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  • Girl, 6, Drowns In Hotel Pool While Dad Looking At Phone

    Girl, 6, Drowns In Hotel Pool While Dad Looking At Phone

    He was looking at his mobile phone while his six-year-old daughter, a non-swimmer, played in a swimming pool nearby.

    Mr Zacharias Alexander Karamoy later looked up and saw, to his horror, his little girl motionless at the bottom of the deeper end.

    The Indonesian national immediately jumped into the pool to rescue his child. But it was too late.

    Neisha Sandra Karamoy, who had not been wearing a flotation device, suffered brain death and died in KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH) two days later.

    The incident happened at the Grand Mercure Singapore Roxy Hotel at East Coast Road.

    Following an inquiry, State Coroner Marvin Bay found that her death was a tragic misadventure yesterday.

    Because drowning can occur swiftly and silently, he stressed that adults should not make use of mobile devices while supervising children.

    FLOTATION DEVICES

    Coroner Bay also said that young children should use personal flotation devices when they enter bodies of water.

    He added: “Nevertheless, it is important to remember these buoyancy aids, however helpful they may appear, are only aids and cannot drown-proof a child.

    “They certainly do not replace close adult supervision in water of all depths.”

    Mr Karamoy, his wife, Madam Ni Ketut Sawitri, and their two children, Neisha and her seven-year-old brother, had arrived in Singapore for a holiday on April 3.

    At around 10am the next day, Mr Karamoy decided to take the children to the pool while Madam Ni attended a course at the SIA training centre.

    Coroner Bay said: “Mr Karamoy sat at the side of the pool while the siblings played in the pool.

    “Mr Karamoy was browsing his mobile phone, and from time to time, he would check on them.”

    At the poolside, Neisha made a new friend, a five-year-old Singaporean girl, identified in court papers only as “Miss A”.

    The two girls were playing in the shallow part of the pool, which was 80cm deep, when Neisha wanted to go to the deeper side. That part of the pool was 1.2m deep while Neisha was only 1.15m tall.

    When they reached there, Miss A panicked after she realised she could not touch the bottom.

    Coroner Bay said: “She started to wave her hands vigorously and tried to get attention. (Neisha) was in front of her and was also seen struggling.”

    An unknown woman managed to rescue Miss A and took her back to the shallow side where the steps to the pool were.

    The little girl’s mother, who was nearby, rushed forward to console her daughter before the pair returned to their hotel room.

    At around 10.30am, Mr Karamoy looked up from his mobile phone and noticed that only his son was at the shallow end.

    He then spotted his daughter motionless at the bottom of the pool and immediately jumped into the water to pull her out.

    Hotel staff performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation on Neisha and an ambulance arrived at around 10.45am to take her to KKH.

    A CT scan later revealed she had suffered severe brain damage.

    Brainstem testing also showed that she had suffered brain death.

    After a family conference with her doctor, Mr Karamoy made the painful decision to withdraw his daughter’s life support at around 1.30pm on April 6.

    Coroner Bay said: “Mr Zacharias Karamoy was candid in stating that he did not pay enough attention to (Neisha) while she was playing in the pool.

    “Children should be accompanied by a supervising adult, who must know how to swim and ideally provide ‘touch supervision’ – that is to say, to be close enough to reach the child at all times.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Former Journalist Ismail Kassim: PAP Should Nominate Strong Minority Candidate For Upcoming Presidential Elections, Not Amend Constitution To Stifle Competition

    Former Journalist Ismail Kassim: PAP Should Nominate Strong Minority Candidate For Upcoming Presidential Elections, Not Amend Constitution To Stifle Competition

    A note to PM

    Dear Prime Minister

    By now you ought to know how divisive your proposal to amend the EP system has become. I cannot think of any issue in the last three decades that has caused such a wide and deep division within the electorate.

    The tragedy is that your aim to ensure that members from minority communities too have a chance at becoming an EP is commendable, and has its merits.

    Unfortunately, the way and timing of your move have also prompted considerable misgivings over your real motive:

    Is it really to ensure minority representation or is it to prevent an independent-minded citizen from being elected EP in 2017?

