Category: Singapuraku

  • John Allen Puji Kaedah Cendekiawan Muslim Singapura Menentang Fahaman IS

    John Allen Puji Kaedah Cendekiawan Muslim Singapura Menentang Fahaman IS

    Jeneral pesara Amerika Syarikat, Encik John Allen, yang mengetuai utusan khas Perikatan Global bagi menentang ISIS, memuji golongan cendekiawan Muslim Singapura kerana mengambil langkah pencegahan dengan mendekati masyarakat menentang fahaman ISIS.

    “Terdapat penekanan yang tinggi dalam cara Singapura bekerjasama dengan masyarakatnya untuk mendekati segmen tertentu, terutama golongan muda, dengan mengambil langkah-langkah pencegahan dalam masyarakat bagi membasmi kepercayaan ISIS.

    “Tidak banyak negara secanggih Singapura dan saya dapati ia (cara mendekati masyarakat) sangat baik, dengan cara kerjasama para pemimpin,” katanya dalam sidang akhbar di Kedutaan Amerika Syarikat di sini semalam.

    Encik Allen berada di sini sehari sebagai siri lawatan di rantau ini untuk menjelaskan usaha yang dilakukan Perikatan Global bagi menentang ISIS.

    Sebelum ini beliau mengunjungi Kuala Lumpur dan Jordan dan hari ini beliau ke Australia bagi misi yang sama.

    Menurutnya, dalam lawatannya ke Singapura semalam, beliau antara lain sempat menemui dan berbincang dengan para pegawai Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (Muis) dan Kumpulan Pemulihan Keagamaan (RRG) mengenai isu dan pergolakan ISIS.

    “Para cendekiawan dan pemimpin Muslim di sini telah menyusun dengan cara yang penting sebagai suatu tanggungjawab bagi menghuraikan masalah ini.

    “Itu merupakan satu mesej yang sungguh kuat,” ujarnya semasa menjawab soalan Berita Harian.

    Menurut Encik Allen lagi, para pemimpin Islam di sini telah membuat kajian mengenai radikalisme dan turut berkongsi memberi nasihat dan panduan kepada negara-negara lain dengan kajian yang dilakukan di sini.

    “Mereka juga membantu golongan yang menjadi radikal dengan sendiri agar pulang ke pangkal jalan,” tambahnya.

    Encik Allen berkata bahawa tidak seperti kumpulan Al-Qaeda, kumpulan ISIS lebih tersusun dan untuk menentangnya akan mengambil masa bukan harian atau mingguan tetapi bertahun atau mungkin berdekad.

    Namun menerusi laporan-laporan, beliau mendapati semakin ramai pejuang militan ISIS menjadi semakin hampa dan mahu pulang semula ke negara mereka.

    Encik Allen berkata, beliau memahami bahawa perjuangan ISIS bertentangan dengan kepercayaan Islam dan doktrin Al-Quran dan Hadis.

    “Ia bukan negara Islam tetapi mereka mendakwa demikian. Namun mereka yang bodoh dan terpengaruh menerusi Internet mahu mengaitkan diri dengan mereka (ISIS),” kata Encik Allen.

    Menurutnya, buat masa ini sebanyak 62 negara termasuk Singapura telah menyertai Perikatan Global bagi menentang ISIS.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Khaw Boon Wan Chides AHPETC For Unacceptable Behaviour

    Khaw Boon Wan Chides AHPETC For Unacceptable Behaviour

    National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan today (Feb 12) rebuked the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC), saying their behaviour is “unacceptable”.

    He was speaking in Parliament on the Auditor-General’s audit on the town council, which had flagged several major lapses in “governance and compliance”. The report is “a sad commentary on the state of affairs at AHPETC, he said, adding that MND will take action.

    POOR PATTERN OF BEHAVIOUR

    Mr Khaw said the AHPETC exercised a lack of transparency, and failed to disclose things on time or submit required reports, adding that they “came up with yet another excuse”, when the ministry gave them reminders. Financial reports aside, he said the town council’s FY2013 cyclical maintenance works report – which informs MND of any delays in replacing major infrastructure – was also late for more than six months and was incomplete and inaccurate, he said.

