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  • Gerald Giam: Caught In The NSEW Line Breakdown

    Gerald Giam: Caught In The NSEW Line Breakdown

    I was caught in the massive breakdown of the North-South and East-West Line (NSEWL) of the MRT yesterday evening as I was heading to a meeting at the WP HQ in Jalan Besar. When I reached Dover station at about 7.05pm, the eastbound train was already at the platform but with all its cabin lights off. I got onto the train anyway, but waited almost 5 minutes before it finally moved off. The westbound train on the opposite track was similarly stalled. My train stopped midway to the next station and all its lights went out again. This pattern was to repeat itself several more times over the next 25 minutes. When I reached Outram Park station at about 7.35pm, the lights in the train went out a final time and we were told to detrain as it was no longer in service.

    The PA system announcements at the station informed us that train service on the entire NSEWL had been suspended and free shuttle buses were available. So I exited the station thinking I could hop onto one of the buses. Big mistake! The street level was packed with people and there were no buses to be seen and no directional signs to guide the stranded commuters. Someone asked me where the buses were. I told him honestly that I had no idea.

    Knowing that it would be pointless to attempt taking a cab, I headed back down to the station, against the flow of the crowd, hoping to get in again and take the North-East Line (NEL). But all the fare gates were closed and I was told by an SMRT staff that I had to exit and walk around the station to get into the NEL entrance. I finally boarded the NEL and arrived at my meeting almost half an hour late.

    I consider myself fortunate that I was able to hop onto the NEL. The guy sitting next to me on the East-West Line train (before it stopped at Outram) said that he was heading to his home in Simei. I think he, like hundreds of thousands of other commuters, probably got home much later than usual.

    This 3.5 hour service disruption, which happened simultaneously on the two busiest MRT lines during the Tuesday evening rush hour, was probably the most serious service disruption ever. I had flashbacks to November 2011, when I had another close shave — I just missed getting on one of the trains from City Hall station that was to eventually stall in the middle of the tunnel.

    According to SMRT and LTA, the outage was due to a power fault. Preliminary investigations found that a faulty train could have caused the power to trip. I find it astonishing that a fault with a single train could cause power to be cut to trains at all 58 stations on the NSEWL. Is there so little redundancy in the system? Or are all the circuits strung together in series like a cheap set of Christmas tree lights?

    As of the time of this writing, it is still unclear if the MRT service will be available in time for the Wednesday morning rush hour. SMRT has already advised commuters to make alternative travel plans. Both the Minister for Transport and LTA have come out to apologise for the breakdown and demanded that the faults be investigated and rectified. That is little comfort for the quarter-of-a-million or so commuters who suffered this massive inconvenience and frustration.

    The Commission of Inquiry (COI) into the November 2011 MRT disruptions had identified maintenance (or lack thereof) as a key cause of the multiple breakdowns then. Now, almost 4 years later, with a new CEO at the helm who promised to focus more on engineering and maintenance capabilities, we seem to be back to square one. What can we expect moving forward? Another COI?

     

    Source: http://geraldgiam.sg

  • Lelaki Muslim Harus Contohi Nabi Muhammad SAW Dalam Perkahwinan

    Lelaki Muslim Harus Contohi Nabi Muhammad SAW Dalam Perkahwinan

    My heartfelt condolence. Share bukan utk aibkan sesiapa tapi utk jadi iktibar dan pengajaran buat kita semua.

    Semoga para lelaki mendalami indahnya akhlak Rasulullah sebagai suami dan ketua keluarga sebelum berkahwin.

    My husband always remind me that ‘love is not just about feelings, its commitment’. How 2 person commits to give their best, whatever it takes.

    Looking at ths two, i guess im a bit demanding as well.. I pun nak Prada nak LV nak Ferragamo.. But my husband cakap, mengikut Islam, when he takes me, he takes up the responsibility to fulfill my wants and needs.. Tp i pun tak ada lah minta bukan2 frm my husband bcz i pun kerja so i can afford what i want with my own money.. Ni lah dipanggil EHSAN.

    Tahu tak tugas dalam rumah ialah tanggungjawab suami? Tahu tak dlm Islam ada bahagian nafkah utk wangian dan perhiasan isteri? I taktahu, Saif yg beritahu.. Tahu tak, kalau isteri dah biasa bersenang jadi tanggungjawab suami utk sediakan maid? Itu pun Saif beritahu.. Kenapa Saif tahu bcz he reads alot, he listens alot.. Dia bukan lelaki yg besar kepala dan bentuk marriage ikut kepala dia je dengan verdict, ikut hukum agama isteri kena patuh pada suami! Tak, Rasulullah tak berkeras dgn isteri, Baginda suami penyayang, kongsi selimut, bergurau senda, pergi pasar kemas rumah, what does that tell u? It means he was a loving man, responsible and tolerates in marriage.

