Blog Archive

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The Session Has Ended. The Questions Have Not

    

KOPITALK LEGCO TRACKER  |  22nd Legislative Council Session — Closing Synthesis

 

 

 

Facts and Figures Count.

But Truth Matters.

The 22nd LegCo Session: A Closing Account.

“The Session Has Ended. The Questions Have Not.”

KopiTalk with MHO    22nd Legislative Council, First Meeting    11–28 March 2026    Days 1 to 11

 

Eleven days. Two hundred and fifteen questions. Four ministerial statements. Four motions passed. One budget — BND6.3 billion — approved unanimously by every member present.

 

On paper, the 22nd Legislative Council session of Brunei Darussalam was a success. The calendar was met. The business was completed. The Supply Bill and the Development Fund Resolution were gazetted in time for the new financial year beginning 1 April 2026.

 

But a session is not measured by its paperwork. It is measured by what it reveals about the country it is supposed to serve. And this session — followed from the first day to the last, question by question, answer by answer — revealed something the official record alone cannot fully capture.

 

It revealed a country of genuine capability, genuine care, and genuine commitment — held back, again and again, by a governance system that too often moves at the pace of its own comfort rather than at the pace of the people who need it.

 

Facts and figures count.

 

But truth matters.

 

And the truth of this session is not in the budget lines. It is in the gap between what was planned and what was built. Between what was said and what was changed. Between what the system knows and what it has done with what it knows.

 

This closing report is not a summary.

 

It is a reckoning. 

 

Because the real measure of a legislative session is not what was debated.

It is what changed for the people who needed it to.

 

 

 

I. The Pattern

 

By the fourth day of this session, a pattern had emerged. By the seventh, it was unmistakable. By the eleventh, it had become the defining story of the entire sitting.

 

The pattern is this: the government of Brunei knows what needs to be done. It has the data, the plans, the policy frameworks, and — in many cases — the budget.

 

What it struggles with, consistently and across almost every sector this session examined, is the step between knowing and doing.

 

This is governance inertia.

 

Not incompetence.

 

Not indifference.

 

A structural tendency to wait rather than anticipate, to respond rather than prevent, to move when pushed rather than when warned.

 

The evidence assembled across eleven days is not circumstantial.

 

It is cumulative, specific, and documented in the official Hansard of the 22nd Legislative Council.

 

Day 4 — Tuesday, 12 March 2026

 

The session opened with a budget debate framing Brunei’s fiscal reality: a structural deficit running for over a decade, oil revenue dependency at over 80 per cent of government income, and a Wawasan 2035 diversification agenda that is real in ambition but uneven in delivery.

 

DMAO raised the first accountability question of the session — who is responsible after the answer is given? — and it became the question this series never stopped asking.

 

Days 5 and 6 — Wednesday and Thursday, 13–14 March 2026

 

The policy debate entered its depth. Youth unemployment stands at 18.3 per cent — the highest in the ASEAN region. A labour market where the public sector still absorbs graduates, and the private sector has not yet created enough space for them.

 

Welfare assistance was still being calculated using data from 2015. Civil servants remained on half pay for years under suspension rules written in 1998. The KMKA poverty framework was outdated, under-resourced, and producing numbers that did not reflect what families were actually experiencing.

 

Day 7 — Wednesday, 18 March 2026

The session entered its first Committee Stage, and the human faces behind the statistics became visible.

 

A family in Belait — three generations in oil and gas — and a son who no longer knows where his future lies. Government officers suspended on half pay for years, their families managing on reduced income while the system could not reach a conclusion.

 

And the number that connected everything: over 13,000 individuals in mental health treatment in 2023–2024, a 17 per cent increase in one year, with the largest affected group being young adults in their early twenties.

 

Day 8 — Thursday, 19 March 2026

 

The pre-Raya sitting produced two images that stayed with the series all the way to Day Eleven.

 

A mother at a photocopier, making copies of her visually impaired son’s school materials because the system had not yet provided what he needed.

 

And the KMKA update — a poverty measurement framework still running on 2015 data, with a new assessment only now coming this year. Eleven years of policy decisions built on numbers that no longer reflect the current reality.

