Category: Singapuraku

  • Local Voluteer Group Plans To Go After Firms Involved In Causing Haze

    Local Voluteer Group Plans To Go After Firms Involved In Causing Haze

    As the season of haze returns to our shores, some Singaporeans may feel helpless about the smoky, unhealthy air blown our way from the south.

    But a group of volunteers are determined to take up the fight against the haze, or those who had a hand in causing it.

    The Haze Elimination Action Team (Heat), led by Professor Ang Peng Hwa of Nanyang Technological University’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, is planning to sue and boycott the companies responsible for the fires.

    Yesterday morning, PSI levels crossed into the hazardous range. At 6am, the 24-hour PSI was 257-318, and the three-hour PSI stood at 334.

    Prof Ang told The New Paper yesterday: “We want consumers to know that there is something that we can do. We are not helpless.”

    He and a few others set up Heat in 2007 – a year after Singapore experienced its worst haze in a decade, with the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) peaking at 150.

    “What struck me most back then was when I read about a 40-year-old CEO who said how Singaporeans can’t do anything about the haze.

    “This was a man empowered and in charge of a company, yet he was feeling helpless. I told myself that surely there was something we can do,” he said.

    In 2007, Heat raised about $20,000 for a website and an educational effort in Jambi, South Sumatra.

    Today, the group has about 800 members who include professionals, housewives and students.

    It is also working with another haze awareness group, PM.Haze.

    Prof Ang said that Heat intends to sue and boycott companies that are registered here but are involved, via intermediary or subsidiary companies, in starting the fires in Indonesia.

    It is also “looking for someone or an organisation that has incurred losses of at least tens of thousand dollars or more due the haze”, or who has been hospitalised, to be an “ideal plaintiff”, he said.

    Legal fees are estimated between $50,000 and $100,000 and the team is looking to get pro bono help as well as a lawyer with experience in corporate forensics to help trace the ownership pattern of the fires, he said.

    Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan said that this was an encouraging effort at self-help by Heat, but added that it would be a challenging task.

    TOUGH TO PROVE

    Firstly, there is the evidential burden of proof that these local companies have management control of the Indonesian companies that are legally responsible for the haze, he said.

    Heat would then need to provide evidence to the court that these Indonesian entities were indeed causing the haze pollution, he said.

    But he noted that this bottom-up approach, if successful, would hit the alleged companies where it hurts the most – their reputations and profits.

    “It will send a signal to these companies to clean up their act. It can pressure Singaporean entities to insist on sustainable and responsible agricultural practices throughout their supply chains.

    “It’s a case of consumers having a big say in how a company ought to conduct itself and being responsible to stakeholders,” he said.

    Environment and Water Resources Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said during a press conference yesterday that the Transboundary Haze Pollution Act, which was passed in Parliament last year, will help those seeking legal action against those responsible for causing or condoning fires if burning results in unhealthy levels of haze in Singapore.

    “Whenever possible, we will try to share as much information as possible with the public. I think they are entitled to take action. I think our demands for greater transparency and sharing of information will facilitate their action. Anyone who suffers losses as a result of this may be entitled to take action against errant companies pursuant to (the Act).”

    Dr Balakrishnan also listed five companies that the National Environmental Agency has issued notices to. (See report,)

    Prof Ang said the case could take years to build and is aware of the challenges ahead.

    One of their plans is to gather pictures of the sites that are burning now and check back on these sites in a few years.

    “We hope then to trace who benefited from these fires. To the companies suspected of starting fires, we are coming after you,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Indonesia VP Jusuf Kalla Reiterates No Apology Required To Neighbours Over Haze

    Indonesia VP Jusuf Kalla Reiterates No Apology Required To Neighbours Over Haze

    NEW YORK – Indonesia’s Vice-President Jusuf Kalla has reiterated that Indonesia need not apologise to neighbouring countries over haze from forest fires in Sumatra and Kalimantan.

    Indonesia only needs to ensure forest fires that cause haze do not recur, he was quoted as saying on Indonesian news site kompas.com.

    “Look at how long they have enjoyed fresh air from our green environment and forests when there were no fires. Could be months. Are they grateful? But when forest fires occur, a month at the most, haze pollutes their regions. So why should there be an apology?” he said during a dialogue session with Indonesians in New York at the Indonesian Consulate-General on Thursday.

    He also claimed that companies from neighbouring countries are paying locals to clear lands using the slash-and-burn technique.

    This was not the first time Mr Kalla has made such remarks. He made similar remarks between 2005 and 2007 when he was Vice-President to then President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

    On Sept 18 this year, he made the same point after meeting Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi at the vice-president’s office.

    Mr Kalla said forest fires and destruction were started by foreigners who needed land in the 1960s and 1970s.

    They later collaborated with Indonesian entrepreneurs.

    “They taught us to destroy forests. As a result, using development as an excuse, our forests were felled. Our peatlands were opened up. Wet peatlands dried up, making them easier to burn,” he said, naming several foreign companies.