    Tanggungjawab isteri dlm Islam ialah menjaga suami, menjaga harta suami sepanjang pemergian dan menjaga kehormatan diri.. Kerja rumah tu ehsan isteri, jaga anak tu ehsan, duit isteri dalam household ialah sedekah dari isteri. Tak percaya? Dalamilah ilmu agama berkaitan perkahwinan.. Jgn tahu nak kawin je lepas 6 minggu dah macam2 jadi..

    Kalau mutually dah agree to swap duties, itu persetujuan antara suami dan isteri. EHSAN. Ini rumah bersepah marah isteri pulak instead of buat jugak. Susu anak pun tak reti nak buat. Memang tanggungjawab lelaki besar. Sebab tu, kalau tak sanggup, fikir byk kali sebelum kawin.

    Indahnya perkahwinan bila suami jadikan akhlak Rasulullah sebagai his way of life and core of action.. Ni tak, kutip sunnah tang kawin 4.. Imamkan isteri solat pun entah ada ke tak.. Kerja rumah serah bulat2 kat isteri.. Duit sendiri perabih kat main bola, lepak dgn kawan, rokok. Duit isteri guna beli pampers duit dapur. Duit isteri bayar rumah bayar kereta. Itu semua tanggungjawab suami. Macam mana rezeki keluarga nak bertambah kalau isteri bagi duit dlm tak ikhlas dlm marah sbb suami tak berikan nafkah dia malah ambil pulak lagi dr dia bahagian yg sepatutnya tanggungjawab suami? Again, if the parties dah agree to swap responsibility, itu lain. Thats EHSAN.

    Susah kan jadi lelaki? Sebab itu lah digalakkan kahwin dari kalangan sekufu.

    Tapi zaman sekarang, entahlah.. Kita kata kita islam, tapi kita pilih2 panduan yang mana nak ikut.. Sedih kan.

    Kalau Rasulullah tengok agaknya Baginda sedih tak? Ini ke Umat yg dia rindu dan sebut berkali2 sebelum wafat tu.. Ini ke umat yg nak diberi syafaat tu..

    Ingatan buat sendiri dan semua, jom kita tepuk dada tanya iman.

     

    Source: Tun Fiqa Mohammad

  • Polyclinic Increases Consultation Fees From 1 Jul

    Polyclinic Increases Consultation Fees From 1 Jul

    The consultation fees at the 18 polyclinics around Singapore have been increased from 1 July.

    The two groups which oversee the clinics, Singhealth and National Healthcare Group (NHG), have updated  their websites with the new charges

    Over at Singhealth, consultation fees are up between $0.40 and $2.90.

    For Singaporean adults, it is up by $0.80 cents – from $11.00 to $11.80.

    While that for Singaporean adults at NHG polyclinics are up $0.60, from $11.30 to $11.90.

    Here is a comparison of the new fees at Singhealth polyclinics:

    Adults: $11.00 to $11.80 (increase $0.80)

    Children/Elderly: $6.10 to $6.50 (increase $0.40)

    Permanent Resident: $21.00 to $22.50 (increase $1.50)

    Non-Resident: $41.70 to $44.60 (increase $2.90)

    fees & charges

    The fees at NHG polyclinics are now as follow:

    fees & charges 2

    Singhealth Polyclinics are located in:

    1. Bedok
    2. Bukit Merah
    3. Geylang
    4. Marine Parade
    5. Outram
    6. Pasir Ris
    7. Queenstown
    8. Sengkang
    9. Tampines

    National Healthcare Group polyclinics are located in:

    1. Ang Mo Kio
    2. Bukit Batok
    3. Choa Chu Kang
    4. Clementi
    5. Hougang
    6. Jurong
    7. Toa Payoh
    8. Woodlands
    9. Yishun

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • ISIS Represents Radical Shift In Terrorism

    ISIS Represents Radical Shift In Terrorism

    The world was shocked by the recent brutal attack on tourists on a Tunisian beach. But the story of the killer, and his progression from young football fan to gun-wielding jihadi, is raising alarm in intelligence circles.

    The odd thing about Seifeddine Rezgui, said Mr Fadi Saidi, a computer science student at Tunisia’s Kairouan University, was that he was always one of the least extreme of the radicals. “What changed Seif Rezgui? We don’t know,” said Mr Saidi, who knew the 23-year-old as an undistinguished face among the growing crowd of noisy Salafists, with their literalist interpretation of the Quran, and jihadi sympathisers with whom he and other secularists routinely clashed on campus.

