Category: Singapuraku

  • Tan Tock Seng Hospital Emloyees Comprise Of Almost 80% Filipinos

    Tan Tock Seng Hospital Emloyees Comprise Of Almost 80% Filipinos

    Filipino workers comprise 70 to 80 percent of the staff at the Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

    This was the shocking revelation in a report in Chinese media yesterday.

    According to a staff at the hospital, she said that 70 to 80 percent of the staff at the hospital are made up of Filipinos but the working relationship is cordial.

    The staff also said, “The professionalism of the Filipinos is not an issue. There are some of them who are outstanding as well.

    “However, the discussion online (about Edz Ello) might affect their relationship with their Singaporean co-workers.”

    A few days ago, a screenshot of what Edz Ello had written on his Facebook account took Singapore by storm.

    “Now the Singaporeans are loosers in their own country, we take their jobs, their future, their women, and soon, we will evict all SG loosers out of their own country hahaha,” he had said.

    “The best part, I will be praying that disators strike Singapore and more Singaporeans will die than I will celebrate.

    “REMEMBER PINOY BETTER AND STRONGER THAN STINKAPOREANS,” he said.

    Edz Ello is a Filipino.

    It was later discovered that he works at the Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

    Tan Tock Seng Hospital later also acknowledged so: “Dear all, the staff concerned is one of our nurses.

    But it also said: “He has reported to the police that his Facebook account has been hacked. We are cooperating with the police on the investigation. Thank you for the alerts and concern.”

    This caused another storm where netizens criticised Tan Tock Seng for still harbouring a person who has threatened Singaporeans with death.

    “Dear Pinoy friends, if you hate SG locals click like, if you want to see them dead click like, true pinoy supporters lets kick their people out of their own country click like hahaha,” Edz Ello had also said.

    Netizens also compared how Tan Tock Seng had brazenly fired Roy Ngerng, who was previously working as an administrator at the hospital, even though he had not yet been found to have defamed the prime minister then.

    Moreover, he had also spoken up for Singaporeans for their Central Provident Fund (CPF).

    However, netizens compared the action of Edz Ello who had evidently threatened Singaporeans but was not fired.

    Instead, in a latest Facebook update, the hospital only said, “The nurse is currently put on administrative duties, pending police investigations.”

    But the gravity of Edz Ello’s conduct and the relatively casual treatment towards him have shocked Singaporeans.

    Some have questioned if the administrator who manages the hospital’s Facebook page is also a Filipino.

    Indeed, where it has now been revealed that 70 to 80 percent of the staff at the Tan Tock Seng Hospital are Filipino, this has become a cause for concern.

    Questions are now abound as to why the hospital would hire such a high proportion of Filipino workers and asked if Singaporeans are not qualified enough to fill the job requirements.

    Moreover, questions are also now being asked if a similarly high proportion of Filipinos, or foreigners, also make up the bulk of workers in the other healthcare institutions.

    In fact, for the service industry, companies are only allowed to have foreign workers make up 40 percent of their headcount.

    Moreover, the foreign worker quota of 40 percent only applies to work permits and S passes. Employment passes (E passes) are not subject to these quotas. If so, does this also mean that there are many Filipinos who are also hired on E passes so as to circumvent the system?

    Is the Tan Tock Seng Hospital going too far as to deprive Singaporeans of their jobs, just so to cut costs?

    In addition, if Filipino workers already make up 70 to 80 percent of the workers in Tan Tock Seng, and this is not yet including foreign workers from other nationalities, then how many foreign workers are exactly working in the hospital, or other healthcare institutions for that matter?

    And how many Singaporeans are being deprived of healthcare jobs because of that?

    If so, not only does this put the question onto why the Tan Tock Seng Hospital would hire so many foreign workers and the ethics of doing so, this also places the question on the Ministry of Manpower – why did it not do its job?

    Why are Singaporean workers not being hired and why has the Ministry of Manpower not taken active enforcement action?

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Women Taking On Lead Roles In Male-Dominated Professions

    Women Taking On Lead Roles In Male-Dominated Professions

    Women make up about 45 per cent of the Republic’s workforce, and are increasingly taking on leading roles in traditionally male dominated professions.

