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  • Alleged SEA Games Match-Fixer Remanded After Denied Bail

    Alleged SEA Games Match-Fixer Remanded After Denied Bail

    A Singaporean who was among four charged with attempting to fix a SEA Games football match between Timor Leste and Malaysia was denied bail on Wednesday.

    Rajendran R. Kurusamy, 55, who is facing three corruption charges, had tried through his lawyer Edmond Pereira to get bail to attend to family matters as well as a medical condition.

    Mr Pereira said his client had a problem with his liver, and had missed two scannings scheduled at Mount Elizabeth.

    He said Rajendran’s family is in Singapore, and there is no likelihood of him leaving the country.

    He added that his client was in Malaysia in 2010 after selling his business here. While Rajendran was facing labour-related offences in 2011, he returned to answer them and was allowed to attend to his business in Malaysia, he said. The matter was eventually dealt with.

    Mr Pereira said if need be, his client could report to the investigation officer daily and the court could impose conditions for bail.

    “He should not be held just for the sake of being held because he has been involved in such match-fixing activities,” he added.

    But Deputy Public Prosecutor Navin Naidu argued that Rajendran’s charges were non-bailable offences, and there was a high risk of him absconding if released on bail.

    He said Rajendran had a previous conviction for match-fixing in Malaysia and had a strong propensity to commit such offences.

    He has the means and ability to survive overseas, the DPP added.

    There is a real risk that the SEA Games – which are ongoing – could still be fixed, and the danger of witnesses being tampered with, he told the court.

    To date, several people have been arrested in the course of investigation and released on agency bail. These were either potential witnesses or even potential accused persons, the DPP said.

    District Judge Eddy Tham rejected counsel’s application for bail and remanded Rajendran, whose pre-trial conference is fixed on June 18.

    A pre-trial conference for the other accused – Orlando Marques Henriques Mendes, 49, a technical director of the Football Federation of Timor Leste; former Timor Leste player Moises Natalino De Jesus, 32, and Nasiruddin, 52, an Indonesian who goes by one name – is fixed for June 15.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • ICA Arrests 29 For Immgration Offences In Islandwide Operation

    ICA Arrests 29 For Immgration Offences In Islandwide Operation

    Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) officers arrested 29 people on Tuesday for immigration offences.

    Twenty-six offenders were overstayers from China or India, aged between 26 and 62 years old.

    One of the remaining three arrested was a work permit holder who was caught possessing duty unpaid cigarettes. The remaining two were arrested under suspicion of harbouring illegal immigrants or overstayers. Investigations are ongoing for those arrested.

    If charged, the overstayers can face a jail term of up to six months and a minimum of three strokes of the cane.

    Those found guilty of harbouring overstayers or illegal immigrants intentionally or recklessly may be sentenced to a jail term of between six months and two years. They will also face a fine up to $6,000.

    If found to have unknowingly or negligently harbouring offenders, the homeowner will face a fine of up to S$6,000 or a maximum of a 12 year long prison sentence, or both.

    The ICA arrested a total of 2,040 immigration offenders in 2014, a 19 per cent decrease from 2013. Out of those arrested, 1,690 were overstayers. The remaining 350 were illegal immigrants.

    In 2014, the ICA also arrested 319 harbourers and employers of immigration offenders. The same year, they detected a total of 93,380 cases of contraband smuggling.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • More Foreign Nurses Hired To Provide Home Care

    More Foreign Nurses Hired To Provide Home Care

    Ms Swaroopa Rani holds a diploma in nursing and has worked for more than 10 years in hospitals in India, even starting up one in a rural village in Pondicherry.

    But since last year, the 34-year-old mother of two has been working in a Singapore household on a work permit – the same pass as a maid.

    “A nurse is a nurse anywhere,” she said. “Whether in hospital or in home care, I hope to do my profession justice.”

    Instead of many patients a day, she sees just one – Mr Goh Chong Huat, 95, a cardiac patient who also had gallstones and had to live with a catheter to drain urine.