    Rezgui’s rampage on June 26, on a beach near Sousse, left 38 dead in what was the deadliest Islamist terror attack on Europeans since the London subway bombings in 2005.

    More than anything, the bloodshed brought home the reach and power of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), in whose name Rezgui murdered. The ability of the group, which controls large swathes of Iraq and Syria, to motivate a breakdancing, football-loving young man to commit mass murder, and in so doing lose his own life, has magnified the threat of what used to be called “lone wolf” terrorism — where individuals take it upon themselves to perpetrate acts of political violence.

    Lone wolf attacks are not new, but the rise of ISIS has changed their nature. The perpetrators are no longer just isolated loners. The pull of the jihadi message that incites them is stronger than ever. Many governments now recognise that the toolkit of counterterrorism developed in fighting Al Qaeda is no longer enough: A major change in approach is required. In the United Kingdom, spymasters are considering the biggest shift in their approach to counterterrorism in a decade.

    “Rezgui was living in this shaabi (poor) neighbourhood called Al Minshiya. It’s massive, maybe almost 100,000 people live there,” said Mr Saidi. “In those kind of areas there are no youth clubs, no cultural activities, no sports. There’s barely even any infrastructure. There’s nothing. All you have is the mosques.”

    Tunisia is riven by the attack. Three months since 21 were gunned down at the Bardo Museum in Tunis, the country’s hard-won reputation as a beacon of stability and democracy following the Arab Spring has been shattered.

    In some ways, it should not come as a surprise. More Tunisians — an estimated 3,000 — have flocked to swell the ranks beneath ISIS’ black banners than any other nationality. In Kairouan, students pull out smartphones to reveal pictures of classmates posing with AK-47s in Syria.

    There is an abundance of reasons given for the turn of so many of Tunisia’s citizens towards jihad. The shaabi neighbourhoods are full of Salafist preachers; crime and drug use are high; the chance of a better future for thousands of young men is not. Hotbeds of Islamism abut glittering tourist resorts. El Sfaya, a ramshackle slum of potholed roads and unadorned concrete block apartments, is a stone’s throw from the beach where Rezgui found his victims.

    Tunisia’s plight is far from unique. Across the Arab world, Europe, North America and elsewhere, counterterror chiefs fret about the new face of terrorism — attacks that do not need direction, do not need plotting and planning, and do not need great resources.

    “After what has happened in Canada, Australia, Denmark and France recently, it seems clear that you don’t need any more to go to Syria to become a terrorist,” said Mr Jacob Rosen, a veteran Israeli diplomat and now senior counsellor at Israel’s Foreign Affairs Ministry.

    “You have a critical mass domestically in so many countries in the Arab world and beyond — you don’t need to travel anywhere to get radicalised.”

    The rise of ISIS has been transformative. Its powerful narrative of redemption has turned the idea of “lone wolf” terrorism into a far more deadly hybrid that motivates a much bigger demographic into action. Under fire from an international coalition in its self-proclaimed caliphate across northern Iraq and Syria, it has sought to export its violence ever further abroad.

    The Sousse attacks came only days after Abu Mohammad Al Adnani, ISIS’ spokesman, exhorted followers to “expose” themselves to martyrdom and bring “disaster to the apostates”.

    NEW TACTICS

    For Western intelligence agencies well-schooled in the fight against Al Qaeda, this shift from hard networks as the vehicles of terror to a movement characterised by charismatic influence is a huge problem. “ISIS’ rise has changed matters a great deal,” said one of Europe’s most senior intelligence officials. “Al Qaeda was about quality. ISIS is about quantity. And we do not have the tools to easily deal with it.”

    Spies across Europe are stretched in dealing with existing networks of hardcore radicals in their own backyards, let alone having now to consider those in other countries. Their investigations have relied on complex processes of triage to whittle down likely suspects to identify the key players at the centre of jihadi groups.

    But as in Tunisia — and the Jewish museum murders in Brussels, the Ottawa Parliament attack, the Charlie Hebdo killings in Paris and the Copenhagen cafe shooting — it is individuals on the periphery of known networks who were the perpetrators. Rezgui, who is said to have trained in Libya for the attack, never featured on the security radar in Tunisia.

    That periphery is not only hard to monitor for legal reasons — warrants for government snooping in much of Europe depend on evidence about who individuals are associating with and why, rather than what they believe — but it is also far larger than the existing groups being monitored. In the UK, for example, the domestic security agency MI5 currently has 3,000 “subjects of interest” on its databases. The agency employs only 5,000 people.

