Category: Singapuraku

  • Beer Promoters No Longer Able To Work At Hawker Centres

    Beer Promoters No Longer Able To Work At Hawker Centres

    Breweries have been asked to withdraw their beer promoters from the 107 markets and hawker centres managed by the National Environment Agency (NEA), The Straits Times understands.

    Promoters have stopped working at hawker centres for about two weeks.

    Letters were sent out to hawker drink stall operators earlier this month reminding them of the ban.

    In a letter seen by The Straits Times, Ms Yew Meng Yet, assistant director (tenancy management) of NEA’s hawker centres division, said NEA does not allow beer promoters at hawker centres as this could lead to touting amongst the various drink stalls.

    She reiterated that non-Singaporeans are also not allowed to operate or assist at hawker stalls.

    In response to queries, the NEA said it does not allow any beer promotion in hawker centres as beer promoters are not stallholders or registered stall assistants.

    Furthermore, said its spokesman, “stallholders or registered stall assistants are also not allowed to carry out beer promotion nor engage beer promoters as such activities may give rise to disamenities, such as touting and possible harassment of patrons when promoters compete for business.”

    The NEA spokesman noted: “Hawker centres are essential social infrastructure and important communal spaces – they provide a family friendly, clean and hygienic environment for patrons and families to enjoy good food at affordable prices.”

    Hawkers said promoters are paid about $1,000 a month by breweries and earn a commission of five cents to 10 cents a bottle. They also earn tips, which can average $100 a night. There are probably about 600 beer promoters here, with Asia Pacific Breweries (APB) Singapore hiring most of them. It declined comment.

    But beer wholesaler Lee Hong Kiat, who supplies APB beers such as Tiger and Heineken to 10 hawker centres, said the withdrawal has led to an estimated 25 per cent fall in sales for his firm.

    Industry players said it was the first time they had seen such a major clampdown.

    Drink stall owners had mixed reactions to NEA’s move but most said business had been affected since the beer promoters stopped working. Six stallholders said beer sales have as much as halved since the promoters left about two weeks ago.

    One stall helper in Chinatown said the move had dampened beer sales by 80 per cent.

    “We used to sell five to six cartons of beer a day but now we sell less than one carton a day,” said 55-year-old Madam Huang Yan Chu. “I guess people like beer girls pouring drinks for them.”

    Another drinks stall owner in his 50s who only wanted to be known as Mr Tang said that beer sales have dropped 25 to 30 per cent since they left.

    “With the beer girls around, they help us to take the beer to customers. Without them, we have to do it ourselves or customers have to self-service,” he said. “If you want to stop them from touting then there should be some guidelines. Being a beer girl is not an easy job.”

    Patron Jeffrey Goh, 65, has also noticed fewer customers since the beer promoters left but supports the move to ban them from hawker centres.

    “It’s more peaceful here without them. Sometimes they will get into arguments among themselves. They are quite persistent and will keep asking us to drink more. For instance, they will say “Support me, support me. Buy more beer,” he said.

    “Of course not all beer girls are like that but there are bound to be some who will spoil the impression that people have of them.”

    Another patron, however, said he is quite surprised that beer promoters are no longer allowed in hawker centres.

    “They’re just here to provide a service,” said Mr Daniel Tan, 55, who works in the legal profession. “They open the beer bottle and pour alcohol for you or ask if you would like to buy more beer. They are decent people.”

    Retiree S.G. Lee, 74, said he will miss the promoters. “We are retirees. Honestly, it’s nice to have someone to chat with.”

    Beer promoter Alice Tan, 31, who works at two coffee shops in Toa Payoh, said she earns $35 for a five-hour shift and a five-cent commission for each bottle sold. “It can be quite stressful, especially if there is more than one promoter at a coffee shop.”

    Meanwhile, Lubritrade, which brews Dester beer, will re-deploy its promoters from hawker centres to coffee shops.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Ho Lay Ping: Not Approving Of Gay Lifestyle Is Not Stigmatising

    Ho Lay Ping: Not Approving Of Gay Lifestyle Is Not Stigmatising

    Mr Bryan Kwa Jie Wen’s letter (“Stop stigmatising sexual minorities”; Forum Online, Monday) sends the wrong message to the public: That supporting gay rights improves public health and that society is the cause of suicide in the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community.

