I flew to Sibu on a MAS airplane (I
can claim for transport) on 15 Dec 2011. Upon arrival a friend of a friend of
my father’s picked me up at the airport. Upon arrival at the airport there were
construction works going on, therefore it was a rather uncomfortable experience
having to wait in line for immigration. For those of you Malaysians who have
never been to Borneo, you have to present your passport/IC to the immigration
officer upon arrival. The officer will then issue a leave of stay receipt that
you should re-present to immigration upon departure from Sarawak. This is
rather odd considering Sarawak has been part of Malaysia for more than half a
decade. I’m sure half my patients in Kajang who were from Indonesia didn’t go
through as much hassle as this when they entered the country in their boats.
The plane that took me to Sibu
My father’s friend’s friend then
helped me look for a hotel to stay after which he took me to the hospital. I initially
booked for 2 days as i figured that I may need the extra day to move in the new
quarters.
At the hospital I reported in to
Pn Norlia the administrative assistant for medical officers. As I was not
issued any document from JKN Sarawak in Kuching I submitted the ministry’s letter.
The Pengarah, Timbalan Pengarah, and Pemangku Pengarah were all not in so I
didn’t get to know which department I will be posted to on my first day. At any
rate I was to settle my work permit first before
starting work anyway. Wait, what? What work permit?
I need a work permit? I’m working for the
Malaysian Ministry of health, not the bloody NHS. Why do I need a work permit?
Hospital Sibu
“Ni Dr bawak surat ini ke Jabatan
Imigresen untuk dapatkan work permit ya,”
“Errr satu hal lagi, itu hari
saya ada call pasal kuarters?”
She then put me in contact with
the relevant personnel;
“Ooo kuarters ada, Dr datang esok
untuk isi borang dia nanti minggu depan tunggu kelulusan,”
What? Minggu depan? It was a
Thursday and ‘minggu depan’ meant at least another 4 days. At least the hotel
stay costs only RM45 a night but that place is way too far in town.
“Dr betul ke nak tinggal di
kuarters? Biasanya dr kita sewa rumah di luar,”
“Kalau ada yang dekat boleh la
saya sewa di luar terus. Saya takde transport buat masa ni so kalau duduk luar
tu susah sikit la,”
“Ada satu dekat Tmn Permai, depan
hospital ni, RM280 sebulan, tapi rumah yang kat belakang la,”
“Walking distance ke?”
“Kalau nak jalan jauh sikit la.
Lepas tu ada anjing. Kalau lari laju boleh kot,”
Great, if I want to rent
somewhere close I have to outrun the dogs to get to work? I’m from KL! I don’t
do walking to work! Do you know how unfit I am? I take elevators to the 1st
floor. That’s what Klang Valley people do!
“Takpe hotel tu nanti boleh
claim,” That afforded me a bit of a relief.
Immigration
So we went to immigration with En
Bong an IT officer who also transferred in the same day as I did to get my work permit. As I was unprepared for this I did not
bring my passport with me (which I needed to get the permit) and had to return
the next day.
Bus ride
I decided to take the bus back to
the hotel as I knew I would have to familiarise myself with it if I were to
commute to town on a regular basis (taxi here has a starting fare of RM10, and
there’s no meter – well there is a meter inside but no one uses it).
At the bus stop I met quite a
decent looking chap and casually asked him (in Malay, which is a dead giveaway
that I’m not from around here, not to mention in my accent) which bus I should take
to get to the market (the hotel is near the market). After which the wind blew from
his direction and I could smell alcohol from his breath! At 5pm! Instantly I
thought to myself “Shit, bad idea. Quick look the other way. Maybe he’ll forget
that I actually tried to talk to him!”
“Mau pergi pasar ka? Bas 5A. Aku
juga mau pergi pasar. Awak bayar tambang aku boleh? Aku juga mau pergi pasar,”
Crap, too late.
As is the tradition of mildly
drunk people at a bus stop, this guy couldn’t stop talking to me. He even tried
to sell me his shoes for RM10! It was at this moment that I realised Sibu is
not another small town in provincial Malaysia. It is in fact a small city with
people who should be approached like in any other small city – there’s a
variety of them and its best to quickly learn their ways.
Needless to say I did pay for his
bus fare to the market as I didn’t want any trouble on a bus with a drunken guy.
I thought I had my fair share of drunks on a bus back in Newcastle but
apparently not. I did not buy his shoes though...
The busses in Sibu are like those
old mini busses and Len Seng busses in KL. They still have conductors, they
still don’t have air conditioning, and they still feel like riding a camel
(yes, I have rode a camel before).
Hotel
If there is such a thing as ‘Shady
Hotel Capital of Malaysia’ , Sibu must be it. There has got to be more cheap
hotels per square mile in Sibu than in anywhere else that I’ve ever been to.
I stayed at a place called
Perdana Inn. When I first checked in, I didn’t get the chance to properly
inspect the room as we were in a hurry to get to the hospital. When I returned
that evening a realisation as to how shady the place was dawned upon me.
When I entered the bathroom there
was rag on the sink. The hotel staff must’ve forgotten to remove it after
cleaning the place. To my horror there were cockroaches crawling out of the rag
when I switched on the light! The air conditioning was working but the controls
looked as if someone had smashed it open. The view outside was of an ugly pink
building despite the place being actually visible from the Rajang waterfront.
And then there was this lingering smell of cigarettes...
As I sat on the bed that evening
I summarised my situation up to that point; I had no place to stay in the long
run, I had no work permit, I didn’t know anyone here, everyone speaks in a language I dont understand, and I’m going to be
sleeping with cockroaches that night. Suddenly this whole ‘let’s go to work in
Sarawak’ thing seemed like a very bad idea...
Coackroaches came out of that rag. THAT rag!!