Category: Singapuraku

  • Indian Foreign Worker Devastated By Death Of Wife During Childbirth Wandered Around Bukit Timah Aimlessly In Early Morning

    Indian Foreign Worker Devastated By Death Of Wife During Childbirth Wandered Around Bukit Timah Aimlessly In Early Morning

    My first passenger today brought me to tears and I had to hold it back till I dropped him off.

    At 5.46am, I got a booking from Bt Timah Road. It didn’t state what number, just the road name. I called him, he said he didn’t know what number or where he was. He just said he was sitting at a bus stop at Bt Timah Road.
    Bt Timah Road is so long. I asked him to describe what he saw nearby. He said cars, trees, at a bus stop. I asked him to look for the bus stop number, I got silence and muffling sounds.
    Sensing something very wrong,
    I said…just sit there and wait for me. I will find you!

    From where I was, I thought…if the booking came to me. He must be at the few bus stops nearest to me, but Bt Timah Road was left and right. So I tried the right side first.

    There he was… a lone Indian foreign worker sitting at the bus stop, looking around aimlessly.

    I stopped my car, asked him if he had booked a car. He nodded. He opened the front door and asked if he could sit in front politely as he will vomit if he sit behind(his words).
    He got in, I offered him a plastic bag and a sweet which he politely declined.

    I confirmed his dropoff address, he nodded. He was upset. So I drove on, leaving him to calm down.

    Halfway through, I asked him if he was okay. He nodded.

    So I asked why he was at that bus stop (very quiet corner) so early that morning. He said he walked there.
    I said from where.
    He said from home.

    Apparently home was where I was sending him now….very far from where he was.

    So I casually mentioned…. wow that’s a very long walk.

    So the talk continues…

    Me: So where are you from?
    He: India.
    Me: U ok?
    Silence.
    Me: U work here?
    He: Ya.
    Me: How long?
    He: 6 months now.

    I then offered him some tissues and he took to wipe his tears…

    Me: It’s ok. You can talk.
    Silence then…..then he spoke.
    (After this, I was quiet for a long time while he spoke)
    His next words:
    my wife die after born my baby girl.

    In that little bit of English that he could speak….
    He went on to say he and his wife were orphans at an orphanage and grew up together and fell in love.
    They had to “betroth”(his word “sell”) their baby girl to a family in their village so they had money to pay for doctor visits for her pregnancy. The baby was supposed to be turned over to the family at age 12.
    His wife died during childbirth and the family had claimed the baby girl after the hospital turned her over to them.

    This man sitting next to me now will never have the chance to see his baby girl or even put his wife to rest.

    After I dropped him off, I declined to take his fare and even wanted to give him money for an airfare home.
    He simply refused to take it and said no use go home.

    He just said “Thank you for hear me” and left.
    He probably needed to be alone now.

    4 hours later when I finished my driving…. as I was clearing my things, I found 2 $10 notes in a slot on the passenger door. He had stuck them there after I refused to take his fare.

    I tried calling him on the same number…. it has been off the last many hours.

    My dear friends, give your kids and partner a good cuddle and many kisses today please!

    *Update* 21/11/116

    I managed to call through the phone this morning. It was picked up by another Indian man who said the phone is actually his and the man (his friend) had left this morning for home.
    I asked how?
    He said “Boss give money send”.

    He told me also….no call here again.

    I hope he will be blessed and find peace within himself soon.

    I didn’t expect this post to go viral but thank you to everyone who shared to let people know what some of our foreign workers face.

     

    Source: Cassandra Tan

  • US Jewish Rights Leader Vows To Register As Muslim If Trump Establishes Database On Muslims In America

    US Jewish Rights Leader Vows To Register As Muslim If Trump Establishes Database On Muslims In America

    A prominent Jewish rights leader has said he would register as a Muslim if Donald Trump sets up a Muslim database in the US.

    Jonathan Greenblatt, director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which campaigns against anti-Semitism and other bigotry, said he would register as Muslim if the database is created because of “painful memories” from when Jews were “identified, registered and tagged”.

    Speaking to AFP, Mr Greenblatt said: “The day they create a registry for Muslims is the day that I register as a Muslim because of my Jewish faith, because of my commitment to our core American values, because I want this country to be as great as it always has been.

    “As a Jewish community, we know what happens with litmus tests. We can remember. We have painful memories of when we ourselves were identified, registered and tagged.”

    Mr Trump made various calls during his campaign to ban Muslims from entering the USand indicated he would bring in “a lot of systems” to track Muslims across the country.

    Asked on MSNBC in November 2015 whether the White House should institute a database system to track Muslims in the country, Mr Trump replied: “Oh, I would certainly implement that, absolutely.”

