Category: Singapuraku

  • World Street Food Congress 2015 To Be Held At Open Field Opposite Bugis Junction

    World Street Food Congress 2015 To Be Held At Open Field Opposite Bugis Junction

    The World Street Food Congress is making its return. Organised by Makansutra and supported by the Singapore Tourism Board, it will be held at the open field opposite Bugis Junction, at the intersection of Rochor Road and North Bridge Road, from Apr 8 to 12.

    The five-day feasting jamboree is open to the public, and will feature 23 stalls from 12 cities, and a food truck run by a US Top Chef winner. Attendees can expect to indulge in food prepared by award winning chefs from all around the world.

    This year’s prices start from S$4.50, and the public can enjoy a cashless mode of payment via NETS or credit card.

    In line with commemorating Singapore’s 50th birthday, the National Heritage Board will be launching the SG50 Deliciously Singaporean exhibition on Apr 8, which will showcase the nation’s food heritage and feature 50 uniquely Singaporean dishes.

    Sisig cups by Bale Dutung Sisig. (Photo: World Street Food Congress 2015)

    This year’s event will also see the launch of a Dialogue-Hackathon, which will comprise a range of networking activities, discussions and presentations.

    Said Mr KF Seetoh, founder of Makansutra: “If anything else, just come and eat things that you cannot pronounce. Even for our local food. I was talking to some of our hawkers and said, ‘Let’s evolve our traditional stuff – so come up with a bonus har cheong gai – prawn paste chicken – burger with a sambal mayonnaise and a little nice salad.’ So they are all very excited.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Yaacob Ibrahim Appointed Minister In-Charge Of Cyber Security,  Cyber Security Agency Formed

    Yaacob Ibrahim Appointed Minister In-Charge Of Cyber Security, Cyber Security Agency Formed

    A dedicated agency for national cyber security will be set up from Apr 1, 2015.

    The Cyber Security Agency (CSA) of Singapore will come under the Prime Minister’s Office and will provide dedicated and centralised oversight of national cyber security functions.

    The agency will take over the functions of the Singapore Infocomm Technology Security Authority (SITSA) and some roles of IDA. Minister for Communications and Information Dr Yaacob Ibrahim will be appointed as the Minister-in-charge of Cyber Security.

    The CSA will consolidate and build upon the government’s cyber security capabilities. These include strategy and policy development, cyber security operations, industry development and outreach. CSA will also work closely with the private sector to develop Singapore’s cyber security eco-system.

    “If you look back 15-20 years, many sectors in Singapore were not cyber-enable,” said Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Teo Chee Hean on Tuesday (Jan 27). “But today, if you look at any sector in Singapore, be it healthcare, transportation, power systems, water supply – they all are cyber enabled in one way or another.

    “And so, the cyber world permeates many sectors in Singapore and have become increasingly interconnected. And so, it is important to protect each of these sectors but also to have an overview to make sure the interconnectivities between all of these sectors, the vulnerabilities there are also covered.”

    Some of the immediate priorities of CSA are ensuring a smooth transition of SITSA and IDA functions, as well as recruiting and developing manpower talent. The high demand for cyber security professionals has resulted in a talent crunch.

    The agency plans to work with institutes of higher learning to build a robust and sustainable pool of cyber security experts, as well as improve the relationship between the Government and the private sector.

    Said Dr Yaacob: “So at the end of the day, the data that we collect – because we are transiting into a Smart Nation – is protected and safeguarded and in that way build trust within the system. The agency will initially start up with 60 staff, and will move some 40 staff from existing organisations over.

    “So this is a very important function of the Government to ensure, not only within the Government, but within the private sector that we are all connected. And we can level ourselves up to that capability where we can withstand the threat.”

    One key driver for setting up CSA was to respond to new and sophisticated threats, such as when personal data is compromised.

    Mr David Koh, Deputy Secretary (Technology) at the Ministry of Defence has been appointed as Chief Executive (Designate) of the CSA on Jan 1, 2015 and as Chief Executive, CSA from Apr 1, 2015.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Malaysia’s GST Takes Effect: Less Savings, Still Worth The Trip

    Malaysia’s GST Takes Effect: Less Savings, Still Worth The Trip

    Singaporeans who frequently shop in Malaysia say they will continue to do so, even though prices of many goods could go up after the new goods and services tax (GST) kicks in today.