    He used to be in and out of hospital every month, but has not had to be hospitalised since Ms Rani started caring for him at his home near Bedok. She changed his diet and he is no longer dependent on a catheter.

    “No one likes to stay in a hospital for a long time. At home he is more comfortable and he can do what he likes,” she told The Straits Times.

    Ms Rani, who works with Active Global Specialised Caregivers, is one of a growing number of qualified foreign nurses in Singapore caring for patients outside of hospitals and nursing homes.

    At least two companies began specialising in this service in the past two years, and existing ones say demand is growing.

    Mrs Susan Ng, director of Sue Private Nurses Agency, which has been offering the service since 1990, said she gets more than 10 new enquiries a month.

    Dr Dana Elliott Srither, chief executive of Optinuum Health Services, said that since bringing in foreign nurses early last year, he has received more enquiries than the company can handle.

    The benefits are clear: Home care allows patients to stay in a familiar environment.

    “A person can avoid going to a nursing home and age in his own place,” said Ms Yorelle Kalika, chief executive of Active Global Specialised Caregivers, which has brought in more than 150 nurses.

    Affordability is another reason for the growing demand. Foreign home nurses are paid between $600 and $1,000 a month, depending on their qualifications.

    This is higher than the $500 average salary of a maid, but far less than the salary of a local nurse, who may earn $6,000 a month doing 12-hour shifts in a patient’s home, said Mrs Ng.

    It can also be lower than nursing home fees, which range from $1,200 to $3,500 a month before government subsidies for households below an income cap.

    The home nurses come from countries such as the Philippines, Indonesia, India and Sri Lanka.

    There are no official figures on the number of foreign nurses working on foreign domestic worker work permits, but industry estimates suggest there are at least 250. Their job scope may include taking patients through exercises, dressing their wounds, monitoring vital signs, and bathing and feeding them.

    “We say no if the family asks if she can also take care of the kids. That would distract the caregiver and short-change the patient,” said Ms Kalika.

    For retired architect Chuah Yet Lian, 88, employing a home nurse through Sue Private Nurses Agency has allowed him to play a role in caring for his wife, a stroke patient, for the past 15 years.

    “I don’t want her to go to a nursing home because she can’t speak and tell you what she wants,” he said.

    “I think it’s safer to get someone to look after her at home. I can look after her sometimes.”

    There are also benefits for the nurses. Ms Rani said she likes the security of working in a home and not having to spend on food and lodging.

    “I want to save some money for my family and for a nursing degree,” she said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • South Korea: 14 New MERS Cases Reported

    South Korea: 14 New MERS Cases Reported

    SEOUL: South Korea’s Health Ministry on Thursday reported 14 new cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), taking the total to 122 in an outbreak that is the largest outside Saudi Arabia.

    Among the newly reported cases was a pregnant woman who contracted the virus at the emergency ward of a Seoul hospital that has been linked to a number of other confirmed cases, the ministry said. She was reported to be in stable condition.

    The woman’s parents had also previously tested positive to MERS, the ministry said. The woman was reported to be in stable condition.

    MERS OUTBREAK DELAYS PARK’S US TRIP

    The spread of the disease has stirred up public fear and confusion, prompting President Park Geun-hye to postpone a visit to the United States, while health officials have been criticized over a lack of transparency and for failing to swiftly contain the spread.

    On Wednesday, the ministry reported two deaths from the MERS virus, bringing the number of fatalities to nine. All of those who died had been suffering serious ailments before they tested positive for the MERS virus, the ministry said.

    The outbreak, the largest outside Saudi Arabia, has fuelled public anxiety and hit spending, with thousands in quarantine and the number of schools closing rising to 2,474, including 22 universities.

    A joint South Korean-World Health Organization mission (WHO) on Wednesday recommended that schools be reopened as they were unlikely to spread the disease, just as school boards recommended more be shut.

    “Schools have not been linked to transmission of (the virus) in the Republic of Korea or elsewhere,” the mission said in a statement.

