Category: Singapuraku

  • MUIS Staying Silent Despite Calls For Greater Transparency On Its Accounts

    MUIS Staying Silent Despite Calls For Greater Transparency On Its Accounts

    There have been some disclosures made about MUIS on this page recently.

    Whether it is turning away the needy, the use of zakat to pay MUIS staff salary, lack of transparency in waqf or riba, there are real concerns in how MUIS is conducting itself.

    For instance, is MUIS dealing with riba with its own subsidiaries?

    According to MUIS annual report, MUIS charges 3.75% interest on a $29,528,837 loan to its subsidiary.

    Why is MUIS, supposedly the highest Islamic authority in Singapore dealing with riba?

    When Allah has declared war against anyone who are involved with riba.

    We emailed MUIS last Friday and did not even receive an acknowledgement.

    MUIS Accounting

    Nevertheless, we will like to remind our brothers and sisters to reserve judgement until there is full disclosure.

    And reserve judgement until we hear from MUIS.

    We are raising questions. We have contacted MUIS to gain clarification.

    MUIS has refused to respond.

    This is one of the problems we face as a community. MUIS does not respond to the community. It is a statutory body that reports to the government.

    Not to us.

    And yet, they are supposed to be the highest Islamic authority.

    This is where the problem lies. It demands the authority to lead us but refuse to explain itself or its decisions.

    Not even the Khulafah Ar Rasyideen behaved in this way. The Khulafah accepted being questioned and corrected in public.

    MUIS refuse to even respond. Instead, they took out advertisement to tell the community a half truth.

    Insha Allah we will reveal a lot more issues concerning MUIS. Until they respond, we suggest that while all of us recognise the problems, let us continue to reserve judgement.

    May those granted amanah live up fully to it.

    May those who lead us gain the courage to truly lead.

    And May we be a community that is always on haq.

     

    Source: Singapore Muslims for an Independent MUIS Facebook Group

  • Singapore Students Spends Third Longest Time On Homework

    Singapore Students Spends Third Longest Time On Homework

    Students in Singapore are among the world’s most hard- working at home, clocking the third-longest time spent on homework, a report released this month has found.

    The country’s 15-year-olds said that they devoted 9.4 hours to homework a week, in the study by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

    They came in behind students in Shanghai, who spend 13.8 hours a week on homework, and those in Russia, who take 9.7 hours.

    Students in Finland and South Korea spent fewer than three hours – the least among the 65 countries and regions surveyed – on homework each week.

    The global average was about five hours’ worth of homework each week.

    The report was based on results from a questionnaire in 2012 for the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa), a test to measure academic achievement for 15-year-olds.

    Around 510,000 students took part in the test. They were asked questions about their school environment, families and attitudes towards subjects and school.

    The study found that students who did more homework scored higher in Pisa. For instance, Shanghai and Singapore, where students spent much of their time on homework, came in first and second respectively in the Pisa mathematics test in 2012.

    Across the countries and regions surveyed, students who came from socio-economically advantaged backgrounds tended to devote more hours to homework.

    A spokesman for the Ministry of Education (MOE) said Singapore’s weekly average of 9.4 hours on homework is “fairly reasonable for upper-secondary students, who would be preparing for the national examinations”.

    She said: “Homework, when used appropriately, can reinforce students’ learning, contribute to their progress and cultivate a healthy disposition towards learning.”

    But in response to parents’ concerns about excessive homework in recent years, schools have adopted policies to monitor and coordinate the homework load across subjects and departments.

    The MOE spokesman said: “Some teachers may get their students to complete their assignments in class or after school, rather than at home.”

    Swiss Cottage Secondary School student Nurul Amirah, 15, said her daily routine of homework and revision starts at 9pm and ends around midnight.

    “I spend more than 10 hours on homework every week. If exams are coming, I spend at least 15 hours. But I benefit from assignments that make me think more,” she said.

    She added that teachers and students list homework assignments on their classroom boards, so students do not get assigned too much work at any one time.

    Associate Professor Jason Tan, an education policy expert at the National Institute of Education, said: “The 9.4 hours do not seem that overwhelming, when students are taking six to nine subjects in Secondary 3.

