Category: Politik

  • Goh Chok Tong: Opposition Parties Come And Go Like Nomads

    Goh Chok Tong: Opposition Parties Come And Go Like Nomads

    Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong has urged Singaporeans to give the currentGOVERNMENT a good mandate and not be distracted by the Opposition.

    The former Prime Minister (PM) was speaking on Wednesday (Aug 26) at the unveiling of the People’s Action Party (PAP) slate for Marine ParadeGROUP Representation Constituency (GRC), which is expected to face a challenge from the Worker’s Party (WP).

    Commenting on the WP, Mr Goh said there was a “certain arrogance” about the opposition party. He addressed a wide range of topics during the introduction.

    Here is a selection of hisQUOTES:

    GE IS “MANDATE” FOR PM LEE’S GOVT

    “I’ve travelled all over the world as PM. I know the impact of politics on people’s lives … I came to the conclusion that we can categoriseGOVERNMENT into three categories: The good, the bad, the ugly.

    “As you can see now, in many countries in the world, there are ugly governments. We are lucky that we have a good Government. So I look at this election as a mandate for the Lee Hsien Loong Government.

    “If the Government doesn’t get a good support, you’re repudiating what they’re doing. It’s very important that you give them a very clear signal and support their agenda.”

    OPPOSITION ARE LIKE “NOMADS”

    “Opposition parties come and go like nomads. Nomads will not have anINTEREST in the people’s welfare. A new tribe is coming – do they really have interest in Marine Parade’s welfare?

    “Having spent forty years there, the residents know me. I will leave it to them to decide whether I’ve done a goodJOB or not.

    “The opposition will be there just throwing all kinds of distractions.

    “You know the fable of the rooster that crows when the sunrises? The rooster goes around claiming that it’s the crow causing the sun to rise. So that’s what they’re doing.”

    “A CERTAIN ARROGANCE” ABOUT WP

    “Strength is relative. They (WP) are stronger than NSP (National Solidarity Party) – there’s no doubt about it – but there is a certain arrogance about them.

    “With that arrogance will they be able to replace me and my team? Let them try.

    “Are we worried that WP is coming to MP? Look at the way they run their Town Council’sFINANCES and look at the way we run (ours).

    “You decide – who do you want to manage your town council?”

    “I COULD HAVE RETIRED”

    “I’ve fought nine General Elections. I could have retired … (I’m) the only pioneer generation leader left in politics. When PM (Lee) asked me to stay, I felt duty bound to contribute.

    “Chuan-Jin has beenWORKING hard as the anchor minister and he is leading the Marine Parade team to fight the elections. Chuan-Jin is a member of the fourth generation leadership team.

    “Will I be running the next election after this? I want to have theOPTION to retire. So, I hope that Chuan-Jin will give me the option to retire.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Filipino Nurse Ello Ed Mundsel Bello Convited Under Sedition Act

    Filipino Nurse Ello Ed Mundsel Bello Convited Under Sedition Act

    Philippine national Ello Ed Mundsel Bello, 28, who made disparaging remarks about Singaporeans onFACEBOOK earlier this year, pleaded guilty to three charges on Wednesday (Aug 26).

    He was convicted on one count under the Sedition Act, for promoting feelings of ill-will and hostility, and on two counts of providing false information to police. An additional charge under the Sedition Act, and another for lying to police, will be taken into consideration during sentencing.

    In hisFACEBOOK post, Bello called Singaporeans “loosers (sic) in their own country”. “We take theirJOBS, their future, their women, and soon, we will evict all SG loosers out of their own country”, Bello added, saying that Singapore would be the “new Filipino state”.

    The Filipino also stated that he would be “praying that disastors (sic) strike Singapore and more Singaporeans will die”. He will “celebrate” if this happens, he said.

    He ended his Facebook post with the declaration: “REMEMBER PINOY BETTER AND STRONGER THAN STINKAPOREANS.”

    Bello did this while employed as a nurse at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, which subsequently dismissed him over the incident, after discovering through their own investigations that Bello had made three other online posts in the same vein in 2014.

    In court on Wednesday, Deputy Public Prosecutor Kumaresan Gohubalan said that Bello’s comments were “xenophobic, derogatory and inflammatory” in nature, further aggravated by the fact that his comments were published to “an enormous audience”, and that Bello displayed a total lack of remorse for his actions.

    Investigations revealed that he had regularly commented on reports and articles relating to Singapore, often in a “vile, derogatory and offensive” nature, and on sensitive issues such as race and nationality.

    Bello’s comments came under the spotlight when they were posted on The Kaki News Network, aFACEBOOK page with a significant public following of 30,000FACEBOOKusers. The comments went viral, and were also the subject of several police reports made against Bello.

    Alarmed by the hostility generated by his comments, Bello deleted them, and lodged a report with police, stating that he was “shocked and furious that these comments had been attributed to him”.