    Channel NewsAsia spoke to two women public officers who are leaders in their field.

    GENDER NOT AN ISSUE WHEN FIGHTING FIRES: MAJOR ELLENA QUEK

    Ms Ellena Quek used to head Jurong Fire Station which is home to about 140 officers. The 32-year-old was the third female officer to command a fire station in Singapore. She is now posted to the Ministry of Home Affairs.

    The Major who joined the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) in 2005 said her gender was never an issue when it came to fighting fires.

    “I think at the fire site or the incident site, a lot of the stereotypes that we have don’t matter anymore, because the fire doesn’t care whether you are male or female or whatever qualifications you have,” Major Quek said.

    Major Quek and her fellow woman officers make up 14 per cent of the SCDF’s uniformed and civilian personnel.

    The SCDF said it started recruiting female officers as early as the 1980s. In the early years, female officers were only trained in administrative work. But the SCDF said more female officers have taken on higher appointments such as Fire Station Commander, Division Commander or Director of a Staff Department.

    Major Quek said female officers bring with them a different dynamic.

    “Female officers have an advantage, in relationship-building and also in our sensitivity to situations, especially when there’s trauma involved. A lot of the things that we see on a daily basis – they are not what you would see outside in your everyday life,” she said.

    “I HAVE TO BRACE MYSELF TO LOOK CONFIDENT”: SUPERINTENDENT JEAN CHIANG

    Superintendent Jean Chiang – who works for the Singapore Prison Service (SPS) – shares her sentiments. She is the second-in-command of a pre-release centre for offenders.

    Superintendent Chiang has steadily climbed up the ranks, behind the iron bars and cold concrete walls.

    “I must share that it is a challenge to be in front of male inmates, who are tall, big, burly. Many of them have tattoos, and I have to stand in front of hundreds of them, to address them in big groups at times. So definitely, that was something new to me and something that I have to brace myself for to stand up in front of them and to look confident and authoritative,” she revealed.

    The SPS said it is seeing more women applying to join the service through the years. Just like Superintendent Chiang, many of them have become leaders in their fields.

    “The basic principle of why SPS deploys women officers in the first place is that the organisation recognises us as competent, capable and thus, we do not want to portray ourselves as the weaker sex but rather fully competent and capable in managing male inmates as well,” she said.

    To ensure the safety of its women officers, there are strict guidelines on the roles of female staff, particularly in male institutions. For example, women officers do not enter the toilet or bathing facilities of inmates, when they are in use.

    They also do not manage high-risk inmates like sexual offenders and those who are violent. They must also be accompanied by male officers in areas where inmates congregate.

    Why are women taking on these jobs despite the obvious challenges?

    Superintendent Chiang said: “When we see that that we are able to help them achieve some things, we see that we are able to motivate them to change. I think that is very, very satisfying.”

    Major Quek noted: “Really, gender doesn’t matter. It is how you prove yourself and what you do that matters.”

    As these women prove – that is what matters most when it comes to serving Singapore.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Jeff Choi Posts Racist Comments Against Malays

    Jeff Choi Posts Racist Comments Against Malays

    Bro my friend share this FB user Jeff Choi kurang ajar.

    Fat fxxxxx racist!!! Ada dier cakapa Melayu semua bodoh dengan kulit gelap sebab Tuhan tak kasi makan babi.  Muka dier tu macam babi.

    Setan ni mengaku diri dier ex-gangster dier cabar siapa2 tak happy bleh cari dier. Kekek siak.

    Dier dah salah langgar ar.  Muka macam kena sampuk dengan babi.

    Share bro. Kasi ampai cari dier.

     

    Satria

  • Suhaimi Rafdi Letak Jawatan Sebagai CEO Cathay Organisation Holdings

    Suhaimi Rafdi Letak Jawatan Sebagai CEO Cathay Organisation Holdings

    Encik Suhaimi Rafdi akan meletak jawatan sebagai ketua pegawai eksekutif (CEO) Cathay Organisation Holdings pada 20 Februari ini, enam tahun selepas memegang jawatan itu.