    “But (the report) also doesn’t give any indication of the subjects the time is spent on, or the nature of homework, so it’s hard to draw any conclusions from this.”

    Prof Tan added that although students in South Korea and Japan were ranked low in the number of homework hours in this survey, they were not “learning any less”.

    “Their students spend long hours after school in cram schools similar to tuition centres, called juku in Japan and hagwon in Korea,” he said.

    It is difficult to set a “right” amount of homework for everyone, said Prof Tan.

    “Every student is different in terms of learning styles and interests, and each may need a different amount of time for practice.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • David William Graaskov: A Hero?

    David William Graaskov: A Hero?

    Please refer to the Straits Times article, “Teen is first among five in Toa Payoh graffiti case to plead guilty to theft, criminal trespass”http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/courts-crime/story/teen-first-among-five-toa-payoh-graffiti-case-plead-guilty-theft-c

    David William Graaskov, 18, is no ordinary Singapore young man. He is one of the few young men and women, far too few unfortunately in that island, who has the character and courage to stand on principle. No one can say that he does not have courage, character or integrity, qualities that most young men and women who have grown up under Lee Kuan Yew, the Singaporean dictator and his son, the Prime Minister, utterly lack.

    Any father or mother should be proud to have a boy like him. And in his journey in life ahead of him, one can see the making of a leader unlike the vast majority of others in that island who can only live their lives in fear and obedience.

    Singapore is a repressive island, devoid of basic human rights such as freedom of speech, assembly, association and anyone engaging in any such activity is liable to be arrested and imprisoned, loss of job and career and victimized the rest of his life by a government determined to keep their citizens under control.

    Since the consequences of any attempt to assert their citizens rights under the Constitution will result in harsh and serious consequences to their life and liberty, most Singaporeans do not dare to criticize the government openly or demand their rights for fear of certain retribution, as is the case in Communist China.

    This courageous young man David William Graaskov is not among the general cowardly population that you find in in the island of Singapore. On May 07, 2014, he and 4 other young men of his age, climbed atop a HDB Government Housing Residential Block and wrote slogans such as “Freedom” protesting the lack of basic human rights of the citizens. Since as mentioned Singapore laws makes it illegal to protest, he and the others were charged for vandalism which under Singapore law not only results in imprisonment but also caning (whipping) a very brutal and inhuman form of punishment which leaves the victim suffering permanent injury and scarred for life.

    Yesterday, December 22, 2014, young Graaskov pleaded guilty to theft and criminal trespass in Lee Kuan Yew’s sons Courts in Singapore. He will be sentenced at a subsequent date.

    Graskov is clearly a hero. He need not have bothered to do this. He has nothing to gain from doing this. Like the other cowardly young men and women who are satisfied to live in bondage, he could have done nothing and merely went on with his life. But not Graaskov. He felt that this is wrong. And when something is wrong, it is courageous who stand up to it. It is honorable act. It shows character and leadership.

    In fact he has much more integrity and leadership than even his ethnic Chinese lawyer walking next to him, a member of a legal profession that has shown it has no intention to do any real lawyering. Very probably his lawyer , undoubtedly a very timid fellow would have advised him to plead guilty and not antagonize the judge. To show how timid these Singapore lawyers are, you might want to know that opposition politician Chee Soon Juan, when sued for defamation of character some years ago, by Lee Kuan Yew and his son, was unable to find a single lawyer to represent him in that entire island! That explains volumes of the lawyering capacity of these Singaporean lawyers.

    If I was Graaskov’s lawyer, I would have advised him to fight the charges. Of course I realize that there is the possibility of caning, but this government today is so maligned and has lost so much respectability that it is most unlikely that they would cane 18 year old Graaskov.

    Of course it is certain that he would lose at any trial but the publicity that he generates by mounting a Constitutional right of free speech and expression , would result in Lee’s son, the Prime Minister who controls everything including the courts,  suffering much more loss to his reputation, while Graaskov would come out the hero, a David who stood up to the one eyed Goliath.

    We all come to the cross roads in life’s journey. At that point those with courage and leadership take the right path, even though it is hard. Others take the easy path although they know it is wrong. Here we have Graaskov, standing up to what is right regardless of the consequence, while other lesser mortals remain quiet and submit.