    This is serious as it potentially impacts on public health and safety, he said. “Why are reports from AHPETC always outstanding?”

    Secondly, the town council appointed a related party, FMSS as its managing agent, he said. The owners are husband and wife – with the former becoming AHPETC’s secretary while the latter became its general manager.

    He asked: “Why did AHPETC not disclose these related party transactions and take steps to prevent the risk of abuse when the companies it gave contracts to were owned by its key officers?”

    He also said that FMSS was paid “abnormally high fees”, some 20 per cent higher than the previous managing agent that ran Aljunied and 50 per cent more than a comparable town council. The supposed “up-scaled and developed financial system” it had embarked on could not even track and make simple monthly arrears reports, as AHPETC said it had to resort to manual counting, he noted.

    Mr Khaw also called out AHPETC’s Members of Parliament, pointing out that they have been “side-stepping and avoiding responsibility”. “I do expect them to exercise close supervision, and when problems arise or issues are highlighted, to step up and take responsibility, to look into them quickly and address them squarely,” he said.

    “Unfortunately, throughout this AHPETC saga, we have found the MPs running the AHPETC to be evasive, unresponsive and misleading,” he said. “In response to legitimate queries from auditors, my MND officials, and their own residents and the media, they stone-walled, deflected the queries, made false or dishonest claims, raised irrelevant excuses and sought to confuse the public with a flurry of red-herrings.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Long-Term Expat Considers Singapore Home

    Long-Term Expat Considers Singapore Home

    I’m coming up on my 13th year in Singapore.  We don’t say “back home” anymore. This island, with its hum and harmonious society, is home. After 20 years overseas, it’s the U.S. that feels foreign. What keeps us here? The easy answer is, it’s the future. We are in the Asian century. Southeast Asia is on the ascent with Singapore as its regional leader and hub. This is neither by accident nor default, it’s because Singapore Inc. has gotten so many things right. This is a forward-thinking, culturally diverse contemporary entrepot, exporting not only goods but also ideas.

    Singapore, with few natural resources save a strategic maritime position, long ago realized that education was a matter of national security. It scours the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) for top students and brings them here on full five-year scholarships to challenge local kids. The students then take their ideas back home with them. Singapore’s six universities are steadily climbing up the league tables. Here, math and science geeks are the cool kids and studying is an honorable pastime. By and large, it’s a meritocracy. We like this, not only because it’s good for our kids to be in this kind of environment, but also for the knock-on effects.

    Singapore gets a rap for being a nanny state. This is generally from those who think the Western model of democracy should be adopted wholesale. Living here for so long has helped me understand how (and why) Singapore has made it work. I’ve also seen how Singapore is exporting “democracy with Asian values.” Much to my benefit, the universities and think-tanks host lectures and workshops. They publish. They bring in heavy-hitters as resident scholars. Countries come through to soft-sell foreign policy, and look for partners. There’s an energy that comes with being a hub.

    We originally chose to come to Singapore with the notion that it was a good jumping-off point to explore Southeast Asia. This is true and we’ve done that, but you don’t need to leave to experience a variety of cultures. Food ennui? Time to dive into an old neighborhood to ferret out the best laksa (local coconut curry with mussels, rice noodles, bean sprouts, and belacan (shrimp paste), and roti prata. Want to see living religions? Hindu festivals are sprinkled throughout the year; Indians travel to Singapore especially for Thaipasum, when the local Buddhist temple uses margarine for its butter sculptures because the real thing will melt in the heat.

    More importantly, when it comes to cultural diversity, by and large, people do more than just “get along.”  This is a big plus. The U.S., among other countries, could learn the art of social harmony. Many places in Asia welcome expats, but most are dominated by one culture. Here, the hodge-podge mingle, happily for the most part. We want our kids to feel more than at home in diversity; we want them to be fluent.

