Category: Singapuraku

  • Election On 12 Sep? Last Day Of Hungry Ghost Month

    Election On 12 Sep? Last Day Of Hungry Ghost Month

    FENGSHUI MASTERS: BAD LUCK?

    The chatter on everyone’s lips seems to be: Will the General Election be held on Sept 12?

    While nothing has been announced so far, “The Date” has been widely suggested and discussed in text messages and social media.

    Even veteran MP Inderjit Singh agreed that Sept 12 looks likely in a Straits Times report earlier this month.

    The date is the last Saturday of the week-long school holidays, which frees schools to be used as polling stations and teachers to be tapped to man these stations.

    It is also the last day of the Hungry Ghost month.

    For those who are superstitious or who believe in fengshui, the date may not be a good day to hold an election.

    Master David Tong, 40, told The New Paper: “Sept 12, according to the Tong Shu (the Chinese almanac), is a bad day. It’s a Month Breaker day. Hence, it is a bad day to carry out any important activities.”

    A Month Breaker day is a day where the energies of that day are in conflict with the energies of the month.

    DIFFICULT TIME

    Master Kevin Foong held a similar view.

    He said: “If election is truly in the September period, the energy suggested by the planetary movement (based on astrology) or Chinese metaphysics based on the lunar calendar both suggest it is going to be a difficult time for the Government to fully convince the voters in their favour.

    “The Government has a high chance of retaining control, but may have certain districts having unexpected results.”

    Understandably, those who are superstitious may not want to plan important activities during the Hungry Ghost month and risk upsetting the souls of the dead, who are said to roam the earth during this time.

    But one fengshui master told TNP that there is nothing to worry about.

    Master Goh Guan Leong said: “The rumoured date of Sept 12 is very interesting. It is basically a day of Metal and Wood elements, with the strength of Metal being overwhelmingly strong and in favour of the incumbent party.”

    In past general elections which coincided with the Hungry Ghost month – 1972, 1988, 1991 – the People’s Action Party (PAP) performed fairly well.

    In 1972, PAP won all 65 seats. In 1988, it gained 80 out of 81 seats while in 1991, PAP won 77 of the 81 seats.

    Sept 12, according to the Tong Shu (the Chinese almanac), is a bad day. It’s a Month Breaker day. Hence, it is a bad day to carry out any important activities.

    – Fengshui master David Tong, 40,

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Neighbour In Abuse Case Faces Two More Charges

    Neighbour In Abuse Case Faces Two More Charges

    The neighbour of a woman, allegedly made to eat faeces and drink urine, faced two additional charges on Friday (July 31).

    Darwinder Singh Sukhdev Singh, 39, who is unemployed, is now accused of abetting the victim’s husband, Mr Khamis Abas, to voluntarily cause hurt to his wife, Madam Kamisah Burel, 58, by feeding her human faeces and urine.

    Singh allegedly committed the offence at Block 48 Lower Delta Road in April.

    A video clip of Madam Kamisah being slapped, allegedly by her daughter, had gone viral.

    Singh is also accused of slapping Mr Khamis on his face once at the block of flats sometime last year. He was first charged in court last week.

    His earlier charge stated he had allegedly abetted the couple’s daughter, Ms Siti Nur Redha Khamis, 25, to voluntarily cause hurt to her mother by feeding the elderly woman human faeces and urine.

    He is accused of committing this offence at the same block at around 10.30pm on July 1.

    Singh is now remanded at the Institute of Mental Health for a psychiatric evaluation and will be back in court on Aug 14.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Jover Chew Faces New Charges, 28 Now In Total

    Jover Chew Faces New Charges, 28 Now In Total

    Two fresh charges have been brought against Jover Chew, the former owner of Sim Lim Square electronics shop Mobile Air, bringing the total number of charges he faces to 28.

    These charges were read during a pre-trial conference today (July 30). Chew, 33, allegedly exhibited insulting behaviour and caused distress to a customer, Ms Zou Jing Tong, in October last year.

    Ms Zou had to pick up small change amounting to S$547 after Chew had scattered it on the floor of his shop. The amount owed to Ms Zou was part of a Small Claims Tribunal order. For this, he could be fined up to S$5,000.

    The second charge sees Chew accused of abetment by conspiracy to cheat walk-in customers between December 2013 and Sept 24 last year with Kam Kok Keong, an ex-employee.