    If I had to follow a leader, I can say without hesitation that it will be Graaskov, not the hundreds of thousands of young men and women who are incapable of doing anything but going back from school to their TV sets as if nothing is happening around them.

    Making a prediction, I say, 18 year old Graaskov, would one day be a leader of men.

    I would also suggest that Graasskov’s parents should try to send him to the West for his higher education. He is surrounded by an entire island of submissive and cowed population and this is not good for his upbringing or his education. His Singapore teachers themselves terrified of the government would be telling him to be like the others and submit in silence. His parents, if they are Singaporeans would probably be telling him the same thing. And the Singaporean mindset is itself bad because it considers submission and obedience as virtues while challenging authority is a crime.

    Graaskov has shown extraordinary courage even while living under such suppressive and repressive climate as Singapore island. Imagine how much more he will progress if allowed to live among people who have their heads screwed on right and know that it is heroic and honorable to stand up to an unjust regime, and submission to injustice is cowardly.

    Well done Graaskov. You have guts.

    Gopalan Nair
    Attorney at Law
    A Singaporean in Exile
    Fremont California USA
    Tel: 510 491 8525
    Email: [email protected]
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/singapore.dissident

  • Dormitory To Be Constructed In Jurong East

    Dormitory To Be Constructed In Jurong East

    Listed construction firm Lian Beng Group is teaming up with listed dormitory provider Centurion Corp to build a 7,900 bed dormitory for foreign workers in Jurong East, not far from major industrial plants on Jurong Island.

    The two companies said the proposed facility, which will also include a training centre, will provide better quality accommodation for Singapore’s foreign workers.

    They were selected to build the centre, in Jalan Papan, in the vicinity of Jurong East MRT station, by an entity set up by the Association of Process Industry.

    Lian Beng will take a 49 per cent stake in the joint venture, while Centurion will hold the other 51 per cent. In their filings with the Singapore Exchange on Tuesday, the two firms did not disclose the cost of the project.

    The process industry encompasses plants involved in the manufacturing of petroleum, petrochemicals, specialty chemicals and pharmaceutical products, and companies providing process construction and maintenance works to the plants.

    The self-contained community with extensive recreational facilities and amenities will sit on about 1.5 ha, with a lease tenure of 23 years.

    The development is scheduled to be completed by mid-2016 and is will have easy access to Jurong Island where most of its workers are expected to commute to for work.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Barry Desker: Mindset Shift Needed On MInimum Wage And Dual Citizenship

    Barry Desker: Mindset Shift Needed On MInimum Wage And Dual Citizenship

    Professor Barry Desker believes that Singapore should be prepared to have a minimum wage and allow dual citizenship. He also said that Singaporeans should welcome new citizens.

    “Attitudes need to change,” Prof Barry wrote in his opinion piece in The Straits Times.

    “We should welcome the presence of new Singaporeans and encourage their integration into Singapore society.

    “We should revise our laws to permit dual citizenship, which benefits some who are permanent residents but do not wish to give up the citizenship of their land of birth.

    “It would also allow the growing numbers of Singaporeans working abroad to retain their links with Singapore,” he said.

    “We should be prepared to adopt a minimum wage policy to protect vulnerable groups in our workforce and to ensure that cheap foreign labour does not displace Singaporeans in their twilight years eking out a living.”

    Prof Barry said that a minimum wage should be considered because “The ease with which foreign labour was recruited has resulted in depressed wages for a segment of our population with minimal educational qualifications, unskilled and often in their 50s and 60s.”

    But he admitted that even though there have been “calls for the introduction of a minimum wage”, the government has resisted implementing one over the years.

    Prof Barry also admitted that the “high levels of economic growth over the past two decades resulted from increases in capital and foreign labour deployed, not from significant productivity increases.”

    “However, the unsustainable sharp influx of foreigners granted permanent residence, as well as employment permits, in recent years has resulted in a backlash, making the issue of immigration politically toxic,” he said.

    Prof Barry said that as a result, for younger Singaporeans, they are “concerned about competition for university places or preferred jobs”.

    “Older Singaporeans worry about the changing environment around them, as they have neighbours with alien languages and different lifestyles.”