 

The budget was passed.

 

The waiting was not.

 

Day 9 — Wednesday, 25 March 2026

 

The session returned from Hari Raya and found the same questions still waiting.

 

A rice farmer dialogue produced the line that became the Day Nine headline: “Feedback is a gift.”

 

Dayang Hajah Rosmawatty had visited rice farmers across three districts and brought their words into the chamber — not as statistics, but as specific, practical requests:

 

— more certified seed suppliers — only three in the entire country

— more field visits from ministry officials

— better grassroots coordination

 

Meanwhile, the tourism budget nearly doubled. A team was sent to Singapore within two weeks.

 

The contrast was not subtle.

 

Day 10 — Thursday, 26 March 2026

 

The cycling ban.

 

Two cyclists died on the Muara-Tutong Highway on 17 February 2026 — the first day of Chinese New Year. Both were wearing helmets. Both were following the law.

 

The accident went viral. It was referenced in the opening address at LegCo on 12 March. On Day Ten — 38 days after the deaths — the Transport Minister announced a comprehensive response: a cycling ban on named highways, dedicated routes per district, Road Safety Action 2030 targets, and amendments to the Road Traffic Act.

 

The response was serious and well-structured.

 

Road accidents had been rising for three consecutive years. The concern had been raised before. The capacity to act was always there.

 

What was missing was the trigger.

 

Day 11 — Saturday, 28 March 2026

 

The final day. Question Time only.

 

And the questions, taken together, told the story of a family institution under quiet, structural pressure.

 

Marriage verification is carefully handled at the front door. Divorce cases are up 26 per cent in nine years. Elder abandonment is rising. An OKU Complex was planned in 2011, a project team was formed in 2024, and there is still no building.

 

The sandwich generation is carrying what it was never sufficiently equipped to carry alone.

 

And the Speaker of the Legislative Council — in his closing address — asked that ministerial responses be published publicly on ministry websites, so the people the chamber serves can follow what happens after the session ends.

 

That may yet prove to be one of the most important things said in the entire sitting.

 

The capacity to act was always there. What was missing was the trigger. And in Brunei, the trigger is almost always the same.

 

 

 

II. The Truths the Session Built

 

Facts can be selected. Numbers can be framed. A session can be described in terms of its achievements or in terms of its gaps — and both descriptions can be technically accurate.

 

This series has tried to hold both at the same time.

 

Because the truth of this session is not in either column alone.

 

Here is what the evidence, taken whole, actually shows.

 

The system is not failing because it does not care.

 

The ministers who spoke across eleven days were, for the most part, engaged, honest, and at times unusually candid.

 

The Health Minister said plainly that doctors are leaving because other countries pay more, and the government cannot yet offer flexible working hours. The Development Minister acknowledged the enforcement gap between RPN housing and private land openly, without defensiveness. The Religious Affairs Minister presented eight years of data on out-of-wedlock births and corrected a widely held public assumption — the trend is declining, not rising, from 378 cases in 2019 to 202 in 2024.

 

These are not the answers of a government hiding from reality.

 

They are the answers of a government that knows what reality is.

 

The system is failing because it is not structured to move fast enough.

 

The OKU Complex: planned in 2011, project team formed in 2024.

 

The KMKA poverty framework: running on 2015 data in 2026.

 

The civil servant suspension rules: written in 1998, review promised in 2026.

 

The childcare age gap: parents solving informally what regulation was designed to solve formally, but in practice pushed them away from protection rather than toward it.

 

The EV charging station in Temburong: one station, one brand, one resort, in a district the government is actively developing as an eco-tourism destination connected by a BND1.6 billion bridge.

 

The halal certification backlog: tens of thousands of applications pending in a global halal market worth USD2.3 to USD2.8 trillion.

 

In each case, the knowledge was present.

 

The planning had occurred.

 

The delivery was late.

 

The people most affected are the ones least able to wait.

 

The family in Belait is waiting for the new industries to arrive.

 

The civil servant has been on half pay since 2020.

 

The mother is photocopying textbooks.

 

The OKU caregiver has been absorbing, at home, what the state itself acknowledged it should help carry.