    He told police on three occasions that he did not make the offending comments on Facebook, and that hisACCOUNT had been accessed without his permission. Bello only admitted to his lies in his fourth statement to police, when “he found he could not keep up the lie”, Bello’s lawyer, Mark Goh, said.

    Mr Goh also told the court that as the “delicate golden threads” of race and religion that bind Singaporean society had not been touched on by his client’s comments, Bello should be granted a lower sentence of six weeks, as opposed to the prosecution’s submission of 20 weeks’ imprisonment.

    In response, DPP Kumaresan told the court that comments of this nature are “detrimental to society” and “cannot be trivialized or underestimated”, especially in a cosmopolitan society like Singapore.

    Bello will be sentenced on Sep 16.

    For promoting feelings of ill-will and hostility between different races or classes of the population of Singapore, Bello could have received a fine of up to S$5,000 or a jailTERM of up to three years, or both.

    For giving false information to police, Bello could have faced a jailTERM of up to one year, a fine of up to S$5,000, or both.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Engineer, Redzwan Hafidz, Unveiled As Workers’ Party Candidate

    Engineer, Redzwan Hafidz, Unveiled As Workers’ Party Candidate

    The Workers’ Party unveiled its first batch of potential candidates for the upcoming general election at its Syed Alwi Road headquarters on Wednesday (Aug 26) afternoon.

    Among them were new faces Daniel Goh, 42, an associate professor of sociology at the National University of Singapore, engineer Redzwan Hafidz, 30, and RHBBANK wealth manager Dylan Ng, 40.

    On July 26, party chairman Sylvia Lim had revealed that it would befielding a record 28 candidates – up from 23 in 2011 – in fiveGROUPrepresentation constituencies (GRCs) and five single-member constituencies (SMCs).

    APARTfrom Aljunied GRC, Hougang SMC and Punggol East SMC which WP currently holds, it is contesting in East Coast, Jalan Besar, Marine Parade and Nee Soon GRCs, as well as Fengshan, MacPherson and Sengkang West SMCs.

    Non-constituency MP Gerald Giam and Aljunied MP Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap had visited the Elections Department headquarters on Wednesday morning toCOLLECT nomination papers on behalf of the party.

    Mr Giam, 37, confirmed that he was one of the 28 candidates contesting at the coming polls.

    The pair also submitted the candidates’ Political Donation Certificates and certificates from the Malay Community Committee and the Indian and Other Minority Communities Committee, ahead of the deadline on Aug 28.

    The Straits Times had previously identified as many as 16 new faces who could be on the party’s slate, half of whom hail from the private sector. Their ages range between 27 and 48.

    Mr Low said on Aug 12 that WP was looking to field younger candidates who “will be able to connect more and represent the views and aspirations of the younger generation”.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Parents, Pupils Will Get Time To Adjust To PSLE Changes

    Parents, Pupils Will Get Time To Adjust To PSLE Changes

    The makeover of the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) is still some time away, with the announcement to come next year at the earliest, said Education Minister Heng Swee Keat.

    Parents and pupils will be given enough time to respond and adjust to the changes when they are implemented, he added.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had said two years ago in his National Day Rally speech that the high- stakes exam would be revamped, and the aggregate T-score done away with.

    Instead of getting a score out of 300 points, pupils will get grade bands – similar to how students get graded from A1 to F9 for the O levels or A to E for the A levels. The grades will then be converted to points to be used for admission into secondary schools.

    Mr Heng said the Ministry of Education (MOE) is already putting diverse programmes in place in primary and secondary schools to meet the needs of different children. For instance, each secondary school has to develop two distinctive programmes by 2017 to cater to students’ interests.

    “It is about choosing the school that has the programme, the emphasis and the fit, rather than about that one school that you must go to,” he said.

    Recent SkillsFuture initiatives – such as the Earn and Learn programme for polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education graduates as well as the introduction of modular courses at the post-secondary level – also aim to send a message to parents and students that the emphasis is on lifelong learning and helping students enter their areas of interest, said Mr Heng.

    “Some of us may take a longer pathway to reach our peak. Some of us may take a shorter pathway, and some will take a path less travelled and go do something completely different,” he said.

    “There are many good pathways and I don’t need to cram at just the PSLE level and say that I must get into that one school.”

    The MOE is still in the process of implementing programmes in secondary schools – especially in neighbourhood schools – to create differentiation, said Mr Heng.

    These initiatives to create a more diverse secondary school landscape, with different schools offering different niche areas, will come before the PSLE revamp.

    “Some parents believe that a certain school will help their child succeed better… It will take some time for this mindset to change,” said Mr Heng, adding that the end goal is not just about grades, but also about finding success in life.

