Category: Singapuraku

  • Singapore Swimmers Continue Hot Streak

    Singapore Swimmers Continue Hot Streak

    Singapore won four gold medals out of six SEA Games swimming finals at the OCBC Aquatic Centre on Tuesday.

    First, Joseph Schooling won the men’s 100 fly in a new Games record of 52.13, although it was off his national mark of 51.69.

    Then, Tao Li won Singapore’s 50th gold medal at this Games when she clocked 1:02.67 in the women’s 100m back.

    Quah Zheng Wen created history for Singapore when he won gold No. 51 in the men’s 400 IM in 4:23.50.

    With it, the Republic surpassed its best-ever gold medal haul of 50 at a single SEA Games, set on home ground in 1993.

    The men’s 400 free relay team then ended the night with a bang. The quartet of Joseph Schooling,  Danny Yeo, Clement Lim and Quah Zheng Wen clocked  3:19.59 to finish almost six seconds ahead of second-placed Malaysia.

    The Republic also won silvers through Quah Ting Wen (women’s 200 fly) and Pang Sheng Jun (men’s 400 IM).

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Shanti Pereira Grabs Bronze In Women’s 100m Sprint

    Shanti Pereira Grabs Bronze In Women’s 100m Sprint

    Shanti Pereira ended Singapore’s 42-year wait for a women’s sprint medal on the tracks by clinching the 100m bronze on Tuesday evening.

    The sprinter enjoyed an uncharacteristically good start and clocked 11.88s to finish third in the 100m race at the National Stadium.

    Kayla Richardson of the Philippines won her race in a photo-finish, edging ahead of Thailand’s Tassaporn Wanakit after both clocked a time of 11.76s.

    Her win gave the Philippines a double as Eric Cray blew the opposition away in the men’s event with a new personal best of 10.25s, finishing ahead of Indonesians Boby Yaspi and Iswandi, who both clocked 10.45s.

    Thailand’s Jirapong Meenapra, the 100m and 200m champion at the last SEA Games in Myanmar, finished a disappointing fifth in 10.48sec.

    Singapore’s two sprinters, Calvin Kang (10.47s, personal best) and Amirudin Jamal (10.55s) finished fourth and sixth, respectively.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Indonesia’s Aceh Province Introduces Curfew Banning Women From Work, Entertainment Venues After 11PM

    Indonesia’s Aceh Province Introduces Curfew Banning Women From Work, Entertainment Venues After 11PM

    The capital of Indonesia’s Aceh province has banned women from working or attending entertainment venues late at night, legally requiring them to be home by 11:00pm, Banda Aceh’s mayor says.

    Internet cafes, tourist sites, sports facilities and entertainment venues have been instructed to refuse service to women after 11:00pm unless they are accompanied by a husband or male family member.

    The directive, which came into effect on June 4, will also bar women from working in such businesses after the cut-off time, in a bid to protect them from sexual harassment.

    “Our aim is to provide protection to female employees, especially those who work in area such as cafes, restaurants, internet cafes and tourist attractions,” Banda Aceh mayor Illiza Sa’aduddin Djamal said.

    “Women in Aceh are vulnerable to sexual harassment so we want to protect them from untoward incidents.”

    The new measures also ban children from being unaccompanied in public places after 10:00pm.

    Businesses that insist on making their female employees work beyond the curfew risk losing their licence, while women who break the rules would be reprimanded.

    “They will be asked to go home and be given a warning,” Illiza Sa’aduddin Djamal said.

    Women in certain professions, like nursing, are exempt from the curfew, she said.

    Aceh is the only Indonesian province that implements Islamic law and makes homosexuality, gambling and drinking alcohol punishable by caning. It also reprimands women for wearing form-fitting clothing.

    The chief of Indonesia’s national commission for violence against women said the measure would only restrict women’s freedom and threaten their livelihoods.

    “The government should stop meddling in women’s affairs,” said Azriana, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name.

    “If the intention of the Aceh government is to provide protection for women, it must instead educate the public and men to respect women or provide security at the nightspots.”

    The decision comes just a month after unmarried men and women were banned from riding together on a motorbike in one of Aceh’s districts.

    Indonesia has the world’s biggest Muslim population, but the vast majority practise a moderate form of the faith.

     

    Source: www.abc.net.au

  • 39 Year Old Youth Counsellor Jailed Seven Months For Taking Nude Photos Of 12 Year Old Girl

    39 Year Old Youth Counsellor Jailed Seven Months For Taking Nude Photos Of 12 Year Old Girl

    He volunteered by counselling troubled youths. Yet, the 39-year-old preyed on the 12-year-old daughter of a friend, asking her to strip for his camera when she asked him for money.