    However, he felt that “ethnic ghettos in HDB estates have disappeared, as legislation has ensured an ethnic balance”, even as he admitted that “condominiums are beginning to see such ghettos, as new immigrants and expatriates from certain nationalities congregate in preferred locations”.

    “The past year has seen rising anti-immigration sentiment in Singapore,” Prof Barry added.

    He said that these “views” have been “influenced” by “the pressure placed on Singapore’s infrastructure because of the sharp increase in the number of people residing in Singapore.”

    “MRT trains are crowded, hospital beds always full, traffic jams occur frequently, once-quiet parks are filled with foreign workers on weekends.

    “The rapid pace of the foreign influx resulted in growing criticism and an undercurrent of resentment reflected in social media sites.”

    Prof Barry also said that “the tightening of government policy on foreign workers in recent months” has led to Singaporeans being employed in “restaurants, offices and department stores, for example, cannot rely on cheap foreign labour”.

    He asked, “One wonders where these people were employed before the restrictions were imposed.”

    “But the reality is that immigration will continue and there will be more foreign labour employed, if low birth rates continue,” Prof Barry continued to say.

    But Prof Barry acknowledged the need for a minimum wage as “The pace of change over the past 50 years has left us with a pioneer generation lacking the education and skills to benefit from the transformation that has taken place in Singapore.

    He also suggested that the pioneer generation package is not a sustainable solution.

    “Ensuring a basic living wage will do more to retain their pride and sense of purpose than handouts as part of a pioneer generation package.”

    He also asked, “Do we retain Third World attitudes towards manual labour even as we proclaim ourselves a First World society?”

    He felt that “Internet chatter suggests that many in our community are unwilling to recognise that even temporary workers have rights and should be protected.”

    Prod Barry pointed to how “The Little India riots last December highlighted the risk of outbreaks of social unrest” and that “A minor dispute in Geylang or Beach Road on weekend nights involving Singaporeans and foreign workers could easily turn nasty.”

    He also warned of packing migrant workers into constructed ghettos because “As large self-contained dormitories are built, dissatisfaction on trivial issues could spark a destabilising wave of riots and public commotion.”

    Prof Barry also warned the government that “even as we want to focus on big ideas and grand plans for reimagining Singapore, reality will intrude.

    “Dealing with such challenges should not be seen as a distraction, but as part of the core test in remaking Singapore to meet the needs of the next generation.”

    Prof Barry is a Distinguished Fellow and Bakrie Professor of South-east Asia Policy at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University.

    As such, Prof Barry said that “the possibility of paradigm shifts should not be ignored.

    “The emergence of unexpected issues which become the focus of attention by policymakers can be seen in the current debate over the population challenge.”

    But he also resigned himself to the knowledge that, “What is striking is how much our imaginations are prisoners of the present.”

    Prof Barry is not the first to call for a minimum wage in Singapore. As he pointed out, there has been numerous calls in the past which the government has resisted.

    However, Prof Barry’s plea to the government is the latest, as worries about the threat of social rupture has crept in even for the well-heeled who are now finally beginning to worry about how the angry sentiments can impact Singapore’s social landscape.

    However, beneath Prof Barry’s plea is also an acknowledgement that the government might be choosing to overlook the social problems, while continuing to believe that it is able to plan for the future, based on old models of thinking. He cautioned the government about its state of denial, and is aware that his plea might just as well fall on deaf ears, as past warnings have as well.

    The state of the Singapore economy is in danger, as the government has over-extended its use of cheap labour which has not only resulted in depressed wages and livelihoods of Singaporeans which have suffered, but it also means that Singapore’s productivity is now backwards by more than a decade or so. This would mean at least a decade or more lost in Singapore, depending on when the government wakes up to its broken economic model.

    And until then, Singapore and Singaporeans will continue to lose out and by the time a change of mindset in the government, either by a mindset change by the current ruling party, the PAP, or by a change of government, decides to reverse the downward spiral of things, Singaporeans would have to brace themselves for the drastic restructuring to finally take place and one which has been postponed for far too long as the current government lacks the political will to do what is necessary to put Singapore back on track.

    But as Prof Barry tacitly acknowledges, any such change might take decades as the PAP is unlikely to change its mindset and neither is it likely to be willing to cede power to another government.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

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