Category: Sosial

  • 5 Lelaki Dipenjara, Didenda Kerana Lakukan Aksi ‘Wheelie’, ‘Superman’

    5 Lelaki Dipenjara, Didenda Kerana Lakukan Aksi ‘Wheelie’, ‘Superman’

    Tiga lelaki masing-masing dipenjara antara dua dan empat hari serta denda RM5,500 (S$1,800) oleh Mahkamah Trafik Malaysia hari ini (10 Okt), selepas mengaku bersalah menunggang motosikal secara melulu dan berbahaya dengan melakukan aksi ‘Wheelie’ serta ala ‘Superman’.

    Majistret Noorul Fhaiez Mohd Nayan menjatuhkan hukuman penjara empat hari ke atas jurujual barangan telekomunikasi Mohamad Saiful Shamsudin yang berusia 27 tahun, dan pembantu mekanik Khairul Azizi Ahmad, 23.

    Sementara itu penganggur, Mohammad Fariez Farhan Md Nor, 20, dipenjara dua hari dan mahkamah memerintahkan kesemua mereka menjalani hukuman penjara tiga bulan jika gagal membayar denda itu.

    Mohamad Saiful didakwa menunggang motosikal secara melulu dan berbahaya sambil melakukan aksi ala ‘Superman’ yang membahayakan diri sendiri dan pengguna jalan lain di susur keluar Taman Melawar, berhampiran susur Balai Bomba KL pada 2.30 pagi, semalam (9 Okt).

    Khairul Azizi dan Mohammad Fariez Farhan pula didakwa menunggang motosikal sambil melakukan aksi wheelie di Jalan Tunku Abdul Rahman pada 8.05 dan 11.05 malam, semalam (9 Okt).

    Di mahkamah sama, seorang jurujual Muhamad Ikhwan Zamarudin, 24, dijatuhi hukuman penjara tiga hari dan denda RM5,500 (S$1,800) manakala seorang penghantar surat Mohamad Hafiz Zulhawari Nikman, 19, dihukum penjara dua hari dan denda RM5,500 (S$1,800) selepas mengaku bersalah melakukan kesalahan sama.

    Mahkamah memerintahkan hukuman penjara ke atas kedua-dua tertuduh itu bermula hari ini (10 Okt) dan penjara tiga bulan sekiranya gagal membayar denda itu.

    Kesemua mereka didakwa di bawah Akta Pengangkutan Jalan 1987 yang memperuntukkan hukuman penjara maksimum lima tahun, denda sehingga RM15,000 (S$5,000), serta lesen percubaan dibatalkan dan hilang kelayakan menunggang atau mendapatkan lesen memandu selama dua tahun.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Working After School Hours Part Of ‘Service’

    Working After School Hours Part Of ‘Service’

    I see Madam Tay Lee Chuan’s proposal (“MOE should control teachers’ working hours”; Thursday) as unrealistic, from a service and practical standpoint.

    For a start, to blame the principal for pushing staff to work beyond school hours is ignoring the fact that most of the time, the principal himself also attends to after-school activities and is, therefore, not immune to putting in extra hours during week nights and weekends.

    The school is providing a service, with its customers being primarily the students who are minors, and the parents. Students need constant chaperoning.

    Parents pick schools with the “best service” to maximise the potential of their children. They have a strong preference for schools with the best results in major exams and strong showing at co-curricular activity (CCA) competitions, which means extra class time and training to boost results.

    Most parents have full-time jobs and are not able to attend meet-the-parents sessions or student performances during normal school hours. Therefore, it is not realistic to have such sessions during weekday school hours.

    As a grassroots leader, I am also aware that in many yearly major events organised by community centres, the nearby schools are invited to showcase talents, for example, in the performing arts.

    This will involve students and teachers putting in extra effort to prepare or rehearse after school. This will benefit students, giving them better CCA grading and outside-the-classroom learning experiences.

    All this comes at a price for everyone involved.

    Quite often, schools will do their best to ask parent volunteers to chaperone or help out at such extra school activities, but few actually turn up.

    Therefore, more teachers are needed on such occasions.

    If the Education Ministry can train more teachers to replace those who resign, why not use the same effort to cut class size and share the work load?

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • New FAS Fitness Coach: Lions’ Scores ‘Poorest’ I Had Seen

    New FAS Fitness Coach: Lions’ Scores ‘Poorest’ I Had Seen

    Balder Berckmans has worked with English giants Manchester City and Cologne of Germany.

    The Belgian also had stints in Russia (Krylia Sovetov), Belgium (KV Mechelen) and Saudi Arabia (Al Ahli).