    Because of suspicions and emotions aroused over motive, it has become very difficult, even for those in the middle ground, to look at the proposed changes in a calm and objective manner.

    And any rush to implement a system that is deemed unfair may have adverse repercussions on the EP itself.

    Reserving the post for a particular minority is fundamentally flawed and goes against the grain of multiracialism and meritocracy. Likewise, the obsession with higher qualifications without giving due weight to strength of character and integrity is both elitist and undemocratic.

    Will any good arise from foisting a minority candidate in a closed race open only to members from that community on the nation; in all likelihood too, it is likely to become a farce, reminiscent of a past EP election, when a businessman was forced to compete to give the semblance of a democratic race.

    Such an EP is unlikely to command wide respect, and in all probability will be regarded as a ‘kayu’ (wood) by significant sections of the people, including members from his own community.

    There is still time for you to salvage the situation; just make sure that whatever changes that will be adopted will not come into effect in the 2017 presidential election.

    In this way, your protestations that they are not aimed against any individual will instantly become more credible.

    The minority community that has not yet produced an EP for the last 47 years will not mind waiting a little longer.

    As far as I know, they have grumbled over a lot of things such as continuing discrimination in the military and national service for their males and the unfair banning of their tudung-clad females from becoming nurses and policewomen.

    But over the EP, there is none.

    The PAP, notwithstanding its faults, is a great party with a sterling record.

    If you feel strongly, you should nominate a minority for the coming EP and use all the powers at your disposal to get him elected.

    If you think it is too risky, you can always field a stronger candidate. There is someone with impeccable credentials from your ranks who cannot become PM because of his ethnic origins. I think he will be unbeatable in any contest.

    These are the heroic options, which a party with a solid reputation to protect, should choose.

    Do not stoop so low now as to amend the Constitution out of fear, just to exclude opponents and independent-minded citizens.

    So Mr Prime Minister, I hope you will reconsider all your options, and choose one that will unite the people, and not divide them further.

    Ismail Kassim
    14th November 2016

     

    Source: Ismail Kassim

  • We Wear Hijab And We Are Serious Athletes

    We Wear Hijab And We Are Serious Athletes

    These women are all athletes and yes, they all wear headscarves too.

    Their achievements are easily forgotten because people are so much more focused on what they choose to wear, even if they are breaking records on every level possible.

    hijab-athlete-1

    hijab-athlete-3

    hijab-athlete-4

    hijab-athete-6

    Let’s support these women by highlighting their sports performances and not just their religious practices.

     

    Source: MVSLIM

  • Bridge To Nowhere Shows China’s Failed Efforts To Engage North Korea

    Bridge To Nowhere Shows China’s Failed Efforts To Engage North Korea

    Towering above the murky waters, the New Yalu River Bridge was supposed to symbolize a new era in relations between China and North Korea, helping bring investment to landmark free trade zones jointly run with the impoverished and isolated state.

    Costing 2.2 billion yuan ($330 million) and partially completed last year, the dual-carriageway bridge today sits abandoned, the impressive border post on the Chinese side deserted and locked, not a soul to be seen.

    On the North Korean side the unfinished bridge ends abruptly in a field, with little sign of infrastructure work happening.

    Launched with great fanfare at a five-star Beijing hotel in 2012, the free trade zones close to the Chinese border city of Dandong were meant to be part of China’s efforts to coax its erstwhile diplomatic ally into cautious, export-oriented economic reforms, rather than saber rattling and nuclear tests.

    China’s anger at North Korea for carrying out its fifth and biggest nuclear test last week means the bridge looks unlikely to open any time soon, especially as Pyongyang is already under wide-ranging UN sanctions China has promised to uphold.

    The lonely streets of the Dandong New Zone stand testimony to the failure of those engagement efforts. Apartment complexes with fancy names like “Singapore City” lie bare or half-finished, and shopping malls empty or at very low capacity.

    At the Guomen Wanjia Home & Life Square Mall, Sun Lixia sits waiting for customers at a lighting store.

