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  • Flying Hippo In Taiwan Confused As A Dinosaur

    Flying Hippo In Taiwan Confused As A Dinosaur

    TAIPEI (AFP) – A hippo that panicked while being transported by truck in Taiwan jumped from the vehicle, breaking a leg and causing confused residents to report spotting a dinosaur on the loose.

    Television footage showed the enormous animal lying on the road with a white fluid oozing from its eyes after it jumped through a truck window and landed on a parked car before falling onto the road on Friday.

    The sound of the collision startled people nearby who flocked to see the animal and contacted the police in central Miaoli county. One woman was quoted by the United Daily News as saying that she ran out of her house after hearing the crash and thought she saw “a dinosaur” lying on the road.

    The truck driver was quoted by the newspaper as saying that he saw the hippo “flying out” of the vehicle after getting spooked during the drive.

    The injured animal, named “A Ho” after the Chinese name for hippo Ho Ma, lay on the road for a few hours before being put into a cargo container and taken back to its farm in central Taichung city, officials said.

    The Taiwanese authorities said on Saturday that the animal’s owner could face a fine of up to TW$75,000 (S$3,100) for violating animal protection laws after the hippo suffered a broken leg and damage to its teeth.

    Local media said the hippo was a star attraction at its farm and had even appeared in a popular television soap opera several years ago.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Malaysian PM Najib Razak Calls Trip To Hawaii “Golf Diplomacy”

    Malaysian PM Najib Razak Calls Trip To Hawaii “Golf Diplomacy”

    KOTA BARU (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) – Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has explained that his private trip to Hawaii to meet US President Barack Obama was a diplomatic gesture that will benefit the country.

    Mr Najib said there was nothing unusual about the trip and described it as “golf diplomacy”.

    “This has been a common practice even by previous prime ministers including during Tunku Abdul Rahman’s administration.

    “I was personally invited by Obama and it is hard for me to turn it down as it has been scheduled much earlier,” he told a news conference at Sultan Ismail Petra Airport on Saturday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Photo Of Handcuffed Children By Policemen Caused Online Furore

    Photo Of Handcuffed Children By Policemen Caused Online Furore

    Three children aged between nine and 12 years old were arrested for theft on Saturday morning.

    They were handcuffed by the police near the traffic junction next to 112 Katong at East Coast Road before being taken to a nearby police station in a police car. A police spokesman added that the suspects were handcuffed for their safety and the safety of others as they had attempted to escape before officers arrived.

    A photo of the children being handcuffed was posted on several online platforms on Saturday morning, including citizen journalism website Stomp, creating a buzz. IT manager Jeremy Tan, who saw the photo on Facebook, said: “They are just kids. Even if they have stolen something, they shouldn’t be treated like that. It is not appropriate.” However others said the police did the right thing, since there was a risk the children could dash on to the roads to escape.

    Police said they received a call at about 8.09am requesting for assistance at a building along East Coast Road. “It was established that a case of theft from person had occurred at the said location,” a statement added.

    Investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • More Scope For Improvements In Public Transport

    More Scope For Improvements In Public Transport

    Years after the Government had pledged to improve the state of public transport — given the growing discontent with breakdowns and overcrowding — the biggest question on everyone’s minds is this: Have the aggressive measures worked and are the billions of dollars pumped in to lift the transport industry out of the doldrums reaping results?

    Official figures indicate some measure of improvement, but not all is rosy.

    Though the number of major train service delays — episodes lasting more than 30 minutes — for the entire MRT network has hit a new high this year, analysts said these were probably due to structural wear and tear of the ageing infrastructure, which takes time to rectify. They pointed to the occurrence of shorter delays — those lasting five minutes or so — and train withdrawals as evidence that the overhaul to the MRT and bus systems has seen incremental improvement.

    Still, more intermediary options can be added to augment the system, the experts felt.

    For instance, the number of City Direct Services — express bus routes run by private operators — could be ramped up, said National University of Singapore professor Lee Der-Horng.

    Nanyang Technological University (NTU) transport economist Walter Theseira added that as long as headline-grabbing major delays are still happening, it is difficult for commuters to feel the benefits from the improvement in the number of short delays.

    He also felt that what could make a difference to the commuter experience are a reduction in overcrowding and better reliability. Demand management policies, such as free travel during early hours and flexible work hours by companies, can make a perceptible difference in peak-hour crowding, he said, providing a respite until infrastructure improvements are completed.

    Indeed, the Government has been aggressively ramping up the capacity of existing train lines.

    The first of the 18 new North East Line and 24 new Circle Line trains are undergoing testing and will be progressively put into service from the middle of next year.

    Stage 2 of the Downtown Line, which comprises 12 stations running through the Bukit Timah corridor, is also set to open in a little more than a year, in the first quarter of 2016.

    The target of doubling the rail network from about 180km to about 360km in 2030 also appears to be on track.

    The Thomson-East Coast Line — a joint line between the Thomson Line and the Eastern Region Line with 31 new stations and seven interchanges — will be ready in stages from 2019. Two new rail lines, the Cross Island Line and the Jurong Region Line, are also being planned.

    Meanwhile, existing lines will get a facelift. Commuters staying between the Yishun and Sembawang MRT stations on the North South Line (NSL) can look forward to Canberra station, slated to be completed in 2019, with work starting in the middle of next year.

    On the maintenance front, re-sleepering work along the northern portions of the NSL, particularly the stretches between Bishan and Woodlands, has been progressing well. As of last month, about 76 per cent of sleepers on the line have been replaced and trains are now travelling at full speed from Yio Chu Kang to Khatib, said the Land Transport Authority (LTA).

