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  • ST Marine Executive To Be Charged In Connection With Corruption Crackdown

    ST Marine Executive To Be Charged In Connection With Corruption Crackdown

    The final executive listed in the ST Marine corruption bust, Patrick Lee Swee Ching, is expected to be in the State Courts Wednesday (Jun 10) to face charges, after four other high-level executives formerly from the firm were similarly charged earlier.

    Lee served as group financial controller of ST Marine between 2004 and 2007. Following his arrest pending police investigations, he was later released on bail and allowed to fly back to the United States.

    In December 2014, four other high-level executives from the firm were charged with various counts of corruption.

    Former ST Marine president See Leong Teck faces seven charges of conspiring to pay more than S$556,000 in bribes to customers, while former ST Aerospace president Chang Cheow Teck faces three charges of corruption totaling more than S$273,000.

    Two others involved in the case are former senior vice-president Mok Kim Whang, who was charged with one count of corruption amounting more than S$43,000, and former ST Marine group financial controller Ong Tek Liam, who faces the most counts – 118 in total – amounting to more than $521,000, in alleged entertainment expenses.

    ST Marine and ST Aerospace are subsidiaries of engineering firm ST Engineering, providing building and repair services in their various fields.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Welder Helps Nab Molest Suspect In Jurong

    Welder Helps Nab Molest Suspect In Jurong

    He had just exited a supermarket when he heard a woman shouting for help.

    Mr Amirul Islam, 26, witnessed a man fleeing the scene at Jurong West Street 93.

    Fearing that the woman might have been robbed, Mr Amirul went up to her to find out what had happened.

    The 42-year-old woman said she had been molested and asked if he could help catch the man.

    Mr Amirul​, a welder from Bangladesh, told The New Paper over the phone: “I thought, ‘I must catch him.’”

    He and off-duty police officer Soh Beng Kuan chased the man for a short distance before nabbing him near a playground.

    Police arrived soon after and arrested the 25-year-old man.

    ‘Why is this man running?’

    The incident happened at about 11.15pm on Saturday (June 6).

    Mr Amirul​​ said he had just left Prime Supermarket and was heading back to Blue Stars Dormitory at Kian Teck Lane when he saw a man and a woman.


    Mr Amirul Islam (above). 

    “The woman shouted, ‘Help! Help!’” said Mr Amirul​​.

    “I asked her, “Sister, what’s happening? Why is this man running? Did he steal your hand phone or bag?”

    Mr Amirul​​ said the woman told him that the man had touched her body and asked if he could help catch the person.

    ‘Forgive me, I go home’

    After he was caught, the suspect pleaded with Mr Amirul​​ and the woman for forgiveness.

    Mr Amirul​​ recalled: “He said, ‘Sorry, sorry. My fault… Forgive me, I go home.’”

    The man claimed he had lost control of himself after drinking too much, said Mr Amirul.

    Police said in a statement on Monday (June 8) that investigations against the suspect are ongoing.

    The offence of Outrage of Modesty carries a jail term of up to two years or a fine. Those found guilty are also liable to caning.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • HSBC To Cut Jobs Globally To Focus On Asia

    HSBC To Cut Jobs Globally To Focus On Asia

    HSBC will slash as many as 50,000 jobs worldwide in an effort to streamline its businesses and improve its sluggish performance as it shifts its focus back to fast-growing Asian economies, Europe’s biggest bank said yesterday.

    About half of the staff cuts will come from the sale of HSBC’s businesses in Brazil and Turkey, while the other half will come from cutting about 10 per cent of the remaining 233,000 staff by consolidating IT and back-office operations, and closing branches. About 7,000 to 8,000 of the workforce reduction are expected to be in Britain, where it is based.

    When asked by TODAY, Mr Daniel Fitzpatrick, head of HSBC Singapore’s corporate communications, declined to comment on whether there would be any job cuts or gains in Singapore. The bank, which has been in Singapore since 1877, employs about 3,000 people here, its website shows.

    The global workforce reduction exercise is part of a second attempt by HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver to boost profits since he took the helm at the start of 2011. The previous effort was foiled by high compliance costs, fines, low interest rates and weak growth.

    The cuts will leave HSBC with about 208,000 staff by 2017, down from 258,000 at the end of last year, though the bank said it would be hiring in growth businesses and its compliance division.

    HSBC also said it will cut its assets on a risk-adjusted basis by US$290 billion (S$392 billion) by 2017. That will include a reduction of US$140 billion in the Global Banking and Markets division, its investment bank, where returns have suffered in tough market conditions.

    HSBC also lowered its target for return on equity to “greater than 10 per cent” by 2017, down from a previous target of 12 to 15 per cent by next year. Overall, HSBC aims to cut costs by between US$4.5 billion and US$5 billion by the end of 2017.

    A key tenet of HSBC’s strategy unveiled yesterday is to expand its presence in China and across the Asia-Pacific region. HSBC has a sizeable presence across Asia deriving from its deep historic ties to the region.

    It was founded in Hong Kong in 1865 when the city was a British colony in order to finance growing trade between China and Europe.

    “Asia is expected to show high growth and become the centre of global trade over the next decade,’’ said Mr Gulliver.

    HSBC’s plans to accelerate its investments in Asia will involve the expansion of its asset management and insurance businesses in a bid to earn more profits from the region’s rapidly expanding class of newly wealthy.

    In particular, the bank is planning to expand in southern China’s Pearl River Delta manufacturing hub in southern Guangdong province, which is next door to Hong Kong and one of the wealthiest regions in the world’s No 2 economy.