 

The young adult is sitting in a mental health waiting room.

 

The farmer is asking for a fourth certified seed supplier.

 

These are not exceptional cases.

 

They are representative ones.

 

They are what governance inertia looks like when it lands on a person instead of a policy document.

 

The family institution is under structural pressure, and the system is arriving late.

 

This is the truth Day Eleven named most clearly — and it may be the one that carries the greatest weight for Brunei’s long-term resilience, sovereignty, and dignity.

 

Divorce cases are rising. Elder abandonment is increasing. Young people are delaying family formation because they cannot yet afford the life they are being asked to build. The sandwich generation is stretched between obligations it cannot fully meet without support that is still being planned.

 

The damage is not moral decay.

 

Bruneians have not stopped loving their families.

 

They have not stopped honouring their faith.

 

The damage is structural — the slow erosion of the conditions under which families can do what they were always meant to do.

 

MIB places the family as the first institution of moral formation — the place where taqwa, responsibility, and love for community are first learned.

 

A government that takes MIB seriously as a living philosophy, not just a ceremonial framework, should be measuring its performance against that standard.

 

There are genuine achievements — and they deserve to be named.

 

Egg self-sufficiency at 112 per cent, achieved through a deliberately export-oriented strategy.

 

2,380 zakat backlog cases cleared in ten weeks — a remarkable administrative achievement.

 

262 former zakat recipients now generating their own income.

 

The Temburong electricity grid fix 92 per cent complete after years of outages from a 40-year-old power station.

 

The BKCF grants programme, the UTB-CrAFT research partnership, the digital payments rollout, the Aviation Steering Committee, and the hybrid rice trials with China and Singapore.

 

Out-of-wedlock births declining 46 per cent over five years.

 

These are real.

 

They reflect effort, commitment, and institutional capability when the system is properly directed.

 

The problem is not that nothing is being done.

 

The problem is the pace — and the consistent gap between the scale of the need and the scale of the response.

 

The problem is not that nothing is being done. The problem is the pace — and the consistent gap between the scale of the need and the scale of the response.

 

 

 

III. The Questions This Session Could Not Answer

 

A legislative council is not expected to solve everything in eleven days.

 

It is expected to surface what matters, apply accountability to what is not working, and send the government back into the world with clearer direction than it had when it arrived.

 

On those terms, the 22nd session did its job — imperfectly, unevenly, but genuinely.

 

But a series that has followed every day of this session would not be doing its job if it did not name what remained unanswered.

 

These are the questions the chamber built but could not close:

 

— What happens to the son in Belait while the new industries are still being developed? The oil and gas transition is real. The anxiety it is producing in communities built around a single industry is also real. The timeline for the alternative has not yet been given to the people who most need it.

 

— When will the OKU Complex be built? Not planned. Not reviewed. Built. The families waiting for it have been waiting since 2011. They deserve a date, not another study.

 

— When will the KMKA poverty framework produce numbers that reflect 2026 realities in time to shape 2026 policy? The update is coming. But welfare decisions made on 2015 data have real consequences for real families right now.

 

— When will the childcare gap be resolved by policy rather than by parents finding informal workarounds? Children aged three to five remain caught between systems that were supposed to protect them.

 

— What is the accountability mechanism for the 215 questions asked across eleven days? The Speaker called for responses to be published publicly on ministry websites. Will they be? And if they are, who will verify that those answers lead to actual change — not just acknowledgement?

 

— Who is responsible — not in general, but specifically — for the civil servants still on half pay under rules written in 1998? A review was promised. A timeline was not.

 

— When will elder care infrastructure exist at the scale Brunei’s ageing population will require? The Successful Ageing Action Plan exists. The demographic pressure is already here.

 

— What is the real plan for food security at field level? Not only at the level of export strategy and ministerial statements, but at the level of the farmer still asking for a fourth certified seed supplier and a more attentive presence from the ministry where it matters most.

 

DMAO asked throughout this series:

 

Who is still responsible after the answer is given?

 

That question does not expire when the session adjourns.

 

It follows every commitment made in that chamber out into the world, where the people who asked it are still waiting.

