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  • Damanhuri Bin Abas: Singaporeans Cannot Take Back CPF Likely Because Money Disappeared Through ‘Brilliant’ Investment Decisions (GIC)

    Damanhuri Bin Abas: Singaporeans Cannot Take Back CPF Likely Because Money Disappeared Through ‘Brilliant’ Investment Decisions (GIC)

    People should be very very very angry about this. Why not!!! We are told we cannot take back our CPF when we all know now most likely it is because they can’t honour our money since many have disappeared through brilliant investment decision by this million dollar led financial maestro.

    A pastor went to jail for $40 million financial mismanagement and we become all righteous criticising his dishonesty yet silent and tolerate worst abuse of power. We demand accountability from WP for APHTC over peanuts compared to far humongous public money thrown away as cheap lunches. Lets make it right Singapore. Demanding accountability from our government is our right and duty in a democracy. The only language that they will listen is through the ballot.

    We may have this opportunity come September in the upcoming Presidential election and we pray and hope our Courts will act justly to allow Dr Tan Cheng Bock to contest and if Mdm Halimah is the government’s candidate we may have a break via a GRC by-election for MYT to put 4 SDP candidates into parliament to make those Ministers sweat and work hard for their lunches instead of simply taking away ours.

     

    Source: Damanhuri Bin Abas

  • Commentary: Need To Understand Asia Without Western Bias

    Commentary: Need To Understand Asia Without Western Bias

    Professor Kishore Mahbubani brought up a pertinent question (How the Western media gets the Korean crisis wrong; May 13): Is the Singaporean mind Eastern or Western?

    Amid the sea change happening in the world, it is time we asked ourselves this question.

    History may have decided for us how we were governed and educated in the last two hundred years. The English language has helped us tap international commerce and adopt technologies. We are fed Western pop culture and news that shape how we understand the world. But are all these cast in stone?

    While we have adopted the language, we have imperceptibly adopted the West’s superiority complex.

    In fact, many among us want to have nothing to do with anything non-Western, and view such things as inferior.

    But does this hold true in the changed economic, geopolitical and social reality we witness now?

    All through Asia, we see the desire for progress translated into action – infrastructural build-up, the adoption of technologies and an overhaul of electoral systems.

    The economic betterment of the people is self-evident. It seems that ideology has given way to economic progress.

    All these are happening in our neighbourhood. Asean, India, China and the vast Central Asia easily make up the majority of the world’s population.

    We should not let this huge tsunami of change pass us by just because we hold fast to archaic notions.

    Therefore, there must be a greater need to understand the region we live in.

    We are what we read. We should diversify our sources for news and information.

    More importantly, we should understand Asia through its own platforms and not cling to digesting feeds that are monolithic in portraying Asia as backwaters, or its people as repressed.

    We must understand Asia through Asia’s eyes.

    It is time we re-orientated our bearings, amid the rise of Asia.

    It will be perilous for us to ignore all that is happening at our doorstep.

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/forum/letters-in-print

  • Khan Osman Sulaiman: Rising Islamophobia, Are Muslims In Singapore Walking On A Tightrope?

    Khan Osman Sulaiman: Rising Islamophobia, Are Muslims In Singapore Walking On A Tightrope?

    Ahok got 2 years jail in Indonesia for blasphemy and the world cries foul. Yes its jail time. Not murder.

    When The Rohingyas were persecuted, not many were outrightly denouncing the Myanmar government for its crimes against humanity.

    Islam got slammed instead for bigotry. Clerics are ridiculed. Judges chastised. The press also solidifies the hatred/prejudice some people have for the religion by pushing out articles to make the religion look bad instead of correctly pointing the atrocities of humans, using religion to promote their political agendas.

    Shanmugam recently has called on the United States (and the world) to pay attention to the rise of “political Islam” and radicalism in Southeast.

    Instead, I say we should also pay close attention toward islamophobia.

    With rising islamophobia across the world and Singapore, the Muslims in Singapore are walking on a tightrope. We get scrutinized even for raising fundamental issues.

    The government’s distrust on the Malay/Muslim community dates back to LKY’s era. It has continued with the current administration led by his son Lee Hsien Loong but with a new dimension added to it. ‘Radicalization’

    With radicalization on the rise, and the effort to look into its emergence in Singapore, rightfully, the government may have fail to also give due consideration towards an emerging trend in Singapore. Islamophobia.

    I’d came across many postings on social media to kill the Muslim. To incarcerate anyone with the slightest differences of opinions. To remove citizenships of Singaporean Muslims and ship them ‘back’ to Saudi/Pakistan etc etc.

    It’s a growing trend if left unchecked, may rip apart the delicate social fabric currently maintained.

    Radicalization is a problem. So is Islamophobia. Deal with it concurrently without further aggravating the growing pressure my community faced from the gov and public.

     

    Source: Khan Osman Sulaiman

  • Alami Musa: Religion’s Place In Parliament, Politics And Policy

    Alami Musa: Religion’s Place In Parliament, Politics And Policy

    The crossing of swords in Parliament last month between Minister Masagos Zulkifli and opposition MP Faisal Manap on a religious issue (wearing of tudung by nurses and uniformed officers) provides an opportunity to reflect on the appropriateness of bringing religion into parliamentary debates.

