Category: Singapuraku

  • Exposing Half-Truths Behind Certis Cisco’s Taiwanese Recruitment

    Exposing Half-Truths Behind Certis Cisco’s Taiwanese Recruitment

    I refer to “Certis Cisco recruiting officers from Taiwan”. There’s more than meets the eye.

    Certis Cisco (CC), a subsidiary of Temasek Holdings, was supposed to have advertised, but probably did not, on the Jobs Bank.

    Temasek Holdings, which owns or is the major shareholder of government-linked companies, employs hundreds of thousands of cheaper (sometimes not) foreigners. So long as PAP continues to run Singapore as a corporation, Singaporeans should not expect our FT policy to be discarded.

    Our FT policy also generates revenue for the government, as in the case of CC’s Taiwanese recruitment.

    CC’s actual total cost – including the cost of levy and accommodation – of employing a Taiwanese officer with a degree is about $4000. Why CC is willing to pay so much to hire a foreigner is because part of its costs, eg S-Pass is in fact revenue to the government. Should CC employ a local, PAP earns nothing.

    CC is likely to house its foreigner workforce at accommodations managed by EM Services or other GLCs. Through PAP’s FT policy, the government, GLCs and Temasek are clearly the winners at Singaporeans’ expense.

    CC is willing to pay:
    – A monthly salary of $2675
    – Free accommodation (estimated cost $500)
    – Total bonus of $4000 upon completion of 2-year contract
    – $650 for S-Pass

    * $4000/24 months

    From the table above, it will cost CC at least $3991 per month to employ a Taiwanese. This excludes other miscellaneous costs such as return air ticket, additional overseas recruitment costs,etc.

    Hiring foreigners come with social costs and CC should actually offer a premium when hiring Singaporeans.

    CC spokesman was therefore telling an outright half truth when she said “The manpower shortage is a perennial situation in Singapore, and we have been working with the authorities to recruit from suitable alternative sources”.

    CC did not offer to hire Singaporeans based on the total higher amount it was willing to pay a foreigner, ie costs of levy and accommodation amounting to more than $1000 were excluded.

    A foreigner with a monthly levy of, say, $500 adds up to $6000 in yearly government revenue. Multiply this by 500,000 foreigners, PAP earns $3 billion yearly without generating any economic activity and at the stroke of a pen. Who really needs scholars to run Singapore when money drops from the sky?

    Monthly levy collection: $500
    Yearly levy collecion: $6000
    X 500,000 foreign workers: $3 billion
    X 1,000,000 foreign workers: $6 billion

    From the above, one should be able to understand clearly why Lau Goh’s FT policy will be here for good.

    For jobless and retrenched Singaporeans, you-die-your-own-business policy has always applied. But don’t say the PAP has no compassion – it has schemes such as WIS in place. So long as one is willing to accept any low-wage job and forego one’s dignity, the WIS recipient will receive a regular peanuts cash and CPF contribution.

    PAP must continue hiring foreigners to increase headcount because an increased population density supports increasing property prices. PAP’s economic growth model has always relied on foreigner population – not productivity – growth.

    Minister Shanmugam has also recently said that only Singaporeans, Singapore PRs and Malaysians are eligible to apply. Is CC, under Temasek CEO Ho Ching, able to suka suka override the Law Minister? Why were Taiwanese suddenly included in the hiring pool with no debate in Parliament?

    CC has obviously not advertised in Malaysian states as the response would have been overwhelming. From the same table above, the salary and bonus alone amounted to a monthly salary $2841 – equivalent to about 8700 Malaysian ringgit.

    Since lodging is provided, a Malaysian recruit can easily save $2000 every month, or about RM6000. CC wants to take Singaporeans for idiots – not a single Malaysian wanted the job and it has to recruit 120 officers from Taiwan.

    PAP’s FT policy generates revenue for the government through levy collection, eg S-Pass, increases revenue/profit for government-linked companies by lowering costs and ultimately increases Temasek’s profits. This is done at the expense of Singaporeans.

    It should therefore not have surprised anyone when a GLC like Certis Cisco engages in half truths to recruit foreigners living 3000 km away.

     

    Source: https://likedatosocanmeh.wordpress.com/

  • ARS is not good for Singaporean Muslims

    ARS is not good for Singaporean Muslims

    Three simple reasons:

    1. The aim has been all along about control. The need to control the asatizahs or religious teachers in Singapore and regulate their teachings and numbers. especially now when there are more and more “bad” representation of Muslims around the world. To be fair, shouldn’t this regulation be implemented for the other religions in Singapore too?

    2. For example, there is an asatizah who has years of experience teaching children how to read the Quran on a  daily basis (her livelihood). Problem is that she does not meet the requirement to register for the ARS. And due to health issues and old age, there really is not a chance that she is going to consider getting certified. So will this mean that she will lose her source of income because she is not ARS-certified? True recognition does not come from the government but from us attaining the ijazah and our sincerity to teach.

    3. Like it or not, radical or misguided teaching can still happen in singapore. An asatizah who is qualified and ARS-certified can still teach you the wrong things! So what measures are MUIS putting in place to tackle such “legitimate” asatizahs?