 

Who is still responsible after the answer is given? That question does not expire when the session adjourns. It follows every commitment made in that chamber out into the world.

 

 

 

IV. The Measure

 

At the beginning of this series, a line was written that has held true across every one of the eleven days that followed:

 

Facts and figures count.

 

But truth matters.

 

The facts of this session are clear.

 

BND6.3 billion.

215 questions.

11 days.

A budget passed.

A Development Fund approved.

Four motions carried.

Eleven Hansard volumes that will sit in the official record of this country for as long as that record is kept.

 

The truth is what those facts point to when you follow them honestly all the way to the people they are supposed to serve.

 

The truth is that Brunei is a country with real wealth, real institutional capacity, and a governing philosophy — MIB — that places the dignity and well-being of its people at the centre of everything the state does.

 

The truth is also that the gap between that philosophy and the daily experience of the families living it is wider than it should be — and has been widening, quietly, for longer than this session alone can account for.

 

The cycling ban came 38 days after two people died on a road already known to be dangerous.

 

The OKU Complex is still being planned fifteen years after the need was acknowledged.

 

The poverty measurement was still using 2015 data eleven years after the world it was measuring had changed.

 

The mental health numbers rose 17 per cent in one year, while the economic pressures producing them were being debated in the very same chamber that authorised the budget meant to address them.

 

None of this is beyond remedy.

 

That is the important thing.

 

Governance inertia is not a law of nature.

 

It is a structural condition — produced by the way decisions are made, reviewed, approved, funded, and followed up — and structural conditions can be changed by structural remedies.

 

The remedy is not more plans.

 

It is not more frameworks, more committees, or more ministerial statements that acknowledge the problem before promising a study that will be completed in due course.

 

The remedy is delivery.

 

At the pace of human need.

 

Before the divorce — not after the marriage has already broken under the weight of financial stress and absent support structures.

 

Before the elder is abandoned — not after the family has already run out of the capacity to care.

 

Before the cyclist dies — not after the accident that makes inaction politically impossible.

 

Before the OKU child grows up — not when the building is finally ready, fifteen years after the need was first named.

 

The Bruneian people are resilient.

 

They have always been.

 

They photocopy textbooks when the system does not provide them. They find informal childcare when regulation pushes them away from formal protection. They absorb, at home, the care burden the state itself acknowledged it should share. They wait, year after year, for the building that is always coming.

 

That resilience is not a justification for slow delivery.

 

It is a testament to what the people are willing to endure.

 

And endurance has limits.

 

A nation that takes care of its families takes care of itself.

 

A nation that plans for its people a decade too late is spending social capital it is not replenishing.

 

And a government that is genuinely committed to the resilience, sovereignty, and dignity of its people must eventually answer the question this session kept asking in different forms across eleven days:

 

Not whether the system knows what needs to be done.

 

But whether it is structured to do it

before the people who need it run out of time.

 

 

 

The 22nd Legislative Council adjourned on Saturday, 28 March 2026. The Second Meeting will be held later this year.

The questions that mattered are not in adjournment.

 

They are in the fields where rice farmers are still waiting for a fourth certified seed supplier.

In the home where a caregiver is still managing without the facility that has been planned for fifteen years.

In the Syariah court records, where divorce cases are still being filed by families under financial pressure the welfare system did not update fast enough to relieve.

In the waiting room, where a young adult is still sitting with an anxiety that thirteen thousand other people in this country now share.

 

Facts and figures count.

 

But truth matters.

 

And the truth of the 22nd Legislative Council session is this:

 

the system has the knowledge, the resources, and the mandate to do what needs to be done. What the people are still waiting for is the will to do it at the pace their lives require.

 

 

 

KopiTalk LegCo Tracker — 22nd Legislative Council Session, First Meeting

Days 1 to 11  |  11–28 March 2026  |  Series complete.

KopiTalk with MHO    Public-first coverage of the Brunei Legislative Council.

What was said, what mattered, and what the public is still waiting for.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

  

KOPITALK LEGCO TRACKER  |  22nd Legislative Council Session — Final Day

 

 

 

Day Eleven: When the Session Ends,

Look at What It Left Unsaid About the Family.

