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    HomeNewsMalaysiaGroom fulfils his vows and duty

    Groom fulfils his vows and duty

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    A recently married couple fulfilled their civic duty by voting in the midst of their wedding celebrations.

    Muhammad Nur Aizat Fuad, 25, and his bride, Nurul Nafisah Mohamed Azizi, 20, hurried to their respective polling stations immediately after their solemnization ceremony.

    “We wanted to be back in time for our bersanding ceremony in the afternoon.

    “It was a rather hectic day, but it’s not a problem as this is our responsibility as citizens anyway,” he told reporters when met at SJKC Pei Chai here.

    Muhammad Nur Aizat voted with his mother Fauziah Pader, 47, and several other family members here, while his wife cast her vote at SM Agama Bakri Batu Enam.

    “We did not expect polling day to fall on the same day as our wedding, but I see it as a special coincidence,” he said.

    Muhammad Nur Aizat and Nurul Nafisah have known each other since they were in secondary school.

    Universiti Utara Malaysia student Derrick Chua Cheng Tak, 21, expressed his delight in being on a semester break.

    “It was such a good coincidence. I can be with my family without having to think about rushing back to Kedah the next day,” he said.

    He added that he would have still come back to vote even if he was not on his semester break.

    Chua came to vote with his mother Tang Meng Ser, 40, and 66-year-old grandmother Teo Hwa Tim.

    Retiree P. Mohan, 60, arrived early to vote in order to avoid large crowds later in the day.

    “I decided to come early to avoid any traffic congestion.

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    “My wife and two of my children are voting at another polling station.

    “Unfortunately, my two youngest children were unable to come back and vote as they are studying in Sabah and Sarawak,” he said.

    Mohan has two other children in the police force who have already cast their votes as early voters.

    He said he hoped there would be improvements in the voting process so that people living or working in Sabah and Sarawak could return home to vote.

    “The price of the air tickets are about RM300 each one way, which is too expensive for me.

    “I’m disappointed that my children cannot come home to cast their votes, but I’m grateful that the rest of us in my family have done so,” he said.



    Credit: The Star : News Feed

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    Wan
    Dedicated wordsmith and passionate storyteller, on a mission to captivate minds and ignite imaginations.

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