Category: Singapuraku

  • Salute to the Men and Women in SPF

    Salute to the Men and Women in SPF

    Author’s note
    The day you decide to take this job up, will be the day you work round the clock. Your responsibility to protect life and property, to prevent and detect crime doesn’t end when your shift ends.

    It becomes your moral compass even when you are not in your blue uniform. The experience shared below is that of a junior ranking police officer with the Singapore Police Force.

    ***
    The honeymoon period for a police officer
    You spend your first 6 months in TRACOM (Training Command) at Home Team Academy honing your police knowledge and skills, preparing you for the responsibilities ahead. You will learn, be trained in and tested on Singapore statutes, weapons handling and firing them, police defense tactics, fitness, foot drills, driving and most importantly, attending and managing cases on the ground.

    Once you have sufficiently completed your training and having been evaluated by a group of assessors, you will go on attachment at one of the Neighbourhood Police Centre (NPC) and finally get your first taste of what it’s like to sit in a police vehicle attending to messages (cases).

    Don’t worry too much about your evaluation because aside from your theoretical examinations of the Singapore statutes, the other evaluations are done as a group or in pairs with your fellow squadmates. So, as long as you and your squadmates have great camaraderie, you will be helping one another out to pass all the evaluation.

    Entry requirements to join the Singapore Police Force
    Minimum 5 GCE ‘O’ Level passes or NITEC
    PES A or B for males. Females are exempted
    Normal colour vision
    This is essentially, your honeymoon period.

    Passing out from TRACOM
    Passing out as a Sergeant (if you are an A Level or Diploma holder) or Corporal (if you only have 5 GCE ‘O’ Level passes or NITEC), you will be posted to a NPC within your land division or one that is not too far away from home (there’s a total of 5 land divisions: Alpha, Echo, Delta, Juliet and Foxtrot, each covering different locations).

    Your patrolling hours are from 8am to 8pm or 8pm to 8am but you will always need to report in at least an hour earlier before your shift begins to draw your weapon and personal equipment from the armoury, check your patrolling inventory and check the road worthiness of your vehicle as well as to fall-in for your uniform inspection, take the Police Pledge and attend a team briefing.

    In the first 3 months posted to a NPC, you will be attached to a team and partnered with a senior. This period is often referred to as your Supervised On the Job Training or better known as SOJT. Your patrolling partner during this period is also your mentor and he/she will guide you through all the processes involved in attending to cases, share with you the relevant details of the job and introduce you to the type of team dynamics that you are entering into.

    This is the period where you will have a mindset change and realise that some things you learnt in TRACOM cannot be applied here because life on the ground requires you to think quickly on your feet to adapt to rapidly changing environments and most importantly, apply discretion.

    Attending cases in the streets of Singapore
    Contrary to popular belief that police officers often eat donuts and drink coffee from cups and look cool posing beside their vehicle, you would probably buy char kuay with a packet of coffee. Coffee is usually hung in the police vehicle (usually at the wiper or signal switch) and at times, it gets thrown out because you end up with a cold packet of coffee due to attending long cases. Some vehicles have the honour of having the interior beautifully decorated with coffee stains and being a home to cockroaches (Roaches or not, you have to get in the car and drive it).

    The public don’t see much of the police on the roads because attending to cases, especially cases of dispute, could take hours to be resolved/closed. In protecting life and property, preventing and detecting crime, officers also step in as first line mediators in disputes. Mediating disputes is a tricky case because it has the potential to escalate into violence. Where disputes are not resolved immediately, you need to encourage parties to attend mediation. Attending to a case of dispute could take between 1-3 hours long, depending on the severity and number of people involved.

    Examples of disputes could include flower pots inconveniencing a neighbour, alleged noise made by neighbour even though neighbour is not home or a teen calling the police because his father is being too harsh at home.

    Police officers also get called to attend cases where people attempt to commit suicide or has committed suicide. In such cases, you may end up spending the entire shift at the location. If it’s the former, you arrest the person and bring them to the lock up. At the lock up, you’ll end up spending a good 15-30 minutes to handover the accused/subject to the lockup officer followed by lodging of an arrest report. If it’s the latter, depending on the type of case you are attending to, you may need to get your hands dirty.

    A hanging decomposing dead body requires you to bring the body down and search the body for particulars or valuables. Often, the decomposing body at this juncture will release its’ last breath and maggots will begin crawling out. When attending to such cases of unnatural death, your job is to cordon the area to prevent contamination of evidence and as far as possible, protect the identity of the deceased, as a show of respect to the deceased and the family.

