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  • Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Ripples from a scam that has allegedly cost Chinese investors US$1.2 billion (S$1.6 billion) touched Singapore’s shores yesterday.

    A group of angry investors from China showed up at a flat in Sengkang yesterday afternoon to demand their money back from a Singaporean employee of the company that allegedly caused thousands of investors to get their fingers burnt.

    The seven, who had flown in from Beijing on Sunday, knocked repeatedly on the door of a Singaporean’s flat for two hours to no avail.

    He purportedly worked for API Premiere Swiss Trust AG – a finance firm that has reportedly cost almost 30,000 investors from China US$1.2 billion of their savings.

    In the five days here, the investors have engaged lawyer Chung Ting Fai and lodged a police report with the Commercial Affairs Department.

    They left a note written in Chinese on the man’s door. It read: “Return our hard-earned money.”

    Street protests were held in Beijing and Hong Kong earlier this year when investors realised they might have been duped.

    In January, API sent out a message informing investors that its servers had been hacked.

    Investors could not access their accounts and were told that their money was gone.

    Mr Zhao Guangcai, the group’s leader, said in Mandarin: “We went to Switzerland and found out that the company was a shell.”

    The police had sealed doors to its so-called headquarters.

    The group in Singapore said they had invested through another Singaporean, who visited China and held seminars in Beijing.

    Some investors were also invited to all-expenses-paid trips to Switzerland – where they met with traders – and Dubai.

    They saw forex trading rooms, where traders worked and made deals online.

    Most investors had started by investing about US$10,000 and could withdraw their money any time they wanted. They got back their principle sum – with 8 per cent interest – within a week.

    Over time, they began to pump in more money. Mr Zhao and Ms Miao Lihua, 33, who owns a fashion company, put in more than US$1 million each.

    Now, they want their money back.

    The group, due to return to China yesterday, extended their stay after realising that one of the company’s employees was in Singapore.

    So far, they have spent about $10,000 each, flying around the world to look for leads.

    They plan to stick around the Singaporean’s registered address to demand an explanation from the employee.

    Mr Zhao, 58, said: “He is the closest clue we have to getting our money back. We are not giving up so easily.”

    According to Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, the Singaporean said he was also a victim and that the company owed him $30,000 in wages.

    He blamed the other Singaporean, whose registered flat in Mei Ling Street is empty, for roping him into the business.

    “I have been looking for him since the start of the year, but I can’t find him. I don’t want to talk about this incident any more. I just want the situation to be over,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Aung San Suu Kyi: Instability Could Delay Elections

    Aung San Suu Kyi: Instability Could Delay Elections

    YANGON — Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi told her party’s senior members today (June 20) that this year’s general election could be delayed if there is any instability in the country.

    The former Nobel Peace Prize winner did not go into specifics but Myanmar has seen several deadly outbreaks of violence between Buddhists and Muslims in the last few years amid a surge of Buddhist nationalist sentiment. This weekend, a movement of ultra-nationalist Buddhist monks is holding a keenly watched conference.

    Ms Suu Kyi spoke at the opening of a two-day conference of her National League for Democracy (NLD), which is expected to mount a sharp challenge in the polls to the current military-backed government.

    In her speech at the party’s twice-yearly meeting of central committee members, Ms Suu Kyi said that stability ahead of the poll was “very important” as she wanted to see it go ahead on time.

    “The election is getting closer. I want to stress that stability in the country is very important ahead of elections,” said Ms Suu Kyi. “I want to warn that elections could be delayed using instability as a reason.”

    Ms Suu Kyi’s remarks can be seen as suggesting that the government or the military — which holds power behind the scenes — might want to take advantage of disorder to hold on to power.

    The election is slated for late October or early November but no exact date has yet been set. The NLD is expected to see heavy gains against the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party.

    Ms Suu Kyi also said when her party contested by-elections in 2012, it pledged to work for amending the 2008 constitution, and it continues to seek that. The current constitution contains clauses that bar her from becoming president. Parliament this coming week will debate several constitutional amendments.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Japan Offers $4.7 Million To Help Rohingya Refugees

    Japan Offers $4.7 Million To Help Rohingya Refugees

    TOKYO (AFP) – Japan on Saturday offered US$3.5 million (S$4.7 million) to help the Rohingya boat people who have fled Myanmar where they faced severe discrimination.

    Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said Japan remained committed to helping national reconciliation efforts on various fronts in Asia, including between Myanmar’s government and “ethnic minority groups”.

