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  • Man Died After Hit By Train At Bukit Panjang LRT

    Man Died After Hit By Train At Bukit Panjang LRT

    A man died after he was hit by a train on the Bukit Panjang LRT early Friday (March 24) morning.

    The Straits Times understands that the man had fallen onto the track at Fajar Station around 1am.

    The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) said it received a call for assistance at 1.05am and sent one fire engine and one ambulance.

    “A male Chinese was pronounced dead at scene by paramedics,” SCDF said.

    While many residents said they did not notice anything unusual last night, some heard noises from the station.

    “I heard a scratching noise and a boom around 1am, but I thought it was just workers working,” said domestic helper Ms Asrotulida, who goes by one name.

    “I didn’t look to see what happened, and went back to sleep as it was late,” said the 30-year-old, who lives near the station. “Sometimes, there is noise due to the works downstairs.”

    When ST visited Fajar station on Friday morning, services appeared to be operating as per normal.

     

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 2016 Was Warmest Year On Record For Singapore: MSS

    2016 Was Warmest Year On Record For Singapore: MSS

    Last year was the warmest on record for Singapore, the Meteorological Service Singapore (MSS) announced on Thursday (Mar 23), breaking the previous joint record set in the years 2015, 1998 and 1997.

    2016 saw an annual mean temperature of 28.4°C, exceeding the climatological average by 0.9°C, MSS stated in its Annual Climate Assessment Report.

    Eight of Singapore’s 10 warmest years have occurred in the current 21st century, with all the 10 warmest years occuring since 1997, consistent with ongoing global warming, MSS said.

    January, April and August set new records for being the warmest of each month in Singapore’s history. In addition, May and December 2016 were the second warmest May (after May 1998) and December (after December 2015).

     

    Source: CNA

  • Countering Terrorism And Violent Extremism Key Concern For Singapore, Region: MFA

    Countering Terrorism And Violent Extremism Key Concern For Singapore, Region: MFA

    Countering terrorism and violent extremism is a key concern for Singapore and the region, given the risks posed by returning ISIS fighters as well as the group’s radical propaganda in Southeast Asia, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) said on Thursday (Mar 23).

    Singapore’s Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishnan met with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and participated in the Meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the Global Coalition on the Defeat of ISIS in Washington DC on Wednesday.

    MFA said Singapore welcomed the Meeting of the Foreign Ministers, hosted by Mr Tillerson.

    “Singapore has consistently supported the coalition’s efforts through contributions of military assets and personnel, and believes in the need for a comprehensive response that encompasses addressing economic, social and political factors,” it said in a statement.

    At the meeting, MFA said Dr Balakrishnan and Mr Tillerson reaffirmed the “deep and multi-faceted relations” between Singapore and the US in the areas of defence, economic and security.

    They also discussed regional developments as well as ways in which the US could build on its enduring strategic and economic interests in the Asia-Pacific and strengthen its engagement of ASEAN, the ministry added.

    Dr Balakrishnan will meet Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Bob Corker before departing the US for Singapore on Friday, according to MFA.

     

    Source: CNA

  • Singtel Subscribers Hit By Phishing E-mail. Beware!

    Singtel Subscribers Hit By Phishing E-mail. Beware!

    Some Singtel subscribers have received phishing e-mails, seemingly sent by the telco, telling them “Your Singtel bill is now available for download”.

    The bills are all in the $200 range. Some e-mails were sent from a Singtel e-mail address and others from SingNet.

    Singtel subscriber Steven Low, 39, received the first e-mail last Friday. His bill was given as $234.19 and there was an attachment that he did not open.

    The civil servant, who called The New Paper’s hotline, said: “The bill was significantly higher than usual, but because I went overseas this month, I thought it contributed to the amount.”

    Mr Low, who pays his Singtel bills by Giro, received another five similar e-mails.

    “More warning bells rang when I realised the amount in each e-mail was different. I was worried and called Singtel’s customer service. Some customers may not check and just pay.”