    Of the 428 new HIV cases acquired via sexual transmission in 2013, heterosexual transmission accounted for 40 per cent of infections, while homosexual and bisexual transmission accounted for 54 per cent of the cases.

    Those engaging in high-risk sexual behaviour can go for anonymous HIV testing. In Singapore, no one is denied medical services based on their lifestyle.

    Are LGBT activists looking for tolerance or normalisation and, thus, celebration of the homosexual lifestyle?

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in 2007 (“Why we should leave Section 377A alone: PM”; Oct 24, 2007): “Homosexuals work in all sectors… they are free to lead their lives, free to pursue their social activities. But there are restraints and we do not approve of them actively promoting their lifestyle to others, or setting the tone for mainstream society.”

    Pink Dot has its annual gathering at Hong Lim Park every year. There are student groups “supporting” LGBT youth in our tertiary institutions.

    What, then, causes the LGBT community to still feel stigmatised and marginalised?

    By not agreeing and supporting their chosen lifestyle, am I considered to be stigmatising, marginalising, discriminating against them or worse, “literally driving them to their death” as Mr Kwa put it?

    There are underlying causes as to why anyone chooses a particular lifestyle. Personality, family background and life circumstances contribute to every decision made by an individual.

    To attribute the cause of suicide to mainstream society shows irresponsibility and disrespect of life by an individual.

    Singapore is a “communitarian” society. The state should shape policies by promoting and upholding things that are good for society.

    Unless our society is prepared to accept all deviant lifestyles regardless of the consequences, any meaningful understanding of diversity can only be made via a conception of the common good.

    Ho Lay Ping (Ms)

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • TNP Readers: Fandi Ahmad Our Choice To Light Cauldron

    TNP Readers: Fandi Ahmad Our Choice To Light Cauldron

    I support Godfrey Robert’s call to give Fandi Ahmad and son, Irfan, the honour of lighting the SEA Games cauldron.

    I am an ordinary female Singaporean in my 50s who does not usually pay too much attention to sports news, but I felt compelled to write to support Fandi for this key SEA Games assignment.

    Fandi is a son of Singapore and his name is immediately recognisable to all Singaporeans.

    So much so that even a non-sports fan like me is aware of how much he has contributed to Singapore in football.

    Like Godfrey pointed out, Fandi earned this honour by dedicating his life to his sport and, in doing so, put Singapore on the international sporting/football arena.

    His time is now! Fandi! Fandi! Fandi!

    – Soo Kim Bee

    I totally agree that Fandi is the right man to light the cauldron. Everyone can associate with him – young and pioneer.

    – Robert Chitty

    I’m in support of giving Fandi Ahmad and his son Irfan the honour of lighting the cauldron on June 5.

    These are the reasons:

    1 Football is the No. 1 sport in Singapore.

    2 He is the most recognisable sportman in Singapore.

    3 He is an inspirational icon with humility and kindness.

    – Rasheedy Hamid

    I fully support Fandi Ahmad and his son, Irfan, to light up the SEA Games cauldron.

    Fandi is the most famous sports personality in Singapore that all Singaporeans are familiar with.

    He is humble, a gentleman and a family man. And not forgetting football can bring the whole nation together, so Fandi’s the right man for the job.

    Hopefully, the footballers can be inspired by him and win the elusive gold medal on home soil.

    – Jason Hc

    I would like to thank Godfrey Robert for standing up for Fandi Ahmad.

    I’ve travelled to Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, Myanmar, Australia and some parts of Europe and, 
when some people I meet in those countries find out that I’m from Singapore, they smile and ask me if my name is Fandi Ahmad!

    A lot of people who know football, especially those from Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand, have very high regard for Fandi.

    Fandi is not only popular and famous in Singapore, but he also put Singapore on the world map (when he signed for FC Groningen in Holland) long before Marina Bay Sands got famous.

