Category: Singapuraku

  • Kenneth Jeyaretnam: Amos Yee – Singapore’s Youngest Political Prisoner

    Kenneth Jeyaretnam: Amos Yee – Singapore’s Youngest Political Prisoner

    Yesterday I attended Amos Yee’s sentencing hearing at the State Courts at 9.30am. As you may be aware, Amos has refused to accept probation. The AG had asked for probation, presumably to save the PAP the international opprobrium for jailing a child who had spoken the truth about the late Lee Kuan Yew.

    Instead Amos requested that he serve a jail term instead.  After all he had already served a longer period in remand than the man who assaulted him received after automatic good behaviour. However the AG objected and asked the judge to sentence Amos to reformative training instead on the grounds that he was unrepentant.

    For those of you who are not familiar with what “reformative training” is in the Singapore context, let me enlighten you. The regulations governing it can be found in the Criminal Procedure Code (Reformative Training) Regulations 2010. A person sentenced to reformative training must serve at least eighteen months but no longer than three years. However after release they will be under the supervision of a probation officer and must comply with any conditions imposed.  Any breach of those conditions will result in six months additional sentence. This supervision lapses four years after the date of the original sentence so in the case of someone sentenced to three years reformative training the supervision period is one year but if the sentence is only eighteen months the supervision period is three years.

    This is what an AsiaOne article had to say about reformative training:

    Reformative training is a strict prison regime for young offenders. It consists of foot drills, counselling and education. Offenders spend at least 11/2 years behind bars. Upon release, they are placed under supervision, which includes wearing ankle tags that track their movements electronically.

    The article was about how the courts deemed reformative training as a suitable punishment for young loan shark runners who would not be allowed the “soft” option of probation even for a first offence. However the runner in this case was 20 years old and in NS.

    It revulses me that the court and the AG could  somehow think that the punishment option for someone defacing and vandalising the flats of those owing money to loan sharks, presumably with threats of violence intended to intimidate the unfortunate debtors, and other violent young criminals is appropriate for a  child like Amos.

    I say “child” advisedly even though our law treats him as an adult when he reaches 16 despite not being allowed to vote till you are 21. Yet another inconsistency in Justice Kaur’s judgement was that she claimed to be protecting the youth of Singapore from being corrupted and depraved by Amos’s supposedly obscene image while she was treating Amos as an adult for the purpose of sentencing. Amos’s blog and video were clearly aimed at adults and viewed mostly by adults and not children.

    I will get back to yesterday’s hearing. The queue for the public gallery was quite short, perhaps because the hearing was originally scheduled for 2pm but was then moved to 9.30am. Singaporeans do not like to get up so early. The atmosphere among the crowd was slightly flippant considering that it was a child’s future we were talking about. When I said that the Government was out to break Amos, some people said jocularly that he would be more likely to break the AG and the judicial system by his refusal to bend. A young man in a suit made some comment to the effect that unlike the “soft” West we treated criminals like Amos as adults from the age of 16 and that the “shackles” which presumably soft-hearted liberals like myself objected to were just cuffs.

    After a delay while the prosecution and defence lawyers met outside the courtroom, Justice Kaur entered at about 9.50am. I expected someone older and tougher looking. Instead she looked quite slight and undoubtedly younger than me. She was extremely soft-spoken so it was very difficult to hear what she was saying. It was difficult to fit her image to her reactionary and inconsistent judgement.

    The DPP argued that as Amos had not “learnt his lesson” and refused to agree to probation that a reformative training sentence was necessary. He said that Amos’s conduct and his decision to make the image and video  public again demonstrated the need for rehabilitation and appropriate counselling. The DPP said a jail term or a fine would have no rehabilitative effect on Yee and would therefore not be “tenable, because we cannot be popping back into court every other day.”

    The judge agreed with him and said that “Rehabilitation is the fundamental tenet of our justice system” and ruled that he be remanded for three weeks to assess his mental and physical suitability for reformative training.

    Alfred Dodwell, Amos’s lawyer, argued in vain that Amos should be given a fine or a jail term equivalent to the time he has already spent on remand and pointed out quite correctly that Amos was being punished for a second offence for which he had not been tried.

    At the end of the hearing Amos was taken into custody again. I saw his mother passing him a plastic bag which made me feel very sad.

    There can be no doubt that in this case “rehabilitation” is just a euphemism. The PAP Government mean to break Amos’s spirit through a harsh regime that is worse than prison. They would like to show Singaporeans that anyone here who dares to challenge the official narrative will be harshly dealt with.

    In totalitarian regimes like Communist China, the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany “rehabilitation” meant years of imprisonment in harsh concentration camps. Everyone remembers the infamous words above Auschwitz  which said “Arbeit Macht Frei” which loosely translated meant “Work Makes You Free” which was meant to be a sadistic joke about rehabilitation.