    He said besides preventing forest fires from recurring, the government has also issued bans on logging and moratoriums on the use of land, including opening up lands for new plantations.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • K Shanmugam Rebukes Jusuf Kalla Over Shocking Statements

    K Shanmugam Rebukes Jusuf Kalla Over Shocking Statements

    The ongoing haze crisis, which has affected the lives of millions across Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, has started to draw strong comments from leaders here.

    Foreign and Law Minister K. Shanmugam, in a Facebook post on Thursday night, expressed his unhappiness at what he referred to as “shocking statements made, at senior levels, from Indonesia, with a complete disregard for our people, and their own”.

    “How is it possible for senior people in government to issue such statements, without any regard for their people, or ours, and without any embarrassment, or sense of responsibility?” wrote the minister.

    Mr Shanmugam did not name any of his Indonesian counterparts or elaborate on the statement in question at the time.

    His post on social media came after Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla had reiterated that Indonesia need not apologise to its neighbours over the haze.

    Speaking at a dialogue at the Indonesian Consulate-General in New York on Thursday, Mr Kalla said Indonesia needs only to ensure that forest fires that cause haze do not recur, Kompas daily reported yesterday.

    “Look at how long they have enjoyed fresh air from our green environment and forests when there were no fires,” said Mr Kalla.

    “Could be months. Are they grateful? But when forest fires occur, a month at the most, haze pollutes their regions. So why should there be an apology?”

    He also accused “companies from neighbouring countries” of paying locals to clear lands using the slash-and-burn technique, which have led to the blaze.

    Mr Kalla had made similar remarks in previous years.

    The most recent occasion was in March this year, when he rapped neighbouring countries for complaining about the haze, asking them to be grateful instead for the clean air they enjoy for the rest of the year.

    “For 11 months, they enjoyed nice air from Indonesia and they never thanked us,” he said at the time. “They have suffered because of the haze for one month and they get upset.”

    Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong yesterday wrote a post on Facebook directed at Indonesia and the haze crisis.

    “Merlion is mythical like the Garuda and will not be affected by the haze. But we humans will be, not just now but also in the long term if haze continues year after year,” he said. The Merlion and Garuda are associated with Singapore and Indonesia respectively.

    “If Indonesia can stamp out illegal burning, they will gain investor confidence in their abilities to tackle other complex challenges. The haze is their litmus test for effective administration and regional leadership. We all see it, breathe it; and there is no hiding.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Foreign Talent Wish To Enjoy Singapore Passport But Unwilling To Serve NS?

    Foreign Talent Wish To Enjoy Singapore Passport But Unwilling To Serve NS?

    Dear Editors,

    Saw this posting of crappy FT on the pros and cons of getting SG citizenship for her Son.

    What really cheesed me is the policy of having an option for her Son to decide at the age of 21 years whether they want to stay or leave. And still got the cheek to respond they are having the same concerns?

    To the FTs here…. If you do not have the intention to let your son serve NS after sponging on us for 21 years, don’t waste our taxpayers money supporting your son.

    So this is the type of quality of new citizens our dear 69.x% endorsed has been targeting to secure? Dual passport citizens that runs when it’s time for them to pay back all the benefits they’ve been bestowed by our taxpayers money and enjoyed?!

    What kind of crap policy does the incumbent 69.9% have that gives the option to chose which passport to retain at 21 years old?!

    True Blue Singaporean
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

     

  • She Would Rather Spend To Help Migrants To Makan

    She Would Rather Spend To Help Migrants To Makan

    She organises dinner parties for migrant workers and Singaporeans – and they cost more than $1,000 each time.

    But 29-year-old self-employed tech entrepreneur Adrianna Tan told The New Paper: “I really don’t mind spending that money because this means more to me than shoes and handbags.”

    She said it gives the groups an opportunity to mingle and to get to know one another, rather than living in different worlds.

    Miss Tan tries to gather about 100 migrant workers and 100 Singaporeans for every Kitchen Culture dinner, which happens once every three months.

    It takes her and her team of volunteers about two weeks to organise each dinner.

    Miss Tan and the other Kitchen Culture volunteers head down to hot spots where migrant workers hang out and hand out fliers to invite them to dinner.

    The volunteers share the duties involved, such as ordering and collecting the food and inviting guests.

    Miss Tan said that Kitchen Culture is not an attempt to “quell or address xenophobia”, but it “raises awareness of some of the migrant groups present among us”.

    She said: “I was shocked at some of the rampant anti-foreigner sentiments that I came across online and even in real life.

    “I am disappointed at how acceptable it seems to be for some people to say things like foreign talents are the cause of all our problems or that they hate a specific group of people.”

    Even though she goes on business trips almost every week, Miss Tan does not think she will be stopping these dinner parties any time soon, especially after receiving an appreciative message from one of the migrant workers who attended a dinner party.

    She said: “The text message read: ‘Thank you for the dinner party. Today was the best day of my life.’

    Said Miss Tan: “Knowing that I managed to make such an impact on someone’s life is a priceless feeling.”

    I really don’t mind spending that money because this means more to me than shoes and handbags.

    — Miss Adrianna Tan

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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