    Duties and shift hours at NPCs
    Besides patrolling duties, you will also rotate with your other team members to do counter duties. Yes, you don’t patrol all the time. Your Team Leader (TL) or Deputy Team Leader (DTL) will do up a roster at the end of every shift to allow team members to rotate duties. When assigned to counter duties, you are desk bound at the NPC or Neighbourhood Police Post (NPP). Though it could be a lonely and boring job, it does have its own challenges. Being rostered for duty at the NPP means you will be left all alone. It’s like you’re manning your own clinic since you will be attending to complainants (people who walk in to report cases).

    Your shifts are 12 hours long and you work one morning shift and one night shift followed by your first off also called your sleeping off and then your second off. On average, you work a total of 16 days per month and work about 16-18 hours per shift, which amounts to about 256-288 hours per month.

    Attending to complainants and assisting them in lodging their reports could take from a few minutes to hours, depending on severity of what is being lodged. Then, there is also the random member of public who will stroll in because they have something to say and there is still the phone calls to attend to. It’s a juggling act the moment you perform counter duties.

    No one enjoys it that much, and it’s especially unenjoyable if you are rostered for duty at the NPC that’s right under the bosses nose: Team Leader (TL), Operations Officer (OO) and Commanding Officer (OO). If your NPC is at the divisional headquarters, it’s the worst because you have all the other senior officers offices just above yours and although they are not going to be paying you a visit so often, you will be always on your toes about what you do.

    Off duty from work
    Being off duty does not mean you are done for the day as you still need to put up reports for the cases you have attended. This often takes between 2-3 hours. Effectively, you only get to go home around 9 or 10am/pm.

    Depending on the luck of your posting, there may be times when even after you knock off from morning shift, you may be required to report back at 12 midnight to conduct operations. One example would be staking out at specific locations to ambush and arrest serial cases such as housebreaking and theft. Often, such operations lasts till about 4 or 5am. Then you go home, sleep for a few hours and report back for night shift. So, your total working hours could be about 22 hours on exceptional days.

    On certain occasions, where there are big events happening in Singapore, you will be recalled back for duty during your off days and be deployed as security personnel. Events such as F1, National Day, Chingay, Thaipusam, Qing Ming, etc. Consider the fact that Singapore is a country that has many events, you need to be prepared to come back on many of your off days. Thankfully, you can claim back these extra hours.

    Once a month, your second off day is taken up to attend training sessions at your divisional headquarters called ‘In-Service’.

    Oh, in case you are planning to take leave, it’s better to put it as ‘Overseas Leave’ or you might get called back to work because some of your team members were on Medical Leave. Yes, on leave and you get called back.

    Besides attending to off-duty duties, you are also required to attend Residents Committee (RC) meetings to update RC members on the crime that’s happening in their neighbourhood, follow Grassroots Advisers (usually a Member of Parliament) on their house visits to answer questions related to crime that a resident may have, be involved in organising Community Safety and Security Programme (CSSP) projects, get roped in to participate in inter-NPC, intra-NPC, inter-Division and/or inter-Agency activities.

    Of course, while it’s entirely your choice whether or not you decide to participate in the activities, participating in the activities could help to bolster your appraisal and ranking which will mean a lot to you because it covers your Performance Bonus (PB).

    Team bonding among fellow police officers
    Different teams have different ways of doing this. Some enjoy going overseas together, some prefer spending time out on a picnic but most of all, drinking and clubbing is an activity that most police officers actually enjoy. Of course, if there is a club in your division, you are not allowed to patronise that club.

    So, during the period just before your pay day, someone in the team will usually plan and suggest going clubbing either after your morning shift or on your first off day. It’s a great way to let loose and it’s also a good way for you to end up broke before the end of the month.

    For some teams, they may choose to get involved in a sport or activity that everyone can agree to participate in on every other off day. Such team bonding activities, though highly time consuming considering the amount of hours you already spend together, will help you to forge better understanding of one another and build great camaraderie.

    The camaraderie built is extremely important because you want to be able to communicate with your team members without the need to speak when you are patrolling on the ground attending to sensitive cases or when you are involved in sting operations.

    Team members are more willing to help one another when there is greater trust and understanding.

