Category: Singapuraku

  • NSF Death: High Court Strikes Out Lawsuit Against SAF, Two Officers

    NSF Death: High Court Strikes Out Lawsuit Against SAF, Two Officers

    The High Court has thrown out a suit against the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) brought by the family of a full-time national serviceman who died in 2012 from an allergic reaction to smoke grenades during a military exercise.

    Private Dominique Sarron Lee, 21, collapsed with breathing difficulties during the training exercise on April 17, 2012, and his family sued for negligence on the part of the SAF, his platoon commander and the chief safety officer of the exercise. The defendants argued that they are indemnified from suits for negligence if the deaths or injuries occurred during service, citing a provision under Section 14 of the Government Proceedings Act.

    In a closed-door hearing yesterday, Judicial Commissioner Kannan Ramesh agreed that the incident fell within the provision and dismissed the suit.

    The incident started during an urban obstacle training exercise involving hand grenades at Murai Urban Training Facility at Lim Chu Kang. Lee lost consciousness and was first taken to Sungei Gedong Medical Centre, and then to the National University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    In 2013, the State Corner ruled that Lee died from an acute allergic reaction from inhaling zinc chloride fumes, which came from the smoke grenades.

    Mr Irving Choh, who represented Lee’s family, argued that there is a contract between Lee and the SAF. In his submissions, Mr Choh said this issue was “a novel point of law that has never been canvassed before the court and should be given an opportunity to be ventilated”. But JC Kannan disagreed that Lee’s family was entitled to sue for negligence.

    Lawyer R S Bajwa represented platoon commander Captain Najib Hanuk Muhamad Jalal, while safety officer Captain Chia Thye Siong was represented by lawyer Laurence Goh.

    Lee’s mother declined to comment when contacted, but pointed TODAY to her post on a Facebook page dedicated to her son’s memory.

    She wrote: “It has been three years and 10 months since you were taken from me and, still, I haven’t been able to get any closure.” She added that the family has to bear the legal costs for the lawsuit.

    Mr Choh said there is a likelihood that the family is considering to appeal against the High Court’s decision.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

     

  • Ease Stress Of Day-To-Day Survival So Poor Can Plan A Better Future

    Ease Stress Of Day-To-Day Survival So Poor Can Plan A Better Future

    When people think about poverty, it is often viewed in the context of money. How much does he earn? Is it enough for the family? But in the course of speaking to people from low-income households last week for a Sunday Times report (“The faces behind the aid figures“; Feb 28), I was struck by something more than their shortage of money: a tendency to shy away from planning for the future, because they are so stressed and concerned about immediate financial worries. This sometimes led them to make decisions that the better-off find hard to understand.

    For example, it is baffling why a couple struggling with finances would want to have seven children, and why the single mother would commit to the big purchase of a new four-room flat despite mounting debt. Or why the elderly karung guni man would spend over half of his $450 monthly government handout on cigarettes and beer when he has no savings.

    Researchers have found that very poor families throughout the world spend more of their income on alcohol than on educating their children – or even on food. Studies have also shown that they do not plan for the future compared to better-off folk, and some have less self-control and are quicker to turn to instant gratification. While some may take a deterministic view, thinking that people become poor because they have such innate traits, recent research suggests otherwise: that it is the state of poverty, and the stress that comes with it, that pushes very poor people to make bad decisions.

    Harvard economist Sendhil Mullainathan and Princeton psychologist Eldar Shafir, in their 2013 book Scarcity, found that economic stress robs people of cognitive bandwidth – the portion of mental capacity used to make decisions. Rushing around worrying about bills, food or other immediate problems leaves people with less cognitive capacity to make good decisions, think ahead or practise self-discipline.Urgent demands of the moment override planning for the future.

    That is perhaps why a food-stall assistant featured in The Sunday Times would rather take on extra part-time jobs in the weekends to get fast cash than go for a skills upgrading course to get a better- paying job. And why the single mother is reluctant to take a little time off work to renew her application for government grants, or meet her debtors to negotiate better repayment plans.

