Tag: Chen Show Mao

  • End Of WP Treasurer Tenure In Accordance With Terms Of My Appointment: Chen Show Mao

    End Of WP Treasurer Tenure In Accordance With Terms Of My Appointment: Chen Show Mao

    The Workers’ Party’s (WP) Chen Show Mao has clarified that the end of his tenure as treasurer of the party was “in accordance with the terms of my appointment”.

    The Aljunied GRC Member of Parliament was responding to comments on his Facebook page on his stepping down from the post, amid questions over his future in the party.

    In a comment on a Facebook post on Sunday (Sept 11), Mr Chen, who entered politics in 2011, assured that his “focus remains Paya Lebar and Parliament, and the party too”, although in a “different way” now that his term as treasurer has ended.

    “I did not quit or resign, but have stepped down from the post in accordance with the terms of my appointment. At the time of my appointment three months ago, it was agreed with the CEC, which appointed me, that my term as WP Treasurer would end in three months’ time, which is now upon us,” he said.

    Mr Chen, considered a “star” catch for the WP in the 2011 General Election, caused a splash in June when he fronted a challenge to the leadership of party chief Low Thia Khiang at the party’s biennial Central Executive Council (CEC) elections.

    Making a bid for the secretary-general post, Mr Chen had gathered 45 votes to Mr Low’s 61 votes. The contest was said to have been triggered by members who wanted to see changes in the way the party is run, with some members expressing discontentment over Mr Low’s ruling style.

    Mr Chen remains a member of the CEC. Mr Dennis Tan, a Non-Constituency Member of Parliament for the party who made his political debut in the General Election last year, replaced Mr Chen as treasurer. He was previously deputy treasurer.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Workers’ Party MPs Questions PR Policy And Edusave Awards To Full-Time Madrasah Students

    Workers’ Party MPs Questions PR Policy And Edusave Awards To Full-Time Madrasah Students

    In the Parliamentary sitting on 13 April, WP MPs raise questions ranging from the number of foreign students offered permanent residency, reviewing/extending Edusave awards to full-time Madrasah students, effectiveness of AVA’s monitoring and warning systems for fish farmers, ‘net neutrality’, data on Eldershield, and more.

    Questions for Oral Answer:

    *6. Mr Yee Jenn Jong: To ask the Minister for Transport (a) whether Singapore-based airlines have a two-person cockpit rule or other systems to protect the cockpit; and (b) whether their pilots are required to be subjected to periodic psychological tests.

    *9. Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song: To ask the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs (a) what is the weight limit on the transport of gold and other precious metals in and out of Singapore by individual travellers; (b) whether diplomats are exempt from this limit, if any; (c) whether the Police is aware of a diplomat carrying up to 27 kg of gold bars in his luggage on a flight out of Changi Airport in March 2015; and (d) what measures are in place to ensure that diplomats do not abuse their diplomatic immunity to carry precious metals, drugs or weapons in and out of Singapore in their luggage.

    *15. Ms Lee Li Lian: To ask the Minister for Transport whether there are plans to extend bicycle crossings at traffic junctions to other parts of Singapore.

    *16. Mr Png Eng Huat: To ask the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs from 2001 to 2014, what was (i) the number of foreign students who were offered and who had accepted permanent residency when they reached Secondary 1 or later; (ii) the number of such student PRs who had gone on to become citizens; and (iii) the number of such students who had renounced their PR or citizenship.

    *17. Mr Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap: To ask the Minister for Education whether the Ministry will consider reviewing and extending the Edusave Awards to full-time madrasah students.

    *20. Mr Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap: To ask the Minister for Social and Family Development (a) what is the number of families that have come under the Home Ownership Plus Education (HOPE) scheme since its implementation in 2004; (b) what is the percentage of families under HOPE that have managed to keep their number of children at two; (c) whether the Ministry can provide an update on the profile of families that have broken the conditions of the scheme and their plight; and (d) whether the Ministry considers the HOPE scheme a success.

    *23. Mr Yee Jenn Jong: To ask the Prime Minister whether the Ministry is working with banks to improve SMEs’ access to foreign exchange hedging products, including renminbi hedging.

    *24. Mr Yee Jenn Jong: To ask the Minister for National Development (a) whether AVA’s real-time monitoring and early warning systems are effective in alerting fish farmers ahead of time of the occurrence of harmful algal blooms to prevent massive fish kills; (b) whether there is a need to relocate fish farms away from areas prone to algal blooms; and (c) whether persistent algal blooms have made it difficult for Singapore to achieve its target of 15% of fish supply to be from local sources.

    *26. Mr Png Eng Huat: To ask the Minister for National Development when will plans to develop Hougang Town Centre under the Remaking Our Heartland programme announced in 2011 be released given that the projected timeline for the development site to be launched is three years.

