BERA, June 10 — Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob, said that education for the Orang Asli community was one of the government’s main focuses, particularly finding solutions to the students dropping out of secondary school issue.

Describing education as a path for them to change the fate of their family, he said that the government had so far provided various initiatives to further facilitate access to education for Orang Asli children at all levels of education.

This, he said, included establishing kindergartens and primary schools located close to the Orang Asli settlements, such that now the issue of primary school dropouts was almost non-existent.

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“Going to secondary school is a big problem because no secondary school can be built near the Orang Asli settlements due to fewer residents. However, we send the children to secondary schools which are equipped with a hostel.

“The government is looking for a formula to overcome this problem because the government does not want anyone’s children, neither Orang Asli nor other ethnicities, to be left behind in terms of education,” he said at a press conference, after officiating the Peninsular Malaysia Orang Asli Association (POASM) annual general meeting here, today.

Ismail Sabri said that the government also provided the children from the community special access to Mara Science Junior College (MRSM) and public institutes of higher learning, besides providing full scholarships to further their studies abroad.

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In another development, Ismail Sabri said that the government will increase the number of internet centres in Orang Asli settlements, in collaboration with the Ministry of Communications and Multimedia.

“Through these centres the Orang Asli community can learn to sell products online, thus ensuring that their children are not left behind in the world of education which now uses the internet,” he said.

On the issue of gazetting the Orang Asli settlements’ land, the prime minister said that a total of 216 settlements had been gazetted thus far; 427 more were in the application stage and 117 had yet to submit their applications.

He said the issue would be raised in the next meeting with Menteri Besar, as the land was under the purview of the state government. In addition, the Orang Asli Welfare Department would be asked to go down to the field to meet chiefs of villages that had not yet applied.

“We want to solve the gazetting issue to avoid overlap, and if there is a proposal to develop the said land. The government’s focus is also to develop infrastructure in the village areas that have been gazetted.

“We also hope that Tok Batin (village chiefs) can advise their community not to just move out or open a new village where there is no application (for gazetting), which makes it difficult for us to provide appropriate assistance,” he said.

At the event, the Prime Minister also announced an allocation of RM200,000 to POASM to help them implement the association’s activities. — Bernama