Category: Singapuraku

  • Decomposed Body Found Hanging On Tree Along Republic Avenue

    Decomposed Body Found Hanging On Tree Along Republic Avenue

    The decomposed body of a man in his 30s was found along Republic Avenue on Monday evening.

    A male jogger had discovered the body hanging high up from a tree as he passed through a forested area nearby and alerted the police, according to Lianhe Wanbao.

    The Chinese paper also reported that the body, which had turned black, was in an advanced state of decomposition and could not be identified.

    The man was said to have been dead for at least five or six days.

    Police said it received a call for assistance at 7.14pm.

    Officers were spotted entering the forested area with a ladder and electric saws – to cut down the tree – at around 8.30pm.

    They emerged nearly two hours later carrying the body.

    Investigations into the unnatural death are ongoing, police said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Newspaper Vendor Sues ‘Unfilial’ Son To Get Condo Back

    Newspaper Vendor Sues ‘Unfilial’ Son To Get Condo Back

    A 76-year-old newspaper vendor has sued his 48-year-old son, whom he called “unfilial”, to get back a $1.2 million Hillview Avenue condominium.

    In 2000, Mr Chin Kim Yon paid $700,000 for the apartment. It was registered in the names of his son and daughter by his second “wife”, whom he married in customary Chinese rites in 1963.

    After daughter Yun Qin died last year at the age of 49, he applied to administer her estate and transferred her half-share of the flat to himself. He sued son Kheng Hai for the other half-share. He said he never meant to give the condo to his children, who were just holding it on trust for him.

    Yesterday, on the first day of the trial, Mr Chin testified that he did not intend to will his estate to Kheng Hai. He said he was taking legal action because his son has been unfilial to him.

    He singled out a “heartbreaking” 2013 incident in which his son visited him at his Johor Bahru home and tried to hit him with a bottle in anger.

    In his affidavit, Mr Chin said that he wanted to “regularise” the ownership of the property to prepare for the administration of his estate after his death.

    The Singapore permanent resident has three other children from his first marriage in 1958.

    Mr Chin, represented by Mr Winston Quek, said he bought the condo his two children were renting after they said they could not afford the rent, out of “fatherly love” so they can live there rent-free, but he made it clear that it belonged to him. He said he felt “cheated” when they mortgaged the unit for $400,000 but did not use the loan to buy another property as promised.

    Kheng Hai, represented by Mr Goh Peck San, denies being unable to pay rent. He said his father agreed to buy the condo after they told him the landlord was selling and he had told them that it was for the two of them. He contends that the loan was used to buy a HDB flat in the joint names of his father and sister in 2003.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Man Bashes Elderly Man Who Allegedly Touched His Girlfriend

    Man Bashes Elderly Man Who Allegedly Touched His Girlfriend

    An elderly man was beaten up in a coffee shop for allegedly molesting the assailant’s girlfriend.

    The incident, part of which was captured on video, happened at Block 59, Marine Terrace, on Sunday at about 1.30pm.

    A bald man in his 20s had accused the older man of touching his girlfriend’s buttocks before attacking him on and off for about 20 minutes, witnesses told The New Paper yesterday.

    The victim suffered a broken nose, had blood all over his face, and his T-shirt was ripped to shreds.

    A customer at the coffee shop said: “The young man kept punching the old man and no one stepped in to help. I was afraid to step in as well because he was so fierce and looked intimidating.”

    The police said they are investigation the incident as a case of voluntarily causing grievous hurt and outrage of modesty.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Marina Square Eateries Still Reeling From Hotpot Culture Rat Incident

    Marina Square Eateries Still Reeling From Hotpot Culture Rat Incident

    Rats are still roaming Marina Square mall, and they have claimed their first victims.

    At least five eateries – The Corner Place Korean BBQ, Cafe Lady M, Addictions Cafe & Remedy Bar, Brazilian restaurant Carnivore Appetite and Italian Japanese restaurant Nuvo – have put up the shutters since January, when a dead rat was found in a salted vegetable dish at Hotpot Culture, which is on the fourth floor.

    An employee at the chain, who did not want to be named, said that Carnivore Appetite shut down in February. “Mainly, it was because of the rat infestation. Customer traffic really fell after that.”