    Hired by the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) in February, the fitness supremo put the national players through a VO2 max test – it measures aerobic endurance – in July, and found the scores to be the “poorest” he had ever seen.

    After a closer look at the findings, Berckmans, FAS’ fitness conditioning coach and instructor discovered that it was not the case of the Lions being unfit, but the fact that they simply did not push themselves.

    Speaking to The New Paper last Wednesday, he said: “When I looked at the heart-rate monitor after those tests in July, it was low.

    “So those test values were not really representative of what our players can achieve, because they didn’t go to their maximum.”

    Berckmans was speaking on the sidelines of a Lions’ training session ahead of last Friday’s Causeway Challenge against Malaysia at the National Stadium, which ended 0-0. The team have flown to Hong Kong for a friendly with the hosts tomorrow.

    Fitness has been a perennial issue for footballers here.

    Drawn in a tough group for next month’s AFF Suzuki Cup, where the Lions will play South-east Asia’s No. 1 team in co-hosts Philippines, defending champions Thailand and darkhorses Indonesia, fitness will be crucial if the Lions are to finish in the top two and advance to the semi-finals.

    NOT ENOUGH GAMES

    Berckmans believes the poor results from the VO2 test can be partly put down to the fact there are only 24 matches in the Great Eastern-Yeo’s S.League season – 20 of V Sundramoorthy’s 25-man squad play in the local competition.

    Berckmans, however, has seen an improvement in the effort put in over the last three months, as the national players get to grips with his style of fitness conditioning.

    “If I look at this last week, then I really like (the response from) a lot of boys, if I compare them with the first camp or first months,” said Berckmans.

    “Now, some players are really pushing more, even though it was a bit higher intensity and a bit higher conditioning-wise than before.”

    He also believes the players have improved because they have been talking to the players about pushing themselves mentally, even if it was through a small fitness drill.

    Explained the 29-year-old: “If we talk about mentality, it starts with running.

    “When you say ‘touch the line’ and change direction, how many players will actually touch the line?

    “From there, you can see which players are working for themselves and which are pulling their handles back.”

    Singapore midfield ace Hariss Harun – whom Berckmans points out as one of only a handful of players who clocked good scores in the VO2 max test – felt a shift in mentality has to come from the player, first.

    “It’s about how motivated you are,” said the Johor Darul Ta’zim star.

    “In my opinion, that half a metre, whether you touch the line or not, will make a difference in games.

    “I believe here in the national team, my teammates and I give our best in every training session.

    “In the end, it boils down to the individual and how much you push, because only he knows how his body really feels.”

    Hariss claimed playing for Malaysia’s best-run club has helped him develop as a professional footballer.

    “Coming from a club that has everything, you can just focus on your football,” said the 25-year-old.

    “It helps when you come to training, the coaches have a programme for you to follow, and you have the gym right there, the recovery pool right there, the jacuzzi…

    PRO SET-UP

    “Everything is available, you don’t have to make a booking or anything.

    “You can come to training an hour earlier or stay an hour after to use the facilities.

    “In Singapore, if all our players have this at their disposal every day, it will definitely help in one way or another to improve local football.”

    Aside from his work with the national players, Berckmans has also been tasked to formulate a fitness strategy as part of FAS technical director Michel Sablon’s blueprint for the development of Singapore football.

    He is hopeful that the plan can lift overall fitness levels and boost the senior national team in five to 10 years’ time.

    Said Berckmans: “The basics of our plan is to start from the young boys, in the Junior Centres of Excellence (Under-12 JCOE) teams.

    “The fitness programme is not really significant still because at that age, they just need to play, run and work in small areas.

    “At that age, they increase their physical fitness abilities significantly simply by playing more football.

    “When I look at our current National Football Academy boys (players from 13 to 18), I find there is a lack of physical coordination – hand-eye, feet, running technique, speed drills – so it’s something we work on a lot in the JCOEs.

    “Another part of the plan is collaboration with coach education, reaching JCOE and COE coaching staff.

    “We’ve spent lots of days on the pitch and in the classroom to share how coaches can get the biggest benefit and increase their players’ fitness levels.”

    Before the 1999 Rugby World Cup, the England squad spent three days abseiling down cliff faces, changing wheels on army trucks and crawling through muddy terrain.

    Eight years later, Australia and France went through a similar rigorous process, preparing for the 2007 tournament by spending a week with their countries’ respective Commando units.

    As Singapore’s footballers gear up for the AFF Suzuki Cup next month, Lions ace Hariss Harun would be up for a similar experience.