    Promotion among the ranks of in the police force
    Promotions are highly dependent on a few factors:

    Your yearly appraisal measured over 2-3 years.
    Your TL and DTL.
    Your Individual Proficiency Physical Test (IPPT).
    Headcount
    If you were good the first year, average the second year and good the third year, that’s not too good for promotion because you had a dip in performance in your second year.

    However, being average over three years is good for promotion. Besides that, your TL and DTL have to ‘fight’ for your promotion, to justify why you deserve that promotion. This is where those additional activities you participated in will assist you!

    In the past years, changes were made in the force such that to be promoted, you also needed to pass the IPPT. It’s actually a good move because as police officers, you are required to maintain your physical fitness but with so much on your plate, not many are pleased as they hardly have time to squeeze in to maintain their fitness.

    Lastly, headcounts make the final determinant on your promotion. In every team, there needs to be a good mix of ranks. If there are several higher ranking junior officers, then the lower ranking junior officers will not be able to get promoted unless the other teams are lacking in higher ranking junior officers. When such a situation happens, then there will be restructuring within the NPC to ensure there is a good mix of ranks between teams.

    Most officers feel discriminated by such promotion strategies and they have every right to but unfortunately, the system is as such or there might be too many high ranking junior officers.

    The structure of ranks and positions in a team usually comprises of:

    TL (1st man): Inspector or Senior Station Inspector (SSI) or Station Inspector (SI)
    DTL (2nd man): SSI or SI or Senior Staff Sergeant (SSS)
    3rd man: SSS or Staff Sergeant (SS)
    Group Leader (GL): SS or Sergeant (Sgt)
    Group Member: Sgt or Corporal

    Officers who do not wish to patrol any longer or by the order of the Commanding Officer (CO) or Operations Officer (OO) could either request to be transferred to:
    Departments within the NPC to perform administrative duties
    Departments at their divisional headquarters which may include becoming an Investigation Officer
    Departments/divisions within the Singapore Police Force (eg: Criminal Investigation Branch, Commercial Affairs Division, TRACOM, etc)
    Concluding thoughts
    The experience shared above may differ from one officer to another, depending on which division they are attached to but the job remains the same — to protect life and property, prevent and detect crime.

    When you make good arrests, you will be commended for it and even receive an award for it but if you make a mistake, there is every chance that you may be charged.

    Remember, the risks that comes with this job is real and is not meant for the faint hearted but this job is always in need of people who are committed and dedicated to serve and protect.

    Source: www.17wakinghours.com

  • The Aerostat System:  Another Eye in the Sky

    The Aerostat System: Another Eye in the Sky

    SINGAPORE: The Republic will soon have an extra pair of eyes in the sky to look out for aerial and maritime threats. The Aerostat System – a tethered balloon that uses low-level radar to detect threats as far as 200km away – will be deployed early next year.

    Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen announced this on Tuesday (Oct 28) at Nanyang Polytechnic, during the PRoductivity and Innovation in Daily Efforts (PRIDE) Day award ceremony. The event promotes innovation and productivity across the Ministry of Defence.

    Dr Ng said with the Aerostat System, the Singapore Armed Forces will save nearly S$30 million in operating costs a year.

    The system will complement the Republic of Singapore Air Force’s current suite of airborne and ground-based radars. “Our ground-based radar systems can only operate above high-rise buildings,” Dr Ng said, adding that the urban landscape in Singapore is changing, and more tall buildings are coming up.

    “For a small island-state like Singapore, surveillance and early warning to give us sufficient reaction time to respond will always be a challenge but the Aerostat will improve our surveillance capabilities significantly,” he said.

    The system requires eight ground crew members to operate. The Aerostat can be tethered to a height of up to 600 metres – about twice the height of One Raffles Place building. Safety measures will also be in place to ensure Aerostat is far from flying aircraft, when deployed. The blimp will also be secured to the ground mooring station with a Kevlar tether, to withstand strong winds and lightning strikes.

    Aerostats have been used by different agencies across the world since the 1980s as early warning systems and for radio re-broadcast.

    In a Facebook post on Tuesday, Dr Ng said the “protector in the sky” will strengthen Singapore’s defences against aerial and maritime threats.

    “The aerostat will complement our ground radars to detect such threats and provide early warning. It can stay airborne for 24/7, use less manpower and cost less,” wrote Dr Ng.

    He also applauded Singapore’s military planners and engineers who are “constantly coming up with new and better ideas for our nation’s defence.”