    I feel only a slightly milder version of this punishment regime is in store for Amos. He will be forced to work and if he refuses will likely be punished.  I am concerned that reformative training may include caning if Amos refuses to obey the orders given to him by his captors. He has years of imprisonment to look forward to and when he is inducted into NS he will probably end up serving his time in a military prison. Meanwhile a father who failed to strap his toddler into a car seat causing her death in an accident was only fined. And Lee Kuan Yew made countless racist remarks designed to wound the feelings of minorities and was commended globally for his wisdom and candour.

    Even with his time on remand Amos has served more time than the man who attacked him. The reports said that he would not be with adult inmates. However since Amos is already being treated as an adult that seems just another example of the AG’s disingenuity. He will presumably be placed with the kind of hardened criminals who are normally considered suitable for reformative training. He wlll probably be bullied and may be sexually assaulted. Of course many comments from PAP supporters and LKY worshippers on the internet were that rape was much too good for him.

    The PAP Government’s treatment of Amos is an international embarrassment to them and to Singapore. The PAP always justify draconian restrictions on our freedoms by saying we enjoy Swiss standards of living as  a result. But I look around and I can see that we have neither, except maybe PAP Ministers and their relatives and wealthy foreigners. Steve Wozniak, who founded Apple with Steve Jobs.  said no innovation or creativity would come out of SIngapore. Is it any surprise?

    I called Amos Singapore’s youngest political prisoner which led to the usual fierce attacks from people saying that he was tried and convicted.  However so was Nelson Mandela who received a sentence of life imprisonment for terrorism. Yet today no one would dream of calling Nelson Mandela a criminal let alone a terrorist.

    I will end by letting Amos’s own words speak for him:

    “And yes, to the chagrin of numerous people, I have not ‘learnt my lesson’, nor do I see any ‘lesson’ that needs to be learnt.If you are going to try to tower over me and say that you know something important that that I don’t, make sure you have a compelling argument for that. And if your lessons are borne from a corrupt, archaic Government lead by primitive monkeys,…then sorry if I doubt the credibility of your quote unquote ‘lessons’.

    Hopefully history eventually vindicates me. But as of now, district judge Jasvender Kaur has deemed me guilty and the Prosecutor does in fact feel, that 30 months of a place worst than Prison (RTC) should be given to a boy who has posted an internet video.

    Unless you do in fact relish in my misery, I hope both of you will be able to sleep at night, and live with the fact that right now, as it is written in the annals of history, my blood is on your hands.”

     

    Source: http://sonofadud.com

  • Lions Beaten 2-1 By Myanmar

    Lions Beaten 2-1 By Myanmar

    A second-half free-kick from Ko Oo Ye consigned Singapore Under-23s (U23) to a 2-1 defeat in their second Group A game against Myanmar U23.

    Nay Lin Tun had initially given Myanmar the lead in the first half, before Faris Ramli equalised from the spot ten minutes later. Ye struck in the second half to give his side the winner.

    While Myanmar dominated possession mostly in the first half, it was the hosts who enjoyed a plethora of chances, although they wasted most of it.

    Sahil Suhaimi had a golden opportunity with just two minutes on the clock after latching onto Aung Si Thu’s poor clearance, but the striker shot over instead.

    Safirul Sulaiman followed suit three minutes later before Sahil blasted a free-kick from 25 yards over.

    At the other end, Myanmar almost crafted out a chance from a set-piece, but Pravin Guanasagaran was alert and managed to head the ball behind for a corner instead.

    Sahil then continued his wastefulness in front of goal, before Pravin headed narrowly over after rising highest to meet Safirul’s corner.

    Myanmar took the lead in the 24th minute through Nay Lin Tun, after he escaped his marker’s attention to bundle home Aung Zone Moe’s free-kick.

    Singapore tried to force an immediate equaliser, but Sahil saw his volley blocked once more.

    Their pressure paid off eventually in the 34th minute. The referee pointed to the spot following a handball by Aung inside the area, and Faris dispatched it into the top corner for the equaliser.

    The Young Lions almost took the lead a couple of minutes later following a good move, but Stanely Ng was unable to make contact with Adam Swandi’s driven cross.

    The home side came out of the second half more determined and could have gone ahead a minute after the restart, but Pravin drilled his effort  inches wide of the left post from just outside the area.

    It was the visitors who retook the lead instead on the hour mark, after goalkeeper Syazwan Buhari misjudged the trajectory of the ball and allowed Ko Oo Ye’s low free-kick to bounce into goal.

    Sahil had a great opportunity eight minutes later after Irfan Fandi nodded on a long ball from Syazwan, but he fired over instead.

    Faris then forced a save from Kyaw Zin from just outside the area in the 73rd minute, before Irfan put the ball into the net only for the referee to disallow it for a foul on Kyaw Zin.