    I like to think that we got beyond the “expat experience,” which has more to do with mindset than tenure. Singapore has a reputation for being “Asia Lite” and there’s no doubt that it’s clean, comfortable and safe, with a bit of exotic. You can treat it like a long-term resort experience. But it’s only “Asia Lite” for those who skim the surface, the people whose experiences are spent primarily in expat circles or institutions. It’s true that Singaporeans, like many locals who are wary of foreigners, can be difficult to get to know. But unless you do this, you’ll always be an expat and an outsider. A Singaporean friend invited me to breakfast at her home with a group of her friends, where the eight of us sat around her huge dining room table and ate very local food. All of the friends were at least second-generation Singaporeans. When the conversation turned to “what is a Singaporean?,” nobody had the answer, but everybody agreed that it was an educated and adaptive creature, aware that its destiny depends on constant improvement and growth.

    When we arrived, there were 4.2 million people; now there are 5.4. Most of that growth has come from immigrants, not all of whom are fully embraced. This is the trade-off that has some of the old-timers grumbling—and keeps folks like us living here. Every other week there’s a new place to eat, adventure to try and park to stroll.

    We sometimes think about retiring here. We have Singaporean friends, old neighbors, who stop by simply to catch up. Our boys grew up across the street from each other. Come Chinese New Year, we will convene at the home of the matriarch, in a public housing flat.  We will all play cards or mahjong (“lite gambling”) and the kids will go home with “red pockets” (fancy envelopes with small amounts of cash inside). As parents, we appreciate the Confucian values of respect and harmony, and admire the focus on family.

    Besides getting to know the local people, digging into Singapore’s history has made the place come alive. As a Chinese studies major and WWII history buff, it doesn’t get better. I can run by munitions dumps, artillery mounts and Japanese shrines. A neighbor invited me on a battlefield archaeological dig where we extracted real Japanese and British bullets. The Ford factory, where the British surrendered, always gives me a frisson when I see the table where it really happened.

    Arts are another reason to stay. This is not New York or London, but it’s way ahead of anywhere else in Asia, with Australia included.  Music? The Yong Siew Toh conservancy is an offshoot of Johns Hopkins’ Peabody Institute of Music. Here you can listen to violin competitions, piano master classes and student recitals almost every day of the week. Juilliard String Quartet will be in to brush up student’s skills in March. Art? The government just designated a dozen old Army barracks as an art zone, dedicated to galleries. The new ArtScience Museum’s current exhibition is on DaVinci, which dovetails nicely with the world’s first public exhibition of a study for the Mona Lisa at the Arts House at Old Parliament. For natural history buffs, the Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum will open in April; it inherits the Raffles Museum’s collection of more than 500,000 specimens.

    Singapore isn’t perfect, of course. The monotonously humid climate with never-moving sunrise and sunset is one of the two main drawbacks. We are just back from Lapland in Finland where we stocked up on winter weather. How nice it would be to run in the snow and sleet. The flip side, especially when you are not running enough, is that you only need one season’s-worth of clothes. My Birkenstock collection ranges from casual to formal.

    The other drawback is constant construction. I don’t think we have ever gone for more than a few months without a house going up or down within a few hundred feet. Driving is like a slalom course with the construction of the subway snaking its way under major arteries. But these are minor gripes. We are well-governed, safe, stimulated, and well-fed. More importantly, we’ve got a foot in the future.

    Kirsten Conrad is Principal of AsiaCat, which promotes research and conservation of wild cats. She has an AB from Harvard in East Asian History and an MBA from Duke University. She lives lives in Singapore with her husband and two sons.

     

    Source: www.wsj.com

     

  • Study Reveals That Online Arena Is Not A Digital “Wild Wild West”

    Study Reveals That Online Arena Is Not A Digital “Wild Wild West”

    The online political arena is, contrary to popular assumptions, not a digital “Wild Wild West” where blogposts are irrational, emotional and one-sided, according to a new study by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) released on Wednesday (Feb 11).

    One of the findings looking at the correlations between blog type and identity, objectivity, emotionality and partisanship showed that the more political a blogpost is, the more objective it is. This is “counter-intuitive”, as it goes against conventional assumptions that highly-political content tends to be irrational, said Dr Carol Soon, a research fellow at IPS and one of the authors of the study.

