Category: Singapuraku

  • Teo Chee Hean: No Indication Of Heightened Threat To Singapore From ISIS

    Teo Chee Hean: No Indication Of Heightened Threat To Singapore From ISIS

    There is no indication of a heightened threat to Singapore specific to the Republic’s support to the coalition against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Teo Chee Hean in Parliament on Wednesday (Jan 29).

    However, the violence in Syria and Iraq continues and raises the overall threat level in every country, as ISIS still attracts extremists and encourages its overseas supporters to carry out attacks on home soil, using all means available, Mr Teo said.

    He was responding to a question posed by MP Alex Yam Ziming on whether there were heightened threat to Singapore, and whether additional measures are required to address issues of self-radicalisation.

    ADDRESSING IDEOLOGY

    On the second question, Mr Teo said self-radicalisation is a problem as it can lead to “lone-wolf” attacks.

    “We have had instances of Singaporeans becoming self-radicalised even before the Syrian conflict. ISIS has, however, worsened the threat through its widespread and effective use of social media to radicalise and recruit foreign fighters and supporters,” he said.

    There is growing international recognition of the need to “deal upstream with the ideology that fuels jihadist terrorism”, said Mr Teo, who added Singapore will be hosting the East Asia Summit Symposium on Religious Rehabilitation and Social Reintegration in April this year.

    “The Symposium will share best practices among participating countries and build capability to counter the terrorists’ radical ideology,” he said.

     

    Source: www.channnelnewsasia.com

  • More Digital Speed Enforcement Cameras To Be Installed By Year End

    More Digital Speed Enforcement Cameras To Be Installed By Year End

    Speeding motorists will soon find it harder to slip past the authorities, with 20 digital speed cameras to be installed at 11 locations around Singapore by the end of the year.

    Six of the 11 locations already have mobile speed laser cameras, while the remaining five have no speed cameras. The colourfully-painted digital speed cameras, which will complement the mobile speed laser cameras, are able to operate around the clock, even during inclement weather. These cameras will also have enhanced capabilities to better identify speeding vehicles.

    This was announced by the Traffic Police today (Jan 29), as it revealed that there has been a 6.5 per cent increase in speeding violations, adding that the offence is the major cause of fatal and injury accidents.

    There were 278,545 accidents last year with 42 related fatalities, up from 261,540 in 2013 with 39 fatalities.

    Describing the offence as “one of the very bad habits motorists (in Singapore) have”, Assistant Commissioner (AC) Sam Tee, the Traffic Police Commander, said the police are working harder to reduce the number of speeding violations.

    The police are also continuing with the replacement of film red light cameras with digital ones, with 30 more to be up by Sept 30, adding to the 120 already in place.

    There were 971,871 vehicles on the road last year. The number of fatal traffic accidents and fatalities, which has been on a downward trend, has dipped. There were 149 fatal accidents last year, compared with 150 in 2013, while the number of fatalities fell to 154 from 160 in 2013. In 2012 and 2011, there were 162 and 192 fatal accidents, respectively.

    The number of fatal accidents that involve running the red light also fell last year to four from eight in 2013.

    Other concerns raised by the Traffic Police include the increase in the number of elderly pedestrians killed on the road — from 17 in 2013 to 25 last year. These were mainly caused by motorists who were not alert and turning vehicles that failed to give way to pedestrians when traffic lights were in the favour of pedestrians.

    And of the 25 elderly pedestrian fatalities recorded last year, seven occurred while they were jaywalking.

    AC Tee said this is an area of serious concern, given Singapore’s ageing population. He said more efforts would be put into educating the elderly on how to look after themselves on the road.

    “The hearing and observation skills (of the elderly) are different from those who are more able bodied. We also urge road users to pay more attention to them,” he said.

    There were fewer persons arrested for drink-driving last year following a step up in enforcement operations — from 3,019 in 2013 to 2,954 last year — but the number of injury accidents rose 2.5 per cent, from 7,598 cases in 2013 to 7,791 cases last year. The number of fatal accidents due to drink-driving dipped from 14 to 10 cases last year.