    Said the 25-year-old midfield star: “For team bonding, it can definitely be beneficial.

    “Something out of the box like this, for a short stint, would be good.

    “It also helps keep the mind flowing, doing something new, away from football… I guess it’s something like cross-training.

    “Having said that, football is a very skill-specific sport and there’s a lot of tactical elements you need to work on ahead of a big tournament like the Suzuki Cup… But I think it can be useful.”

    Fitness coach Balder Berckmans also said he was open to the idea, if Singapore coach V Sundramoorthy was on board.

    “You always have to be open to different ideas and sometimes you get really interesting things out of other sports,” said the Belgian.

    “The main thing to consider if we implement this is, are our boys ready to cope?

    BETTER

    “If we do something, it must be to make our boys better or improve their technical or tactical level.

    “Since I’ve come in (in February) with fitness exercises that are more football-specific, it is already something for them to try adapt… Some boys, they like it, some boys, they struggle a bit with it.

    “If the time is right to implement new things, we might try it.

    “But it’s always a communication between me and Sundram first, to see what we implement.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Shops In Strata-Titled Malls Pull Out All The Stops To Avoid Closure

    Shops In Strata-Titled Malls Pull Out All The Stops To Avoid Closure

    Standing in her shop in Beauty World Centre, Madam Sie Choo Yong, who is in her 90s, mustered a smile for every shopper who walked by — there were hardly any these days at the ageing mall which has become a pale shadow of its former glorious self. “Would you like a packet of crispy chips?” Mdm Sie would ask passers-by, in the hope of doing some business.

    Lean Seng Lee Trading used to sell embroidery. Today, in order to survive, it sells biscuits, wafers and candies. Mdm Sie’s youngest son, Mr Tony Lean, said: “There are no buyers for needles and threads. We turned it into a food store — something easy for my mother to do. It’s not good to have her sit at home the whole day.”

    The fading fortunes of Beauty World Centre — built in 1984 at a cost of S$45 million — is mirrored across the island: Strata-titled malls, where stallholders own the individual units, find themselves stuck in time and on the brink of oblivion.

    According to R’ST Research, there are about 80 strata-titled malls in Singapore — many among them were household names in the past including Katong Shopping Centre, Queensway Shopping Centre, City Plaza and Golden Mile Complex, to name a few.

    R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng estimates that about a dozen are “resilient” and have adapted to consumers’ demand but at the other end of the spectrum, almost half are suffering. The ones in between are barely getting by.

    The problems are strata-titled malls are well-documented: It is almost impossible to get individual owners to agree on issues ranging from collective sale to maintenance. Such malls have management councils made up of subsidiary proprietors to represent owners. Compared to institutions such as real estate investment trusts (Reits), management councils do not have strong profit incentive or the resources to keep the malls in tip-top condition.

    There is also a lack of vision and coordination in terms of promotional or marketing efforts. The end result? A hodge-podge of retailers, often selling similar goods and services, housed in rundown malls in need of a facelift.

    Beset with such issues, these malls face a challenge to stay relevant even in the best of times. With the retail scene currently under siege from the economic slowdown and the rise of e-commerce, the odds are stacked even more heavily against them.

    Based on R’ST’s data, vacancy rates at strata-titled malls — which happen to include several of the oldest properties on the island — in the second quarter of the year reached about 10 per cent, compared to 7 per cent in malls managed by professionals.

    New mixed developments including Alexandra Central along Jalan Bukit Merah and Junction Nine in Yishun are adding to the supply of strata-titled malls. Experts believe these shopping centres, including the older ones, can add to the retail scene and hold their own — if they capitalise on e-commerce, develop a niche and adapt to the changing business environment.

    Indeed, some strata-titled malls —such as Queensway Shopping Centre, Lucky Plaza and Golden Mile Complex — have continued to thrive, developing a loyal following and offering an appealing alternative to shoppers put off by the cookie-cutter, glitzy shopping centres.

    Apart from having a distinct character and positioning, these malls —with their lower rentals compared to shopping centres managed by Reits — offer entrepreneurs and smaller retailers an attractive option to set up a shopfront. In fact, the unit owners have a significant advantage over retailers in Reit-owned malls who are struggling with high rentals.

    “The advantage of the shop owners at older malls is their brick-and–mortar presence, which is the expensive side of business. All they need to do is link it to online (operations) to pull traffic to their outlets,” said Singapore Polytechnic marketing and retail lecturer Mr Amos Tan.

    For more than four decades, Mr M Nasir has been running Arcade Sports at Queensway Shopping Centre. On the changing consumer behaviour, he noted that customers these days would first do their research online to find out the range of products and the best prices before heading down to the malls. To stay in the business, prices have to be competitive but Mr Nasir stressed that service quality is key.

