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  • Singapore: Popcorn Democracy?

    Singapore: Popcorn Democracy?

    Confrontational politics, social media and political apathy — some of the issues raised during MARUAH’s post-election forum What’s at Stake?

    After the unexpected landslide victory of 69.9% of the popular votes by the People’s Action Party (PAP) in this year’s Election, pundits, academics and other politically-minded individuals shared their analyses of the result and its implication for Singapore.

    Against this backdrop, MARUAH, a human rights group, held a forum called What’s at Stake? on Saturday, 19 September. It comes eight days after polling day

    Speaker Alex Au who was one of six speakers at the forum, avoided giving a mere explanation of the result. Instead he posed “provocative” questions for people to consider,among which was the state of opposition politics. Speaking directly to Workers’ Party’s dip in performance — he touched on their reluctance to “boast” of their performance in Parliament and questioning PAP on a number of issues. He felt their inability to score on such matters may have backfired.

    Confrontational politics

    The writer behind the blog Yawning Bread spoke about the importance of party branding. To differentiate themselves from each other, opposition parties should not just criticise the PAP, but each other, he said.

    According to him, in people’s minds, the opposition parties are all the same. Hence, opposition parties should “forget about opposition unity” and be unafraid of contesting each other.

    When an audience member questioned the need for “confrontational politics,” Au said, this is “unavoidable”.

    Disputing this point, political analyst Dr Derek da Cunha pointed out that the Workers’ Party (WP) had actually performed well over the years because it took a moderate stance.

    Role of social media

    Dr da Cunha also took to task social media’s role in determining election outcomes. He said it had “zero impact” and that he has been saying this “forcefully for six years.”

    Terry Xu, Chief Editor of The Online Citizen (TOC), said that prior to this year’s Election, he would not have agreed with Dr da Cunha, but now does. He noted that despite the satires of PAP politicians his publication put out, voters were hardly swayed by them — presumably to vote for the opposition.

    Xu took issue with new sites like SIX-SIX.COM, Mothership and The Middle Ground, urging the audience to ask where funding for these sites comes from, even implying, without any proof, that they may be backed by the Government.

    Author and blogger, Sudhir Thomas Vadaketh pointed out the question of funding and the need to moderate one’s content is an issue all media outlets deal with. He added that readers should decide for themselves the credibility of a news site.

    Dr da Cunha questioned TOC’s credibility after putting out articles from anonymous sources. He said that while he used to think the site was good, it has over the years become “more extreme.”

    In reply, Xu said the people who write the anonymous articles are teachers and academics who are afraid their positions in the workplace might be compromised when they are associated withTOC.

    Death of the new normal

    Au said that the one point all the speakers could probably agree with is that “the new normal” of higher political engagement after the WP won a Group Representation Constituency (GRC) in the 2011 election “was a figment of our imagination.”

    In the same vein, Thomas said the 2011 result might have just been a “blip” and the presumed “death of the apathetic Singaporean” was false.

    Singaporeans might be interested only in “popcorn democracy” where they engage with politics once in every four or five years during election season, instead of actively engaging with politics every day, he said.

    “Maybe Singaporeans just want the veneer of democracy.”

    Going forward?

    As per its discussion theme, What’s at Stake?, MARUAH’s forum laid out issues of concern for Singaporeans after the recent election.

    Braema Mathi, President of MARUAH, had asked the speakers to provide some ideas for electoral reform as well. Dr da Cunha suggested that GRCs be of “uniform size,” following the practice in 1991 where there were four-members each for every ward.

    He also said that the EBRC should publish its report on boundary shifts no less than four months before polling day and that policy changes like the introduction of sample count this election should not be announced “just days before polling day.”

    Besides Dr da Cunha, Au seems to have been the only other person to have sketched out some steps forward, with his suggestion that opposition parties brand themselves better and that opposition parties collaborate more with civil society.

     

    Source: http://six-six.com

  • Analysts: BTO Flats At Bidadari To Come At A Premium

    Analysts: BTO Flats At Bidadari To Come At A Premium

    A total of 2,150 new flats in Bidadari estate will soon be launched for sale under the HDB’s next Build-to-Order (BTO) exercise, expected by the end of September. The BTO flats will comprise two- to five-room units.

    This will be the first batch of HDB flats on offer in the new estate and priority will be given to those whose parents live in Toa Payoh, Potong Pasir or within the 2km radius.

    The area, which was once a cemetery, will eventually house about 10,000 residential units in the new Bidadari estate, as well as community malls, a 10-hectare park and a lake. The estate will be served by two MRT stations – Woodleigh and Potong Pasir – on the North East Line.

    According to property watchers, the Bidadari units will come at a premium, largely due to the city-fringe location.

    Said ERA Realty’s key executive officer Eugene Lim: “The nearest recent BTO in the vicinity was St George around the Boon Keng MRT station, which is just one stop away from Potong Pasir, where Bidadari is next to.

    “That was in September last year and the flats back then were launched, from S$328,000 for a three-room flat, and for a four-room flat, it started from about S$459,000. So we would expect pricing for the flats in Bidadari to be in the range of, for a three-room flat, S$300,000 to S$350,000, while for a four-room flat, S$400,000 to S$450,000. As for the larger five-room flats, (it is expected) to be around S$600,000.”

    Despite its history as a cemetery, and the possibility of a funeral parlour in the vicinity, analysts said they are expecting a strong demand for the Bidadari project. These flats will also be offered under the first BTO exercise launched after the income cap was raised to S$12,000.