    The number of motorcyclists and pillion riders injured in accidents rose 5.7 per cent to 4,631 last year.

    AC Tee said motorists must realise that every traffic rule violation poses a danger to themselves and to other road users.

     

    Here’s where the digital speed cameras will be:

    AYE towards City

    AYE towards Jurong

    Boon Lay Way towards Commonwealth Avenue West

    Boon Lay Way towards Jalan Boon Way

    Bukit Batok Road towards Chua Chu Kang Road

    Bukit Batok Road towards Jurong Town Hall Road

    BKE towards PIE

    BKE towards Woodlands

    Holland Road towards Farrer Road

    Holland Road towards Grange Road

    Loyang Avenue towards Tampines Avenue 7

    PIE towards ECP

    PIE towards Tuas

    SLE towards BKE

    SLE towards CTE

    Upper Thomson Road towards Lornie Road

    Upper Thomson Road towards Sembawang Road

    Yishun Avenue 1 towards Lentor Avenue

    Yishun Avenue 2 towards Lentor Avenue

    Yishun Avenue 2 towards Sembawang Road

     

    Source:www.todayonline.com

  • Khaw Boon Wan: Plans For Buddhist Temple and Commercial Columbarium In Sengkang Will Not Proceed

    Khaw Boon Wan: Plans For Buddhist Temple and Commercial Columbarium In Sengkang Will Not Proceed

    Singapore’s minister for national development Khaw Boon Wan on Thursday said he would not allow plans for a Buddhist temple and commercial columbarium in Sengkang to proceed. He also said his ministry would “find a way” to deliver the Chinese temple the land was originally earmarked for.

    Responding to multiple questions filed by three different MPs, he said in Parliament that it was the first time the government allowed a secular company to win the tender for the plot of land in Sengkang’s Fernvale estate, located near to two upcoming Build-To-Order HDB projects as well as an executive condominium.

    The case of the Sengkang Chinese Temple plot raised the ire of Singaporeans who had purchased flats under the project — the company, Eternal Pure Land, opted to build a Buddhist temple with a commercial columbarium on the area, plans that would-be residents said they did not know about before they opted to purchase homes there.

    Several requested refunds, expressing concern that the presence of the columbarium would impact the resale value of their flats, while others said they did not want to expose their children to “these things so young in their lives”, according to previous local media reports on the issue. Some 400 disgruntled people also attended a dialogue earlier this month with MP Lam Pin Min, who oversees the area.

    Speaking in Parliament on Thursday, Khaw said the tender process, in place since 1991, has always allowed both religious organisations and secular companies to participate, because religious organisations often form companies to engage in such tenders on their behalf.

    “The assumption is that only companies affiliated to religious organisations would participate in such tenders,” he said.

    The minister explained that the tender was awarded to Eternal Pure Land with the impression that the company was a vehicle for a religious organisation to build a Chinese temple, noting that a commercial columbarium is different from the columbarium services provided by religious organisations alongside temples.

    “We now understand that [Eternal Pure Land] is actually a private company without any religious affiliation. From what we know, the plan of the company is to run a commercial columbarium on the site,” he said. “This is not in line with our plan for the Places of Worship site.”

    The company had placed a winning bid of $5.2 million for the plot of land in July last year.

    “Having reached such a situation, I’ll find a way to try to unwind this,” he continued. “The key point is for that Sengkang site we want the Chinese temple and we will deliver that, for that Sengkang site we do not want a commercial columbarium and we won’t have one.”

    Khaw said his ministry is currently reviewing the existing land tender process for places of worship, working with religious groups to tighten eligibility requirements for tenderers.