KopiTalk with MHO    Saturday, 28 March 2026    22nd LegCo, Day Eleven  |  Final Day

 

 


SOCIAL MEDIA TEASER

Divorce cases rose 26 per cent in nine years.

The OKU Complex has been planned since 2011. There is still no building.

Elders are being abandoned. Young people cannot afford to start families.

On the final day of this session, the chamber touched all of these.

But the question underneath them — the one nobody quite named — is this:

what is happening to the Brunei family?

And what is at the root of it?

 

 

 

Damage does not always arrive loudly. It does not always come with drama or public collapse. Often, it works quietly from the inside, while the surface still looks intact. You do not fully notice it until the day you press your hand against something that should be solid — and feel it give way.

 

This column does not use that image lightly. And it does not use it to condemn. It uses it because it is the most honest description of what the final day of the 22nd Legislative Council session — taken together with everything this session has surfaced over eleven days — quietly revealed about the condition of the Brunei family institution.

 

Not the family as an idea.

 

The family as a lived reality.

 

The family in the home where a mother is still photocopying textbooks for a child with visual impairment. The family where a civil servant has been on half pay for six years and the bills have not stopped. The family where a marriage entered carefully, under a thorough registration system, still ended in a Syariah court — because financial stress, exhaustion, and the absence of support structures eventually did what no marriage guidance document could prevent.

 

The session's final day raised marriage verification, elder abandonment, OKU welfare, women's empowerment, and the protection of children born outside marriage. Each was treated as a separate issue. Each received a separate answer.

 

But they are not separate.

 

They are the same story — told from different angles, by different people, about the same underlying condition.

 

The Brunei family is under pressure it was not designed to carry alone. And the structures that should have been sharing that load have, for years, remained in planning, in review, or in transition.

 

A nation's resilience lives in its families first. When families weaken

quietly — not dramatically, but steadily — the nation's roots begin to loosen.

 

That is the conversation Brunei needs to have.

 

The Symptoms Are Real. But They Are Not the Root.

 

Divorce cases in Brunei rose from 469 in 2013 to 593 in 2022 — a 26 per cent increase in nine years. The Islamic Da'wah Centre identified the main causes: financial stress, neglect of responsibilities, and changing social norms around women's ability to leave a marriage that is not working.

 

Out-of-wedlock births, while declining — and the Religious Affairs Minister's data on Day Eleven showed a genuine downward trend from 378 cases in 2019 to 202 in 2024 — still represent thousands of children over eight years growing up outside the full structure of recognised family. Elder abandonment is rising. Single motherhood is increasing. Youth unemployment stands at 18 per cent — the highest in the region — meaning many young people are delaying marriage, delaying family formation, and entering adulthood with financial anxiety already built in.

 

These are the symptoms.

 

And the temptation — in a legislative chamber, in a policy document, in a ministerial answer — is to treat the symptom.

 

Strengthen the marriage verification process.

 

Study a legal liability framework for elder care.

 

Finalise the Women's Action Plan.

 

Form a project team for the OKU Complex.

 

Each of these responses is reasonable on its own terms.

 

None of them fully addresses the root.

 

The deeper issue is this: the Brunei family has been sheltered for decades — genuinely, generously sheltered — but not always systematically strengthened.

 

The model of governance has been one of provision. The state provides. The citizen receives. Subsidies, housing, healthcare, education — real benefits, genuinely delivered.

 

But provision is not the same as enablement.

 

A family that receives support is not necessarily a family that has been built to remain resilient when that support is reduced, delayed, or simply insufficient to meet the scale of the pressure it faces.

 

When the economy shifts — when diversification brings uncertainty, when the private sector is still maturing, when costs rise and wages do not keep pace — the family is suddenly asked to be strong in ways it was never systematically prepared to be.

 

And it is asked to be strong precisely at the moment when the support structures it depends on are still, after years of planning, not yet ready.

Provision is not the same as enablement. A family that receives support is not automatically a family that has been equipped to absorb prolonged pressure.

 

The OKU Complex — And What Fifteen Years Really Means

 

The plan to build a dedicated complex for organisations supporting persons with disabilities was first initiated in 2011. The project team was formed on 30 January 2024. There is still no building.