    This is because the strong Singapore dollar makes shopping across the Causeway at least 30 per cent cheaper than in Singapore, they said. The new GST is 6 per cent.

    Popular items that Singaporeans cart back include groceries such as instant noodles and soft drinks, baby items such as diapers, and household essentials like shampoo and toilet rolls.

    Yesterday, Malaysians thronged malls and supermarkets, such as the one at Aeon Bukit Indah in Johor Baru, to stock up on essentials such as paper towels, diapers and detergent.

    According to a poster at the entrance of the supermarket, essential items such as rice, palm oil and white bread are exempted from the new GST.

    Singaporean Lim Peng Soon, 61, is not too concerned about the new tax.

    He drives to Johor Baru from his Woodlands home once a week to pick up household items and groceries, such as eggs.

    “I know about the tax, but I will continue to buy things in Johor. It will still be cheaper than in Singapore,” said Mr Lim, who is self-employed. “Generally, I save at least 30 per cent buying things in Malaysia.”

    For accounts manager Viki Foo, 39, her trips to Kuala Lumpur once every three months will continue.

    She stocks up on baby formula for her 21/2-year-old son.

    “I’ll still save quite a fair bit, especially with the good exchange rate,” she said. Yesterday, $1 could buy RM2.69, compared with RM2.59 a year ago.

    When it comes to buying big-ticket items such as laptops, however, Ms Foo said she will be more “cautious” as it may cost at least $100 more with the new tax.

    For some Singaporeans, the new GST means fewer trips. Administrator Jennifer Goei, 57, has stopped visiting Johor since the Chinese New Year.

    The recent hikes in vehicular fees and tolls have put her off making such trips altogether. “And now, there’s this 6 per cent GST,” she said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Zaid Ibrahim: Singapore’s Exit Allowed Malay Ultras To Take Over Malaysia

    Zaid Ibrahim: Singapore’s Exit Allowed Malay Ultras To Take Over Malaysia

    KUALA LUMPUR, March 30 — Singapore’s expulsion in 1965 prevented Lee Kuan Yew from continuing to press for a “Malaysian Malaysia” and allowed Malay ultras headed by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad to depose Tunku Abdul Rahman, Datuk Zaid Ibrahim asserted today.

    In a blog post eulogising the late Singapore founding father, the former de facto law minister lamented the lost opportunity for both Tunku and Lee to co-operate on transforming Malaysia into a flourishing democracy with strong rule of law.

    “Without Singapore in the wings and without LKY articulating his mantra of ‘Malaysian Malaysia’, the ultra Malays, led by Dr Mahathir, gained huge momentum.

    “They filled the vacuum with the help of a young Islamist named Anwar Ibrahim.

    “They were able to push Tunku out after May 1969 and the country’s history was rewritten by the introduction of the New Economic Policy (NEP), followed by the Malay-first and Islamisation policies,” Zaid wrote on his blog today.

    Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, a vocal critic of Tunku, eventually became the country’s fourth and longest-serving prime minister, while Anwar later became his deputy.

    The NEP is the technically-defunct race-based affirmative action that created a system of preferential treatment for the Bumiputera in jobs, housing and access to government funding.

    The policy and others taking after it are blamed for Malaysia’s declining competitiveness as well as increasing discontent among non-Bumiputera communities over what is perceived to be “second-class” treatment.

    Zaid said that keeping Singapore in Malaysia and Lee in the administration would have allowed Tunku to resist the push for Malay-first policies in order to make the community competitive, progressive and reasonable.

    According to the former Kota Baru MP, the country’s first prime minister would also have been able to keep Islam’s focus on charity, good and ethical conduct and compassion instead of permeating into the governance of the country.

    “Malaysia has come full circle: Malays have become Arabs, Malay words have changed to Arabic, and their Western education has changed to the Islamic variety.

    “Malaysia’s identity no longer follows Tunku’s vision. Singapore remained true to the dreams of its founder, and very successfully as well. That’s the tale of the two leaders, in short,” he said.

    Singapore founding father Lee died on March 23 after over a month on life support following complications arising from severe pneumonia.