    And when later asked whether a Muslim database would be the same thing as requiring Jews to register in Nazi Germany, Mr Trump simply said: “You tell me.”

    Since his election victory, the billionaire appears to have rowed back on some of the remarks, releasing a statement claiming he “never advocated for any registry or system that tracks individuals based on their religion”.

    But at least two prominent Trump supporters raised the prospect again this week.

    Carl Higbie, a high-profile supporter, claimed Japanese internment during the Second World War was a legal precedentfor a potential registry of Muslim immigrants, while Kris Kobach, believed to be a key member of the President-elect’s transition team, said the Mr Trump’s policy advisers were discussing plans to establish a registry for Muslim immigrants in the US.

    Mr Greenblatt, who previously worked in the White House as a special assistant to President Barack Obama, also criticised Mr Trump’s decision to hire Stephen Bannon as his chief strategist, who he said had “presided over making his former business Breitbart the platform for the alt-right, this loose-knit group of white supremacists, anti-Semites and racists”.

    The rights leader said ADL wanted to “engage” with Trump and his administration “on the issues they care about”, but added that they “would hold them relentlessly accountable to those issues”.

    It is not the first time the Jewish community has spoken out against Mr Trump since the billionaire business was elected. Hundreds of Jewish scholars of holocaust history signed a statement calling on Americans to “mobilise in solidarity” under a Trump presidency.

    Social media users have also reacted with anger to suggestions of a Muslim registry, with people vowing to register their details and the hashtag #IWillRegister trending on Twitter.

     

    Source: www.independent.co.uk

  • Chee Soon Juan: Singapore Is Ailing, PAP Serving Her Poison

    Chee Soon Juan: Singapore Is Ailing, PAP Serving Her Poison

    Dr Chee Soon Juan, the Secretary-General of the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), wrote an article on the condition of the country stating that Singapore economy is living on borrowed time and innovation is the only antidote.

    “It is what we desperately need for economic regeneration. Welcoming the unknown, taking risks, making mistakes, embracing failure, encouraging derring-do – isn’t this what being innovative is all about?” he said.

    Pointing that countries around the world are changing so drastically politically while Singapore continues to follow its old ways, being “disastrously out-of-sync with rapidly changing times.”. Cocooned in its comfort zone, unaware that Singapore is sinking deeper into dysfunction and mediocrity and passed by societies ready and willing to change.

    This is what he wrote in full :

    THE WORLD is in upheaval. South Koreans throng the streets demanding the removal of their president; Malaysians clash as they profess their love or loathing (depending on whether you don red or yellow apparel) for their prime minister; pro- and anti-Beijing Hong Kongers do battle over whether two young lawmakers should be disqualified from parliament; Pinoys and Pinays elected a Pope-cussing-Obama-hating-gun-happy politician as their national leader; the Brits up-ended order of every conceivable kind when they voted to leave the European Union; and now, half of Americans elected as their president someone whom the other half cannot find enough expletives to hurl at.

    All this is enough to make Singaporeans want to quicken the search for another habitable planet to fly to.

    Cue PM Lee: “In Singapore, we watch all this with concern and we have to ask ourselves how we can prevent ourselves from going in that direction. For 50 years we’ve been very lucky. We are still united, still proud of the country, still moving forward…So be aware that the risks are there, and you have seen what can go wrong in other countries.”

    Translation: Singaporeans are lucky to have the PAP. So shun disruption, stick with the familiar. We may not be able to change the government but that is a good thing because citizens cannot be trusted to make the right decisions – just look at the other countries. The PAP will decide for us and protect us from the world’s madness.

    This is what Singaporeans hear and have been hearing for half-a-century. The thinking has been baked into our national DNA.

    It is also one that will ensure our country’s demise. It is this fear of the unfamiliar, fear of getting things wrong, fear of taking chances that will be Singapore’s undoing. For nothing in such an outlook fosters an innovative culture.

    Welcoming the unknown, taking risks, making mistakes, embracing failure, encouraging derring-do – isn’t this what being innovative is all about?

    The truth is that our economy is living on borrowed time. The dependence on multinationals to transfer skills and know-how, a hard-working and cheap labour force ready to work even harder and cheaper, and a bewildering bevy of government companies controlled by the Prime Minister’s wife is a model that may have worked in the past but is disastrously out-of-sync with rapidly changing times.

    As it is, our economy, teetering on the brink of a recession, has been ailing for the last couple of years – this taking place despite the absence of a major world crisis. The danger is that it may signal the beginning of something protracted.

    Innovation is the anti-dote. It is what we desperately need for economic regeneration. For this, change – including political change, especially political change – is necessary.

    I can do no better than quote Steve Wozniak, Apple’s co-founder, who pointed out that a company like Apple could not have emerged from a place like Singapore: “Look at structured societies like Singapore, where are the creative people?…All the creative elements seem to disappear.”

    It is a tragedy that Singaporeans are unable to see that Americans, Hong Kongers, or Britons are unafraid to take political chances, stand up to injustice – perceived or otherwise, and be their nation’s boss. So what if Brexit fails or China cracks down on Hong Kong or Donald Trump’s tenure turns out to be a disaster? They’ll learn, course-correct and improve their political systems in the long run.

    What about us? We continue to be afraid of change because the PAP breeds and feeds the fear of change. We are cocooned in our comfort zone, unaware that we are sinking deeper into dysfunction and mediocrity and passed by societies ready and willing to change.

    It has become a cliche, but still no less true, that this island on which we inhabit has precious little natural resources; nothing to mine for, drill at or grow on. This is why it is so troubling that those in power are strangulating the very thing that will ensure our survival and progress – the minds of our people.

    What fertiliser does for crops, political freedom does for innovation. The messiness and seeming chaos that accompanies democracy must not be seen as societal threats to be bleached from our system. In our desire for peace and security, let us not inadvertently celebrate the peace of the cemetery and the security of the serf.

    Political disruption (unfortunately, to many Singaporeans, this includes the simple act of electing a few more opposition MPs) is needed to energise the human spirit and provide that impetus for positive change.

    May wisdom and courage prevail.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • Traffic Lights Malfunctioned At Yio Chu Kang Road Junction, Chaos Ensued

    Traffic Lights Malfunctioned At Yio Chu Kang Road Junction, Chaos Ensued

    Traffic lights at the junction of Yio Chu Kang Road and Ang Mo Kio Avenue 5 stopped working on Sunday (Nov 20) during a heavy downpour, causing a traffic jam.

    Pictures of the incident taken by Ms Dilah Ali showed a chaotic scene as cars and buses headed in different directions made their way slowly across the junction.

    Ms Ali, 31, was on her way from Punggol to Toa Payoh on bus service 88. When she experienced the slowdown in traffic at about 12.30pm, she thought at first that it was was due to the heavy rain.

    “However, I saw a minor accident at the junction involving four cars. Then I realised that the traffic lights on all sides were not working,” she said.

    The bus was caught in the jam for about 15 minutes, according to Ms Dilah.

    “The cars were coming in all directions and none gave way, they just tailgated each other. I felt a bit angry that the cars did not give way to the bus, and I heard many passengers from the lower deck urge the bus drive to ‘just go!’” the receptionist said.

    She also added that she only saw a traffic police officer arriving just as the bus emerged from the jam.

    “The cars should have given the buses the right of way, but people were ‘kiasu’. Surprisingly, I did not hear any honking,” Ms Dilah said.

    The Straits Times understands that a ‘technical issue’ had occurred with the traffic lights at the junction, and that the lights were fixed by around 1.15pm.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • F1 Supremo: Singapore Ungrateful, Not Interested To Extend F1 Contract

    F1 Supremo: Singapore Ungrateful, Not Interested To Extend F1 Contract

    The future of Singapore Grand Prix has been cast into fresh doubts after Formula One head honcho Bernie Ecclestone claimed the Republic no longer wants to host a race here.

    Speculation was rife during September’s Singapore Grand Prix on whether negotiations to extend the Singapore race when its five-year deal expires next year would be concluded successfully.

    In an interview with German magazine Auto Motor Und Sport that was published on Sunday (Nov 20), Mr Ecclestone — who once christened the Singapore night race the “crown jewel” of Formula One — claimed Singapore is not going to extend its deal.

    “Look at what we have done for Singapore,” the F1 chief executive was quoted as saying. “Yes, the Grand Prix has cost Singapore a lot of money, but we’ve also given them a lot of money.

    “Singapore was suddenly more than just an airport to fly to or from somewhere. Now they believe they have reached their goal and they do not want a Grand Prix anymore.”

    When contacted by TODAY, a Singapore GP spokesperson said they “don’t comment on ongoing commercial negotiations”.

    Mr Ecclestone’s comments came on the back of a poor 2016 edition of the Singapore race. Organisers Singapore GP reported that overall ticket sales at the Marina Bay Street Circuit were 15 per cent lower than the average attendance since 2008.

     

    In the interview with Auto Motor Und Sport, Mr Ecclestone also said that some of the current manufacturers – including world champions Mercedes – may quit in the near future.

    “It could happen to us that Mercedes and Ferrari run away,” he said. “But honestly, if the races get better, this may not be such a terrible vision.

    “We have to expect the manufacturers to leave us anyway. Mercedes will retire on the day when it suits them and it’s something we had before – look at Honda, BMW and Toyota. They go when Formula 1 has done the job for them. There is no gratitude.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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