    *27. Ms Lee Li Lian: To ask the Minister for National Development (a) whether the revision to the Code on Accessibility in the Built Environment requiring 1.5 metres of minimum clearance along common corridors applies to buildings built before 1 April 2014; (b) if so, whether there are plans to align SCDF guidelines with this; and (c) if not, whether Town Councils will need to have two sets of by-laws for flats built before and after 1 April 2014.

    *31. Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song: To ask the Minister for Communications and Information with regard to ‘net neutrality’ (a) whether Internet Service Providers (ISPs) or network operators are allowed to (i) throttle legitimate Internet content, albeit without rendering them unusable and still remaining above the threshold of IDA’s minimum Quality of Service (QoS) requirements; (ii) impose extra charges on consumers or providers of over-the-top (OTT) services like WhatsApp and Skype; and (b) whether there are any plans to introduce net neutrality regulations to prohibit discriminatory network management practices which negatively affect consumers’ experience when using legitimate Internet services.

     

    Questions for Written Answer

    3. Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song: To ask the Minister for Trade and Industry (a) if he can provide an update on the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations; (b) when is the Agreement expected to be successfully concluded; (c) what are the key obstacles that need to be overcome; (d) to what extent the TPP is likely to improve market access for Singapore-based firms in US, Japan and other markets; and (e) what are our economic agencies doing to prepare Singapore firms, especially SMEs, to take advantage of the improved market access that a successfully concluded TPP can bring.

    4. Mr Chen Show Mao: To ask the Minister for Trade and Industry whether the Ministry will consider monthly releases of services exports data so as to provide closer trend indicators as well as to help dampen the effects of fluctuations in monthly goods exports data.

    8. Mr Chen Show Mao: To ask the Minister for Health (a) what is the cumulative number of people who have received payments under Eldershield300, Eldershield400 and the Interim Disability Assistance Programme for the Elderly (IDAPE) respectively; (b) what is the cumulative number of Eldershield300, Eldershield400 and IDAPE recipients who were deceased before the end of their respective payout periods; and (c) what is the cumulative number of Eldershield300, Eldershield400 and IDAPE recipients who remained in need of assistance beyond their respective payout periods.

    13. Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song: To ask the Minister for Manpower for each year since 2005 (a) how many CPF members have successfully applied for CPF withdrawals on each of the following medical grounds: (i) permanently incapacitated from ever continuing in any employment (ii) terminally ill with a life expectancy of 12 months or less (iii) suffering from a severely shortened life expectancy (iv) mentally incapable of handling and receiving monies (v) other reasons; (b) what is the proportion of successful applications which have been granted a full CPF withdrawal; and (c) how many applications have been rejected.

     

    Source: The Workers’ Party

  • The Parliamentary Debate On AHPETC

    The Parliamentary Debate On AHPETC

    National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan moved a motion in Parliament on Thursday (Feb 12) to “note with concern” findings from the Auditor-General’s Report on the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council’s (AHPETC) financial accounts.

    Mr Khaw noted that “AHPETC have not submitted their reports on time ever since their formation in 2011”. The first report, delivered after a delay of more than four months, was a qualified one, with the Auditor making a “Disclaimer of Opinion” – which means that the auditors are unable to state that the financial statements provide a true and fair account of the TC’s financial position, said Mr Khaw.

    ‎AHPETC‬’s reports for financial year 2012 were also submitted after a delay, and the auditor also submitted a Disclaimer of Opinion, noted Mr Khaw. There were nine new issues of pressing concern, in addition to four areas identified by the auditor in the previous year, which remained unresolved contrary to AHPETC’s assurance to MND, he added.

    As stewards of public funds, all Town Councils must keep proper accounts and records, and maintain adequate control over their assets, said the minister.

    The AGO’s report is a “sad commentary” on the state of affairs at the AHPETC, said Mr Khaw. The AGO found that “AHPETC’s financial and accounting processes and systems are unreliable and their accounts, inaccurate”, he added.

    “Things can only get worse” because the bulk of the AHPETC’s lift replacements – about 90 per cent of its 1,870 lifts – are due after 2025, said Mr Khaw, as “if it continues to miss contributions to its sinking fund, the residents will eventually be living in blocks where lifts are unsafe or unreliable, and other infrastructures often break down”.

    AHPETC needs to build up its sinking fund, said Mr Khaw: “There is always the temptation, when a Town Council is financially strapped, to postpone saving, and say it will make up the shortfall later, or worse, to put its hand into the cookie jar, to draw from the savings to satisfy immediate needs.”The Town Council also did not “adequately manage the conflicts of interests of related parties arising from ownership interests of its key officers,” said Mr Khaw. “It was very convenient. Husband issued payment voucher, wife issued payment.”

    Mr Khaw said the AGO’s report showed that AHPETC has close to S$27 million worth of contracts with its two related parties, FMSS and FMSI, and of these, close to S$6 million was given without tender.