    “With regard to non-regular immigrants, including women and children trying to cross the Indian Ocean, Japan has decided to extend US$3.5 million” through global agencies such as the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, he said in a public address.

    The money will go to providing food and shelter as well as to fund data analysis of their maritime movements, the foreign ministry said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Could SPP Eye Mounbatten SMC In Upcoming General Elections?

    Could SPP Eye Mounbatten SMC In Upcoming General Elections?

    The Singapore People’s Party (SPP) today (Jun 20) held a walkabout in the Mountbatten neighbourhood along Singapore’s east coast.

    SPP member Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss also handed out a flyer in which she stated: “I want to serve you to the best of my ability; your concerns are my concerns. This is why I am walking the ground in Mountbatten SMC, and this is why I visited your home today.”

    Among the issues she said she wanted to hear residents’ thoughts on were housing, education, healthcare, employment and community facilities.

    Ms Chong-Aruldoss, a lawyer by trade, was the former Secretary-General of the National Solidarity Party (NSP). She ran in the 2011 General Election in Mountbatten under the NSP banner, but was defeated by the People’s Action Party candidate Lim Biow Chuan after getting about 41 per cent of the votes. She joined the SPP this year.

    Singapore must hold its next parliamentary General Election by January 2017

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Property Experts: DBSS Losing Its Relevance

    Property Experts: DBSS Losing Its Relevance

    Property experts say the Design, Build and Sell Scheme (DBSS) is losing its relevance and should be scrapped.

    The scheme was suspended in 2011, but came under the spotlight after recent complaints by residents over defects in their new DBSS flats. The Housing and Development Board (HDB) says the scheme is not currently its priority.

    One four-room DBSS unit at Ang Mo Kio gave its owner nightmares. Forty-five-year-old Ng Tong Seng had moved into the flat – which cost more than S$500,000 – in December 2012. Within weeks, he found numerous flaws, from bug infestation to cracks on the walls.

    It was a painful process for Mr Ng, who had to spend months getting the developer to rectify the defects.

    “The number of defects filed by the residents was a lot,” he said. “And they were having a difficult time catching up with all the work. We have about one year to get all these rectified by the developer and the developer took their own sweet time.”

    He said the HDB did not offer much help.

    “We are being left alone by authorities,” he said. “We bought the house under the ruling of HDB. They threw the rule books at us, but when we faced problems and approached them for help, they said, ‘Sorry, I can’t do anything’. So, that is frustrating. On one side, you try to govern me, on the other side, you can’t help me. So, I’m very confused about their rule.”

    Residents of the Trivelis DBSS estate in Clementi have also questioned HDB’s role in the scheme. About 500 of them have complained about problems such as rusty dish holders and flooding in the corridors.

    The housing board says it oversees the scheme, but under the sale and purchase agreement, developers must rectify defects reported by buyers within a year.

    HDB brought on board private developers to bring diversity and creativity to public housing designs, when it introduced the scheme in 2005. The condominium-like furnishings of DBSS units initially grabbed attention.

    But experts say the quality of Build-to-Order (BTO) flats has gone up.

    Associate Professor Sing Tien Foo from the Department of Real Estate at the National University of Singapore said: “I think the differentiation has become smaller. So, if the price differentiation is relatively big, it makes DBSS less attractive in that sense compared to BTO flats, because there’s still a price gap between BTO and DBSS flats.

    “So, we might see that the DBSS scheme may no longer be necessary in the near future. So, this is probably a good time to phase it out.”

    The scheme was intended to cater for the “sandwiched class”, which referred to those who could not afford private condominiums, but did not qualify for BTO flats because their income exceeded the qualifying ceiling, which was then set at S$8,000.

    However, analysts say prices between private and HDB units are narrowing, which means the scheme is losing its target group. Furthermore, the income ceiling for BTO flats was raised to S$10,000 in 2011, the same as that for DBSS properties.

    With not much difference in quality, they added that home buyers will be more inclined to purchase BTO flats, which are cheaper. This would lower demand for DBSS flats.

    Still, one expert says it’s better to suspend the scheme than scrap it totally.

    “Because we never know that, perhaps one day when prices start to escalate quickly again, there may be a need to bring back a scheme that is similar to DBSS,” said Mr Nicholas Mak, an executive director for research and consultancy at SLP International Property Consultants. “But I think in the next two or three years, the chances of it coming back are not high.”

    There have been 13 DBSS projects since the scheme was introduced.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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