    “North Korea hasn’t opened their end of the bridge and we can’t really do anything about it. It’s been bad for the local economy here. Who knows when they’ll open it?” Sun said.

    “Apartments haven’t been selling quickly, a lot of people aren’t willing to move here,” she added. “There isn’t even a proper hospital here, it’s only been half completed.”

    It’s far cry from what one Dandong official told state media in 2012: that the development would resemble Causeway Bay, one of Hong Kong’s busiest commercial areas, and the bridge handle 50,000 people and 20,000 vehicles a day to North Korea.

    “ABUNDANT RESOURCES”

    The Hwanggumphyong and Wihwa Islands economic zones, along with one at the other end of the border at Rason, had high level support. Late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il inked an agreement for them during a trip to China in 2010.

    The Rason zone has been more successful, though, with much more development, including a Chinese-built road into town and a new bridge being built at its border crossing.

    Kim’s son, the youthful current leader Kim Jong Un, has yet to visit China, and seems unlikely to be invited any time soon as he pursues an accelerated nuclear weapons and missile testing program to the increasing alarm of the outside world.

    A glossy promotional booklet from 2012 shows an artist’s rendering of gleaming tower blocks in Hwanggumphyong and wide, tree-line avenues.

    “North Korea has not only abundant, high-quality human resources, but also rich capital resources and enormous land to develop,” the bilingual Chinese-English booklet reads, promising legal protection for investors and tax breaks.

    When Reuters visited this week, only farmland and barbed wire fencing could be seen from the Chinese side.

    “The government was counting on trade between China and North Korea to drive economic growth here but that hasn’t happened,” said a security guard who gave his family name as Liu, standing in front of an office building on the optimistically named Commercial Street.

    “To be honest, the main reason the new zone hasn’t developed is because the bridge isn’t open,” Liu added.

    WAR TIES

    The new link is meant to supplement Dandong’s old “Friendship Bridge”, with its lone lane for both vehicles and people running parallel to a single-line railway track.

    About three-quarters of bilateral trade flows through the city, and statistics show how limited that still is.

    China’s trade with the North is dwarfed by that with capitalist South Korea, which was worth 908 billion yuan ($136 billion) between January and July, compared to just 17.7 billion yuan between China and North Korea.

    Dandong’s emotional ties with North Korea run deep, thanks to its front line position during the 1950-53 Korean War when China and North Korea fought against a U.S.-led UN coalition.

    Shops are packed with often low quality-looking North Korean goods, including ginseng and spirits infused with snakes and medicinal herbs, and North Korean waitresses sing patriotic songs at government-run restaurants for curious tourists.

    Those relations have been severely strained by North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests and periodic shootings and murders blamed on North Korean residents and security forces.

    “I don’t like North Korea. The police on the other side used to shoot farmers who’d go over to sell potatoes, corn, things like that, in the winter,” said Dandong farmer Zhao Guangfu, 70.

    Jin Qiangyi, Director of Yanbian University’s Centre for North and South Korea Studies, said China found itself in a “distressing” position on what to do with North Korea.

    “We have a choice about whether we can push them to reform and open up, to get them to change,” Jin said. “Of course political and military sanctions need to be stepped up, but civilian opening up and exchanges must be strengthened too.”

    Shutting the door won’t work, Jin added.

    “Can it really change that way?”

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Mohamed Jufrie Mahmood: Elected Presidency Has Become A Joke!

    Mohamed Jufrie Mahmood: Elected Presidency Has Become A Joke!

    The primary objective of having AN ELECTED PRESIDENT is to arm him with the moral authority to SAY NO to the government of the day. Millions need to be spent to achieve this objective. Then they make the whole exercise futile by clipping his powers by subjecting his custodial responsibilities and decisions to the agreement and consent of a bunch of unelected PAP errant boys. Do they think that Singaporeans are fools? This is what you again and again get from another bunch, made up of scholars who pay themselves millions and whose main objective is to retain power. To do that they have to pre-occupy themselves with moves to screw up the system.

     

    Source: Mohamed Jufrie Bin Mahmood