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  • Civil Servants Get One-Off $500 SG50 Bonus On Top Of Mid-Year AVC Of 0.5 Months

    Civil Servants Get One-Off $500 SG50 Bonus On Top Of Mid-Year AVC Of 0.5 Months

    All civil servants will be given a special one-off SG50 payment of $500 in recognition of their contribution towards nation building, the Public Service Division (PSD) said in a statement today (June 17).

    The Government has also decided to pay a mid-year Annual Variable Component (AVC) of 0.5 month in view of the economic climate.

    The PSD, which falls under the Prime Minister’s Office, also said that all Division IV civil servants will be given a built-in wage increase of $30 to their monthly salaries.

    “This [increment] will be in addition to their annual increment in 2015, and signals the Government’s continued commitment to help raise the salaries of low-wage civil servants,” the statement added.

    Around 2,500 Division IV civil servants will benefit from the wage increase. While $30 is less than NWC’s recommendation of $60 for those earning less than $1,100, all Division IV civil servants already earn more than $1,100, PSD said.

    The mid-year AVC, special one-off SG50 payment, and built-in wage increase for Division IV civil servants were decided in close consultation with the public sector unions and will be paid in July 2015.

    Explaining the mid-year AVC of 0.5 month, PSD said: “The Singapore economy grew by 2.6 per cent on a year-on-year basis in the first quarter of 2015, faster than the 2.1 per cent growth in the preceding quarter. Global economic growth in 2015 is expected to come in marginally better than in 2014, but the pace of growth is likely to be uneven across economies.

    “Given the expected improvement in global economic conditions in 2015, externally-oriented sectors are likely to see improved growth prospects. However, sector-specific factors could weigh on the growth of some sectors.

    “Taking these factors into account, the Ministry of Trade and Industry forecasts a GDP growth of 2 per cent to 4 per cent for 2015, barring the materialisation of downside risks.”

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • PKR Believes Pakatan Will Rise From The Ashes While PAS And DAP Think Otherwise

    PKR Believes Pakatan Will Rise From The Ashes While PAS And DAP Think Otherwise

    Just like a phoenix, Pakatan Rakyat will rise from the ashes, said a PKR leader in response to DAP’s declaration that the coalition is dead.

    PKR’s strategic director Sim Tze Tzin said the coalition will be having a meeting either tonight or tomorrow to look for a solution to the problems they’ve been having.

    “We saw it coming but Pakatan will rise again.”

    However, DAP lawmaker Charles Santiago said that there is no recovering from the move taken by PAS, which during its Muktamar earlier this month had approved for a motion to cut ties with the secular based party to be discussed by its central committee and Syura Council.

    “This is best move for us as PAS has made its decision so there is no point in us lingering around.

    “PAS left us with no choice but to declare Pakatan Rakyat dead.”

    PAS’ former central working committee member Khalid Samad said the next step for the pact, if there was to be one, is to come up with a new name.

    This is because “Pakatan Rakyat” is a coalition consisting of three component parties and should any party leave, the pact cannot go on the same way it always has.

    “Without either one of the component parties, there is no Pakatan Rakyat. So the next step has to be decided by the leadership.

    “Will we form a new coalition comprising of only two parties or will we go our separate ways and be individual parties the way we were before.

    “But either way, Pakatan Rakyat is dead,” he said to The Rakyat Post.

    DAP leaders, party supremo Lim Kit Siang and secretary-general Lim Guan Eng, have said that Pakatan Rakyat is dead and done with, blaming PAS as having killed the opposition coalition.

     

    Source: www.therakyatpost.com

  • Khalid Samad Criticises PAS’ U-Turn On Coalition

    Khalid Samad Criticises PAS’ U-Turn On Coalition

    Former PAS central committee member Khalid Samad criticised the U-turn by the party’s highest leadership following the passing of a motion to cut ties with its Pakatan Rakyat coalition partner DAP at its recently concluded muktamar.

    The Shah Alam MP questioned the logic for the motion slated to go before the Syura Council and the central committee for decision-making.

    He said both bodies attended the recently concluded PAS muktamar and did not object when the motion was passed without debate.

    “Wasn’t the Syura Council ulama at the meeting? Weren’t the central committee members there?

    “If they approved it in the meeting, don’t tell me now they want to reject the motion outside the muktamar.

    “If the muktamar approved it, that means the Syura Council also approved it, the central committee approved it, Dewan Ulama approved it, Dewan Muslimat and Dewan Pemuda approved it.

    “So all the delegates from across the country have already approved it.

    “What else is there to say? Don’t tell me the leadership does not understand the muktamar process,” he said at a dinner event in Muar, Johor, yesterday.

    Khalid added that DAP, in accepting the decision and announcing the end of Pakatan Rakyat, showed that the party understood the workings of PAS better than the  Islamist party.

    “Even DAP understands better, they said already disbanded, there is nothing else there,” Khalid added.

    DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng yesterday announced that PR ceased to exist, adding that it would only work with PKR and “other forces” to end Barisan Nasional’s hold on the federal government.

    PKR is expected to announce its stand today following a party leadership meeting last night.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Of Muftis And Gymnast

    Of Muftis And Gymnast

    This letter stems off the recent Gold Medal achievement of national gymnast Farah Ann Abdul Hadi.

    But the weight of this letter is for those in Malaysia who think that they have the right to ridicule others and judge whether one’s actions are properly Islamic.