    On Sept 24 last year, Kam allegedly tricked Ms Zou into believing that she could buy an iPhone 6 Plus for S$1,600 — a fact that Kam knew to be false. For this, Kam, 31, faces the same charge as Chew, bringing the total number of charges brought against Kam to nine.

    If convicted of abetment by conspiracy to cheat, Chew and Kam could be jailed for up to 10 years and fined.

    Mobile Air became notorious after a video of a tourist, Pham Van Thoai, going on his knees to beg for a refund at the shop went viral. The Vietnamese had paid S$950 for an iPhone 6, but was told he had to add S$1,500 in warranty fees.

    Three other employees — Koh Guan Seng, 38, Lim Hong Ching, 33, and Lim Zhi Wei Kelvin, 32 — have also been charged. They face one to 15 charges each of abetment by conspiracy to commit cheating.

    All five men are out on bail. A pre-trial conference for them will be held on Aug 27.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Battle For Sembawang GRC Shapes Up

    Battle For Sembawang GRC Shapes Up

    The battle for Sembawang GRC is shaping up.

    The People’s Action Party (PAP) slate of candidates is starting to take shape in the five-MP GRC that was substantially affected by new electoral boundaries last week, and its MPs have begun working the new ground.

    Party chairman Khaw Boon Wan yesterday said he and his team were reaching out to the 53,177 new voters added to Sembawang GRC from areas that were under Nee Soon GRC, while “handing over” the areas with 61,061 voters that have been carved away to the new Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC.

    In the 2011 General Election, Sembawang GRC saw a contest between the PAP team and a Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) team.

    he PAP won 63.9 per cent of the vote against the SDP, whose slate included academics James Gomez and John Tan.

    The SDP confirmed it will again contest the GRC at the coming general election. But party leaders have yet to name their slate for the GRC.

    With the boundary changes, two members of PAP’s current team in the GRC – Senior Parliamentary Secretary Hawazi Daipi and first-term MP Ong Teng Koon – will see their wards go to Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC, said Mr Khaw, who is the National Development Minister.

    But Dr Lim Wee Kiak, a two-term MP in Nee Soon GRC’s Canberra ward, will join Sembawang GRC.

    This leaves a spot open in Sembawang GRC. But Mr Khaw would not confirm if lawyer Amrin Amin, 35, a PAP new face spotted in the GRC, will join his team.

    But he added: “He’s in my group. He’s proactive. I need a Malay after (the) carving out of Marsiling.”

    The two other MPs in the Sembawang GRC team are Ms Ellen Lee and Mr Vikram Nair.

    Mr Khaw gave the likely line-up for his GRC – and partially for Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC – to The Straits Times when he met Nee Soon GRC MP Lee Bee Wah at a coffee shop in Yishun Avenue 11.

    His disclosure reinforced a point that PAP organising secretary and Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen made at a SingHealth Nurses’ Day event yesterday: that the party would disclose its slate of candidates early, probably well ahead of Nomination Day.

    At the meeting between Mr Khaw and Ms Lee, she briefed him about the 51 blocks that were being transferred to Sembawang GRC following the boundary changes.

    Mr Khaw said boundary changes have the greatest impact on the PAP, and in some cases are “quite drastic … We’ve invested time. Now, new relations have to be forged”.

    Losing Marsiling, which has a predominantly elderly population, Mr Khaw said, will lower the median age for Sembawang GRC and bring it nearer to the national median age of just over 40 years.

    Yesterday, SDP members went on a walkabout in Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, and party activist Paul Tambyah said it would return to the areas it contested in 2011 – including Sembawang – “because the residents know who we are”.

    “We have been going back there over the years… on a regular basis, so these are a natural fit for us.”

    That opposition parties aim to contest all 89 seats at the next general election, is a prospect relished by first-term Tanjong Pagar GRC MP Chia Shi-Lu.

    Speaking to reporters at an event yesterday, he said that he and his fellow GRC MPs were at a “disadvantage” as theirs was the only uncontested constituency in 2011.

    As the GRC, previously helmed by the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew, has no history of contests to indicate how it would do in the face of a challenge, “we actually have to work harder than most others”, he added.

    This is why the team campaigned in 2011, going door to door and meeting residents, as if they were facing a real election.

