provide ways that parents or teachers can flag accounts belonging to people under 16; show that they are countering attempts at circumvention, such as through a VPN; and prove that they are tracking the efficacy of their methods, she said. Even if not every underage account is immediately purged from all platforms, she said, the law being in place will lead to change in the right direction. 'This is one of the biggest questions of our time, the intersection of social media and children's mental health,' Inman Grant said. Some tech company officials who are working on carrying out the law said that more than halfway through the year, they were still waiting on the government to define the 'yardstick' by which they would be evaluated. Meta, for its part, has already invested in developing technologies to understand users' age and created separate teen accounts with safeguards, Joanna Stevens, a spokesperson for the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, said in a statement. Critics of the law have pointed out that it has numerous blind spots. For instance, it does not address the content that children are able to access without being logged into an account; it only specifies that underage users should be prevented from having accounts. Axel Bruns, a professor of communications and media at the Queensland University of Technology, said that in requiring tech companies to find a way to keep children out through unspecified means, rather than requiring them to better moderate harmful content, the government was choosing to 'go down the sledgehammer way,' he said. 'It's a bit like saying we want to have this magical technology – if you don't come up with it, then it's your fault,' he said. 'It's law as wishful thinking, essentially.' – ©2025 The New York Times Company This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Sabah-Kalimantan road project begins field work, state assembly told
Sabah-Kalimantan road project begins field work, state assembly told

The Sun

time20 hours ago

  • The Sun

Sabah-Kalimantan road project begins field work, state assembly told

KOTA KINABALU: Field work for the construction of a road linking Sabah and Kalimantan, Indonesia, has commenced, the Sabah State Assembly was informed. Deputy Chief Minister III Datuk Shahelmey Yahya, who is also the state Minister of Works, confirmed that land surveying, utility mapping, and land investigations are currently underway. The project involves a new road alignment from Kalabakan, Sabah, to the Malaysia-Indonesia border at Simanggaris, covering 28 kilometres. A spur road connecting Kampung Serudong Laut, spanning 20 kilometres, is also part of the plan. Shahelmey stated that the federal government, through the Ministry of Works, has approved the preliminary study and design under Rolling Plan 3 of the 12th Malaysia Plan. Another proposed alignment runs from Pekan Pagalungan in Sabah to Bantul Town in Kalimantan. This project, funded by the Ministry of Rural and Regional Development, is currently in the procurement phase. Responding to queries about additional road alignments from Sindumin and Long Pasia to the Indonesian border, Shahelmey noted that these proposals would be evaluated based on necessity. 'The proposed alignment extends deeper into Kalimantan than the current project. We may explore more suitable routes, such as those connecting to Sarawak,' he said. - BERNAMApix

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store