    A former Addictions Cafe & Remedy Bar employee, Ms Rachel Doan, 35, said the cafe shut in February, ahead of its lease expiry in November, also due to the rodent problem.

    Nuvo shut on Jan 29 with a notice on its Facebook page declaring that it would cease operations “until the situation at Marina Square has been resolved”. It has not reopened.

    Lady M shut in January, with The Corner Place Korean BBQ following soon after. Prior to the latter’s closure, a manager was quoted in The Straits Times as saying that customers confused it with Hotpot Culture.

    The rodent problem remains, although it has eased.

    A spokesman for the National Environment Agency (NEA) said: “Our assessment is that there has been a marked improvement in the rat situation at the mall, as there has been a significant reduction in the number of rats caught.

    “However, as dead rats were still being found at the mall as recently as last month, it may still be some time before the ongoing rat control measures take effect fully .”

    Meanwhile, remaining eateries report poor business.

    Chinese restaurant Yechun Xiao Jiang Nan is likely to close when its lease expires at the year end. It is losing $20,000 each month, said managing director Li Jing.

    This is despite landlord Marina Centre Holdings’ rental reprieve of up to 30 per cent for July, August and September. Mr Li said the 20 per cent discount he received, off the more than $45,000-a-month rent he is paying, is not enough. He pointed out that other factors, such as road closures soon for National Day and the Formula One race next month, will hit business once again.

    At Vietnamese restaurant Lotus Saigon, business has halved since January. Supervisor Jenny Kim, 40, said: “It never returned to normal”.

    Meanwhile, Japanese restaurant Hamanoya shut for a month after the rat incident and reopened in March with a new menu.

    A Straits Times visit last week found restaurants empty at dinner time. The spaces where Nuvo, Addictions Cafe & Remedy Bar, and Lady M used to be remain vacant. On Carnivore Appetite’s entrance was a notice from the landlord informing the eatery that it had failed to comply with requirements to open daily from 10am to 10pm. “We are entitled to remove any goods… and apply the proceeds of the sales of such goods against the costs and payment incurred and any arrears of rent,” read the letter.

    When contacted, Marina Centre Holdings did not comment specifically on how it was addressing the pest problem or how many tenants received rental discounts.

    It would only say: “Pest control is an ongoing programme and we continue our vigilant pest control programme with our tenants.”

    However, The Straits Times understands NEA has taken enforcement action against the landlord.

    Oddly, business at Hotpot Culture is “almost back to normal”, said its owner Wilson Lim. The NEA said over 20 inspections of the eatery after its suspension was lifted in February found “no hygiene lapses or pest infestation”.

    Customers, meanwhile, are still giving the mall a miss.

    Ms Yeo Yeo Min, 31, said she will return for a meal only when the mall has been declared rat-free.

    “It’s just gross. I won’t eat there if I can help it,” said the engineer. “How would you know if the food you are eating is really hygienic?”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Calculating The Cost Of Singapore’s SG50 Jubilee

    Calculating The Cost Of Singapore’s SG50 Jubilee

    Singapore is celebrating 50 years of independence and everywhere you look in the city, there are posters, banners, bus ads and post boxes marking the event.

    The government-led brand sums up the jubilee with the acronym SG50.

    It is the city state’s biggest and most expensive effort to drum up nationalist fervour.

    The celebrations will culminate on 9 August, National Day, the date of Singapore’s independence 50 years ago.

    An extravaganza costing nearly $15m (£9.6m) will take place on the historic Padang – the large field in the middle of the city – as well as on a platform that overlooks the picturesque waterfront where 150,000 people are expected to fill the stands and watch from the city centre.

    The show has been put together by 12,000 participants and crew – among the highlights will be 20 fighter jets forming the number 50 in the sky.

    Jets displaying '50' in the sky
    Fighter jets were rehearsing their formation ahead of the big day
    SG 50 bag
    National Day ‘fun packs’ are being sent to 1.5m households

     

    Companies have also piled in, desperate to be associated with the “feel-good” factor.

    Honav Singapore is one small firm hoping to do this. They’ve produced around 300,000 flag-themed temporary tattoos, as well as more than a million mini Singapore flags, erasers and games for the National Day ‘fun packs’.