    “We take nothing for granted because of this unknown element, which I suppose spurs us to work even harder,” he said.

    The Singaporeans First party and Democratic Progressive Party are keen on Tanjong Pagar GRC.

    But the SDP, which said in January that it was also considering Tanjong Pagar, confirmed yesterday that it would not target the GRC.

    Said Professor Tambyah, who was accompanied by SDP chief Chee Soon Juan and party activists: “Many people in Tanjong Pagar are very keen to vote but, at the same time, there are many other parties that have expressed interest.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 2011 Walkover ‘A Very Big Disadvantage’ For PAP Candidates

    2011 Walkover ‘A Very Big Disadvantage’ For PAP Candidates

    Only one constituency – Tanjong Pagar – went uncontested in the 2011 General Election. The lack of a contest there is “a very big disadvantage” for the incumbent Members of Parliament there, says Dr Chia Shi-Lu.

    The consultant orthopaedic surgeon was assured of a seat in Parliament on Nomination Day four years ago when a Singapore Democratic Alliance team intending to contest the Group Representation Constituency filed their nomination papers after the deadline.

    The People’s Action Party went on to win 60.1 per cent of the votes in the 26 other constituencies islandwide, following an intensive campaign period which ultimately saw it lose a GRC for the first time in history.

    This time round, the incumbents at Tanjong Pagar could have two things working against them, said Dr Chia: Not having been in the thick of the hustings, and the risk of complacency.

    “This is a very big challenge, a very big disadvantage for us,” said Dr Chia, speaking to Channel NewsAsia on the sidelines of the Global Youth Leaders’ Summit, held at Bishan Park Secondary School on Thursday (Jul 30). “Because of this we actually have to work harder.”

    WILL THE TEAM CHANGE?

    The MP in charge of the Queenstown ward said that their preparation for the upcoming General Election, which will have to be held by early 2017 but which observers expect to take place in the near future, started even before Polling Day, 2011.

    “We started working in Apr 2011. Even though we didn’t have an election at that time, we did our campaigning,” he said.

    Part of the reason was to keep themselves on their toes, to ensure the PAP team remained relevant to the electorate.

    “If the incumbent has been there for many years, sometimes it may not always work to their advantage because people are used to them and they keep on doing the same thing. It may have worked in the past but it may not work in the future,” he said.

    Change, therefore, is a necessary constant.

    In 2011, the Tanjong Pagar PAP team only had two candidates remaining from their 2006 campaign (also a walkover): Mr Lee Kuan Yew, a stalwart there since the pre-Independence 1955 Legislative Assembly General Elections, and Ms Indranee Rajah.

    This time round, a rumoured possibility is that Dr Lily Neo will move over from Tanjong Pagar to neighbouring Jalan Besar GRC, where she served as MP from 2001 to 2011.

    Dr Chia said of the MP of the Kreta Ayer-Kim Seng ward, which will sit in Jalan Besar GRC following recommendations from the Electoral Boundaries Review Committee: “The area she looks after hasn’t changed. In fact it has gone back to 2006 so I don’t think it’s that much of a change. I think there’s not much of a surprise there. Of course as colleagues we are sad to have her move to another GRC because we have done so many events together.”

    THE LEE KUAN YEW LEGACY

    One man’s shadow looms large in Tanjong Pagar – that of founding Prime Minister Lee, who passed away in March this year.

    Dr Chia Shi-Lu (centre) greets members of the public who came to pay respects to the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew at Tanjong Pagar Community Club on Mar 24, 2015. (File photo: TODAY)

    And Dr Chia – who was awarded the Lee Kuan Yew Postgraduate Scholarship in 2003, allowing him to pursue his doctoral degree in England – said the team there still acts with Mr Lee’s principles in mind.

    “When I first joined politics and was nominated and came into Tanjong Pagar, the first thing he told me is: Whatever you do, you just do your job well and look after the residents. Do what you are here to do and look after the residents to the best of your ability,” said Dr Chia.

    “It’s kind of direct and typical of his style.

    “We still go according to the principles of Mr Lee – we will do what we have always been doing.

    “He has always maintained that his greatest legacy is what continues after he’s gone, not when he’s around. Now that he’s not around, things should just go on; we should work as we have worked before. But when you look at what he has achieved with his team – everything should not be just maintained, but should be better than when he was here.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

deneme bonusu