
Deputy Chief Minister II James Jemut Masing, who is also Sarawak infrastructure development and ports minister, said today the state Public Works Department (JKR) had been instructed to start erecting the guard rails immediately.
“With the strong guard rails, nothing can fall off (at the ferry boarding and alighting point).
“This will be with immediate effect.
“It must be understood that the vehicle fell from the ferry landing point… not from the ferry (as some people had thought),” he told reporters after visiting the Triso Ferry Point.
A four-month-old baby was among nine people who died after the 4WD vehicle they were in went out of control and plunged into the river at the ferry point at 3pm.
The victims were identified as the driver of the vehicle, Ronany Ting, 33; Siti Aisha Abdullah, 36; Nor Shuhada Mohamad, 16; Khairunnisa Muhamad, 14; Alvin Phang, 12; Wallace Phang and Mohd Aiman Mohd Hamdan, both seven; Muhd Mustaqim Mohd Hamdan, five; and the infant, Mohd Ahmad Mohd Hamdan.
Masing said the tragedy served as a grim reminder of the need to strictly follow the SOPs when using such ferry facilities.
According to the SOPs, all car occupants, except the driver, must disembark from their vehicle before it is driven through the landing ramp into the ferry, and only board the vehicle after it had exited the ferry at the other point of landing, he said.
“We have to enforce these SOPs that were introduced quite some time ago,” he said, adding that all users should follow the ferry guards’ instructions at all times.
According to him, the state government had allocated RM3 billion to build bridges across rivers that now require ferries for crossing in its Second Trunk Road project linking all the coastal areas in the state.
“The state government had to fund it as the previous Pakatan Harapan federal government cancelled all these bridge projects.
The Batang Lupar bridge costs about RM848 million (to replace the Triso ferry service). We are building it now,” he said.
Masing said the Sarawak government was willing to use its own funds to build these bridges because it realised that infrastructure was important for the people.
“This bridge project is very important for us and we decided to use our own funds to make sure that the bridges are completed by 2025 or 2026,” he said.
Masing said investigations so far showed the tragedy was an accident. On behalf of the state government, he extended his condolences to the families of the victims.
He also thanked members of the public who jumped into the river to try to save the victims.
“That showed that in Sarawak we care for each other. They tried their best to do it (save the victims),” he added.