    Around 1.5m of these packs are being distributed free to households and to spectators of the national day parade rehearsal shows over the last few weeks. The fun packs are estimated to have cost the government around $7m, though part of this cost is picked up by sponsors such as Honav Singapore.

    Marketing director Marilyn Lim says it’s a chance too for her firm to get more exposure and be associated with a ‘memorable once in a lifetime event’.

    SG50 planes, cars and whisky

    Jubilee branding has also turned up on Singapore Airline’s A380 planes. Two of these have been flying the globe since July, flanked in the red and white colours of the Singaporean flag with SG50 on the turbochargers of its wings.

    Singapore Airlines, who were the first to fly the A380 planes when they debuted in 2007, says one of these flag themed planes will be flying past over the parade on the day.

    The airline says that its growth has been so closely linked to the development of Singapore that having the special Singapore-flag themed livery would be a ‘unique way to help celebrate Singapore’s 50th birthday’.

    Singapore Airlines A380 plane with SG50 branding
    Singapore airlines put the SG50 logo on two of its A380 planes

     

    Even supermarkets are in nationalistic overdrive, trying to sell shoppers everything from 50 grams more bacon and fishcakes shaped in the number 50 for their noodles.

    It’s not just Singaporean companies, the fervour has hit big multi-national firms too.

    Real patriots can order a bespoke SG50 Rolls Royce. The car company says it is the first time anywhere in the world Rolls-Royce has commissioned a car to commemorate the anniversary of a country.

    Price is upon application for the one of a kind Ghost Series II which has hand painted details of Singapore’s famous Merlion – a creature with a lion’s head and fish body .

    According to Paul Harris, the regional director of Rolls Royce Motor Cars, they did this because Singapore is an important market for the firm. It had its first Asian dealership there and it is where most of their regional employees are based.

    It is one of the “top five markets in Asia for the Ghost Series II” and has a “loyal base of customers dedicated to the brand”, he adds.

    The Merlion turns up too on Johnny Walker’s high end Blue Label whisky. Diageo has commissioned 888 gold silk screen printed bottles for the nation’s jubilee. The number 8 is considered a lucky number in Chinese culture as it sounds like the word for ‘wealth’. Gold printing them is an intricate process involving a dedicated staff of up to 10 and curing for 48 hours before it’s shipped off for sale.

    The president of Diageo for the region, Sam Fischer, also says that Singapore is an important base for them. It’s where their regional and logistical headquarters is based.

    Singapore has “logistics efficiency” and “manufacturing excellence” he says.

    “It’s such an important part of Diageo and we felt the need to commemorate such an important occasion for Singapore.”

    Johnny Walker bottle with Merlion branding
    The true patriot’s dram – Johnny Walker’s special SG50 whisky

    Nation branding

    But does this sort of patriotic branding work? Brand expert Samir Dixit, managing director of Brand Finance Asia Pacific, says the jury is out.

    “Looking at our economic analysis, there’s nothing to suggest that the companies will see any benefit. There’s nothing to say that if they put the SG50 logo on the product, that they will sell more than before or if they are not using it, they will sell less.”

    Just how much is too much? SG50 has become so ubiquitous that it’s spawned web sites mocking these efforts.

    Search the acronym and you’ll uncover them, including one called ‘Simi Sai, also SG50’ which describes the latest SG50 branding effort and tries to get online users to rate them as ‘sai’ (which translates as ‘rubbish’) or ‘not sai’ (not rubbish).

    Singaporeans, too, feel that these SG50 marketing campaigns are aimed not so much at playing up their patriotism, but parting them from their cash.

    ‘Overdone’ and ‘over the top’ are what most of them said when asked about SG50. Yet many admit that it’s a special time to look back at the nation’s progress as one of the great economic successes of the 20th century.

    While the effect on businesses may be limited, there may be some benefit for the nation.

    “Events like this put the country through a rejuvenation mode, so that may be good going forward in the next two or three years,” admits Mr Dixit. But he says those economic effects can only accurately be measured after the fact.

    So the impact of Singapore’s golden jubilee will most likely only be felt long after the last SG50 signs are taken down.

     

    Source: www.bbc.com

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