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  • Increasing Number Of Families Are Applying For Financial Assistance From MUIS

    Increasing Number Of Families Are Applying For Financial Assistance From MUIS

    The number of people applying for financial assistance through the Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (MUIS) has risen slightly over recent years, said Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, who is the Minister in charge of Muslim Affairs.

    The number of applicants for zakat financial assistance has risen from 5,210 applicants in 2012, to 5,306 applicants in 2013 and 5,454 applicants in 2014. Dr Yaacob added that over this time period, MUIS approved an average of 99 per cent of applications each year.

    Unsuccessful applicants might have sought help on matters for which MUIS does not have an assistance scheme. In such instances, MUIS would refer the applicants to the appropriate public agency, he added.

    Dr Yaacob said the per capita income cap of the assistance scheme is decided based on the long-term sustainability of the scheme and how it supplements existing national assistance schemes such as ComCare.

    With regards to enhancing services for needy families, Dr Yaacob said that MUIS regularly reviews the adequacy of its current financial assistance schemes and studies social trends and challenged faced by needy households. MUIS has also trained over 520 Mosque Befrienders to conduct regular home visits to long-term zakat recipients.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Health Promotion Board: Race-Based Health Programmes The Way To Go

    Health Promotion Board: Race-Based Health Programmes The Way To Go

    SEVERAL health programmes are tailored differently for the various ethnic groups to better tackle particular health concerns due to factors like lifestyle and diet, Parliamentary Secretary for Health Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim told the House.

    “Malays have a common way of eating the kind of dishes that they like, similarly for Chinese as well as others,” he said.

    This was why the Health Promotion Board (HPB) took a targeted approach by having calendars and workshops for different audiences, on top of its overall efforts to get people to have a balanced diet, exercise and go for health checks, he added.

    Dr Faishal was replying to Mr Zaqy Mohamad (Chua Chu Kang GRC), who asked about plans to address health issues facing the Malay community.

    Statistics put out by the national registry of diseases last month saw a disproportionate number of diabetics and patients with kidney failure, heart attacks and strokes from the Malay community in 2013, although Chinese had the highest incidence of cancer.

    Dr Faishal said research showed lifestyle, rather than genetic factors, appeared to be behind such differences.

    “In terms of genetics, we do not have significant evidence to (explain) such a phenomenon,” he added.

    He noted that HPB had worked with the Singapore Muslim Women’s Association (PPIS) and mosques to launch a 2014 calendar for Malay women that included healthy recipes, which was received warmly. The number of 2015 calendars was increased tenfold, to 30,000 households.

    A version of the calendar targetting Chinese households has also been launched, he added.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • MOM: Foreign PMETs Have Higher Pay Because They Are Deserving

    MOM: Foreign PMETs Have Higher Pay Because They Are Deserving

    The gross monthly income of full-timed employed residents who are professionals, managers and executives (PMEs) is higher compared to Singaporean citizens, said Manpower Minister Tan Chuan-Jin in Parliament on Monday (Jan 19).

    “As compared to Singaporean PMEs, the gross monthly income of resident PMEs is higher since Permanent Residents typically have to display good employability before they are granted residency,” Mr Tan said, in reply to a Parliamentary question from MP Patrick Tay Teck Guan.

    For instance, the gross monthly income for PRs and Singapore citizens for the 50th percentile is S$7,018 and S$6,886, respectively, according to data from the Manpower Ministry.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com and The Alternative View

  • Dr Ting Choon Meng – The David Who Took On The MINDEF Goliath

    Dr Ting Choon Meng – The David Who Took On The MINDEF Goliath

    A doctor, a professor, a philanthropist, and an inventor. A man who believes in educating young Singaporeans to think and imagine, and not just to follow. A firm believe in putting Singaporeans first.

    That’s Dr Ting Choon Meng. That’s the man that Singapore’s Ministry of Defence cruelly ripped off by stealing the rights to his design for a first-aid vehicle from right under his nose.

    A short rags to riches story of Dr Ting

    From young, he stood in for his seaman father, who was seldom home, while his seamstress mother toiled.

    By age 11, he was cooking, ironing and tutoring his four younger siblings.

    The Pearl’s Hill Primary, Gan Eng Seng Secondary and National Junior College student was the only one in his family to qualify for the University of Singapore medical school.

    During National service, he attended Officer Cadet School as a medical officer, where his right index  finger got sliced off by a bayonet.

    He became a GP at a family health clinic, and later on invented a blood pressure monitoring watch that would shake up the medical world – the BPro.