    Under overwhelming circumstances, people living in extreme poverty lack the time and mental will to assess their situation or think of alternatives. They may not even realise they have choices.

    This creates a vicious circle because people end up making decisions that leave them worse off, such as taking out high-interest loans or buying on instalment. In settling today’s problems, they create debts for tomorrow.

    The question then is: How can the poor be relieved of their cognitive stress of day-to-day survival so they are able to plan for a better future?

    If extreme poverty exacts a mental toll, the most direct way to help them would be to help them cancel their debts. Methodist Welfare Services (MWS) started a programme in 2014 for low-income families that matches debt repayment dollar-for-dollar up to $100 a month.

    It found that the 34 families given such help reduced their debt from a total of $256,000 to $175,000 over a year. In comparison, another 34 families not given the funds saw their collective debt increase by $18,000 over the same period.

    MWS assistant director Cindy Ng said: “Chronic debt is one of the major factors that perpetuates their poverty and if they are always fighting fires and thinking about putting food on the table, their ability to deal with longer-term issues is limited. For instance, they are less likely to seek skills upgrading which may help them break out of the poverty circle.”

    Another practical way would be to make it easier for the needy to access help. The poor often work long hours and can apply for aid only after work. Yet most of the 24 social service offices are open only during office hours and are closed at weekends.

    A third solution is to make it easy for those in dire straits to opt for good decisions. For example, they can be automatically enrolled in a savings scheme, with part of their pay or government grants channelled into a rainy-day fund.

    Last, improving their living environment can reduce mental stress. The poor, such as the featured family of eight who squeeze into a one-room rental flat the size of three parking spaces, often have to deal with living in small, crowded spaces. Neuroscientists at Princeton University found that a cluttered environment reduces one’s ability to focus and process information.

    Mr Cayden Woo of Chen Su Lan Methodist Children’s Home, which runs home improvement projects for low-income families, said: “Adults often bring their stress back home from work and when they see the physical mess at home, their frustration escalates. But after helping them declutter and reorganise the space, they become more positive when communicating or parenting.”

    Poverty has a clear link to bad choices. Rather than blame the poor for making such choices, it is more constructive to understand that the mental stress of coping with day-to-day needs drives them to make bad choices – and then work to reduce that daily stress. Helping struggling families cope better in the present will help them reach a brighter future in which their children will not be propelled towards bad choices.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • An Encounter With Racist Father & His Kids At Hawker Centre

    An Encounter With Racist Father & His Kids At Hawker Centre

    Dear ASS Editors,

    This is a disgusting racist encountered faced by our fellow Singaporean in the hawker center. After 50 years of multi racial harmony and nationhood, such racist still exist in Singapore. Thoroughly do not understand why parents do not correct their kids and allow such racist thinking to persist.

    This was his unfortunate encounter in full

    “Had an interesting lunch. Someone paid me $20 to move to another table because his young children don’t want to sit and share the table with ‘a Malay man’ even though I was already there eating halfway through and they were the ones who came later.

    Took the money, finished my food, and gave it to the cleaning lady instead. And told the guy what an expensive way to raise racist kids.”

    Shame on this parent who does not have the sense to teach the right values to his children. Pity the children really.

    Shazwan
    A.S.S. Contributor

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • SDP Parents-CEC Members Call For Inquiry Into Benjamin Lim’s Case

    SDP Parents-CEC Members Call For Inquiry Into Benjamin Lim’s Case

    As parents of school-going children, we have been following Benjamin Lim’s case very closely. What happened to Benjamin is tragic. There are many answers the Ministry of Education owes to parents regarding the issue.

    First, shouldn’t schools be the safest place for our children to be in when they are away from home? Why did the school hand over one of its students to the police without his parents’ or school official’s presence?