    Singapore joined Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak to form the Federation of Malaysia in 1963, but was expelled two years later by an Act of Parliament following racial tensions over the republic’s insistence on equal treatment for all citizens.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • The Story Behind The Success: Adam Road Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak

    The Story Behind The Success: Adam Road Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak

    Abdul Malik Hassan had but one ambition when growing up: To be an airline pilot.

    His family was not well-off and because he was the eldest of five children, he had to jump through a few hoops – peddle banana fritters as a kid, moonlight as a banquet waiter and bartender in his teens, work full-time and study part-time as an adult – before he finally got his degree, a requirement for a flying job, at age 33 in 2004.

    The mechanical engineering graduate from Nanyang Technological University immediately applied to be a pilot with Singapore Airlines. When the company called him for a second interview, he was beside himself with joy.

    But his father, who ran a nasi lemak stall, looked miserable when told the news.

    Mr Abdul Malik, 43, recalls: “I asked him why he was not happy for me. He gestured at his stall and said, ‘If you go and pilot aeroplanes, who is going to pilot my stall?’”

    Those words caused him sleepless nights. It was Mr Hassan Abdul Kadir’s wish to involve his brood in the business, and he was banking on his eldest son to rally everybody together.

    As he could not bring himself to let his father down, Mr Abdul Malik agreed – but he wanted carte blanche to run the business.

    Among other things, he streamlined processes and tweaked the menu and recipes. Already a popular stall then, Selera Rasa – at Adam Road Hawker Centre – became an even bigger draw.

    Among many other accolades, it bagged The Straits Times Readers’ Choice award for favourite nasi lemak in 2008. The Sultan of Brunei requests it for breakfast each time he visits Singapore. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong served it to Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the Istana when the latter visited last November. Mr Lee posted a picture on his Facebook account.

    Mr Hassan died four years ago, but he would have been pleased to know that his eldest son carried out his wishes, and more.

    Not only has Mr Abdul Malik managed to get all his siblings on board, he is all set to expand the business.

    Earlier this month, he inked a deal with the folks behind Pezzo Pizza – which grew the pizza chain in Singapore from two to about 25 outlets in two years – and plonked in about half a million dollars to invest in a central kitchen and open multiple Selera Rasa outlets all over Singapore.

    The amiable and self-effacing man spent his early years in a kampung in Siglap.

    His father initially made a living selling French loaves, riding on a bicycle in Telok Kurau.

    “But one day, my grandmother told him she would make nasi lemak for him to sell, too. That’s how it all started,” says Mr Abdul Malik whose 86-year-old paternal grandmother is half-Japanese.

    “Her father was a Japanese soldier who married a Malay woman. When he died, her mother gave her and her two sisters to another Malay family,” he says. “Her sambal recipe includes some special Japanese seafood ingredients. That’s why it is so special.”

    His father gave up peddling after he found a job in the laundry department of the Hyatt Hotel. But he continued making nasi lemak to sell to his colleagues at the hotel, where he worked for 20 years.

    That was how the Sultan of Brunei became a fan. Hyatt Singapore is a property of the government-owned Brunei Investment Agency.

    “According to my father, the Sultan came into the laundry department one day and saw the packets of nasi lemak. He asked what it was, and my father gave him one to try,” he says.

    The Sultan told Mr Hassan he should open a stall and that was exactly what he did in 1998.

    The notion of taking over his father’s stall one day never crossed Mr Abdul Malik’s mind.

    “I just wanted to become a pilot,” says the former student of Opera Estate Boys’ Primary and Bukit View Secondary where he was head prefect.

    A dutiful son and conscientious student, he never got up to any mischief growing up.

    “My grandmother was a cleaner for Opera Estate Boys’ Primary School. I would wake up at 5.30am, go with her to school, help her sweep the compound and then attend classes at 7.30am,” he recalls.

    Afternoons were spent lugging a basket and peddling nasi lemak and other snacks in the Siglap area.

    In his teens, he worked weekends and a couple of weekday evenings as a banquet waiter to help his folks, who found feeding and educating five children a struggle.

    He tried getting help for himself and his siblings, but the community groups he approached kept referring him elsewhere. “I realised then that it was easier to work for things myself instead of asking for help.”

    That was exactly what he did.

