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  • Impiang Terbang Di NDP Kini Jadi Nyata

    Impiang Terbang Di NDP Kini Jadi Nyata

    Impian waktu kecil juruterbang jet pejuang Angkatan Udara Republik Singapura (RSAF), Kapten Muhammad Iskandar Dzulfadhli Abdul Rahman, menjadi nyata apabila beliau terpilih bagi pertunjukan udara Perbarisan Hari Kebangsaan (NDP) tahun ini.

    Kapten Iskandar akan memandu salah sebuah daripada empat pesawat pejuang F-5, bersama pesawat pengangkutan KC-135 dan G550-AEW dalam acara terbang lalu.

    Semasa kecil, Kapten Iskandar, 26 tahun, sering mengimpikan menjadi juruterbang selepas terpegun melihat aksi akrobatik udara pasukan Black Knights RSAF.

    “Saya bercita-cita menjadi juruterbang apabila menyaksikan pertunjukan udara pasukan Black Knights pada NDP dalam tahun 1990-an. Tidak sangka kini saya diberi peluang membuat pertunjukan itu pula,” katanya semasa acara pratonton bagi media di Padang kelmarin.

    Pengalaman itu bertambah manis bagi Kapten Iskandar kerana pertunjukan udara NDP kali ini ialah yang terbesar – melibatkan 50 pesawat RSAF- sempena sambutan Jubli Emas Singapura (SG50).

    “Saya rasa amat bertuah dan bersyukur dapat mengambil bahagian dalam NDP tahun ini,” ujar beliau.

    Penonton teruja melihat jet terbang sederas 600 kilometer sejam, tetapi Kapten Iskandar dan pasukannya perlu melalui pelbagai cabaran bagi mempesembahkan pertunjukan itu.

    “Cabarannya daripada peringkat perancangan. Untuk menerbangkan 50 pesawat dalam ruang udara Singapura yang kecil, rancangan dan aspek keselamatan amat penting.

    “Oleh itu, kami memerlukan kerjasama daripada pelbagai agensi,” katanya.

    Pasukan itu berlatih sejak April lalu.

    Kapten Iskandar juga amat bersyukur pengorbanan dan perjuangan beliau dalam RSAF sejak menyertainya pada 2008 mendatangkan hasil “yang tidak ada gantinya”.

    “Saya amat gembira dapat menjadikan impian saya satu kenyataan. Perjalanan saya sebagai juruterbang bukan mudah, dan lebih tujuh tahun saya berlatih untuk mengendalikan jet pejuang.

    “Malah, saya juga bangga diberi peluang mewakili warga kerja Melayu RSAF dalam NDP tahun ini,” ujar beliau sambil tersenyum.

    Selain pertunjukan udara tradisional seperti Terbang Lalu Bendera Negara dan aksi udara ‘letusan bom’ Black Knights, orang ramai akan dapat menikmati aksi juruterbang 20 pesawat F-16 membentuk angkat 50 di udara dan terbang lalu jet pejuang, helikopter dan pesawat pengangkutan bagi NDP kali ini.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • SG50 Bonus Should Be Given To The Lower-Income Singaporeans Too!

    SG50 Bonus Should Be Given To The Lower-Income Singaporeans Too!

    DEAR MR PRESIDENT

    Everytime its all about the civil servant.. maybe the GOVT shud relooked and, since its sg 50…, give that 500 to the road sweepers, the cleaners, the old age, the poor, the homeless, the middle n low income families, the true singaporean, the parents of special children and children with chronic illnesses, the preschool teachers, the odd job labourers, the single parents, the orphanages, old folks at OLd folks home, and the housewives.

    NOT SPECIFICALLY civil servants!!!
    Sorry but, No offence. I just hope this msg gets to you and the whole gang. 500 is a big deal to the above people. It is not jus my opinion alone but im sure the rest of the ‘regular’ singaporeans would agree with me.