    “AHPETC’s repeated failure to do so shows a disregard for its obligation to account to its residents; and also disregard for this Parliament of which the AHPETC’s Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and their fellow MPs have solemnly sworn to serve in,” said Mr Khaw.

    The Auditor General’s findings confirm that something is “seriously wrong” at the Town Council, said Mr Khaw: “They paint a picture of financial mismanagement, incompetence and negligence in corporate governance.”

    Mr Khaw said that by law, Councillors and Members of Parliament are “ultimately responsible” for everything in the Town Council, and they cannot delegate their responsibility away to the Managing Agent, or others. But “throughout the AHPETC saga, we have found the MPs running the AHPETC to be evasive, unresponsive and misleading,” he said.

    “Financial incompetence aside, failure to carry out critical cyclical maintenance work is an even graver safety concern,” said the minister, highlighting the six-month delay of AHPETC’s FY2013 cyclical maintenance works report.

    On the appointing of a related party, FMSS as a Managing Agent, Mr Khaw asked: “Why did AHPETC not disclose these related party transactions and take steps to prevent the risk of abuse when the companies it gave contracts to were owned by its key officers?”

    He also questioned what the MPs of AHPETC were doing “throughout this sad saga”, saying that the MPs of AHPETC were consistently “side-stepping and avoiding responsibility”.

    MND’S FOLLOW-UP

    MND expects AHPETC to follow up and remedy the problems and weaknesses listed in the AGO Report, said Mr Khaw. MND has withheld the FY2014 S&CC grant from the AHPETC. The money has been put aside in a separate deposit account, and will be paid out after the problems are fixed.

    The Ministry will also address the weaknesses in the current Town Council regulatory framework. “We can no longer take the light touch and assume that all MPs running Town Councils will be responsible,” said Mr Khaw. A proper system of enforcement and penalties will be instituted.

    Mr Khaw also noted that it is not a Town Council’s business to organise and operate trade fairs, as it would be unfair to existing HDB shops. AHPETC was found guilty of holding a festive trade fair, without a permit, in 2014.

    MND’s regulatory oversight will be strengthened, with powers to collect information and conduct investigations, and a stronger penalty framework, said Mr Khaw. Town Councils need competent, honest people and proper systems to serve their residents well, added Mr Khaw. “Good intentions and bland assurances alone are not sufficient … Compared to the sound and fury of politicking, governing is long, tedious and unglamorous work.”

    WORKERS’ PARTY SUPPORTS THE MOTION

    The Workers’ Party supports the motion, said party chief Low Thia Khiang.

    Mr Low also addressed the “misconception that the Managing Agent was given the contract without tender”, saying the fact remains that AHPETC finds it hard to attract a Managing Agent as many Managing Agents serving PAP Town Councils appear unwilling to serve a non-PAP Town Council.

    He said that any Opposition party aspiring to take over the Government must first build an army of civil servants, calling it a “strange situation”.

    He called upon the Government to protect resident’s interests during the transition from one party to another, and said that the process of transition for Town Councils should be depoliticised.

    Mr Low also said that the AHPETC episode should be taken in proper perspective, as that the Town Council’s performance in other aspects is comparable to others.

    The Workers’ Party chief ended his speech saying that the party will continue to serve AHPETC residents to the best of its ability, despite a “challenging political climate”.

    ‘KEY IMPROVEMENTS AND UPDATES’ MADE: SYLVIA LIM

    The AHPETC has made the needed corrections and payments for the sinking fund, said AHPETC chairman Sylvia Lim. She added that the money not transferred to the sinking fund was not lost, and that “the Town Council accepts that it should have transferred the full amount each quarter.

    She said that the AHPETC has never disputed that the Town Council and the Managing Agent are related parties, saying that the agent has no decision-making powers in award of tenders. The tenders are awarded by a separate committee, said Ms Lim.

    Ms Lim said that FMSS was only appointed as a transitional Managing Agent following the General Election in 2011, but when open tenders were called for a Managing Agent in 2012, only FMSS tendered. Still, AHPETC has various structures in place to oversee the work of the Managing Agent, she said.

    The AHPETC chairman also suggested that MND “makes it clear which parties are considered related parties”.

    Ms Lim also touched on the unintended overpayments to the Managing Agent over the nine-month interim period, saying that the sum has been paid back. “I bear personal responsibility,” she said.

    For payments made to the Managing Agent, Ms Lim said monthly reports were churned out based on the performance and time taken. The AHPETC has started to introduce more oversight on the Managing Agent and processes have been changed, added Ms Lim.

    She maintained that it was not the case that the Town Council disrespected residents and Parliaments by not providing information to the AGO, saying that AHPETC has done its best to provide whatever information they could to auditors. Ms Lim admitted that they were late with some information for the cyclical maintenance, but she said that they were not ignoring it and that some information has been submitted.