    It is also planning a similar expansion exercise in South-east Asia, where booming economic growth in countries such as Indonesia is swelling the ranks of the middle classes.

    The Asian pivot raises the likelihood that HSBC will shift its headquarters to Hong Kong.

    HSBC has set out criteria it will use to evaluate whether to move its headquarters from London, where a bank levy cost the lender £700 million (S$1.45 billion) last year. These include factors such as economic growth, the tax system, government support for the growth of the banking system, long-term stability, and the possibility of attracting good staff.

    The bank said it would complete the review of the possible move by the end of this year.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Singapore Beefs Up Measures Against MERS

    Singapore Beefs Up Measures Against MERS

    Singapore will begin temperature screening at air checkpoints for passengers arriving from South Korea from Tuesday (Jun 9), 7.00pm, as an additional precautionary measure against the MERS virus.

    Travellers flying to Singapore from South Korea will also receive health advisories starting from Tuesday, announced the Republic’s Ministry of Health (MOH) in a news release.

    Currently, there is temperature screening at air checkpoints for passengers arriving from the Middle East, and travellers arriving from or heading to the Middle East receive health advisories. All hospitals in Singapore stand ready to screen and isolate suspect cases, the ministry added.

    Passengers with fever detected at the temperature screening stations will be referred to a designated area for further clinical assessment. A medical practitioner will recheck the traveller’s temperature and ask about his or her travel history, or any history of contact with a MERS patient, and check for symptoms of lung infection or severe respiratory infection with breathlessness.

    If the traveller fulfils the criteria for a suspected case of MERS, he or she will be referred to Tan Tock Seng Hospital for further evaluation and tests. Children under the age of 16 will be referred to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital.

    If the passenger does not fulfil the criteria, he or she will receive a surgical mask and a health advisory, and will be placed on phone surveillance until the symptoms resolve. If the traveller’s condition worsens, he or she will be advised to seek medical attention promptly.

    The ministry advised Singaporeans to monitor their health closely for two weeks upon returning from a MERS-affected area.

    It added that Singaporeans returning from MERS-affected areas need not undergo self-quarantine if they have no symptoms of illness, but they should wear a surgical mask and seek medical help if they come down with fever and cough. They may be isolated for observation and further investigations for up to 48 hours.

    South Korea on Tuesday reported its seventh death from the virus and 23 new cases in the largest outbreak outside Saudi Arabia.

    Singapore’s Ministry of Education earlier announced that all school trips to South Korea have been postponed or cancelled due to the growing number of reported cases in the country.

    “To date, there is no case of MERS-CoV in Singapore, but the possibility of an imported case here cannot be ruled out given today’s globalised travel patterns,” MOH said. It stressed that even if there is an imported case, the risk of an outbreak remains low as sustained human-to-human transmission of the virus has not been reported.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Singapore’s Ashley Liew Shows What Sportsmanship Is

    Singapore’s Ashley Liew Shows What Sportsmanship Is

    It was a decision that could have cost him a SEA Games medal, but Singapore marathon runner Ashley Liew has no regrets in slowing down to almost a crawl to allow his fellow competitors, who had mistakenly followed the wrong route, to recover.

    At one point during the early stages of Sunday’s 42.195km race, Liew suddenly found himself leading the 12-strong field after his rivals took the wrong path. But instead of taking advantage of his lead, which was about 50m, the Singaporean decided to wait for them.

    Liew, 28, eventually finished eighth in 2hrs 44min 02secs. The marathon was won by compatriot Soh Rui Yong in 2:34.56, ahead of silver medallist Boothung Srisung (2:35.09) of Thailand and Vietnam’s Nguyen Thanh Hoang, who settled for the bronze (2:37.10).

    The incident had gone almost unnoticed, and yesterday, Liew told TODAY that his gesture of sportsmanship had been inspired by British Olympic cycling champion Bradley Wiggins, who waited for his competitors to catch up during the 2012 Tour de France after their tyres had been punctured by nails and tacks on the road in what was believed to be an act of sabotage by rivals.

    “I found myself in pole position. I looked back and all 11 of them were not there, and I dramatically slowed down to wait for them,” Liew told TODAY.

    “I would not have felt comfortable taking advantage of the situation as I am a big fan of sportsmanship. In fact, I was sharing with the other athletes how important sportsmanship is.”

    Liew, coached by Murugiah Rameshon — who set the national record of 2:24.22 at the 1995 SEA Games in Chiang Mai — added: “It is not always about the medals, but also the things you do in between.”

    Liew, who spent 41 days at the world-famous High Altitude Training Centre in Iten, Kenya to prepare for the SEA Games, struggled to finish the race as he had suffered injuries to both his hamstrings.

    But spurred on by the memory of his late mother, who passed away in 2010 after battling colon cancer for five years, Liew managed to not only display the act of class but also persevered in finishing the race, which took place on what would have been his mother’s 61st birthday.

    “I did that (waiting for his competitors) in a manner that my mum would have done. I think that my mum would be very proud of me. Every moment of my race was a tribute to her,” he said.

    Although his competitors may not have thanked him for slowing down, Liew, whose personal best in the marathon is 2:32.12 which he set at the New Orleans Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon in January, simply brushed it off. He recalled how Soh also showed the same sportsmanship by waiting for him during the 2011 Army Half-Marathon after he had fallen.

    Said Liew: “It happens. When things are fast and furious in the race, you don’t really pay attention to what’s going on, and I don’t make a big fuss out of it.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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