    Other stretches will soon see a gradual lifting of speed restrictions next year. Work on the NSL is slated to finish by the middle of next year and the East West Line (EWL) by the end of 2016.

    An upgrade to the North South-East West Line signalling system is also set for completion in 2016 for the NSL, with the new signalling system installed at more than 73 per cent of the stations and tracks. New signalling equipment has also been installed and is being tested on 14 trains in the existing fleet. The EWL will begin its upgrade early next year and is expected to be completed by 2018.

    As for buses, the LTA’s billion-dollar Bus Service Enhancement Programme (BSEP), which aims to add 1,000 more buses by 2017, is showing preliminary results.

    Associate Professor Gopinath Menon, who teaches transportation engineering at NTU, acknowledged that there had been visible improvement in the bus industry under the BSEP. The recent reliability framework also helped in better assessing expected delays to passengers at bus stops, he added.

    With more than half of the buses under the BSEP having been added so far, the LTA said waiting times for commuters had been shortened by three to seven minutes on more popular services. The number of bus services that were persistently crowded during peak hours has also been reduced by 60 per cent. Thirty-six new bus services have been rolled out since the programme began in 2012, along with nine City Direct Services and 10 Peak Period Short Services.

    The authorities have also been rolling out “soft approaches” to improve the commuting journey, such as offering free travel to commuters who hop on before peak hours to eye-catching graciousness campaigns.

    An LTA spokesman said the shift of commuters from morning peak periods to pre-peak periods has been consistent since the introduction of free pre-peak travel in June last year, at around 7 per cent.

    This has resulted in a more even distribution of morning peak hour crowds, she noted, adding that capacity during the pre-peak period remained adequate.

    The Corporate-Tier Travel Smart Rewards programme has also seen results. Introduced in July after a two-year pilot, the scheme offers monetary incentives to companies that implement flexible travel arrangements. From only 12 organisations in the pilot in 2012, the scheme has seen 39 companies and about 6,700 employees signing up to date, said the LTA. New sign-ups include Standard Chartered Bank, DBS, Barclays and Arup.

    “As travel patterns typically take some time to stabilise, we expect to see preliminary results from the … participants some time mid-next year, with more definitive results around the end of 2015,” added the LTA spokesman.

    Despite the various efforts, it could be worthwhile to consider more alternative transport modes besides electric-vehicle sharing, for example, said Professor Lee. The authorities can explore “making use of low air space to allow cable cars or even elevated Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) to come into the picture”, he suggested. PRT, also known as a podcar, is a system of small automated vehicles operating on a network of specially-built tracks.

    With Certificate of Entitlement prices remaining high, there are more people scrapping their vehicles than new vehicles being registered, he said, signalling that more people could be switching to public transport.

    Assoc Prof Menon pointed out that the current usage ratio during peak hours for public to private transport is 63:37, still some distance away from the Government’s target of 70:30 by 2020.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Bad Weather May Have Contributed To The Disappearance of QZ8501

    Bad Weather May Have Contributed To The Disappearance of QZ8501

    Aviation experts said a range of causes could be responsible for the disappearance of AirAsia flight QZ8501, which had 162 people on board and which lost contact at 7.24am yesterday local time near Belitung island, Indonesia, but many pointed to the bad weather in the area and the fact that the plane’s crew had asked for a course and altitude change to avoid it.

    The crew had requested to increase altitude to 38,000ft from 32,000ft to avoid clouds. Thunderstorms were reported in the area, with clouds up to 50,000ft, Indonesian officials said.

    Flight-tracking website Flightradar24 said the jet was flying at the regular cruising altitude for most jetliners, 32,000ft, when the signal was lost. No distress reports came from the plane, officials said.

    This was the third air incident this year for Malaysia, which lost two Malaysia Airlines jumbo jets, one of which mysteriously disappeared without a trace over the South China Sea, while the other was shot down over Ukraine.

    “This aircraft has disappeared in a very similar fashion (to Malaysia Airlines flight 370 in March), but we have heard nothing about a Mayday call … so we don’t know at this moment what has happened,” said former airline pilot Desmond Ross in an interview with the BBC.

    While there is no clear indication of what happened to the jet and what caused its disappearance, Mr Michael Palmer — lead forecaster at The Weather Channel — said there were numerous showers and hail throughout the Java Sea and the flight path. The large clusters of thunderstorms, some as tall as 50,000ft, would have forced a pilot to change course and the flight could have run into turbulence and hail, he said.

    “We don’t know if it was the cause, but certainly, the weather was not calm,” Mr Palmer added.

    Mechanical problems cannot be ruled out at this time, but the plane was said to be in good working order and had undergone its last scheduled maintenance on Nov 16.

    Earth Networks, a company that tracks weather conditions across the globe, said it had recorded a number of lightning strikes near the path of flight QZ8501 yesterday between 6.09am and 6.20am Indonesian time. The last communication between the pilot and air traffic control was made at 6.13am local time, when the pilot asked to change course.

    While it is rare for a lightning strike to cause serious structural damage that threatens the safety of an aircraft, it can disrupt navigation systems such as magnetic compasses. A lightning flash, particularly at night, can also momentarily disorient pilots.

    The turbulence associated with a big storm can sometimes be severe and sudden shifts in wind direction could disrupt the airflow through a jet engine, potentially causing it to shut down.

    However, a shutdown of all engines in such a scenario would be highly unlikely and the Airbus A320 is certified to fly up to three hours on a single engine, in compliance with global aviation safety regulations.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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