    Today (June 9), District Judge Low Wee Ping sentenced the man, who cannot be named to protect the victim’s identity, to seven months’ jail and chided him.

    “I find it ironic that you were once a counsellor for troubled youths, yet you did this to the girl,” said the judge.

    District Judge Low also took issue with the defence lawyer for underplaying the severity of the crime. “If you think it is merely taking a naked photo, then you don’t know what you’ve done and what the law is trying to protect,” he said, adding that “sexual exploitation of a child” was a better description of what had transpired.

    The court heard that the man was a friend of the victim’s mother, and had on previous occasions given the victim small sums of money ranging from S$2 to S$10.

    On April 25, 2012, the victim asked the man for S$300 to buy a handphone. The man called the victim’s friend, a 17-year-old sales assistant, later in the evening asking them to go to his Ang Mo Kio home. As she was uncomfortable going there alone, the victim asked her friend to accompany her.

    Once there, he said he would teach them how to make money by becoming a “hostess”. Despite her reluctance, she was persuaded to strip naked and pose on the bed for a photo, which the man took with his mobile phone. The next day, a family friend of the girl’s reported the incident to the police.

    Today, defence lawyer S S Dhillon argued that the victim was a “runaway girl” and that her mum had confided in his client about her problems. The man had not touched her either, he added.

    Pleading for leniency, he highlighted the man’s “contributions to society”, such as speaking to delinquents about not re-offending and voluntarily contributing S$27,000 to eight Nepalese earthquake victims.

    But deputy public prosecutor Dillon Kok pressed for a sentence of six to eight months’ imprisonment, citing the aggravating factors in the case, including the victim’s young age and his persuading her to pose naked despite her reluctance. “It is not even taking a picture of a naked girl. It’s child porn,” Mr Kok added.

    The maximum punishment for the offence under the Children and Young Persons Act is five years’ jail and/or a S$10,000 fine.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • NUS Retain Top Spot, NTU Moves Up To Fourth, In  Asian University Rankings

    NUS Retain Top Spot, NTU Moves Up To Fourth, In Asian University Rankings

    The National University of Singapore (NUS) has maintained top spot in an annual ranking of Asian universities released on Wednesday morning, while Nanyang Technological University (NTU) moved up from the seventh to fourth place.

    London-based education and career consultancy Quacquarelli Symonds (QS), ranks Asia’s top 300 universities based on nine criteria including academic reputation, employer reputation, student-faculty ratio, papers per faculty and citations per paper.

    NTU has reached its highest ever position since the rankings were first compiled in 2009, after moving up three places in 2014.

    QS said NUS achieved the maximum score in the academic reputation indicator, based on more than 42,000 responses from academics from the region and around he world, while NTU achieved a nearly perfect score.

    Both universities also achieved the maximum score in the employer reputation indicator based on the opinion of almost 12,000 employers who took part in the survey.

    QS said although both universities had a low score in terms of the number of papers published, they scored highly when the impact of their research was measured by the number of citations per paper.

    NUS ranked third regionally for citations per paper while NTU was 12th.

    QS said the citation ranking reveals that the research output of the two universities “achieves a significant impact among the international scientific community and the world at large”.

    Mr Ben Sowter, QS head of research, said: “The leading Singaporean universities have an insatiable quest for excellence and an unwavering ambition, supported by a favourable environment which places education and innovation among the top priorities of the city-state’s agenda.

    “The historical analysis of the rankings shows that to maintain their position year on year, universities need to constantly improve. Hence, when they rise or if they stay firmly at the top of the table, it means that they are effectively progressing perceptibly faster than their peers.”

    Hong Kong University was placed second, followed by Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

    NUS president Professor Tan Chorh Chuan said: “We are very encouraged that the University is highly regarded and valued by employers and academics in Asia and the world.

    “This is a reflection of NUS’ distinctive education and broad-based research excellence, which are results of the strong contributions made by dedicated NUS faculty, staff and students.”

    NTU president, Professor Bertil Andersson said: “Singapore should be very proud to have two highly acclaimed universities among Asia’s top four.

    “This is a remarkable feat for this small country and especially meaningful that it has come during Singapore’s Golden Jubilee year.

    “It shows that Singapore’s continued investments in education and research are reaping good results.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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