    “The Sengkang temple case has highlighted the necessity for such a review. I will provide more information when the review is completed,” he said.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Foreign-Born Singapore Citizen Thinks More Singaporeans Now Think They Are Owed A Living

    Foreign-Born Singapore Citizen Thinks More Singaporeans Now Think They Are Owed A Living

    From “overfussiness” and complacency to an inability to accept criticism, many things about Singaporeans’ attitudes to work irk Mr Victor Mills. The Northern Ireland-born Singapore citizen, 55, who took over as chief executive of the Singapore International Chamber of Commerce (SICC) last June, speaks his mind to Walter Sim.

    What was your first impression of Singapore when you arrived 30 years ago?

    When I graduated (with a master’s in East European Political Science from the University of London), it was during a major recession and there were no jobs.

    So I joined an international bank and was first posted to Hong Kong, and then Singapore in 1985.

    What really impressed me about Singapore was that it preached good race relations – and actually had them.

    This was different when compared to Northern Ireland (which had a lot of political violence at the time due to the Protestant and Catholic conflict) and it was the first thing that struck me about Singapore.

    What also struck me, which we have since lost, is that Singapore was much more egalitarian and relaxed back then.

    People didn’t wear suits. They certainly didn’t wear ties – even the Government or businessmen. Anybody could talk to anybody.

    How have things changed?

    We’re now going through a period I saw in Hong Kong in the 1980s.

    The level of materialism – what you wear, where you live, what you drive, what you wear on your wrist – has become a key determinant of the value of human life. This is absolute nonsense.

    But it’s the unintended consequence of the fantastic economic success which we have enjoyed. In our headlong rush for more money, a lot of values seem to have been lost.

    The ability to communicate with anybody else is less evident, and people now, generally, want to interact only with people of their own perceived social group.

    So we’re now a more stratified and polarised society, which is why you hear people longing for the return of the kampung spirit.

    What impact does Singapore’s success have on workplace attitudes?

    There are lots and lots of people – more than before – who feel that life, their employer and the Government owe them a living.

    This has manifest itself in an overfussiness or a sense of entitlement which businesses, whether large or small, foreign or local, have been telling me about.

    They all say the same thing. The problem may vary in degrees in different sectors, but it exists across all sectors.

    But please don’t get me wrong. There are hundreds of thousands of my fellow citizens who do a fabulous job, day in and day out.

    One issue that has become a challenge for many businesses is excessive job-hopping. This has come about only because of our economic success and a very tight labour market.

    I have seen one extreme example in the SICC. We had employed an assistant finance manager who had a lovely personality with all the right experience and skills.

    We thought we hit gold. But she turned up for work for just one day and then disappeared.

    When we tracked her down a few days later – she was not answering her phone – she said: “It just wasn’t for me.”

    But my response was: “How could you possibly know after just one day? You are not giving yourself or the organisation a chance.”

    It’s an extreme case, but there are just too many stories of people leaving their jobs after a couple of months. I’ve not seen so many morose people in the workforce.

    All this job-hopping is stressful, and it doesn’t produce a lot of happiness. Yes, it may give $50 to $100 more in the pay packet but it doesn’t produce satisfaction.

    It is fine to say: “Look, I’ve given this 18 months, two years and it’s not for me. I’ve tried everything and raised issues. But it’s time to move on.”

    That’s healthy. What is unhealthy is not turning up for work because you don’t like it.

    It’s bad for businesses because it increases costs unnecessarily. The churn is just constant, and they have less time to focus on executing their business strategies.

    What other issues have you observed?

    Another problem is the unwillingness to accept feedback, even when given constructively.

    The attitude now is that if you don’t like me, I’ll go. People think they are great and are unwilling to believe that they can learn something as an employee.

    Distance is also another issue.

    I know of an industrial fragrance company which invested $25 million in Singapore. But they could not get a Singaporean to do the job. No matter what they paid, there were no takers because there was no direct bus or train. Also, nobody could tahan (Malay for tolerate) the smell at the plant.

    I think all this is very disappointing. This was not the case 30 years ago. People then were very hungry for a job, and so they were willing to work. And worked hard.