    Second, schools have the responsibility to make sure children’s well-being are their top priority, even when faced with demands and pressure from the police.

    In Benjamin’s case, the school could have asked a school counsellor to accompany him to the police station. Even if the police did not allow anyone else to ride in the police vehicle with Benjamin, the school should have sent someone to drive separately to the police station and let Benjamin know that he was not alone.

    This is the whole problem with Singapore where most of us do not know our rights or question the limits of the authorities’ powers.

    Third, there was a school camp the following day which Benjamin was to attend. Students generally like attending these camps and there is no reason to believe that Benjamin was not looking forward to it. According to the family, however, the school called right after Benjamin left the police investigation to inform his mother that he will be excluded from the camp.

    If this account is true, why did the school decide to exclude Benjamin from the school camp and add to his already depressed state of mind?

    Already as a 14-year-old child facing five police officers without the presence of any familiar adult is very daunting. We will never know what went on in Benjamin’s mind when he decided to end his life that day, but his suicide is a wake up call to us.

    Let us make sure that no child ever goes through what Benjamin had to go through. This can only be achieved when an independent Commission of Inquiry is set up to determine exactly the events of his arrest and his treatment while he was under police custody. The current system does not afford adequate protection of minors.

    We owe it to Benjamin and his grieving family to seek justice for a son and brother lost.

    Jaslyn Go
    Jufri Salim
    Bryan Lim
    Mansura Sajahan
    Members
    Central Executive Committee
    Singapore Democratic Party

     

    Source: http://yoursdp.org

  • PAP Dreaming: When Empathy Was Not Needed

    PAP Dreaming: When Empathy Was Not Needed

    Two of the PAP’s characteristic behaviour is a lack of empathy and total loyalty to their party even when they are clearly in the wrong.

    We can see such behaviour especially, when PAP Ministers and members try to defend themselves or their party’s policies.

    From comments that the elderly collect boxes to exercise, that if they had waited to meet with Benjamin Lim at home rather than at school, he could have molested someone else, that the hijab can be problematic, these politicians show how they are insensitive and lack the common touch.

    And when their party’s policies are questioned, they take the apathetic approach in their responses.

    Shanmugam’s speech in parliament when he addressed Benjamin Lim’s death shows how disconnected he is.

    Rather than acknowledge the flaws in interrogation procedures for minors, he insinuated that Benjamin could have molested someone else if they waited just a couple of hours.

    The insinuation was uncalled for.

    Shanmugam’s attempt to defend police procedures resulted in such a terrible reference on a child who should still be assumed to be innocent.

    In the hijab case, Yaacob Ibrahim said Muslimah wearing the hijab in certain professions will be problematic. Masagos argued that we should sacrifice hijab for multiracialism.

    Again, the PAP’s defence of the policy led to callous remarks. Both Malay ministers not only support their party’s policy, they made statements that showed how much they lack empathy for Muslim ladies who wear the hijab.

    This insensitivity is reflective of a party that is intellectually and emotionally bankrupt.

    Rather than acknowledge their mistakes or seek ways to accommodate differences, the PAP chose a legalistic, uncaring approach.

    But the problem is not with Shanmugam or Yaacob Ibrahim or Tan Chuan Jin.

    The PAP’s culture is based on how it behaved from its founding.

    Lee Kuan Yew was known for verbally and politically attacking anyone who disagreed with him.

    He would use the full force of the law against those who challenged him.

    The socio-political system today is not the same as it was during Lee Kuan Yew’s leadership of the PAP.

    But the party’s culture has remained.

    While most in Singapura used to keep quiet out of fear, today many have stood up to question the PAP.

    I am sure that for some PAP members, they dream of the good old days when we used to keep quiet and accept everything the PAP says and do.
    But instead, they now have to respond.

    They do not seem to like it.

    And the lack of empathy bears evidence to how much they dislike having to respond and to how disconnected they really are.

     

    Source: Almakhazin SG

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