    Compared to the footfall at swanky new malls, “people come here with a purpose — they have in mind what they want to buy,” Mr Nasir observed. “That way, chances of a customer buying in my shop is higher and we win them with quality service,” he said.

    Stressing the importance of tapping into e-commerce, an owner of a mobile communications shop at Golden Mile Complex said: “Online presence is helping us survive. There is no other way to pull buyers here. But the older generation of shop owners have no idea on how to get business back on track.”

    The experts said that with their proximity to large population catchments, as well as MRT stations or bus interchanges, some older strata-titled malls are well-positioned to reinvent themselves. One way to do so is by attracting entrepreneurs to their fold, they added.

    Adding that these shopping centres could consider engaging consultants to come up with new strategies to draw in the crowds, Mr Ong said: “Unit owners should look at sharing shop space with young entrepreneurs. As they pull in crowd with their social media skills, other shops in the mall will automatically benefit.”

    This is already happening at some malls. Mr Ryan Wee, 28, who owns Ham Baobao Burger at Beauty World Centre, told TODAY: “This place is just perfect for us. It didn’t make sense for us to set shop at a high-end mall where rents are high and survival is tough. Though the mall is old, customers come back and social media helps us bring in more.”

    Associate Professor Seshan Ramaswami at the Singapore Management University suggested that unit owners reach out to budding retailers — for example, students at LASALLE College of the Arts or the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts — and provide the shop space for them to showcase their offerings over a limited period for nominal rent, or even for free. “This will attract more people to the mall. Usually young retailers have many special concepts, and are technologically driven … If these young retailers do well, (the unit owners) can consider extending longer lease to them,” he added.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Shorter Wait For BTO Flats On The Horizon: Lawrence Wong

    Shorter Wait For BTO Flats On The Horizon: Lawrence Wong

    Young couples will soon be able to move into their new homes quicker, as the Government is looking to shorten the wait for public housing.

    When implemented, the move will see the waiting period for Build-To-Order (BTO) flats dip to two to three years, from the current three to four years, said National Development Minister Lawrence Wong last week.

    He was speaking to The Straits Times and Lianhe Zaobao in his first sit-down interview since taking over the portfolio a year ago.

    Referring to young couples who are buying flats for the first time, Mr Wong said: “We would like to see how we can help them settle down and get their flat faster.”

    He noted that some couples who urgently need their own flat currently opt for provisional housing or balance flats not sold in previous launches. Such balance flats are closer to completion, but are subject to balloting as well. “The demand for moving in is always there, that’s why balance flats are always more popular… People want to move in as soon as possible,” he said.

    The shorter wait will be achieved by bringing forward construction and building ahead of BTO launches. But this will not apply across the entire housing stock, Mr Wong said. “It’s not possible because you just can’t construct all the flats within such a short period.”

    Doing so would risk building too much ahead of demand and ending up with a redundant housing inventory, he added.

    To be meaningful, the waiting time has to be shortened by one to two years, Mr Wong said.

    “There will be a range of BTO flats with different waiting times… so people can pick and choose,” he said, adding that this spells more options for more home buyers.

    Special education teacher Pearlyn Tay, 25, who is getting married in December, said a shorter wait will help young couples who want their own place after getting married.

    “Logistically, it’s very difficult for couples to wait four years… So many people are applying for BTO flats first, before they even propose (marriage),” said Ms Tay. She and her fiance, marketing manager Russell Tan, 26, will be moving in with his parents after the wedding.

    Mr Wong said the shorter wait will be pushed out as soon as possible, but added that the Housing Board still needs to work out the details. “Exactly how many of these units can we offer, what steps do we need to take in order to advance the construction process – that’s something we are all studying now.”

    Mr Wong said he does not expect prices of flats with shorter waits to be higher, adding that price points are “more location specific”.

    Shorter waits for BTO flats is one of three areas that Mr Wong’s ministry hopes to focus on going forward.

    The second involves making it easier for seniors to unlock the value of their flats for retirement. The third will be the rolling out of the Fresh Start Housing Scheme from February’s BTO launch. It will help families with young children in public rental flats buy homes again.

    Mr Wong also touched on other housing-related issues during the interview. He said that property cooling measures, which have dampened demand for homes and pushed down prices, are still needed to keep the market stable.

    Future public housing projects in coveted downtown areas might come with stricter resale conditions, he added, in a bid to mitigate any “windfall effect” from the resale profits and ensure more equity.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

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