 

Fifteen years.

 

In that time, the children who needed that facility in 2011 are now adults. The parents who were managing their care then are now elderly themselves — some of them, perhaps, among those whose abandonment another member was asking about on the same day.

 

The minister was honest. He said the 2011 assumptions no longer reflect 2026 realities. Ecosystems change. Lessons are learned from other countries. Cost-benefit analyses need to be recalibrated.

 

All of this is true.

 

But here is what fifteen years also means.

 

It means fifteen years of families absorbing, alone and at home, the care burden that the state itself acknowledged it should be helping to share.

 

It means fifteen years of mothers who could not work full time because there was no facility. Fifteen years of siblings who restructured their own life plans around a family member's needs. Fifteen years of caregivers who aged alongside the people they were caring for, without relief, without respite, without the institutional support that was coming — always coming — just not yet here.

 

This is what governance inertia costs when it is applied to the most vulnerable.

 

It is not just a delayed project.

 

It is a life lived inside the gap between what was planned and what was built.

 

And it sits inside a larger question about the Maqasid Syariah — the higher objectives of Islamic governance — that Brunei has made central to its national philosophy.

 

The protection of family.

 

The protection of the mind.

 

The protection of wealth.

 

The protection of life.

 

These are not abstract principles.

 

They are the exact things under pressure in every story Day Eleven told.

 

A government that takes MIB seriously as a living philosophy — not only as a framework for ceremonial affirmation — should be measuring its performance against these standards, not just against the percentage of budget utilised.

 

The Elder, the Marriage, and the Transmission Gap

 

There is a deep connection between the rising divorce rate and the rising abandonment of elders that Day Eleven's questions — taken together — begin to reveal.

 

When marriages break down, family structures change. When family structures change, the transmission of values — of what it means to honour parents, to carry family obligations, to see the elderly not as a burden but as a trust — can also weaken over time.

 

Not deliberately.

 

Not maliciously.

 

But structurally.

 

The vessel that carries those values begins to crack, and over a generation, some of what it was meant to pass on quietly leaks away.

 

MIB places the family as the first institution of tarbiyah — moral formation. It is where a child first learns what is owed to parents, to community, to God.

 

If that institution is under sustained pressure, if its foundations are being worn down by economic anxiety and inadequate support, the formation it provides will also come under strain.

 

Not because the faith is weakening.

 

But because the family carrying the faith is carrying too much else at the same time.

 

The minister's answer on elder abandonment was careful and compassionate. He spoke about Islamic obligations to parents. He spoke about the Successful Ageing Action Plan. He said legal liability for family members will be studied — but carefully, because the balance between enforcement and family harmony requires wisdom.

 

He is right that it requires wisdom.

 

But wisdom, in this case, also requires honesty about what is producing the abandonment.

 

It is not simply a failure of love.

 

It is often a failure of support.

 

The sandwich generation — the men and women in their forties and fifties managing children, parents, mortgages, careers, and economic uncertainty at the same time — are not necessarily abandoning their parents because they do not care.

 

Many are reaching a point where they are running out of capacity.

 

A legal framework that punishes the outcome without addressing the cause is not wisdom. It is, at best, a deterrent. At worst, it adds legal burden to human exhaustion.

 

The more urgent intervention is the one that has already spent fifteen years in planning: the infrastructure, the facilities, the respite care, the community support — the things that would allow a family to honour its obligations without being quietly destroyed by them.

It is not simply a failure of love. It is often a failure of support. Many in the sandwich generation are not abandoning their parents because they do not care. They are reaching a point where they are running out of capacity.

 

The Good News That Must Also Be Said

 

This column would not be doing its job if it only named the pressures without acknowledging what is working.

 

The Religious Affairs Minister's data on Day Eleven was genuinely encouraging. Out-of-wedlock births declined from 378 in 2019 to 202 in 2024. The ministry's enforcement operations — 634 in 2025 alone — and its prevention programmes — 25 sessions reaching over 3,000 people last year — are producing measurable results.

 

The downward trend is real.

 

It reflects effort, commitment, and the genuine effectiveness of a community that still takes its values seriously.

