Saturday, August 06, 2011

Walk on the wild side of Sabah


Exploring the natural wonders and rare wildlife of Sabah’s southeast is a must for any adventure traveller.

AT first glance, one finds it hard to believe that Sandakan was once the capital of British North Borneo (now Sabah).

A ramshackle jumble of rusting corrugated-iron huts overlooking the Sulu Sea, this gateway town of some 350,000 people is right now in the throes of redevelopment. Its formal declaration as a city in 2008 was the first move in a drive to put Sandakan firmly back on the South-East Asian map.

Long before the arrival of the British, Sandakan was a trading port of the Islamic Sultanate of Sulu, based in the south of the Philippines. Then, after more than 90% of Sandakan’s buildings were razed by the Japanese in the last years of World War II, the Brits moved the capital to Jesselton (now Kota Kinabalu), on the north-east coast of Sabah.

Sandakan was rebuilt – more or less – and was then left to rot in the steamy equatorial heat for the next 50 years or so.

It is tourism that has revived Sandakan. To Australian visitors, the major place of interest is the Sandakan Memorial Park, commemorating the infamous Sandakan-Ranau Death March of World War II. I found a visit to the Park to be full of poignant moments. The very simplicity of the park, with its chapel and memorial set amongst gardens studded with lotus ponds, brings home the brutality and hardships of the march with stark immediacy.

On the 250km march, around 4,000 Malays and Indonesians and over 2,000 Australian and British prisoners-of-war died – and amongst the Allied troops, only six Australians lived to recount the horrors of the experience.

But Sandakan is not just sad memories. Near the Memorial Park, the Sepilok Orang Utan Rehabilitation Sanctuary is about hope. At the sanctuary, orphaned orang utans are cared for, nurtured and taught survival skills, before being released into the wild. Maybe as a result of this constant human contact, they are disarmingly friendly towards visitors.

Over 300 baby and juvenile orang utans are in residence at Sepilok at any one time, spread out over some 4,300ha. At feeding times, large numbers of them converge at the feeding station – a series of raised tree-platforms connected by rope swings. At the time of my visit, many of the monkeys appeared to be mocking us spectators – and given our voyeuristic demeanour, maybe they had reason to do so.

In Sandakan town, public spaces are undergoing a much-needed, major clean-up. A new fish market graces the waterfront, selling the finest produce of the Sulu Sea – super-fresh tuna, red snapper, garoupa, mackerel, rayfish, mangrove crabs and tiger prawns. The fish market forms part of the new Sandakan Harbour Square, which when completed late this year will be home to a new central market, a town square, a mall and a convention centre.

But the most atmospheric part of Sandakan is undoubtedly the Buli Sim-Sim water village. In neighbouring Brunei, the famous water village of Bandar Seri Begawan is home to over 10,000 people, who live in stilt-houses perched over the Brunei River. Buli Sim-Sim is a little smaller, but is just as colourful.

Continue reading (Incl. Pics) at: Walk on the wild side of Sabah
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