     

    Source: http://youthphoria.stomp.com.sg

  • Facing Difficulties, SPP Candidate, Jeanette Chong-Aruldoss Gets Creative

    Facing Difficulties, SPP Candidate, Jeanette Chong-Aruldoss Gets Creative

    Unlike meeting residents in HDB Flats and Landed Property where a candidate can go knock on doors without prior permission, explicit permission is required to visit homes in condominiums.

    Many, if not all, opposition parties face difficulties in meeting their constituents who live in condominiums.

    Approval to visit must be obtained from the condo’s management under the Management Corporation Strata Title (MCST) – the managing body of a condo.

    Rejection letters from MCSTs are commonplace as many managing bodies prefer not to have any form of political activities in their private estates.

    In the case of Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss, the Singapore People’s Party (SPP) candidate for Mountbatten SMC, she had mailed out 23 requests to various condominiums in her constituency to ask for permission to visit voters residing there.

    Letters of rejection

    To date, she has only received 4 letters of rejection and has yet to hear from the rest.

    Some letters of rejection are more fair, like the one from Sanctuary Green, which promised not to have any form of political activity – from any party, including the People’s Action Party (PAP) – on its premises.

    Letter of Rejection from Sanctuary Green MCST
    Letter of Rejection from Sanctuary Green MCST

    Others, however, have been a little less fair in their decisions.

    Take, for example, Pebble Bay’s MCST, which rejected Jeannette’s request a mere couple of days after allowing the incumbent MP to have a chit-chat session in the condominium. 

    Untitled

     

    What is of interest to me is not the letters of rejection and the unfairness but how the opposition candidates responded. Instead of the usual lamenting that many half-expected, they took it in their stride, rolled up their sleeves and got resourceful.

    2 cases in point, Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss from the SPP and the Workers Party’s Yee Jenn Jong.

    Picnics and BBQs

    Jeannette Chong organised a Picnic at Wilkinson Interim Park to mingle with residents from the nearby Private Estates
    Jeannette Chong organised a Picnic at Wilkinson Interim Park to mingle with residents from the nearby Private Estates

    The letters of rejection did nothing to deter Ms Chong-Aruldoss.

    Last Saturday evening, she organised a picnic at Wilkinson Intermin Park. The Park’s location was a strategic one as it was just a stone’s throw away from many private estates. Through the picnic, she had the opportunity to meet many residents of private estates and along with the conversations, there was good food to go around too.

    One resident of Mountbatten SMC remarked that it “felt like a block party!”

    Jeannette explaining what the Picnic is all about
    Jeannette explaining what the Picnic is all about

    Jeannette also took full advantage of the fact that she resides in Mandarin Gardens, a condominium in Marine Parade GRC.

    As her condominium falls under the Joo Chiat precinct, she organised a BBQ and hosted WP’s Yee Jenn Jong.

    Mr Yee had contested in Joo Chiat SMC in the 2011 elections and lost by a hair’s breath – 355 votes – to the PAP’s candidate.

    It was an opportunity for him to meet residents of Marine Parade GRC – from both inside and outside of Mandarin Gardens – over some juicy satay.

    Sharing a light moment with a resident
    Sharing a light moment with a resident

    It was very clear that there was a real sense of mutual respect and camaraderie between Ms Chong-Aruldoss and Mr Yee, or JJ as he is also called.

    “Here’s a personal story about why I respect JJ so much,” Ms Ms Chong-Aruldoss said. “At GE2011, my elderly father was frail and not well but he insisted on casting his vote. So my brother had to devise a way to take him in his wheelchair to vote. My dad was greatly satisfied to have cast his vote (thanks to my brother), and I will always be proud of my dad for his determination. I respect JJ for inspiring my dad’s determination. JJ lost by 388 votes – but it would have been 389 if not for my dad’s vote. After the election, JJ visited the residents to thank them for their support. My dad was very touched by his sincerity. Proud to introduce this sincere, personable and caring man to my neighbours. Joo Chiat is also Mountbatten’s neighbour.”

    Mr Yee is expected to contest in Marine Parade GRC in the upcoming elections, after Joo Chiat SMC was erased from the electoral map by the Electoral Boundaries Review Committee in its report released last month.

    Overall, it was two events where the opposition candidates managed to weave a way through to meet their constituents despite the roadblocks set by the various MCSTs.

    Such events go to show that when there is a will, there is truly a way and these candidates are more than willing to go the extra mile for their constituents. Obstacles do not turn these candidates away. In fact, it strengthens their resolve and forces them to be more resourceful in thinking of creative ways to overcome the rejections.

    A shot where candidates and volunteers of SPP and WP come together. Huat ah!
    A shot where candidates and volunteers of SPP and WP come together. Huat ah!

    *The writer, Ariffin Sha, is a volunteer with Ms Chong-Aruldoss’ election campaign.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

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