    A rare mistake from Kyaw Zin presented Sheikh Hadi with a chance, but his improvised shot was off the target.

    Singapore kept piling on the pressure and in the last minute of injury time, Irfan managed to get onto the end of Sheikh’s cross, but he headed agonisingly wide from point-blank range.

    That put paid to Singapore’s hopes of finding the equaliser, with the referee blowing the full-time whistle seconds later.

    After the match, Singapore U23 coach Aide Iskandar thought his boys were unlucky to lose after putting up a battling performance.

    “I’m not here to point fingers at anybody, we win as a team and we lose as a team,” Aide said. “In general, we did well. Myanmar did not trouble us with many chances. We created chances, yet we did not score and in order to win games we need to score.

    “I have to take my hats off, the players tried hard and fought. We have to thank the fans for coming and staying till the final whistle. The boys have showed and they kept battling. Today’s performance is better than the one against Philippines even.”

    Meanwhile, Myanmar coach Kyi Lwin thought it was indeed a tough match against Singapore.

    He said: “Singapore is the host team, and it was very difficult to play against them but we hope they will win the next two matches and make it through.”

    Singapore line-up: Syazwan Buhari (GK), Al-Qaasimy Rahman (C), Sheikh Abdul Hadi, M Anumanthan, Shakir Hamzah, Pravin Guanasagaran, Safirul Sulaiman (Suria Prakash 69’), Adam Swandi, Stanley Ng (Irfan Fandi 57’), Faris Ramli (Amy Recha 89’), Sahil Suhaimi

     

    Source:www.fas.org.sg

  • An Open Letter To Grassroots Leaders About The Word Cum

    An Open Letter To Grassroots Leaders About The Word Cum

    Esteemed grassroots leaders,

    I am writing to highlight an important issue surrounding our banners in this day and age.

    You see, as a local blogger, aspiring journalist and young punk, I am intrigued by the number of posters – even at this day and age – that use the word ‘cum’.

    image

    Reddit

    Yes, ‘cum’. And if you’re giggling, stop.

    Because if you’re giggling, you jolly well know what people think the word ‘cum’ means. And it certainly doesn’t mean ‘in conjunction with’.

    image

    Bukit Batok East blog

    Some of you might be asking: “punk, who gave you the rights to the English language?knnccb, we Singaporeans we like to use the word ‘cum’, cannot ah?”

    Truth be told, your publicity officers (or fellow grassroots leaders) have left the word everywhere.

    image

    Bukit Batok blog

    They’re most commonly found in banners…

    image

    Bukit Batok East blog

    but some of them have gotten in our flyers as well.

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    Sembawang Town Council

    They’re even on our websites – and more ironically, on a banner publicising a clean-up day.

    The thing is – the word ‘cum’ can be simply avoided by a matter of planning.

    image

    You can dodge it with an ampersand (for those of you who aren’t atas enough to know what it means, it’s a “&”).

    image

    Everything East

    Or you could simply use the word ‘and’ – it’s frankly not that difficult.

    Given the simplicity of their replacements I have no idea why there are some esteemed leaders who insist on using the word.

    image

    Toa Payoh RC Facebook

    It frankly leaves a bad taste in the mouth – and none of us certainly appreciate it –

    image

    Bukit Batok East blog

    So please, stop getting the word ‘cum’ in our eyes.

    If not, I’ll have to write up another article cum anti-’cum’ campaign to stop you.

     

    Source: http://the-yishus.sg

  • Some Maggi Noodles With Unsafe Lead Level Exported To Singapore

    Some Maggi Noodles With Unsafe Lead Level Exported To Singapore

    New Delhi: Indian shopkeepers withdrew a popular brand of Nestle instant noodles from their shelves on Wednesday after tests revealed the snack contained unsafe levels of lead.

    India’s states have either ordered the withdrawal of Maggi noodles from shops or are carrying out further tests on noodle samples before taking action in conjunction with the federal government.

    Maggi sales have plunged in India since laboratory tests showed the noodles contained lead at levels far higher than the legal maximum. The tests also detected the chemical flavour enhancer monosodium glutamate, or MSG, which is not mentioned in the product’s list of ingredients.

    On Tuesday, the Delhi government said it had conducted tests on 13 samples of Maggi noodles and 10 were found to be unsafe with lead exceeding the allowable level. Earlier tests, performed by food safety authorities in Uttar Pradesh state, showed that samples contained 17.2 parts per million of lead, many times the allowable limits which range between 0.01 and 2.5 ppm.

    The Delhi government said it will take legal action against Nestle India, which is a subsidiary of Swiss-based Nestle SA, and was meeting Wednesday with company officials. It banned the sale of Maggi noodles in all state-run stores in the Indian capital for 15 days. Several major grocery chains in the city have also announced that they are taking the noodles off shelves.