    Additionally, blogposts with “low” political content tend to be more pro-Government or pro-Opposition. “High” political content blogposts, on the other hand, tend to be more anti-Government and also more anti-Opposition, Dr Soon noted.

    Blogs with low political content are also more likely to post identifying information about their writers.

    The study also looked into identity and its impact on how objective, emotional or partisan a blogpost was. It found that there is no relationship between a blogger’s identity and objectivity.

    Dr Soon said: “This challenges the assumption that people who blog anonymously tend to be less objective.”

    As for emotionality of the posts, the study found there was no relationship between emotionality and the author’s partisanship to the Government or the Opposition.

    Of the 195 blogs studied, only 6.7 per cent were labelled as “5” – indicating the use of expletives. On the other end of the scale, 20.5 per cent were found to be “1”, or “very calm”.

    Other observations:

    • About 70 per cent of the blogs were not completely one-sided in their commentaries. A third scored between “3” and “5” in journalistic objectivity that offers alternative viewpoints in their posts
    • Political blogs tend to be two-sided in their approach – perhaps an indication that balanced arguments are more persuasive than one-sided blogposts, said Dr Soon
    • Journalistic objectivity and being unemotional go hand-in-hand

    Mr Tan Tarn How, a senior research fellow at IPS and one of the study’s co-authors, provided caveats to the study. He said the length of time – June and July 2014 – was short, and that the sample size of blogs and posts studied were small. A total of 197 blogs and more than 1,000 posts were analysed in the study.

    Facebook data was not factored in because access to the information was not readily available, the study’s authors said. Twitter data was analysed but the 140-character nature of the microblog meant meaningful analysis of a standalone tweet is not possible, they added.

    Dr Soon said: “(The study) has enabled us to empirically establish that the internet or the online space is not as much of a ‘Wild Wild West’ that we have feared it to be. Moving on, if we can develop big data tools to help us up-scale the effort, we can use it to look at Twitter and public Facebook pages for instance. From there, we can hopefully get a more representative indication of the online space.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • 50 Year Old Man Imprisoned For Repeatedly Raping Girlfriend’s Daughter

    50 Year Old Man Imprisoned For Repeatedly Raping Girlfriend’s Daughter

    A middle-aged man was sentenced to 15 years in jail on Wednesday (Feb 11) by the High Court for repeatedly raping his then-girlfriend’s daughter, who was 12 years old at the time.

    The Singaporean man, now 50, was charged with Aggravated Statutory Rape on April 1 last year. Throughout the course of the trial, the court heard that the offences had caused the victim, now 18 years old, to suffer from nightmares and trust issues. TODAY did not name the parties involved so as to protect the victim’s identity.

    The victim first met the man when she was a toddler in 2000. She and her mother had moved to Singapore after her mother gained employment here. The culprit was at the time married to another woman, who had helped the victim’s mother find a flat to rent in Circuit Road.

    Not long after, the culprit began an affair with the victim’s mother and moved in with them. The court heard that all three would sleep on the same bed.

    During the day, the man would look after the victim while her mother was at work. The victim, who called the man “daddy”, said she was afraid of him due to his bad temper.

    One afternoon, sometime between March and June 2009, the victim – then in Primary School – was alone in the flat with the culprit. The court heard that he approached the victim while she was resting on the bed and began touching her intimately despite her protests.

    He then proceeded to rape her. When she complained of pain, he told her that it was normal for girls to feel pain the first time they have sexual intercourse.

    He raped her again sometime between June and October 2009.

    Two years later, the victim was brought to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital after experiencing recurring rashes and growths at her private part area. Further investigations by social workers brought the rape incidents to light. The victim then lodged a police report against the man, who at the time of his arrest was working as an industrial technician. The victim said she did not lodge a police report earlier out of fear of being beaten.

    A psychiatric assessment by Dr Bernadine Woo of the Child Guidance Clinic revealed that the victim has been feeling sad, irritable and angry since the rape incidents.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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