    TRAVELLERS AVOID AIRPORT DUE TO MERS SCARE 

    Airplanes, taxis and subways in South Korea are being disinfected to prevent the spread of MERS and protect passengers from transmission, as people avoided public transport in response to the outbreak of MERS.

    Seoul Metro, city-owned subway company, said on average 4,600,000 people take the subway daily but only about two million people took a subway on Sunday (Jun 7).

    Some countries around the region have issued advisories against travel to South Korea or stepped up screening of inbound passengers, dealing a setback to a tourism sector that had been a bright spot for the flagging South Korean economy.

    The main Incheon airport said the number of passenger arrivals was down sharply on Monday (Jun 8) and Tuesday.

    First identified in humans in 2012, MERS is caused by a coronavirus from the same family as the one that triggered China’s deadly 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). There is no cure or vaccine.

    South Korea’s new cases bring the total number of MERS cases globally to 1,271 based on WHO data, with at least 448 related deaths. The country has the second highest number of cases after Saudi Arabia, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

    South Korea’s infections have all been traced to a man who developed MERS after returning from a trip to the Middle East in early May, and who came into contact with other patients at a hospital before being diagnosed.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • AHPETC: No Managing Agent Has Submitted Bid

    AHPETC: No Managing Agent Has Submitted Bid

    The Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC) will not have a Managing Agent from July, as no one has come forward to submit a bid, said chairman Sylvia Lim in an open letter to residents published in the June edition of the Good Neighbours newsletter.

    “Come July 2015, we will be embarking on direct management of the TC, as no MA (Managing Agent) has submitted a bid to work for AHPETC. We will do our best to keep costs down and protect AHPETC’s long-term financial interests,” she wrote.

    She added that the Workers’ Party-run town council would continue to serve residents to the best of its ability despite the “challenging political climate”.

    Ms Lim said the three-page letter aimed to clarify any misconceptions that may have arisen, as well as to update residents on matters concerning the management of the town council.

    Earlier this year, a report by the Auditor-General’s Office pointed out serious lapses in the town council’s books. This sparked a two-day debate in Parliament.

    Among the lapses identified was a failure to manage conflict of interest when it came to transactions involving its Managing Agent FM Solutions & Services (FMSS). Its owners were also senior party officers.

    In the letter to residents, Ms Lim said AHPETC had not given contracts to friends, and that public tenders had been called in 2012.

    “AHPETC does not and cannot reserve contracts for friends in a public tender,” she said, adding that a tender was not called for MA services only in the one-year period from July 2011 to July 2012.

    The then newly-elected MPs had decided to award FMSS a one-year provisional contract – to ensure a smooth takeover of town management and avoid any disruptions in services to residents.

    The town council is also said to have overpaid FMSS by an estimated S$1.6 million a year, over a four-year period.

    But Ms Lim said what AHPETC pays its Managing Agent cannot be compared to the “weighted average” of rates that all other town councils pay.

    She pointed to tables detailing the rates for residential and commercial units between 2011 and 2014, saying that there is “a lot of variation” in rates among the town councils – which reflect the different geography and requirements of each town. This, in turn, affects how they are managed.

    Ms Lim added that this, and later contracts involving FMSS, were fairly priced and based on “strict reasoning” using available market information.

    In wrapping up her letter, Ms Lim told residents that since the AGO report, AHPETC has made some improvements, and hired external accountants to help clean up its accounts as well as to further strengthen processes and controls.

    “The work is making progress and certain financial issues will take time to resolve. AHPETC is also working towards filing its audited accounts by the deadlines set by the Ministry of National Development (MND),” she said.

    MND is currently appealing a High Court decision not to appoint independent accountants to safeguard Government grants to the town council. The court did also point out that grave and serious questions had been raised about the state of the town council’s accounts.

    The ministry said there is an urgent need for independent accountants to be appointed with powers of inquiry and recovery, given the “serious questions” raised about payments AHPETC had made to related parties — a reference to the town council’s managing agent firms.

    The case is likely to be heard on Aug 3.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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