Tag: ACRES

  • Thank You Inspector Fariz Bin Mohamad Noor For Your Assistance In Helping Your Neighbour To Catch A Snake

    Thank You Inspector Fariz Bin Mohamad Noor For Your Assistance In Helping Your Neighbour To Catch A Snake

    On 27 Nov 2017, a snake was spotted in my HDB unit at Bukit Batok at around 12:15PM. We contacted the police hotline and seek for assistance. The operator for the police hotline advised my brother to contact Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA) instead. Upon the arrival of AVA at around 2:40PM, the snake was missing in the house despite our constant monitoring. Therefore, the personnel from ACRES advised my family to contact them again should the snake appear again. Our neighbour, Inspector Fariz Bin Mohamad Noor of Clementi Police Division came to know about the incident as my family members shared with him about the incident earlier on. He assured my family members and told us that if we find the snake again at home, feel free to contact him anytime.

    For the entire day on 27 Nov 2017, we could not find the snake in the house until late morning of 28 Nov 2017. I contacted Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA) immediately and the operator said the team would need about 30 minutes to arrive. Although it was identified by AVA through a WhatsApp photo that it’s a Paradise Tree Snake, I contacted Inspector Fariz for his assistance. Despite, Inspector Fariz was not being at home at the point of time, he extended his help to assist my family and I in capturing the snake before the arrival of AVA personnel. He released the snake back to its habitat after capturing it.

    My family and I will like to express our deepest gratitude and compliment towards the courageous and helpful Inspector Fariz, who goes beyond his core duties as a law enforcer to provide help for people around him and has shown extraordinary compassion to living creatures. He truly demonstrated the ‘Kampong Spirit’ in assisting those that are in need of help. Singapore Police Force will always have my full respect and support.

    Thank you Inspector Fariz, it’s truly honourable to have a have a selfless officer in the Singapore Police Force. Please continue to serve with pride and dignity for the people of Singapore.

     

     

    Source: Wong

  • Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    A trending topic on social media has recently been this question: What in the world is wrong with Yishun?

    “Build a wall around Yishun,” says a popular meme, while a Twitter account has been set up, dedicated to weird happenings in this northern town.

    Somehow, Yishun has developed a reputation for bad news. Alongside the everyday events, Yishun is also home to cat abuse, murder, car chases, brothel raids, civilians trying to attack policemen with stun guns, loan sharks, falling concrete slabs, sinkholes, feuding taxi drivers, shopping mall stabbings and more.

    Could it be something in the air? Or perhaps the water?

    But it turns out that the problem with Yishun is simple, just like what most people won in the Toto draw last week: Nothing.

    It is a made-up phenomenon, driven by media coverage and confirmation bias.

    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”.

    By coincidence, one or two sensational things happen in the estate that draw widespread coverage, some enterprising wags seize upon it and soon the idea that the place is jinxed enters almost mainstream thought.

    “For example, Woodlands had that murder case on Chinese New Year, along with the water tank murder in 2013, but the place is not associated with dysfunctionality.”

    Emphasising the role of media attention, Mr Louis Ng, an MP for Nee Soon GRC, said cat killings had been going on since 2012, but most people did not know about them at the time.

    Only after a press conference in December 2015 did people begin looking out for such incidents and highlighting them.

    Soon, Yishun became synonymous with the phrase “cat killer”.

    Mr Ng, who is also head of animal welfare group Acres, said cat abuse happens in other neighbourhoods – most recently in Tampines, Ang Mo Kio and Redhill – but the publicity does not reach the same level.

    “There’s a balance of positive and negative news with every estate. But a lot more people read the bad news,” he noted.

    There is also an expectation that a public housing estate in the heartland is insulated from problems that beset more worldly areas.

    Prof Liew said: “For example, Geylang is not associated with being a family-friendly place like the HDB heartland.”

    So if something occurs in Yishun, people sit up and take notice.

    These factors combine to create an often darkly funny, dystopian image of the town.

    “Perhaps people want to reaffirm their own geographical biases,” said Prof Liew. “For example, people in the east may not like to travel that far, so they pick on this to justify themselves.”

    He added that Yishun’s demographics are similar to those of other housing estates and its social problems, such as poverty, are found elsewhere in Singapore as well.

    That Yishun’s popular image is firmly tongue-in-cheek is clear in the negligible impact on property values.