     

    Source: Nurul Marzuki

  • Amos Yee Is Talking To Himself And Hallucinating In Prison

    Amos Yee Is Talking To Himself And Hallucinating In Prison

    Ever since Amos Yee was forced into 3 weeks remand, there has been little news about his condition apart from the revelations by his lawyer Alfred Dodwell who has since been censored for publishing court documents.

    A reader alerted us to Amos’s mothers Facebook which clearly shows the ill-effects of prison life taking its toll on Amos’s mental health.

    Amos’s mother Mary said:

    “Amos’ cellmates told him that he could be suffering from hallucinations. He was seen talking to himself and hitting the walls repeatedly. He became worried as he could not remember any such things done. He also has difficulty falling asleep, having only about 2 to 3 hrs of sleep everyday.

    Amos looks even skinnier today. He said pimples have grown on his body and made him feel itchy. When I told him that Dodwell & TOC were told to remove the ‘Firm Letter to Court’, he kept asking, “Why? Why remove?” At one point, he hit repeatedly on the glass piece separating us apart so hard that it invited 3 police officers over.”

    It appears that Amos is not coping well with prison and may be suffering from a mental breakdown. Is this how Singapore treats our 16 year olds? What do you think? Does Amos deserve such harsh and draconian treatment?

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • 90% Of People Polled Say They Will Vote For Opposition

    90% Of People Polled Say They Will Vote For Opposition

    “90% of those polled say they will vote for opposition”.  That’s the kind of sensational headline that will grab the attention of the reader.  That’s what my unrepresentative poll results indicate.  Hopefully, you have, by now, picked yourself up after falling off your chair.

    Poll results

    I had carried out an online poll that attracted 135 persons to vote.  It is a small sample and hardly indicative of the actual voting pattern in the country.  My readers are, quite obviously, largely opposition voters.  So, the 90% vote in favour of the opposition is indicative of the profile of my readers rather than being indicative of how Singaporeans are likely to vote.  From the outset, I had no intention to find out about the level of support for PAP.  My little survey was motivated by a recent research finding released by Blackbox Research that indicated that 80% of Singaporeans felt that PAP would either perform better or the same as the last elections if elections are to be held now.  Blackbox went on to conclude that “the PAP are now in the box seat to improve on their 2011 election result”.

    I was a little skeptical about the conclusion.  My gut instinct is that there is a general perception right now that either PAP will perform better or the same as the last elections and this perception is largely a result of pessimism among individuals that would themselves vote for the opposition anyway.  Poll results that indicate that there is a perception as to how PAP will perform are not at all indicative of how those that were polled would themselves vote.  So, Blackbox Research’s findings are neither here nor there.  My conversations with friends (who are largely opposition voters) after the passing of LKY has provided me with anecdotal evidence that there is a high degree of pessimism in the opposition camp.  Three factors loom large in the assessment of many opposition voters:

    1.   LKY’s death and the propaganda overdose following that

    2.   SG50 celebrations and the feel good factor that is likely to be generated (with taxpayers footing the bill)

    3.   WP’s continuing legal troubles with Town Council management.

    It stands to reason that middle ground voters may veer back to the PAP (as it happened in 1997) or there may be a stalemate and we may not see any change between 2011 and 2015 in terms of the popular vote.

    Given the negative sentiments among opposition voters, it is quite inevitable that Blackbox Research’s findings indicate a low 20% stating that they thought PAP will perform worse than in 2011. My view is that their research should not be interpreted to indicate that there will in fact be a vote swing towards the PAP.  Blackbox didn’t ask the crucial question: “Who would you vote for?”

    If that question had been asked, we might have ended up with a result that indicates 35% to 40% stating that they would vote opposition and nevertheless 80% stating that PAP would perform better or the same.  The other problem with the Blackbox findings is that they don’t indicate the percentage that stated that PAP would perform better and those that stated that it would perform the same.