    Penerima Anugerah Jauhari Berita Harian itu memberitahu akhbar ini semalam beliau ingin melakukan “sesuatu yang lebih bermakna”.

    “Kerjaya baru saya ada kaitan dengan kerja-kerja kemasyarakatan. Tetapi buat masa ini saya ingin berehat, dan bakal melakukan ibadah umrah,” ujarnya, yang sejak 2012 membantu Menteri Negara Kanan (Ehwal Dalam Negeri merangkap Ehwal Luar), Encik Masagos Zulkifli Masagos Mohamad, di sesi bertemu penduduk (MPS) beliau di GRC Tampines.

    Ketika ditanya, Encik Suhaimi, 47 tahun, enggan mendedahkan rancangan beliau selanjutnya.

    Semangat menyumbang kepada masyarakat berputik dalam diri Encik Suhaimi setelah beliau aktif dalam kerja kemasyarakatan, termasuk menjadi mentor seorang belia di bawah program Mendaki Sense, cabang latihan Yayasan Mendaki, dan pembimbing program keusahawanan sosial kendalian Kementerian Pembangunan Sosial dan Keluarga (MSF).

    Beliau, yang memulakan kerjayanya sebagai pengurus pelatih restoran makanan segera KFC, juga pengerusi Jawatankuasa Pengurusan Kelab Masyarakat (CCMC) Tampines West.

    Encik Suhaimi dipikat Cathay pada 1996 dan menyandang jawatan CEO sejak 2008, menyelia semua perniagaan Cathay, termasuk pengurusan pawagam, pengedaran filem dan penganjuran acara.

    Di bawah kepimpinannya, Cathay berkembang ke ke Timur Tengah, Afrika Utara, benua kecil India dan Indonesia.

    Pengarah Urusan Kumpulan Syarikat Cathay, Cik Choo Meileen, akan mengambil alih tugas beliau.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Singapore PR Jailed Two Months For Blackmailing Teenage Couple

    Singapore PR Jailed Two Months For Blackmailing Teenage Couple

    A security guard has been sentenced to two months in prison for blackmailing a teenage couple, after catching them having sex on the staircase landing of a condominium.

    Nagindran Dharmiah, 32, a Singapore permanent resident, worked as a security guard at a condominium on Simei Street. While making his rounds on the night of Mar 31, 2014, he stumbled upon the couple – a girl and her boyfriend, both 19 and whose names have been withheld to protect their identities – having sex and in various states of undress on the 11th floor staircase landing in the 27th block of the condominium, where the girl was a resident.

    He accused the boyfriend of trespassing and told the couple that their act had been caught on CCTV camera, and that he would be able to playback the recording by connecting his clocking device which resembled a black torchlight, to the camera. He also took a photo of the couple using his mobile phone. Investigations later revealed that Nagindran had been bluffing and that there was no CCTV camera on the 11th floor.

    Nagindran also made threats to call the police and the couple’s parents — to which the pair responded by pleading with him not to do so. He then agreed to break the clocking device if the couple paid him S$1,000 in cash as an initial sum to replace the device.

    Afraid that they would get into trouble since Nagindran knew her home address, the girl withdrew the amount and gave it to Nagindran, after which he deleted the photo from his mobile phone and took down her contact number.

    The next day, Nagindran sent the girl a text message demanding an additional S$850, claiming that it was the remaining sum to replace the clocking device he had promised to break. He asked her to meet him at Tai Seng MRT station to handover the money. The girl then made a police report. Later that evening, the girl met Nagindran at the MRT station and handed him an envelope containing S$50. He was then arrested by police officers who were at the station.

    Nagindran was charged with three counts of aggravated cheating, which each carries a maximum sentence of 10 years imprisonment, or fine, or both.

    However, in delivering the sentence at the State Courts today, District Judge Lim Tze Haw took into consideration that the amount of money involved was small and that this was Nagindran’s first offence.

    The judge chastised Nagindran for neglecting his duty as a security guard and for “committing the very crime (he) was supposed to prevent”. He imposed a two-month jail sentence for each charge, to run concurrently starting on Monday (Jan 5), and also ordered for the money to be returned.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

deneme bonusu