    – Azariamin

    Fandi Ahmad is Singapore’s favourite footballing son.

    He is humble and a popular figure in the local football community.

    But since it’s SG50, the honour to light the SEA Games cauldron should go to someone who has won an Olympic medal before.

    My choice to light the cauldron is pioneer citizen Tan Howe Liang (who won a silver medal in weightlifting at the 1960 Rome Games).

    – Chiang Ging Seng

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Walid J Abdullah: Crucial That Singapore Muslims Involve Themselves And Contribute In Issues Beyond The Traditional

    Walid J Abdullah: Crucial That Singapore Muslims Involve Themselves And Contribute In Issues Beyond The Traditional

    It is important that Muslims – in Singapore and elsewhere – speak up, donate, and craft solutions to issues beyond traditional ones that we are used to be passionate about (hijab, Islam and homosexuality, Palestine etc). A good example would be the collection of funds for the Nepali victims a couple of weeks ago.

    We should be more proactive in dealing with issues of poverty, homelessness, refugees, amongst others, so as to truly display the ‘mercy to all’ conduct that is befitting of our faith.

    Don’t get me wrong: i’m not saying that we should not take up those traditional issues, i am saying we must go beyond that as well.

    It is especially difficult to speak up/do something in issues where there is minimal gain (due to the unpopularity of the matter, like the Rohingyan refugees, as opposed to the Palestinian crisis) and plenty of costs (for example, ‘sensitive’ topics like poverty), but it has to be done. And, i believe this is one of the things that religion in general can offer to the modern world.

    On that note, anyone knows of anything we could do/could think of w.r.t the Rohingyan crisis? Any idea is welcomed, from the trivial to the sustainable.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • Chinsese Couple Helped Malay Woman And Husband Who Suffered Heart Attack At A Wedding

    Chinsese Couple Helped Malay Woman And Husband Who Suffered Heart Attack At A Wedding

    Stomper Maimunah will always be grateful to the nurse and the couple who stepped forward to help her husband when he collapsed at a colleague’s wedding.

    In a phone interview with Stomp, Maimunah recounted her story:

    “I was at a wedding with my husband and grandson when my spouse suddenly collapsed.

    “There were so many people at the event and but many of them were too shocked to come forward.

    “Some of the people there even pronounced my husband dead. I was crying hysterically as I couldn’t believe it.

    “Then a woman came forward and declared that she was a qualified nurse. She conducted CPR on my husband.

    “She did all she could to save my husband.

    “My grandson and I were both crying hysterically, during this tough time a couple approached us.

    “During this tough time a couple approached us. The wife hugged me, prayed for me reassured me that everything will be fine.

    “They provided me some emotional support that helped me regained my sanity.

    “The CPR was successful and they managed to revive my husband but he failed consciousness.”

    Maimunah added that her husband was rushed into the ambulance as soon as the paramedics came.

    However, strict policies meant that only one person could travel in the ambulance with her husband.

    At this point, the couple who had offered support to Maimunah told the distraught woman that they’d bring her grandson to the hospital.

    Fortunately, Maimunah was able to convince the paramedics to allow her to bring her grandson in the vehicle.

    At the hospital, Maimunah’s husband was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and was put on life support.

    While she was waiting for her husband to recover, she noticed that the caring couple from the wedding had made their way to the hospital.

    Maimunah said:

    “I don’t them but they were there to offer support.

    “There were so many people at the wedding but this couple rushed down to see how my husband was doing.

    “I was very touched by their caring act.

    “They have become like family to me.

    “They bought food for my family and even made sure that it was halal. They kept praying for me even though we’re not of the same religion.

    “They were supportive.”

    Maimunah added that her husband has since made a speedy recovery but still has breathing difficulties.

    She also mentioned how the couple had come to the hospital a few days later to visit her husband and the family.

    Maimunah told told Stomp:

    “I am really very thankful to them. I don’t even know how to say ‘Thank you’.

    “I feel so touched.

    “I just want to extend my gratitude to the couple and the nurse for helping me in my time of need.

    “It is very rare to see people like these nowadays.”

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

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