    To put himself through the Singapore Technological Institute after his O levels, he moonlighted as a waiter and bartender at Zouk. He graduated with an Industrial Technician Certificate in 1991 and found work as a supervisor in a real estate company.

    Upon completing his national service in 1994, he attended classes and obtained his diploma in mechanical engineering from Singapore Polytechnic four years later.

    As he could not afford to study for his degree full-time at NTU, he financed it by working as a service technican for Hexagon Singapore, a provider of information technologies. By then, he had married a staff nurse and their first child arrived in 1999.

    At Hexagon, he rose quickly to become service engineer and then sales manager, and was drawing nearly $6,000 monthly, with a company car, when he got his degree in 2004.

    “My wife was expecting our third child when I graduated,” says the father of four children, aged between seven and 16.

    When his father told him to give up his dream of becoming a pilot, he felt a lot of resentment.

    “I was thinking, I worked so hard for a degree, put in so many nights of night school and now you want me to sell nasi lemak?” he recalls. “The naughty part of me told me to go after what I wanted. The good part of me told me my father probably wanted me to do this for good reason.”

    After agonising over it for a week, he told his father he would accede to his wishes, but only if he called all the shots.

    “He said, ‘No problem. You now run the show. You do what you think is right and at the end of the month, you pay me what you think I should get.’”

    The engineering graduate introduced processes including proper book-keeping, paid his staff CPF and put in place a roster to make more effective use of manpower.

    Then came little tweaks to the recipes; such as substituting Thai rice with basmati rice for a better texture and improving the batter and marinade for the fried chicken.

    Soon, the stall started getting accolades such as Singapore Street Food Master for best nasi lemak given out by food guide Makansutra in 2006. In 2008, Selera Rasa’s business received a massive spike when it bagged The Straits Times Readers’ Choice award for favourite nasi lemak.

    He remembers that Sunday morning well.

    “I told my brother to open the stall’s shutter to start business that morning. He opened it half-way, pulled it down again, and kept quiet. I asked him why. He said, ‘You open, lah. I don’t want to open.’ So I did, and was shocked to see a long queue.”

    He has dished out his nasi lemak during Singapore Day in cities such as London and New York. And that queue has not abated. It is not uncommon to see lines of more than 30 people every lunch time.

    Four years ago, his father died from nose cancer, aged 66.

    “Before he died, he told me he had a task for me. He wanted me to bring all my brothers and my sister into the business. And then, he said, he wanted me to take them all on a vacation to Australia.”

    And so Mr Abdul Malik rallied his siblings and their families – 22 people in all – and took them on a trip to Brisbane and Sydney.

    “Prior to that, we only went on one vacation together as a family and that was 15 years ago. He really wanted us to bond as a family. He probably also hoped the trip would make it easier for me to get my siblings to join the business.”

    It took some cajoling, but he succeeded in getting his siblings – who were then holding jobs from air- con technician to service engineer – to come into the fold.

    The hardest to persuade was his youngest brother, who had an engineering diploma from Ngee Ann Polytechnic.

    “He said, ‘The pay you are giving me is equal to what I’m getting now. If I come on board, I do not just want Adam Road.’

    “So I said, ‘What do you mean?’ He said, “I want you to expand so that the whole of Singapore knows about Selera Rasa.’ So I promised him I would do that.”

    Although Selera Rasa opened an outlet in Ang Mo Kio Avenue 5 in 2007, its plan for expansion made headway only last year when a regular customer, Mr Chiang Zhan Xiang, business development director of Butterfly Park & Insect Kingdom in Sentosa and co-founder of Pezzo Pizza, broached the idea of a joint venture.

    Negotiations took more than a year; it is an equal partnership.

    Says Mr Abdul Malik: “They take care of the outlets, we take care of the central kitchen and the quality of the food. This is perfect because I have never liked the idea of franchising our brand. You cannot control the quality.”

    There are days when he is wistful, wondering how his life might have turned out if he had taken to the skies.

    But the man, who is also featured in filmmaker Eric Khoo’s telemovie Wanton Mee – a homage to Singapore food – says he has no regrets.

    “Before they came on board, I only saw my siblings once or twice a month. Now I see them every day,” he says.

    “Sure we bicker, but we have also become so much closer as a family. My father was a very wise man.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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