    “Mr Masagos pointed to his (Mr Faisal’s) practice of subtly and frequently bringing issues that are sensitive to the community, knowing (they are) not easy to resolve and cleverly turning them into state-versus-religion issues… He (Mr Faisal) disagreed he was sowing discord and said that as an elected MP, he had the right to voice the concerns of his community in Parliament.” (The Straits Times, April 5).

    The question to deal with is whether issues of religion can be raised in Parliament, which is the apex political institution that defends the secular nature of the Singapore state.

    The above question seems easy to answer but it is not so. This is due to the complexities of Singaporean society that is religious in character. Eighty-three per cent of the populace have religious affiliations and the remaining 17 per cent have moral sensibilities, although they do not profess any religion. Religion is central in the lives of a majority of Singaporeans; it is intertwined with many aspects of life and cannot be ignored even within the secular setting.

    One response is to address the above question from the perspective of politics and policy. In his National Day Rally speech of 2015, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke of the 2Ps of politics and policy and reiterated that the Government must get them right to secure people’s trust and confidence.

    One important way to ensure that Singapore gets its politics right is to ensure that there is strictly no mixing of politics with religion. Raising issues of religion in Parliament for the sake of winning political support or gaining political mileage is politicising religion and this is against secularism.

    Nevertheless, secularism is more than the simple separation of politics from religion or the neutrality of state towards religion. Secularism is essential because it is only with a secular state ideology that tolerance of differences in beliefs and persuasions can exist. Furthermore, a state that does not show any favour to a religion or belief can better arbitrate among the many contending interests, wants and needs of various groups in a religiously diverse society.

    The nature of politics is that it is likely to be contentious. Its mix with religion will make politics even more contentious. Politics is the exercise of power, and the pursuit of religious demands or goals through politics in Parliament will give rise to a clash of interests and conflict among diverse religious groups. This can lead to disharmony and disunity.

    REGULATING RELIGIOUS PRACTICE

    However, it is recognised that religion is important to Singaporeans. In a religiously diverse country experiencing rising religiosity, the Government cannot be indifferent to religions. It has to assume stewardship over religion with regard to the social and political implications of rising religiosity. The Government does this through the lever of policy to ensure that the religious practices of any community do not contravene public order, public hygiene, national security, public safety and good governance requirements. Examples include the practice of ritual slaughter, playing of musical instruments during a street procession and the soliciting of public donations for religious purposes. The state must regulate these and many other aspects of religious life to the extent that they affect the general well- being of Singaporean society. As the state is involved in these matters, issues of religion will find their way into Parliament, either as policy pronouncements by the Government or as points of debate among parliamentarians.

    The state’s commitment is to secure the overall well-being of society through maintenance of public order, social stability, defence against external threats, enforcement of contracts and long-term economic prosperity. The Government has to be fully in charge to deliver all these “public-interest goods”. This means that all institutions and groups – temporal and spiritual – need to accept the reality that they have to be subordinated to the state. Nevertheless, the Constitution upholds the freedom of practice of religion and beliefs.

    Singapore’s secularism is unique in many ways. While it curtails the encroachment of religion into politics, as institutionalised within the Maintenance of Religious Harmony Act, the state accommodates the need for religion to assume a public presence to a certain extent. As many aspects of religious life have implications for society, the Government needs to be in charge through the instrument of policy to ensure the well-being of all citizens, regardless of faith or persuasion.

    The main argument for religious communities to leave to the Government of the day judgment calls on specific requests is that only the Government is in a position to decide which of these would not cause a pushback or adverse reactions from other religious communities. This is a delicate matter as each community has its own expectations that its requests be fulfilled.

    The state has been judicious in maintaining an “equidistant” position in relation to all religious groups and not showing favouritism to any particular group. In this regard, the state adopts a number of approaches, including that of accommodating all religious groups. For example, the state accommodates the request for space for places of worship for many groups by allocating parcels of land for religious purposes. Another approach is equal recognition of needs. This is illustrated in the equal recognition of religious celebrations and the declaration of public holidays for them. At the same time, as the third approach, the state had also in the past turned down requests but it did so with fairness, as illustrated in the refusal to allow religious groups to broadcast religious programmes over national television.

    Hence, the Government adopts an even-handed approach to all religious groups and it will decide how and when requests of various religious communities can be acceded to. In this way, the Government maintains its neutrality towards religion to secure the trust and seek the buy-in of all stakeholders. There is no benefit for religious communities to pressure the Government directly or indirectly, through proxy in or outside Parliament. To do so is to politicise these religious requests and it may result in an impasse. The ultimate loser will be the religious community concerned.


    • The writer is Head of Studies in the Interreligious Relations in Plural Societies Programme, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University .

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • An Open Invitation For Non-Muslims To Fast For A Day

    An Open Invitation For Non-Muslims To Fast For A Day

    Ramadhan is coming in about two weeks. I hope my Muslim brothers and sisters can introduce Ramadhan, and its significance in Islam (and why Muslims are markedly nicer in this month, if only in this month!) to our friends from other (or no) faiths.

    In fact, I suggest we encourage the people we know to try out fasting for a day. If nothing else, just to get the multiracial experience.

    For my friends, those who wish to try fasting for a day (or more), please inform me and you have an open invitation to my place for the breaking of fast on that day(s).

     

    Source: Walid J.Abdullah