    A Nestle spokesperson said a majority of Maggi noodles produced in India are sold in India but a limited amount are exported to the U.S. , Canada, the United Kingdom, Kenya and Singapore.

    Maggi noodles are a hot favourite with school and college students and Nestle’s “two-minute” advertising campaign stressing the ease of making the snack have made it a household name in India. The noodles are Nestle’s fastest selling food item in India, clocking around 15 billion rupees ($240 million) in sales annually.

    Excessive intake of lead can cause damage to the kidneys, bones and nervous system. It is particularly harmful to children and can cause learning disorders. Health experts say MSG, often used as a flavor enhancer in processed food and in some restaurants, can damage the nervous system with long-term use.

    The government of the southern state of Kerala has stopped the distribution of Maggi noodles and ordered more than 1,000 state-run grocery stores to withdraw the product. The state governments of Haryana, West Bengal and Maharashtra have begun the process of testing noodle samples for lead and MSG. — AP

    Our Mumbai correspondent adds: Maharashtra’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which has collected about 10 samples of Maggi noodles packets, has so far not encountered any negative reports relating to the product by multinational Nestle.

    According to FDA commissioner Harshadeep Kamble, the final test results are expected by Friday after which the regulator will decide on the future course of action. The FDA collected samples from Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur and a few other cities and is conducting tests at its laboratories. While the FDA and the state government have not imposed any ban on the sale of Maggi noodles in the state, there has been a sharp fall in the sale of the popular instant food, following widespread media coverage about actions being initiated by various states including Uttar Pradesh, Kerala and Delhi. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has also directed all states to check samples of the noodles and get them tested at laboratories.

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Malaysia Has More Religious Freedom Than US, Singapore, Christian Group Says

    Malaysia Has More Religious Freedom Than US, Singapore, Christian Group Says

    There is more freedom of religion in Malaysia compared to Singapore and the United States, both of which imposes stricter laws against various faiths, a prominent Christian preacher said today.

    President of a new non-governmental organisation Christians for Peace and Harmony Malaysia (CPHM), Reverend Wong Kim Kong said that an individual preaching a different religion can be prosecuted in Singapore but not in Malaysia.

    “In Singapore, if you preach other religions in a sermon, or you pray to a god made of wood, they’ll report to the police under the Singapore Religious Harmony Act, you’ll (be) prosecuted.

    “In Malaysia, even if you talk bad about a different religion, not that we want to, they won’t disturb you,” he said during a press conference ahead of CPHM’s official launch.

    He claimed Malaysians are also allowed to freely practice their religions at any location while Americans face difficulty even when wanting to pray.

    “For the Christians, the Buddhist, the Hindus, you can build a shrine anywhere, you can open a church in any shop lot.

    “You can even form a church without registration because the constitution allows you to practice your religion.

    “Even in America, you can’t pray. So it just depends on which angle you look at,” he said.

    He also noted that the debacle over the usage if the word Allah, an Arabic word that means god, in Bibles using Bahasa Malaysia has also been misinterpreted as an attempt to convert Muslims into Christianity, which it is not.

    “I want to assure you that the accusation is actually not true. The church, as far as I know, never use the word Allah to preach the gospel,” he said.

    “But the word Allah is used by our Bahasa Malaysia-speaking congregation to denote the god that they believe. So it’s not a tool for evangelism,” he added.

    He further explained that the usage of the term was in no way an attempt to coerce others into Christianity.

    “But I cannot deny the reality that sometimes overzealous Christians share the good news, every religion has this type of people, but by and large the Malaysian Christians are not extremists.

    “We don’t coerce, some may out of enthusiasm, but generally they are peace-making,” he said.

    This comes amid religious tensions silently brewing in Malaysia, with right-wing Muslim groups like Perkasa and the Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (Isma) pitting themselves against various interfaith groups.

    The country’s minority groups have repeatedly lashed out at the authorities’ allegedly nonchalant responses to remarks issued by Muslim fundamentalists against the sensitivities of the non-Muslims here, insisting that their inaction have only emboldened these groups and others into inciting more violence and hatred.

    Earlier this year, influential UK paper Financial Times columnist David Pilling had written that growing religious intolerance in Asian countries could turn into a “disaster” for the region.

    He cited Malaysia as an example of yet another country with “hardening ideology” but did not elaborate on the disaster this might cause.

    Malaysia also made international headlines when it banned a Catholic Church publication from using the word “Allah”, which is deemed here as exclusive to Muslims, as well as the seizure of Malay and Iban medium Bibles from the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) last year.

    In April this year, a group of Muslims protested against a church’s hanging of a cross on its facade, claiming the symbol was a threat to them and their religious beliefs.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

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