Categories: News

Sarawak DCM tells Federal Govt to adopt ‘jab first, register later’ approach to speed up vaccination

Sarawak Deputy Chief Minister Tan Sri James Masing today suggested that the federal government adopts the “jab first, register later” approach currently used in rural Sarawak as a means to contain the spread of COVID-19 in the country.

He said this aggressive approach has resulted in Sarawak recording high numbers of people being vaccinated daily, especially in the rural areas.

“In fact, Sarawak need not follow the lockdown as practised in Malaya, but by being part of Malaysia, we have to follow the national instruction,” Masing said when commenting on the extension of Phase One of the nation-wide National Recovery Plan (NRP) announced yesterday.

He said the enforcement of the NRP during which some economic sectors are closed will not break the chain of COVID-19 infections in Malaysia.

Masing said the effect of the lockdown will create “economic mutants” among industries, social frustration within the community, and cause public anger.

“What the Malaysian decision-makers should push for is aggressive jabs for industrial workers using whatever vaccines that are available, so we can create big enough herd immunity our industries to function,” Masing said.

Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin announced yesterday that the first phase of the NRP would be extended as COVID-19 infection numbers have not fallen to the threshold set.

He had said that daily COVID-19 cases were still above 4,000 a day, one of the three benchmarks that must be reached before the NRP could move into the second phase.

Muhyiddin also stressed that Malaysia would not exit Phase One until all three NRP indicators — new cases below 4,000 daily, “moderate” demand on intensive care capacity, and 10 per cent of population vaccinated — have been met.

“Now they say the movement control order (MCO) is about to end. I want to say that we don’t call it MCO from now on, but we say we are in a particular phase and now we are in Phase One (of the NRP) until July, maybe the middle of the month or so,” he added. — Malay Mail

Related reading

Recent Posts

Puspakom backs officer as motorcycle trader ordered to pay RM80K over TikTok Live defamation

Puspakom Sdn Bhd (Puspakom) has reaffirmed its commitment to integrity and professional conduct following a…

18 hours ago

Huawei FusionSolar9.0 launches in Malaysia with AI-driven, grid-stabilising solar and energy storage solution

Huawei has launched its FusionSolar9.0 Smart PV & ESS solution in Malaysia, marking a shift…

19 hours ago

Hyundai Ioniq 6 N and Ioniq 5 N estimated price in Malaysia starts from RM450k

Hyundai Motor Malaysia (HMY) has officially opened the order books for its upcoming high-performance EV…

2 days ago

WCE now supports TNG eWallet PayDirect at all toll plazas

West Coast Expressway (WCE) is now PayDirect enabled and it is said to be the…

2 days ago

JomCharge x DBKL offers 50% off EV charging in Kepong this weekend

For this coming Labour Day holiday weekend, JomCharge x DBKL are offering 50% discount for…

2 days ago

Volvo offers Selekt certified used EVs from as little as RM153,000

Volvo Car Malaysia has released a limited batch of 100 Volvo Selekt Certified Used Cars…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.