    R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng said: “I wouldn’t say the spate of bad news would affect property prices there.”

    He added that buyers make decisions based on budget and location and take into account the available amenities and connectivity to the city centre.

    Property in Yishun still draws buyers, he pointed out.

    He said: “In 2015, a private residential project, Northpark Residences, was launched. Although prices were on the steeper side, averaging $1,300 per sq ft, there was still overwhelming interest.

    “This was because the project offered integrated amenities.”

    There is also a more sinister side to the misrepresentation of Yishun, said Ms Lee Bee Wah, an MP for Nee Soon GRC.

    Though netizens may find it funny to cherry-pick incidents and poke fun at the town, the jokes may hurt the feelings of some.

    Ms Lee has received feedback from upset residents, some of whom have been the target of insensitive jokes. “It will affect the morale of the hard-working police and other community partners in Yishun,” she said. “If you work hard every day to make somewhere a peaceful home, but only the negative incidents get blown up, you would be a little discouraged too.”

    She urged people to also acknowledge positive events in Yishun.

    Vegetable seller Jenny Ong, 47, has lived in Yishun Avenue 6 for almost two decades. She said: “People here are actually nice and normal. My neighbours are friendly and we are all on good terms.”

    She regards her regular customers as friends, having served them for years, and does not mind when some make purchases on credit.

    “There’s that trust,” she said. “Some people say Yishun is a kampung because it is far from the city, but I find it cosy.”

    Mr Muhamad Riduwan, 24, a driver, has lived in Yishun Ring Road for more than a year. He first noticed the jokes on Facebook a few months ago but laughs them off.

    The parrot enthusiast said that with developments such as the Seletar West Link, Yishun is not as inaccessible as some make it seem.

    “Things like fighting, murder and animal abuse happen everywhere,” he said. “We can’t stop people from saying what they want.”

    To put the stereotypes to rest, Prof Liew suggests making relevant statistics public.

    “Perhaps it’s time to raise the question of whether Singapore’s police should release figures for crime rates by region,” he said. “If not, such stereotypes might persist.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Animal Activist And ACRES Founder, Louis Ng, May Be Fielded In Nee Soon GRC

    Animal Activist And ACRES Founder, Louis Ng, May Be Fielded In Nee Soon GRC

    Each candidate contesting a Group Representation Constituency (GRC) must bring strengths to the team, and if animal activist Louis Ng was part of his team standing in Nee Soon GRC, his experience in activism and the grassroots would come in useful, says Minister for Foreign Affairs K Shanmugam.

    Speaking to TODAY last night at a Meet-the-People Session at Chong Pang ward, Mr Shanmugam, however, would not confirm whether Mr Ng would indeed contest in the five-man GRC in the upcoming elections.

    “If Louis was part of the team, he will bring, as you can tell, his rich experience as an activist, as someone who has advocated a variety of causes including animal rights causes,” said Mr Shanmugam, who is the People’s Action Party’s anchor minister for Nee Soon GRC and also Minister for Law.

    Mr Ng, 37, the founder of wildlife rescue group Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (ACRES), has been helping out in the grassroots in Chong Pang ward since 2008, and was also present at last night’s Meet-the-People Session.

    He announced his joining the PAP in October last year, when he started helping out at the Kembangan-Chai Chee ward in the Marine Parade GRC.

    Recent speculation that he could stand in Joo Chiat SMC has fizzled out after it emerged that current Moulmein-Kallang GRC Member of Parliament Edwin Tong would contest there instead.

    And with Mr Ng helping out at Chong Pang again, word has it he could be fielded in the ward.

    “He has experience in dealing with people, engaging people and doing things for people. That spirit and that idealism will be brought for the benefit of residents,” said Mr Shanmugam.

    “All his life he has trained to be that, so he brings that, if he is part of the team,” he added.

    When asked about the PAP’s prospects at the upcoming polls, given that this is the first time all constituencies would be contested, Mr Shanmugam replied that it is not a matter of how many seats are contested, but a matter of who can best serve the residents.

    “Who are the five, and can they run your town council? Will they be honest, or will they take your money?” he said, adding that voters would be most concerned about whether or not candidates can deliver their promises.

    “Second, you are also selecting them to go into Parliament to form as part of the Government. Do you want them to be part of the Government?” Celene Tan.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com