    So all this suggests that people have a misplaced sense of entitlement, but not necessarily retained a sense of responsibility.

    Instead of a two-way street, the employer has to do all the walking. Some employees are not prepared to even meet their employers halfway.

    It’s only because we are so successful that we have a prevalence of these attitudes. People are no longer hungry enough.

    But now, if we have – God forbid – a dreadful recession or some cataclysmic event that curtails employment opportunities, I have every confidence in the pragmatism of my fellow Singaporeans that they will change tack and attitudes.

    How is Singapore unique in the workplace issues that you have observed? Don’t most, if not all, mature cities face such problems?

    There are those who say we have to accept this as a way of life and that we cannot do anything, that a tight labour market produces this sort of behaviour.

    I do not agree with that.

    We are a city-state and cannot behave like another developed country, which can rely on something else happening in a different sector or a different part of the country.

    There is a school of thought that the days of Singapore’s vulnerability are over. But my contention is that Singapore will always be vulnerable. This is because of our size and the geopolitical space where we are located. It will not take much to upset the very delicate balance we have spent 50 years building.

    So we have to be careful in order to sustain our society and way of life. Singapore is an incredibly special place, and not enough of my fellow Singaporeans realise that. We cannot afford complacency because, without a vibrant economy, we can’t exist as a society.

    What repercussions will Singapore face if the negative workplace attitudes persist?

    Our neighbours have not only caught up with us, but are now much more nimble than before.

    They’re capable of producing good-quality talent who can produce good output consistently. They also have a more realistic assessment of remuneration.

    I met a 29-year-old US Silicon Valley technopreneur last year who first came to Singapore in 2012 to launch a start-up.

    But when he arrived, he discovered many problems – among them was a shortage of good IT developers, unrealistic remuneration expectations. He was also disappointed with the quality and quantity of output.

    He cut his losses within one year and moved to Jakarta after having tried everything, including counselling his staff.

    So how can the Economic Development Board say “Come to Singapore, we’ve got the right workers” when companies will very quickly find out that, in large numbers, we do not?

    We need to watch our attitudes because it is indicative of our attractiveness as an investment opportunity on a sustainable basis.

    On salary expectations, Singapore has much higher standards of living than its immediate neighbours. Is it really unfair to expect more?

    That is a fair point. Of course, we have a more expensive lifestyle and the cost of living is higher, but we must make sure it does not get to the point where it undermines our competitiveness.

    This is why the Government has been putting in so much energy to communicate, and facilitate an increase in productivity.

    We need to sit down and talk about how to help people make that mindset change.

    It’s not meant to be some kind of highfalutin, ivory-tower academic debate. These are real rice-bowl issues!

    You have also been a passionate champion against workplace ageism. How big of a problem is it?

    Many talented people above 40, especially PMETs (professionals, managers, executives and technicians) who lose their jobs due to economic restructuring, cannot find jobs due to an extraordinary degree of ageism here.

    HR managers would look at their CVs and think they are too senior and probably stuck in their ways. But age is not the issue here. Rather, it is their skills, experience, capabilities and, above all, their potential.

    Admittedly among this group are people who do not want to take a pay cut because they think they are going to lose face. Or they do not believe in continual learning because they think that’s for young folk. That is wrong. Those attitudes must change too.

    How do you think Singapore could do better in the way it crafts its manpower or workplace policies?

    I don’t think we are lacking in policies, though I sometimes think we are lacking in their execution.

    Our manpower policy is a classic example, because it is a one-size-fits-all blunt instrument. What we need is a much more focused sectoral approach, and an honest assessment of which sectors Singaporeans want to work in and which sectors they do not want to work in.

    The policy itself is clever because it tries to wean businesses off a 30-year addiction to foreign labour, and a real effort to force companies to think about how to improve their processes.

    We cannot just hire an extra body anymore. But we must realise we are in danger of wage inflation if we keep the mistaken belief that if you pay more, Singaporeans will do these jobs.