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Voyeur at Citylink Mall

    Voyeur at Citylink Mall

    Dear The Real Singapore,

    I took a video of a potential pedophile or gay pervert at Citylink Mall Toilet trying to catch young school boys or even working adults using the toilet. I work in the area and this is not the first time I saw this guy loitering around suspiciously in the toilet.

    Today when I was peeing in the urinal i quickly got ready my phone and turn it into video mode and quickly take the video of the pervert in action. I believe he is actually committing a crime by looking at other guys peeing or shitting in the toilet cubicle. He is staring at the next door cubicle for like a few mins the whole time ever since I entered the toilet.

    Even though he is a man in the man’s toilet i strongly believe it is still illegal. However, I do not want to make this incident very big because my job might be affected as I do not want my boss to know I am video-ing some other pervert in the toilet as it is still a very weird thing to do.

    Please keep my identity strictly confidential but I hope some action can be done against this pervert always lurking around in the men’s toilet at Citylink Mall.

    I know some of your readers might scold me why did I film another guy in the toilet but I believe sharing this video online is okay because Firstly, he is a adult and Secondly he is in the act of committing a crime. Even though it is not a serious crime such as molesting a girl or peeping at a girl he is still committing a crime even if it is a guy peeping on a guy. It infringes the privacy of others. Thirdly, I did not film any private part of the guy as I only want to capture his face in the act so as to use it as evidence to proof other people he is a pervert.

    Please share this warn all guys visiting Citylink mall to beware of this guy

    Anonymous TRS reader

    Source: The Real Singapore

  • Life of a Security Guard

    Life of a Security Guard

    Many people look at a security guard and think “wah, this job damn senang lor…sit down do nothing, get paid”. But FiveStars, I’d like to share with you a story about what it is really like.

    Firstly, I’m in the business of securing condominiums. Sure, the job sounds easy – but I can assure you it’s not. We’re a lost and found centre, a missing children’s centre, we’re plumbers, locksmiths, repairmen, we get called to do odd jobs, we’re in direct line of fire if there are break-ins, domestic quarrels and the first in line with threats.

    Threats, abuses and complaints – we get it all the time when we merely do our job to check on visitors, we get complaints when we do our job to interfere in domestic quarrels. People make noise at the BBQ areas and it is our fault if we cannot get residents and their friends to be have civil.

    I even had a resident make a complaint when her cat died jumping out of the window, and it was my fault for not spotting the cat on the window ledge.

    The salary isn’t huge, the pressures are high. And we’re not allowed to work two jobs at a time even if we wanted to. Please go easy us, we’re just here to do a job like everyone else.

    Liew Bee Choo, 52, security officer at a condo in the East.

    Editor’s notes: The median basic of a security officer is btw $700-$800. Media gross wages after working 12 hours a day, 6 days a week is $1550. The Progressive Wage Model is set to increase their salary by as much as $300.With overtime, that would be at least $450.

    source: facebook.com/FiveStarsAndAMoon

  • Col (Ret) John Morrice:  The Passing of a Heroic SAF Pioneer

    Col (Ret) John Morrice: The Passing of a Heroic SAF Pioneer

    SINGAPORE: “Without John and his generation of officers, we would not have today’s SAF (Singapore Armed Forces),” Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong wrote of the late John Morrice.

    The retired Army Colonel died on Oct 24 of a heart attack. He was 79.

    In a Facebook post on Monday (Oct 27) evening, Mr Lee said he was saddened to read of the news. “John helped to build the SAF,” the Prime Minister said in his tribute. Mr Morrice joined the Singapore Military Forces when Singapore was still a British colony and decided to continue to stay with Singapore when the Republic left Malaysia. He also trained the “legendary first batch” of officers to graduate from the Singapore Armed Forces Training Institute (SAFTI) as their Officer Commanding. He was also President of the SAF Veterans League after retirement.

    Mr Lee reminisced that he had worked under Mr Morris as a young SAF officer. “When I joined the General Staff, he was one of the senior commanders we worked closely with. So I was happy to see him do this video for the Pioneer Generation Package,” he said, referring to a video by gov.sg.

    “My deepest condolences to Mrs Morrice and the family,” Mr Lee added.

    Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen had earlier expressed sadness on the colonel’s death. “He is a shining example of a devoted soldier who served his country to the best of his abilities and for as long as he could,” he wrote on Facebook.

    The Singapore Army also posted a farewell note on Facebook, describing Mr Morrice as “a shining example of devotion and service, a faithful soldier and son of Singapore.”

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore