Category: Singapuraku

  • China Asks Singapore To “Respect” Its Position On South China Sea Ruling

    China Asks Singapore To “Respect” Its Position On South China Sea Ruling

    The Chinese government has asked Singapore to “respect” China’s position on the outcome of a recent ruling by an international tribunal and the consensus it has reached with Asean.

    In a statement on Friday (Aug 5), the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Hua Chunying said China had made its position on the issue “very clearly”.

    “The related ruling is illegal, invalid and has no binding force,” she said.

    “China hopes that Singapore…can maintain an objective and fair position as the coordinator of China and Asean dialogue relations, so as to advance Sino-Singapore relations and healthy and stable China-Asean ties.”

    Ms Hua was responding to queries from Chinese media regarding Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s comments at a reception hosted by the United States Chamber of Commerce and US-Asean Business Council in Washington on Tuesday, Singapore time. The Chinese media had reported PM Lee’s comments.

    PM Lee had said that he did not think China has changed its policy on its claims in the South China Sea after the ruling on July 12 by an international tribunal.

    He said very few countries would “walk back” from the positions that they have taken to say “well, it’s not quite so absolute and it wasn’t so clearly mine after all”.

    But PM Lee said he did not think that any of the claimants , which include China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan, would want to “push it to the brink.”

    “They have interests, they have claims, they would want to maintain them, but nobody wants to go to war,” he had told US officials and business leaders.

    A recent international tribunal has ruled that China’s claims to a number of reefs and features in the Spratly island chain in the South China Sea has no legal basis, in a case brought by the Philippines.

    The 10-member Asean put out a joint communique that referred to maritime disputes after a meeting of its foreign ministers in Vientiane, Laos last month.

    The communique did not specifically mention the tribunal’s ruling. But it stated, in its second paragraph, that the ministers reaffirm their commitment to maintaining regional peace and stability “as well as to the peaceful resolution of disputes, including full respect for legal and diplomatic processes… in accordance with the universally recognised principles of international law, including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)”. The tribunal was held under the auspices of Unclos.

    Ms Hua on Friday said Asean had also clearly stated its position saying that it, as a collective entity, did not hold a position on the tribunal ruling in the recently concluded Asean foreign minister’s meeting.

    The ministers’ joint communique, however, did not state explicitly that Asean did not hold a position on the ruling.

    Asean and China had separately in Vientiane issued a joint statement on the “full and effective” implementation of the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea signed in 2002.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Abang On Pokemon Hunt Stumbled Across Floating Corpse At Woodlands Waterfront Jetty

    Abang On Pokemon Hunt Stumbled Across Floating Corpse At Woodlands Waterfront Jetty

    Early morning finding Pokemon.

    Foating Body 2

    Suddenly find dead body.

    Foating Body 3

    Rest in peace whoever you are.

    Seems like an old lady.

    Foating Body 1

    Dont think it is due to Pokemon Go

     

    Source: Azmi Suarez

  • Singapore Rower Saiyidah Aisyah Advances To Quarter-Finals

    Singapore Rower Saiyidah Aisyah Advances To Quarter-Finals

    Faced with choppy waters she had never competed in before, Saiyidah Aisyah had to improvise, adapt and most of all, row like she had never done before.

    The Singaporean was already the country’s first Olympic rower and the trailblazer continued her remarkable journey by reaching the quarter-finals of the women’s singles sculls at the Rio Games.

    Her time of 8min 44.71sec might have been almost a minute slower than her personal best but the only number that mattered was three, the position she finished in heat 4 under the scorching sun at Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas in Copacabana.

    It was good enough to see her join the heat winner, China’s Duan Jingli (8:18.57), and Swiss Jeanine Gmelin (8:28.10) in the quarter-finals where the top three from the six heats will square off on Tuesday.

    Saiyidah, who dropped her hands in exhaustion and looked skywards after crossing the finishing line of the 2,000m race, said: “This was one of the toughest races of my life. The water was so choppy, especially at the halfway mark. I had to row using only one side to make sure I didn’t cross into the other lane on my left.”

    The waters were so rough that she even had to think out of the box and use her spare socks to remove water from her craft – soaking up the water and squeezing it on the side – minutes before her race.

    The sight of capsized Serbian men’s pair Milos Vasic and Nenad Bedik in a later race further illustrated the testing circumstances.

    She clung to the last-minute words of encouragement from her Australian coach Alan Bennett, particularly in the final 500m when Chinese Taipei’s Huang Yi-ting was threatening to overtake her.

    She said: “He told me I’ve come this far and there’s no reason why I can’t finish in the top three. I kept repeating that to myself throughout the race.”

    The 2013 SEA Games champion is used to adversity. Her form dipped in 2014 and she moved to Sydney last year to train full time with faint hopes of qualifying for the Games.

    The 28-year-old, who left her job as a Student Development Officer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic in August last year, even took to crowd-funding earlier this year to fund her training expenses after using up most of her life savings.

    Flashing the widest of grins, she told The Sunday Times: “It’s been an amazing experience and I’m so proud to represent Singapore and I really hope this (her participation in the Olympics) will inspire others.”

    She was equally pleased about beating the other two participants in her heat, Huang (8:51.74) and Kazak Svetlana Germanovich (9:34.15).

    Saiyidah had lost to both women at April’s Asia and Oceania Continental Olympic Qualification Regatta but earned her Olympic spot after winning the B final.

    She remains on track for her goal in Brazil, a top-24 ranking among 32 participants. She has progressed to the next round as the 16th fastest competitor.

    The top three from the four quarter-finals will advance to the semi-final while the rest proceed to the C and D division alongside winners from the repechage stage to decide the rankings from 13-24th.

    Such complex permutations will have to wait though. Sayidah had attended Friday’s opening ceremony and returned to the Games Village only at 1am. Her bus to the rowing venue left five hours later.

    She said with a chuckle: “I’ll return to training tomorrow morning and get myself ready for the next race. But all I want to do now is go back and sleep.”

    After a performance like that, it is a richly deserved nap. And chances are, the dreams would be especially sweet.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Andrew Loh: What Will Happen If Chan Chun Sing Becomes PM?

    Andrew Loh: What Will Happen If Chan Chun Sing Becomes PM?

    Just making an observation.

    1. Rear Admiral Minister suddenly announced he won’t be standing for election, after numerous criticisms for train breakdowns and failures.

    2. Another Rear Admiral suddenly steps down at LTA after less than 2 years, after recent controversy over purchases of 26 faulty trains.

    3. Lieutenant General at NOL fails to keep company afloat. Sells NOL to a foreign company.

    4. Another Lieutenant General at SMRT struggles to solve train problems. SMRT taken over by Temasek.

    5. Major General in the running to be next PM.

    I’m just saying.

     

    Source: Andrew Loh

  • Could A Homemade Rocket Reach Singapore From Batam?

    Could A Homemade Rocket Reach Singapore From Batam?

    The arrest of six men in Batam suspected of planning to launch a rocket at Marina Bay has raised questions about what kind of rocket would be capable of achieving this aim.

    To travel the roughly 25km from Batam to Marina Bay, any rocket would have to be more advanced than the homemade Qassam rockets Palestinian militants have in the past fired into Israel from inside the Gaza Strip.

    The Qassam-3 rocket, made by Palestinian militant groups in underground rocket factories, measure about 2m tall and can carry a 15kg warhead. These rockets have a range of just 12km — not far enough to reach Singapore from Batam. The rockets also have no guidance system and are therefore difficult to fire accurately over long distances.

    Other short-range rockets capable of reaching Singapore from Indonesia would include the Grad (range 20km) and WS-1E (range 45km).

    These missiles, however, are not home-made and are manufactured in Iran and China respectively, meaning they would be more difficult to obtain for a small cell of budding terrorists.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

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