    That may be so for some jobs, but for the vast majority that Singaporeans are not doing today, it’s because people have taken the conscious decision not to do those jobs.

    So it becomes a double whammy for businesses.

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • Harassment Of Blind Busker At Woodlands MRT Resolved By SMRT

    Harassment Of Blind Busker At Woodlands MRT Resolved By SMRT

    Dear Netizens and all FB friends,

    Mr Suhaime Roa and Wife, Siti Aisah Sawie have met with SMRT official, Andrew last Friday. We were happy with the outcome of the meetings where the SMRT official offered their apologies for the incidents.

    According to them, they were not aware of the situation till it was highlighted through the social media. They took the matters seriously and the said Station manager has been given warning, reprimanded, would be send for training and would not be at Woodlands MRT for the longest of time.

    As SMRT already took responsibility for the unbecoming behavior of one of their staff high handed approach in dealing with Mr Suhaime, Mr Suhaime have decided to close this matter and move forward.

    On behalf of Mr Suhaime family, from the bottom of my heart I can only thank each and everyone of you for being there for them. At 3R Sincerely & Giving, ONE STARFISH AT A TIME, everyone matters! Please continue to support our cause to give a bright spot to those who need us.

    Having said all this, I am just disappointed that a simple issue if taken seriously by the authority like the MP’s and Police where an appeal and complain has been lodged, this case would not need be blown out of proportions. Their heck care attitude to the disable left much to be desired!
    I will personally write to the said MP to highlight this matter to him.

    I too was toying with the idea of any possibilities of gathering our buskers for a concert or maybe a get together for them to entertain us at Hong Lim park perhaps? Any promoters can take up this challenge? Just a thought!

    Please comment responsibly. No racists or vulgarities yah! LOVE ONE LOVE ALL!

    Zarina jaffar
    3R Group

     

    Previously…

    Dear Editors,

    Suhaime Roa is a prolific song writer and singers back in the 80’s. He is visually handicap and is a father of 4 children. For the past few years he has been busking at CWP and Civic centre. Woodlands. He hasNAC license for it.

    Sometimes back he has been harassed by Edmund Chong Kong Lum from Woodlands MRT. This idiotic of a guy try to exert his authority by ordering Suhaime to move away from the usual place he used to play.Suhaime would comply. If not he would call the police.

    This harrassment got so bad that a police report has been lodged against him but it still continued. I will copy and paste the convoy I had with his wife.

    By the way when he played its not even on SMRT Ground. following are her PM’s “We’ve been tolerating this far too much. We did go to MPs to seek advice n help.

    As a responsible man, Suhaime just want to earn a living by trading his talent for the family. Insyaallah.” TODAY AFTER I LEFT THE STATION, HIS WIFE PM AGAIN ”

    He came again. Demand to see Suhaime’s busking license. He want to make report to NAC tomorrow. We refused to give. Told him that he got no right to see as we are not in his ground. He said he will call the police. We told him to go ahead…” “He call Transcom Policeman. They also agree that it’s not MRTground.” “Just now, he’s not happy when Transcom Police refuse to give Suhaime’s particulars because the policemen said that Suhaime is not MRT ground. He call NPC. NPC came n told him the same thing.

    Our friend still not happy:, when the Transcom Policemen refused to give Suhaime’s particulars to him, he took down the Policemen’s particulars? What was he up to? Is he trying to manipulate with the Police too? “Even the CWP staff talk to him. He wants to show his power” UNQUOTE

    In one of the pictures you would see he very the kurang ajar put a barrier in front of Suhaime while the other picture is he standing threateningly. This has been going on for 2-3 years by the same person. SitiAisah Sawie please feel free to share more.

     

    Suhaime Roa Station Manager Suhaime Roa

    We are all here for you and Suhaime Roa Ok Guys please help to stop this! Together we have a duty to make a difference to someone in need of us now!

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

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