     

    Kak Sham

    Reader’s contribution

  • Ismail Kassim: MUIS Must Revamp Thinking Of Islam And How It Should Be Practised

    Ismail Kassim: MUIS Must Revamp Thinking Of Islam And How It Should Be Practised

    I agree with you Jon.

    jon-terry

    Getting rid of unqualified and extremist teachers solves only half the problem.

    I think MUIS have to revamp their thinking and understanding of what Islam is and how it should be practised.

    Will the emphasis continues to focus on the rituals and the dos and don’ts?

    Or should it be on the spirit of Islam and its values which are universal in nature.

    For real change to take place in the mindset of Muslims, the pedantic approach with its emphasis on salvation for the next world has to be thrown out

     

    Source: Ismail Kassim

  • Compulsory Asatizah Recognition Scheme-Accreditation For Asatizahs To Begin From 1 Jan

    Compulsory Asatizah Recognition Scheme-Accreditation For Asatizahs To Begin From 1 Jan

    With the Asatizah Recognition Scheme (ARS) to be made compulsory on Sunday (Jan 1), religious teachers, or asatizah, who are not registered under the scheme would have a three-month grace period to do so, the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) said on Thursday (Dec 29).

    Announcing details to ease religious teachers and organisations into the scheme, Muis said that a grace period of up to three years would also be granted to those who do not meet the academic qualification requirement now.

    In the interim, these teachers could be granted provisional recognition under the scheme that allows them to teach basic subjects such as Quranic literacy and basic Islamic rituals.

    Islamic education centres and providers will have to register with Muis and employ only asatizah recognised under the scheme. Those that do not meet the requirements will be given a one-year grace period to make the necessary adjustments, including hiring new asatizah under the scheme, or acquire provisional ARS licences for asatizah not registered with it, or tweaking their curriculum. Islamic education centres and providers refer to those who provide religious instruction to non-family members regularly on their own premises or otherwise. These include running classes at mosques, private Islamic education centres, and residences.

    The move towards mandatory ARS — first announced on the sidelines of this year’s National Day Rally by Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim — comes at a time when there is “growing religious consciousness” among the Muslim community here, Muis said.

    Mr Abdul Razak Hassan Maricar, chief executive officer of Muis, said that the scheme has particular importance in today’s context. “There is a need to present contextualised teaching and guard against extreme and exclusive teachings, and of course, problematic teachers.”

    “It gives some assurance to the community that they will get reliable and appropriate religious guidance, only from recognised asatizah,” he added.

    The ARS is voluntary for now, with 2,500 asatizah — or the majority of all Islamic teachers in the Islamic education sector.

    The scheme, which started in 2005, is administered by Muis and the Singapore Islamic Scholars and Religious Teachers Association (Pergas). It recognises teachers and scholars who meet the minimum standards of qualification to preach and teach Islamic religious knowledge.

    Under these standards — split into two tiers, one for asatizah and another for Quranic teachers — asatizah will need to undergo at least 30 credit hours of continuous professional education (CPE) modules in three years. These include skills-based courses such as counselling, as well as content-based modules such as sociology of religion. Quranic teachers will need to undergo at least 10 credit hours of CPE over the same period of time.

    The ARS also contains a code of ethics, for registered asatizah to follow. These include what not to teach — advocating political ideas that may encourage extremism, for example — as well as a code of conduct.

    Any asatizah and/or Islamic education centres and providers flouting the rules may have their recognition status suspended or cancelled by Muis. Nevertheless, the council stressed that remedial measures, including counselling, will be the first resort.

    On the matter of enforcing the scheme, particularly on home-based teachers, Mr Abdul Razak said that “residents and neighbours are encouraged to approach their mosques to find out which are the asatizah approved to teach”.

    He added: “We do think that those who are teaching at home are (mostly) under the scheme.”

    ARS will not apply to foreign religious speakers as they are regulated under the Manpower Ministry’s Miscellaneous Work Pass scheme. Singapore sponsors of these speakers have to ensure that the speakers possess formal religious training before applying for the work pass.

    Muis said: “We have to ensure that the standards we apply to local teachers also have to apply to foreign teachers, just by a different mechanism.”

    At the National Day Rally this year, Dr Yaacob told reporters that some 20 per cent of asatizah in Singapore are not under the ARS. Since that announcement, Muis has said that “more than 100” asatizah not under the scheme have registered with it.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Two Indonesians Deported From Singapore For Alleged Plans To Travel To Syria

    Two Indonesians Deported From Singapore For Alleged Plans To Travel To Syria

    JAKARTA: Singapore’s Immigration & Checkpoints Authority on Tuesday deported an Indonesian man and woman who allegedly had plans to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). Both were deported to Batam.

    The man, identified only as MNA, is a 40-year-old native of Medan, reported The Straits Times. The woman, also 40, was identified only as SI, and is known to have lived in West Java province.

    Both had reached HarbourFront Centre on Monday and were held for interrogation before they were deported the next day, said Riau Islands police spokesman Saprono Erlangga.

    The couple had left Batam on a Queens Star speed boat on Monday afternoon. They had planned to continue their trip to Syria after Singapore.

    “They are now under interrogation by police and immigration officers. They planned to go to Syria. Investigation is being carried out intensively on whether they are planning to join ISIS,” Mr Erlangga said.

    This is the second reported case of Indonesians planning to travel to Syria using Singapore as a transit point.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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