gunsirit News Agency
The news that you are about to read are totally lies, absolute fabrication, nothing but craps!
KENINGAU, Malaysia (GN)--The Ministry of Education has announced recently that it will be relocating the Keningau Teachers Institute to a new site in 2015. The move to reposition the institute is due to the growing numbers of students currently enrolled in the four teachers’ training institutes in the state. An amount of RM300 million has been allocated for this purpose. The first to be relocated will be the Keningau Teachers Training Institute which is scheduled to move in 2012. They have been given a time frame of 1 year to move its students and staffs to the new location.
The construction of the new campus would not be carried out in the state of Sabah, said the new director of the Teacher Training Division, Datuk Dr. Joseph Yabai. “The very high price of building materials, expensive land reclamation cost, labour intensive difficulty in the state had forced the government to relocate the IPGKKS to a new site in Uganda, Africa,” he added. “The Ugandan government has promised us a long stretch of land – amounting to about 3000 hectares in diameter. The aforesaid land is to be leased by the government for at least a hundred years,” he stressed.
Non-academic staffs will be given the choice of reassigning to the new location and enjoy a 200% salary increase plus benefits or to continue serving in the state without any privilege. Academic staffs were encouraged to transfer too. Teaching staffs that are willing to be relocated however will not be paid the additional 200% pay increase as the non-academic staff enjoys. Since most lecturers were overpaid, there will a 50% pay cut if they decide to join the new campus in Africa. Moreover, the cost of living in Uganda is fairly cheap, approximately RM5.52 a day inclusive of food, accommodation and transportation. Academic staffers who refuse to migrate would still be allowed to serve in the thousand schools and kindergartens throughout the state.
The Ugandan High Commissioner to Malaysia, Dr. Gordian Pius will be signing a memorandum of understanding on behalf of his home country and the Malaysian government in June 2011. At least 1000 academicians from the African Union will be employed in the new 3000-hectares campus. [gunsirit News Agency]KOTA KINABALU, Malaysia (GN) -- The two missing RMAF Northrop F-5E jet engines which initially reported as stolen and sold on the black market by military officers to a South American company were actually found in a scrap-metal junkyard here in Kota Kinabalu. These engines have never reached their destinations as they apparently fell from the plane and crashed-landed into a humble scrap-metal junk yard in Luyang, Kota Kinabalu.
The owner of the scrap-metal junkyard who wanted to be identified only as Ah Chong asserted that there was a loud bang outside his home and when he eventually reached the junkyard, a large crater the size of football field is visible just in front of him. The engines themselves were undamaged and were still intact. Chong sold one of the engines to a Palm Oil Plantation proprietor, Patrick J. Jair who bought the engine as a replacement for his Toyota 1HD-FTE 4.2-litre six-cylinder 24-valve turbodiesel EFI engine which has been damaged and unrepairable.
Chong said that after the massive Northrop F-5E engine was installed in the Land Cruiser, the man paid him at the sum of RM27.37 and left. An eyewitness said that when the owner started the engine, there was an initial deafening bang, followed by smoke and fires. The truck sped off like a rocket into the blue sky and disappeared. That was the last time they saw the wealthy Oil Palm proprietor.
Other ingredients added to the soup are spinach, tofu, onions, and 100 types of hot peppers, brinjals, eggs, frogs, crocodile tears, tortoise and durians. The cost of the soup is about RM350 per serving and only rich people and dignitaries will be able to afford such a luxury. [gunsirit News Agency]Photos courtesy of:
KENINGAU, Malaysia (GN)--The Ministry of Education has announced recently that it will be relocating the Keningau Teachers Institute to a new site in 2015. The move to reposition the institute is due to the growing numbers of students currently enrolled in the four teachers’ training institutes in the state. An amount of RM300 million has been allocated for this purpose. The first to be relocated will be the Keningau Teachers Training Institute which is scheduled to move in 2012. They have been given a time frame of 1 year to move its students and staffs to the new location.
The new 3000-hectare campus
The construction of the new campus would not be carried out in the state of Sabah, said the new director of the Teacher Training Division, Datuk Dr. Joseph Yabai. “The very high price of building materials, expensive land reclamation cost, labour intensive difficulty in the state had forced the government to relocate the IPGKKS to a new site in Uganda, Africa,” he added. “The Ugandan government has promised us a long stretch of land – amounting to about 3000 hectares in diameter. The aforesaid land is to be leased by the government for at least a hundred years,” he stressed.
Datuk Dr. Joseph Yabai, the new Director of the Teachers Training Division
Non-academic staffs will be given the choice of reassigning to the new location and enjoy a 200% salary increase plus benefits or to continue serving in the state without any privilege. Academic staffs were encouraged to transfer too. Teaching staffs that are willing to be relocated however will not be paid the additional 200% pay increase as the non-academic staff enjoys. Since most lecturers were overpaid, there will a 50% pay cut if they decide to join the new campus in Africa. Moreover, the cost of living in Uganda is fairly cheap, approximately RM5.52 a day inclusive of food, accommodation and transportation. Academic staffers who refuse to migrate would still be allowed to serve in the thousand schools and kindergartens throughout the state.
Dr. Godian Pius, The Ugandan High Commisioner to Malaysia
The Ugandan High Commissioner to Malaysia, Dr. Gordian Pius will be signing a memorandum of understanding on behalf of his home country and the Malaysian government in June 2011. At least 1000 academicians from the African Union will be employed in the new 3000-hectares campus. [gunsirit News Agency]KOTA KINABALU, Malaysia (GN) -- The two missing RMAF Northrop F-5E jet engines which initially reported as stolen and sold on the black market by military officers to a South American company were actually found in a scrap-metal junkyard here in Kota Kinabalu. These engines have never reached their destinations as they apparently fell from the plane and crashed-landed into a humble scrap-metal junk yard in Luyang, Kota Kinabalu.
The massive Northrop F-5E jet engines
The owner of the scrap-metal junkyard who wanted to be identified only as Ah Chong asserted that there was a loud bang outside his home and when he eventually reached the junkyard, a large crater the size of football field is visible just in front of him. The engines themselves were undamaged and were still intact. Chong sold one of the engines to a Palm Oil Plantation proprietor, Patrick J. Jair who bought the engine as a replacement for his Toyota 1HD-FTE 4.2-litre six-cylinder 24-valve turbodiesel EFI engine which has been damaged and unrepairable.
The Toyota 1HD-FTE 4.2-litre truck
Chong said that after the massive Northrop F-5E engine was installed in the Land Cruiser, the man paid him at the sum of RM27.37 and left. An eyewitness said that when the owner started the engine, there was an initial deafening bang, followed by smoke and fires. The truck sped off like a rocket into the blue sky and disappeared. That was the last time they saw the wealthy Oil Palm proprietor.
The junkyard where the engines landed
A giant wok, similar to the one used by Leong is his restaurant
Other ingredients added to the soup are spinach, tofu, onions, and 100 types of hot peppers, brinjals, eggs, frogs, crocodile tears, tortoise and durians. The cost of the soup is about RM350 per serving and only rich people and dignitaries will be able to afford such a luxury. [gunsirit News Agency]Photos courtesy of:
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