    CEO of Century 21 Ku Swee Yong, said: “That gives us a fresh group of applicants who previously were not allowed to apply for BTOs. So on the demand side, the tap has been opened a little bit. If we were to draw the comparison with Bishan, which used to be a significantly-sized cemetery, Bishan currently has resale prices that are almost the top in Singapore.”

    HDB said there are plans to relocate the niches at the Mount Vernon Columbarium, currently located within the Bidadari estate.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • The Birth Of Malay Radicalism

    The Birth Of Malay Radicalism

    Associate Professor Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied, of the Department of Malay Studies at National University of Singapore, during his talk on ‘Radicals: Resistance and Protest in Colonial Malaya’.

    Before the coming of Malay radicals, ordinary Malays in the peninsula had never imagined the idea of Merdeka.

    Associate Professor Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied, of the Department of Malay Studies at National University of Singapore, said this had been a new way of looking at politics.

    He added that many ideas that the radicals were talking about in the 1930s were out of the world for ordinary Malays at that time

    “Radicalism brought people from different strata of life together as they tried, not only to redefine, but also question everything.

    “Malay radicals embraced democracy, but hated the West for taking over Malaya. But a lot of ideas they developed had Western origins.

    “They used these ideas to turn the tables on the very people who were oppressing them,” he said during his talk on “Radicals: Resistance and Protest in Colonial Malaya”.

    He added that many ideas that the radicals were talking about were far out of this world for ordinary Malays at that time.

    Syed Muhd Khairudin pointed out that these radicals also came from different backgrounds. Some were English-educated, others Malay-educated and there were also those who were Islamic-educated, adding that women also formed a big part of this group.

    “They were also fighting each other on the strategy they should take. It was akin to being married then divorced, and it would repeat itself from time to time.

    “This was one of the reasons radicalism failed to gain traction with rural Malays.”

    He said some of the leading members if this movement were national laureate Datuk A Samad Ismail, Ibrahim Yacob, Baharudin Helmi, Samsiah Fakir and Tan Sri Datin Paduka Seri Dr Aishah Ghani.

    Syed Muhd Khairudin said one badge of honour for this group was going to prison where they would regroup. At the same time, it was a place for them to get new “education” and develop new ideas.

    He said the one thing that was very clear was that the Malay radicals were not sure of their end game plan, but they still went ahead promoting their ideas.

    It should not be forgotten that women played a big part in being the agents of constructive change, he noted.

    Syed Muhd Khairudin said all women wings and non-governmental organisations owed their formation to the radical wing of women as they were the first to have a proper organisation.

     

    Source: www.therakyatpost.com

  • Dominican Republic – Girls Become Boys After Reaching Puberty

    Dominican Republic – Girls Become Boys After Reaching Puberty

    For some adolescents living in the village of Salinas in the Dominican Republic, one pubescent change is the development of a penis and testes.

    One in 90 boys residing in the area suffer from a rare condition that causes them to be born without male reproductive organs.

    Known as Guevedoces — which means ‘penis at 12’ — these children spend the first decade or so of their lives as girls before turning into boys upon reaching puberty.

    According to The Telegraph, Cornell endocrinologist Dr Julianne Imperato found an explanation to the phenomenon after making a trip to Salinas in the 1970s.

    Dr Imperato’s study found that human embryos only have protrusions called tubercles and remain sexless for the first few weeks of life.

    If the embryo is genetically male, the Y chromosome will instruct the gonads, or reproductive glands, to become testicles.

    Hormone

    Testosterone is then sent to the tubercle to be converted into a hormone known as dihydro-testosterone, which is responsible for transforming the tubercle into a penis.

    In female embryos, dihydro-testosterone is absent and the tubercle transforms into a clitoris instead.

    In its TV series Countdown To Life, BBC Two told the story of one of the Guevedoces — a 20-something man named Johnny who was once known as Felicita.

    Johnny told BBC Two that he wasn’t comfortable spending the initial years of his life as a girl.

    He said: “I never liked to dress as a girl and when they bought me toys for girls I never bothered playing with them – when I saw a group of boys I would stop to play ball with them.”

    When Johnny made the transition from girl to boy, he struggled to fit in with the rest of the children.

    He said: “They used to say I was a devil, nasty things, bad words and I had no choice but to fight them because they were crossing the line.”

    After becoming a man, the next thing on Johnny’s mind is settling down with the right woman.

    He said: “I’d like to get married and have children, a partner who will stand by me through good and bad.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Society, Not State, The Answer To Police And Nip Seditious Comments

    Walid J. Abdullah: Society, Not State, The Answer To Police And Nip Seditious Comments

    I always get worried when someone is charged or jailed for saying something ‘wrong’. Believe me, i know all about racist/derogatory comments (i am Muslim and Indian, after all!), but even with regards to those who make such remarks towards my religion or ethnicity, i would never advocate for the strong arm of the law to punish the offender.

    And what is even more worrying for me, i see so many people cheering the sentence of the dude who allegedly hurt so many Singaporeans with his comments; and in fact, many are asking for a longer jail term.

    Do we really have to punish people who make the slightest of offensive remarks? Can’t we disagree loudly and passionately, or call them out ourselves? Can we ever solve racism or attain true racial harmony if our response is to utilize the full force of the state each time something like this happens?

    I say: always be careful if you advocate for more state intervention in terms of punishment, because today it may be someone else who said something ‘wrong’; tomorrow, when societal conditions and/or the state change, it may be your turn.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

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