 

The zakat system, as this session's earlier discussion showed, is also providing meaningful protection for vulnerable children. The 262 former zakat recipients who now generate their own income — mentioned in Day Eight — is a real achievement. 

 

The PROPAZ skills programme, the succession planning policy for farms, the Caregiver Allowance amendment to the Old Age Pension Act — these are not nothing.

 

They are genuine steps in the right direction.

 

The problem is not that nothing is being done.

 

The problem is the pace.

 

And the consistent gap between the scale of the need and the scale of the response.

 

A building that takes fifteen years to move from planning to construction is not failing because people do not care. It is failing because the system is not structured to move at the pace that human need demands.

 

What the Speaker Said — and Why It Matters

 

The Yang Di-Pertua closed the 22nd Legislative Council session on Day Eleven with a formal address that was, in its quiet way, the most important speech of the final day.

 

He thanked members. He noted the unusual circumstances — eleven days of sitting through Ramadan and Syawal. He reflected on the 215 questions answered, the 4 motions passed, and the 4 ministerial statements heard.

 

And then he said something that deserves to travel beyond the chamber.

 

He asked that written responses to unanswered questions be published on ministry websites — not just delivered privately to the members who asked them. He said the public should be able to follow the progress. He said other countries do this. He said it should happen here too.

 

That is the Speaker of the Legislative Council acknowledging publicly what this series has documented across eleven days:

the gap between what is said in the chamber and what reaches the people the chamber is supposed to serve.

 

When the Speaker names it, it is no longer just a commentator's observation.

 

It becomes an institutional admission.

 

He also said this — and it should travel with the rest of the session's record:

 

"I hope whatever has been planned, even in the face of global challenges, there are still opportunities to improve and increase our capability together."

 

Together.

 

That word is the key.

 

Not the government delivering to the people.

 

Not the people waiting for the government.

 

Together — which is what the Whole of Nation approach was always supposed to mean, and what governance inertia has too often prevented from fully taking shape.

 

The Root. Not the Symptom.

 

Eleven days. Two hundred and fifteen questions. One budget. BND6.3 billion.

 

And at the end of it, a country that is genuinely trying — with real commitment, real intention, and real capability — to be what it says it wants to be.

 

The resilience, sovereignty, and dignity of the Bruneian people — the things MIB is fundamentally about — do not live first in budget allocations or policy frameworks.

They live in families.

 

In the home where a father keeps his promise to his ageing parents. In the marriage where two people navigate difficulty because they have the support to stay. In the child with a disability who grows up knowing that her country built something for her — not fifteen years too late, but when she needed it.

 

The damage this column refers to is not moral decay.

 

Bruneians have not stopped loving their families.

 

They have not stopped honouring their faith.

 

The damage is structural — the slow erosion of the conditions under which families can do what they were always meant to do.

 

And structural damage, unlike moral failure, has a structural remedy.

 

The remedy is not more plans.

 

It is not more frameworks.

 

It is not more ministerial statements that acknowledge the problem before promising a study that will be completed in due course.

 

The remedy is delivery.

 

At the pace of human need.

 

Before the divorce — not after the marriage has already broken.

 

Before the elder is abandoned — not after the family has already run out of capacity.

 

Before the OKU child grows up — not when the building is finally ready fifteen years later.

 

A nation that takes care of its families takes care of itself.

 

A nation that plans for its families a decade too late is spending social capital it is not replenishing.

 

That is the conversation the 22nd Legislative Council session — across eleven days, through 215 questions — has been quietly building toward.

 

Not as an accusation.

 

As a reckoning.

 

Because the families are still there.

 

Still trying.

 

Still holding on.

 

They deserve a system that moves at the pace of their lives — not at the pace of its own comfort.

 

 

 

Eleven days. One session. BND6.3 billion.

Two hundred and fifteen questions.

And perhaps the most important one was never formally asked:

 

What are we doing to the family —

and what will we do before it is too late?

 

 

 

KopiTalk LegCo Tracker — 22nd Legislative Council Session

Days 1 to 11  |  11–28 March 2026  |  Series complete.

What was said, what mattered, and what the public is still waiting for.