    Recently, the Mufti of Perak Tan Sri Dr Harussani Zakaria claimed that gymnastics is not for Muslim women because of its attire. Alongside him, plenty others condemned Farah for her outfit, evidently incapable of comprehending the amount of hard work and practice required to achieve what Farah did.

    The irony of it all comes back to the lost condemners, the ones who think they have the authority to judge other Muslims.

    No matter who you are, no matter your family or your political authority, as Muslims, no one has the right to tell others whether Allah will accept you.

    As Muslims, we are taught to focus primarily on our own connection with Allah and not to be running around wagging our fingers.

    I may not be an Islamic scholar, but as a Muslim, I know that the basic truth of Islam is its non-compulsion.

    As stated in Surah Al-Baqarah, “Let there be no compulsion in religion,” (2: 256) meaning that Islam comes from within; it is a personal decision and a faith that can only be developed when the individual decides to engage with the Quran.

    Similarly, in Surah Yunus, the Quran asks rhetorically: “Can you compel people to believe against their will?” (10: 100).

    Islam’s very definition is “submission to God”.

    No one has the authority to make you submit, no one is allowed to push your forehead to the ground when praying.

    During the time of prophet Muhammad (SAW), Islam represented a belief that empowered the poor and the oppressed of Mecca, the prophet’s first revelation was concerned on aiding the poor. Today Islam is being used by old men to maintain control of a society where women are increasingly taking roles of leadership.

    In specific regards to Harussani, it is inadvisable to take your recommendations and advice seriously considering how, just this April, you proclaimed that wives are unable to refuse when the husband asks for sex, that apparently women lose their right to decline intercourse after the dowry has been paid: “Once she got married…she can’t refuse unless when she’s [on her] period.”

    What perhaps makes this statement more alarming is how you cite Prophet Muhammad SAW to justify this rapist assertion. Let it be clear, Prophet Muhammad SAW, who had even been criticized by his fellow companions for giving equality to women in Medina, would never condone such an animalistic behavior from any man, let alone a Mufti of Perak.

    Stepping back, its easy to recognize that the ignorant criticisms on Farah’s gold medal success is just another chapter in the extending story of Malaysia’s skewed and wrongfully authoritarian view of Islam, but ignoring or even allowing individuals such as the Mufti of Perak to spread false rumors about Islam is detrimental to our national societal maturity.

    It is dangerous to our democracy.

    The example of South Africa’s apartheid is a case in point. In one of the most morally corrupt regimes in world history, it is vital to note that apartheid held its strength from the state Church, from—now very clearly false—interpretations of Christianity.

    In the 1960’s and 70’s, the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) in South Africa upheld the belief that God had made man of distinct color so each would have his own way of life, they proclaimed: “God had established nations as cultural communities, each having its own identities and man dare not misinterpret God’s will in a manner which would upset the order which he established.”

    As a result, the church ensured that the different ethnicities in South Africa would maintain segregation. Church’s were built separate for whites, for coloureds and for Africans.

    Eventually, South African apartheid leaders used the Church to justify their rule of segregation and oppression of the African community. Eventually, the apartheid government invaded school books to ensure that children of South Africa had no conception of a world without division.

    The point here is not that Malaysia lies vulnerable to be an apartheid state but that it is important to comprehend religious “authorities” as individuals who hold their own personal beliefs: if you are a racist and a Christian, you’re a Christian racist, if you’re a sexist and a Muslim, then you’re a Muslim sexist who uses Islam and the Quran to justify your beliefs.

    There are plenty of religious leaders today — and especially in Malaysia — who make outlandish statements then cowardly hide behind Islam to justify their claims.

    As a growing and maturing society, it is pivotal for us to remember that when religious leaders say, “the Quran says,” part of the “saying” comes through their interpretation, you don’t listen to the Quran speak, you have to read it.

    And when you read it, it is up to you on how you comprehend the message. This is the miracle and empowerment that the Quran gives to its readers, that everyone has the ability to pick it up and make your own conclusions through your own interpretations.

    It is a direct connection with Allah SWT.

    Last week, I attended the Friday prayer at New York University and listened to their Islamic Chaplain, Khalid Latif talk about the troubling feature of Muslims today; how Muslims now are too focused on the do’s and don’ts, on what’s haram and what’s not, that we’ve forgotten to focus on the primary message of Prophet Muhammad SAW of showing unrelenting love to all peoples.

    It is from the Prophet that we must remember to not cast judgment on those we disagree with, it is through the Prophet that we should remember to always respect the person in front of us, no matter if they’re Muslim or non-Muslim, man or woman.

    “Kita manusia sama saja. Tiada tinggi, tiada rendah.”

    Congratulations Farah on your success in gold!

    Your passion for gymnastics is and should rightfully be an inspiration to all in Malaysia.

    * This is the personal opinion of the writer, Shamil Norshidi, and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail Online.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • Wild Dogs And Wild Boars Sighted In Punggol

    Wild Dogs And Wild Boars Sighted In Punggol

    Wild dogs and wild boars have been sighted in Punggol recently, causing residents to raise concerns about the possible dangers that the animals present.

    Residents of Edgefield Plains have made complaints to the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority Singapore (AVA) regarding the animals, reported Chinese evening newspaper Shin Min Daily News on Tuesday.

    According to the residents interviewed by Shin Min, people have been witnessed leaving food for stray dogs in a field close to Edgefield Plains.

    Some residents have reportedly resorted to carrying wooden sticks to defend themselves against the animals.

    In response to public feedback on the wild boars and stray dogs in the vicinity, an AVA spokesman told The Straits Times that surveillance and control operations are being conducted in the area.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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