    There was no finding that AHPETC was dishonest or falsified records in the audit, said Ms Lim.

    AUDIT SERVES AS A WARNING TO ALL TOWN COUNCILS: SAM TAN

    The AHPETC audit serves as a warning to all Town Councils, said Minister of State, Prime Minister’s Office & Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth Sam Tan. He also pointed out that Workers’ Party Members of Parliament have frequently criticised the PAP’s transparency in part election rallies.

    Mr Tan also touched on potential conflicts of interest, saying that it is hardly in the public interest if the person who generates and approves an invoice is the same person.

    He said that Town Councils need to be held responsible when it is at fault, pointing out that the current Town Councils Act doesn’t allow this.

    The Minister of State, citing Confucious, also called Members of Parliament to apply high standards to themselves. He pointed to Workers’ Party’s Chen Show Mao first Parliament speech in 2011, calling Mr Chen’s words “righteous and powerful”, and saying that he was looking forward to hearing Mr Chen’s views on the AHPETC audit.

    Mr Chen explained that all payments from AHPETC required the signatures of both Sylvia Lim and Mr Png Eng Huat.

    AHPETC PAYMENT APPROVAL PROCESS ‘UNLAWFUL’: SHANMUGAM

    Law Minister K Shanmguam said that the AHPETC’s payments were made without “transparency and accountability”, adding that there was “no discussion of conflicts of interests”.

    Mr Shanmugam called Managing Agent FMSS a “convenient vehicle”, to which “millions of dollars went from the Town Council to FMSS”. He also distributed a graphic to Parliament, which depicted the payment approval process for the AHPETC, calling the process “unlawful”.

    Approval Process

    The ownership interest and control of the Managing Agent is what “distinguishes AHPETC from other Town Councils”, said the Law Minister.

    “This is not just a question of negligence, or inexperience,” he added.

    The Law Minister also said the payments that the Managing Agent were verifying and and approving on behalf of the Town Council “were going into their own pockets”, calling it a “real conflict” of interest.

    Mr Shanmugam also distributed a table in Parliament that compared Managing Agent rates across the various Town Councils. FMSS now charges “double what everyone else” does, he said.

    Town Councils MA Rates

    “The rhetoric from the WP is always about helping the poor man,” said Mr Shanmugam. “The reality is that WP took money from the man in the street and gave it to (Managing Agent) FMSS.”

    The behaviour of the WP, which “claims to champion transparency and accountability”, was “shocking”, said Mr Shanmugam. “Why doesn’t the Town Council give proper answers instead of playing hide and seek?” he asked.

    AHPETC’s actions were “not negligence” but an “active decision to suppress”, said Mr Shanmugam. “It raises the issue of integrity.” He added that the Town Council’s “failure to disclose the details of its contracts with FMSS” in FY2012/2013 was “in breach of the Singapore Financial Reporting Standards”.

    He asked if AHPETC chairman Sylvia Lim or any Town Councillor can “honestly say that no monies have been lost” from the Town Council, asking “overpayment to related party is not loss?”

    “The law takes an extremely strict view on related party transactions, on conflict of interests,” said the Law Minister. He said the money was not lost through accident, but that the structure was “approved by at least some of the Town Councillors”.

    “The basic point is that while the Town Council lost money, FMSS and FMSI seem to have made money,” said Mr Shanmugam.

    The Law Minister called on WP chief Low to “stop playing the victim card”, and said that it was time for each Town Councillor to “come clean before this Parliament”.

    He asked if Mr Chen knew about the payment structure, saying that if Mr Chen knew all the facts, he “could not have agreed to this structure”. He added that the WP’s Pritam Singh makes “fierce speeches on transparency”, but has been  “anything but transparent”, and that FMSS got the contracts because they were friends of Mr Low.

    “The AGO Report makes sad reading,” said Mr Shanmugam. “Basically, the Town Council is in shambles.”

    “So many things are so disastrously wrong,” he added. “There has been a complete dereliction of duties.”

    “We have to ask the WP to come clean and explain yourselves to the public,” said Mr Shanmugam in closing. “Your residents deserve some real honest answers.”

    WP REJECTS LAW MINISTER’S ASSUMPTION

    WP’s Sylvia Lim and Pritam Singh both rejected Law Minister K Shanmugam’s statement.

    “We reject the assertions that the appointment of the Managing Agent was to benefit our friends,” said Ms Lim. She also said that it was premature for Mr Shanmugam to accuse the WP of not giving answers, as some MPs were yet to speak.

    Mr Singh said that his duty was to AHPETC residents, and that he would answer questions if they were posed by a resident, to which Minister of State Sam Tan said: “I’m an Aljunied resident. You can give your answers to me.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com