    Another Singtel subscriber, Mr Jasper Loh, 38, a helpdesk engineer, also received similar phishing e-mails.

    He said: “I clicked on the link, which opened a blank page and downloaded a file. Luckily, my company’s website security blocked the download. I’m guessing the file will install a virus.”

    “Singtel should do something to stop these phishing e-mails,” he added.

    When contacted, a Singtel spokesman said it was aware of the issue.

    She said: “These are phishing e-mails and are not from Singtel. We advise recipients of these e-mails to delete them immediately.

    “Once informed of such malicious e-mails, we took prompt action to take down the malicious sites linked to these e-mails and to block them.”

    Mr David Maciejak, head of cybersecurity firm Fortinet’s FortiGuard Lion R&D team for Asia Pacific, told TNP it is dangerous to click on the links.

    “The links lead to domains which have been flagged as malicious by our FortiGuard Labs malware detection engines,” he said.

    “A malware file will be downloaded onto the user’s computer… and facilitate the downloading of more malicious files.”

    Mr Maciejak added that anything can be downloaded, including ransomware that will lock up the user’s computer, or malware that may be able to access and steal personal details.

    Mr Tony Jarvis, Check Point Software Technologies’ chief strategist for threat prevention in Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa, said the links pointed to free online servers with short lifespans that will automatically download files to the end user machine.

    Mr Jarvis said the Singtel e-mail address could be forged by e-mail spoofing.

    He said: “It’s the creation of e-mail messages with a forged sender address. It can be easily achieved by using the right tools and can be done at no cost.”

    He reminds users to read the entire e-mail, especially if they are worried about its validity.

    “They should contact their service provider if they have any doubts. If the e-mail is about their billing, users can think back if the e-mail is sent in their usual billing cycle,” he said.

     

    Source: TNP

  • Netflix Shows Yishun In Stranger Things Promotional Video

    Netflix Shows Yishun In Stranger Things Promotional Video

    “Is Yishun cursed, simply unlucky or struck by something stranger?”

    These are the words accompanying a clip of Yishun, posted by American video streaming giant Netflix on its Facebook page on Wednesday (March 22) night.

    The clip, likely advertising the second season of its hit series Stranger Things, shows a Yishun MRT station sign against a background of the Upside Down, or a parallel universe in the sci-fi horror television series.

    A shadow passes by briefly halfway through the 11-second clip.

    Stranger Things, Netflix’s original supernatural series, stars 90s star Winona Ryder whose son mysteriously vanishes.

    The series has catapulted its young actors to stardom, including Millie Bobby Brown, Gaten Matarazzo, Finn Wolfhard, Noah Schnapp and Caleb McLaughlin.

    The 2016 eight-episode series received stellar reviews and ratings, and will be returning for a second season on Halloween this year.

    Netizens were amused by the post, which poked fun at Singapore’s northern Yishun town and the reputation it appears to have acquired as a seedy place where anything can happen.

    Wrote Facebook user Stuart Kuek: “Even Netflix is making fun of Yishun… time to build a wall around Yishun.”

    Jacq Lim called it “the Upside Down of Singapore”, while Yong Jian Lee wrote: “New show ‘Yishun Things’”.

    But not everyone was amused.

    Joseph Jo wrote: “Lame, not funny… been living here my whole life, wasn’t so bad like 10 years ago… who to blame?”

    The Straits Times in February wrote about the odd reputation Yishun has acquired for negative news. Reports about happenings in the area range from cat killings, murder, brothel raids and civilians trying to attack policemen with stun guns.

    But the made-up phenomenon is driven by media coverage and confirmation bias, experts said.

    Assistant Professor Liew Khai Khiun, from Nanyang Technological University’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, said Yishun’s reputation boils down to “public imagination”.

    Nee Soon GRC MP Mr Louis Ng said there are both positive and negative news in every estate, “but a lot more people read the bad news”.

     

    Source: ST