    One senior British counterterrorism official compares it to Brownian motion — the phenomenon of particles in a fluid bouncing around, seemingly at random. “We have to track all of these particles, moving around in ways we cannot necessarily predict … some particles are connected, others are just floating around.”

    According to the EU’s counterterrorism chief, Mr Gilles de Kerchove: “The nature of an organisation is that it is constructed. It leaves traces of links that can be crossed by investigations. But with individuals, they may get their ideas from Dabiq or Inspire (ISIS’ and Al Qaeda’s online magazines, respectively) or the Internet, or their peers … but you do not necessarily know how or when.”

    In response, officials are now focused on trying to develop “counter-narrative” strategies online and in communities to try and disrupt the lure of ISIS’ own story. But such efforts remain piecemeal and are often clunky.

    EXTREMISM’S ALLURE

    In developing policies to eradicate the ISIS narrative, the real key might come in asking why its allure has so suddenly exploded. “We have had a sustained (jihadi) fever. The tensions are so high. The imagery and the rhetoric is like nothing before,” said Mr Patrick Skinner, a former Central Intelligence Agency counterterrorism official and now director of special projects at Soufan Group.

    “The combination of ubiquitous social media and these non-stop conflicts is stoking a very different environment for extremism in Europe and the West … All the conditions are right for this big change in what lone wolf attacks are and mean.”

    ISIS’ skill in information warfare and its use of social media have made a huge difference to the pull of its message. Its physical caliphate itself is, of course, one of the group’s most emotionally resonant concepts. Unlike Al Qaeda, whose leaders led a covert and small network from shadows and caves, ISIS has proclaimed its enduring presence as a physical state. Even the most wilful potential recruits for Al Qaeda struggled to find the network. In the case of ISIS, it is impossible to miss it. As such, for radical young Muslims drawn to extremes, it is much easier to take up the cause.

    Shattering that allure will ultimately require a physical effort as well as a conceptual one, said one senior military official in the anti-ISIS coalition. ISIS needs to suffer defeats to break its primacy in the minds of radicals, he said. In practice, however, the military campaign against ISIS — nearly one year old — has barely contained the group, let alone humiliated it.

    The problem may be yet broader. The slums of Tunisia are not unique as nurseries for crime and producing disillusioned young men and women. The ISIS message has found a home in almost any place where such social structural problems are evident among Muslim communities, be they in London’s East End, Paris’ banlieues or the ethnically segregated villages of the Balkans.

    “We can save people from this,” said Mr Saidi. “But it requires support for civil society and studying the situation to understand the main problems. It isn’t about sending a couple of mukhabarat (spies) into the hotels and mosques.”

    Ironically, the crackdown — which saw dozens of unofficial Tunisian mosques closed in the aftermath of the attack — is in many cases making matters worse. “The harassment is pushing us,” said Mr Waleed, a Salafi truck driver in Tunisia.

    “I was someone who was much more moderate before, but now I am really angry. The only solution is a second revolution — and let it be more than the last one. Let it be like Syria, if it has to be.” THE FINANCIAL TIMES

    ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

    Sam Jones is defence and security editor at The Financial Times and Erika Solomon is the newspaper’s Middle East correspondent.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • It’s A Wombat, Not A Pig

    It’s A Wombat, Not A Pig

    PETALING JAYA: Malaysians had better hit the text books and familiarise themselves with the animal kingdom before making false claims and causing panic among others.

    Just as one irresponsible member of the public did when mistaking a wombat for a pig. Incensed at the disrespect shown, this person posted online a screenshot of the digital advertisement featuring the animal, causing a panic in cyberspace and resulting in Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) having to temporarily pull it down.

    Mayor Ahmad Phesal Talib confirmed the pulling down of the advertisement along Jalan Bukit Bintang and said DBKL officials were trying to reach Servcorp, an Australia-based company the advertisement belonged to.

    “An irresponsible person perceived it as a pig and spread false rumours on the Internet which led to the public misconception,” the mayor was quoted as saying on The Star Online.

    He also agreed the animal in the digital advertisement was a wombat, a marsupial like kangaroos, wallabies and koala bear which Australia is famous for, and not a pig as claimed.

    The wombat in the Servcorp advertisement is named Sidney, which the company claims as the “world’s wisest wombat”.

    In the erroneous messages that went viral, Sidney was mistaken for a “pig wearing a songkok and baju Melayu while accompanied by a Selamat Hari Raya greeting”, the news portal said.

    Sidney is usually dressed in a hat, coat and brown pants.

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com

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