    My poll was done to show that there exists a deviation among opposition voters.  There are a significant number of opposition voters that would vote for opposition but are nevertheless pessimistic about the general outcome in the current elections.  Among the 135 that voted, 90% would have voted for the opposition but only 66% felt that PAP would do worse.  This strongly attests to the fact that even in my small sample of 122 opposition voters, there must have been a significant percentage that were pessimistic about the opposition’s chances in the coming elections.

    There is a percentage deviation of 23% between the actual votes by opposition voters and the perception of improvement in the opposition performance.  In the course of the two weeks that I kept the poll open, at various stages of voting I saw this voting-perception deviation fluctuate from a low of 15% to a high of 25%.  For the most part, the percentage was hovering between 20% to 25%.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if the findings of Blackbox Research are somewhat tainted by the fact that there exists this voting-perception deviation.  I suspect that it does exist at a national level.  So, whilst my small sample yielded a 23% deviation, at the national level this figure is bound to be different (higher or lower) but without data, it is impossible to arrive at any conclusion.  Blackbox didn’t ask the crucial question as to which party would those polled vote for.  All we have is a finding that indicates that only 20% think that PAP will do worse.  This does not mean that only 20% will vote for the opposition.  It indicates, merely, the existence of a certain degree of pessimism among those that would vote for the opposition.  It is not inconceivable that we might have had 40% of those polled intending to vote for the opposition with a large number of them feeling that PAP will perform the same or better (thereby contributing to the statistics provided by Blackbox).

    Another problem with the Blackbox Research findings is that they have conveniently failed to indicate the percentage of those that think that there will be no difference in the voting and those that think that PAP will do better.  I wouldn’t be surprised if the actual figures were along the following lines (speculating, of course):

    50% –  PAP will perform better

    30% –  PAP will perform the same

    20% –  PAP will perform worse

    We don’t know why Blackbox chose not to give a breakdown of the ‘better’ and ‘same’ categories.

    For Blackbox to make the assertion that PAP is in the box seat to improve on its performance in 2011 is a rather bold step.  Another research firm, BMI Research, whilst being generally positive on the outlook for the PAP, did not venture to assert that the vote share will improve.  “While it is difficult to ascertain whether or not the PAP’s vote share will fall again in the upcoming election, the party’s ability to form a strong majority in the parliament is virtually assured,”  Personally, I think that a general election this year is not going to threaten PAP’s majority in Parliament.  The only thing that we are really speculating about is the increase or decrease in their vote share.

    For those in the opposition camp that feel a little despondent after reading the Blackbox report, they should brush aside polls like these as they serve only to measure voter perception rather than how those voters would in fact vote.  There is bound to be a deviation between the two.  For those in the PAP camp, they would be well advised to avoid being too complacent.  Don’t underestimate the actual anger and dissatisfaction on the ground.

     

    Source: https://article14blog.wordpress.com

  • HSA Seizes Over 11,000 Units Of Illegal Health Products

    HSA Seizes Over 11,000 Units Of Illegal Health Products

    Western medicines, slimming products and contact lens (below) were among the 11,000 units of illegal health products seized by the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) during Operation Pangea.

    This is the 8th year that the HSA has taken part in the week-long enforcement action coordinated by Interpol.

    PHOTO: HSA

    Intensified surveillance of local Internet platforms helped the HSA track down the illegal products that were being sold online in Singapore.

    Part of their haul included 400 capsules of an unlicensed medicine labelled as Viagra (below), which was promoted as a sexual enhancement drug.

    The medicine was found to contain sildenafil, a medicinal ingredient which can cause serious adverse effects when used without proper supervision.

    An unlicensed weight loss medicine labelled as Duromine was also seized by the HSA.

    In addition, the HSA works closely with e-commerce sites such as Carousell and Qoo10 to remove posts selling illegal health products.

    The HSA has warned consumers against purchasing health products from dubious sources and to be careful when buying these products online as they may be illegal, counterfeit or substandard, and may contain undeclared ingredients.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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