    In 2007, the device won a World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer award, which counts Google and PayPal among previous winners. Today, all the hospitals here, including some clinics, widely use his wireless monitoring devices.

    Dr Ting has given out some 30 scholarships to students from Singapore Management University and Pioneer Junior College. The only condition – they pay it forward and help other needy students when they are financially-capable.

    A serial inventor, Dr Ting and his partner would go on to develop a mobile first-aid centre in 2004. It was patented in more than 9 countries, including Singapore. That is, until MinDef conspired with an external vendor, Syntech, in 2009 to run with the idea  force him to revoke all rights to the invention. Read the full story here.

    The Great MinDef Heist

    What happens if ordinary citizens really do come up with something novel, and this can be taken away in a flash? Or in this case, after years of legal wrangling?

    Dr Ting received intellectual property rights to his invention in more than 9 countries. Even the SCDF acknowledged this and played fair by demanding that its vendor give Dr Ting’s company, HealthStats, its dues.

    But MinDef and its legal battalion was allowed to run roughshod over this.

    Let’s not forget, this invention received IP rights in more than 9 countries, including Denmark, Britain and the US.

    Are we truly that Uniquely Singapore?

    No Country for Innovators

    “All things being equal, we should get local brands. The Government should be the first and main customer of local enterprises, as in Japan and Germany.”

    Sadly, this wasn’t the case for Dr Ting when he  created his award-winning BPro blood pressure monitor.

    Cardiologists here boycotted his talks. “I’ve been told countless times I’m only a GP… Re-learning is uncomfortable,” he concedes.

    Economic Development Board officers asked him where he took the technology from, implying he copied it, and remarked: “You mean a Singaporean can do this?” Others took issue that he had no PhD, only a medical degree. And that his was a “local company, single product, with no track record”.

    “But you got to start somewhere, isn’t it? It’s called colonisation of the mind.”

    Dr Ting had to obtain patents from the US and other western nations, before the Singapore medical scene even bothered to take notice.

    What does this spell for Singaporean innovators, then?

    Can we blame Singaporeans for wanting to try their luck abroad, if their own country can’t even accept them?

    And if they make it there, should we call them “quitters” or the reason for Singapore’s brain drain if they were to give Singapore the collective middle finger? Their homeland that refused to give them even the slightest of shots?

    In Sum

    The government continues to trumpet its desire for creativity and innovation in Singapore.

    But following Dr Ting’s story, how can any Singaporean feel assured that anything they create will not be laid at the mercy of the bureaucratic meat-grinder, and they’ll be left with nothing except wounds to lick?

    And even if they have the mind for invention, will they be given the support needed to develop their ideas without being stone-walled by unimaginative leaders who are grossly resistant to change?

    It’s probably time to give this machine the collective middle finger.

     

    Source: http://redwiretimes.com

  • Islamic State Releases Video Showing Japanese Captives And Demanding Ransom From The Japan Government

    Islamic State Releases Video Showing Japanese Captives And Demanding Ransom From The Japan Government

    DUBAI (Reuters) – The militant Islamic State group, which holds territory in Iraq and Syria, issued a video online on Tuesday purporting to show two Japanese captives and demanding $200 million from the Japanese government to save their lives.

    A black-clad figure with a knife, standing in a desert area along with two kneeling men wearing orange clothing, said the Japanese public had 72 hours to pressure their government to stop its “foolish” support for the U.S.-led coalition waging a military campaign against Islamic State.

    The militant, who spoke in English, demanded “200 million” without specifying a currency, but an Arabic subtitle identified it as U.S. dollars. The video identified the men as Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto.

    The video was not dated, but on a visit to Cairo on Jan. 17, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged around $200 million in non-military assistance for countries battling Islamic State.

    Abe was in Jerusalem on Tuesday as part of a regional tour.

    In Tokyo, Japan’s foreign ministry said it was checking the video to see whether the footage was genuine and said that, if it was, “such a threat by taking hostages is unacceptable and we are extremely resentful.”

    Goto is a freelance reporter who was based in Tokyo. He has written books on AIDS and children in war zones from Afghanistan to Africa and reported for news broadcasters in Japan.

    Goto met Yukawa last year and helped him travel to Iraq in June, he told Reuters in August.

    Yukawa’s father, Shoichi Yukawa, declined to comment, saying he was overwhelmed by the news reports.

    The video resembled others distributed by Islamic State outlets in which captives were threatened or killed.

    The militant, who spoke with a British accent, appeared to have the same voice as a jihadist shown threatening captives in previous Islamic State videos.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

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