Tag: foreigners

  • Many Expats On Localised, Perk-Free Packages

    Many Expats On Localised, Perk-Free Packages

    Some people assume that Western expats get luxurious perks and lead a glamorous lifestyle here but two of them say the reality can be different.

    Ms Elaine Young, 43, left Scotland 12 years ago to be a writer here.

    She buys her groceries at NTUC FairPrice and her clothes from Uniqlo, and eats at hawker centres near her Tiong Bahru rental apartment.

    Ms Young says: “I wish I could walk into Burberry and buy anything I want but the reality is I wear basic clothes like an average person here.”

    She did not imagine the cost of living here to be so high.

    .

    PHOTO COURTESY OF ELAINE YOUNG

    And she did not know she had the option of renting an HDB flat since property agents serving expats here often recommend private properties.

    “Had I known about renting HDB flats then, my husband and I would have done so to save more money,” she says.

    She and her husband, who is an Asia Pacific sales director with IHS Energy, pay about $6,500 a month for their three-room apartment.

    SAFER

    Apart from the haze and high cost of living, Ms Young says: “I’ve never felt safer and the people here are lovely.”

    She has made many local and expat friends, and they organise outings and dinners for the weekends.

    Ms Young intends to move back to the UK to look after her mother in a few years.

    She says: “We love living here but are well aware that we are guests in the country. It’s home now but not forever.”

    Thirty-year-old Dane Jesper Rasmussen, an operations manager in a shipping company, says he usually eats at hawker centres.

    He jumped on the opportunity to work in Singapore the moment he saw his company post the opening and has been here for more than two years now.

    Mr Rasmussen had another motivation to move here: His girlfriend, whom he met in Denmark, is a Singaporean.

    She was stationed in Denmark for three years in the same shipping company.He had never been to Singapore although he travelled around South-east Asia over a few years before his move here.

    So, the high cost of living here came as a surprise to him, especially since his experience with South-east Asia mainly involved Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar.

    MOST EXPENSIVE

    Singapore is the world’s most expensive city, according to research by the Economist Intelligence Unit this year.

    During the first three months alone in Singapore, Mr Rasmussen overspent because he did not know about hawker centres and cheaper supermarkets.

    His girlfriend returned from Denmark and took him to hawker centres and food courts, showing him ways to save money.

    He says: “It’s great to have someone local to show me around. Had it not been for her guidance, I would still be spending a lot of money on the wrong things.”

    He rents a two-room condominium unit in Farrer Road and pays about $3,400 a month.

    Mr Rasmussen says that sometimes it is hard to adjust and make new friends as an expat because people know that he won’t be here for long.

    “Many have their own groups of friends and sometimes it’s hard for them to invest time in a person who will leave.”

    Both Ms Young and Mr Rasmussen have noticed expats switching to localised packages to secure a job here. They also say that many expats here do not live a life of luxury.

    “Like Singaporeans, each individual earns a different amount of money and leads different lifestyles,” says Mr Rasmussen who spends his weekends visiting his girlfriend and her family in Woodlands.


    I’ve never felt safer and the people here are lovely.

    – Ms Elaine Young from Scotland has been working here for 12 years


    Like Singaporeans, each individual earns a different amount of money and leads different lifestyles.

    – Mr Jesper Rasmussen, who is working as an operations manager in a shipping company

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 5 Year Old Boy Found Dead In Condominium At Farrer Road

    5 Year Old Boy Found Dead In Condominium At Farrer Road

    A five-year-old boy was found dead in a condominium unit on Farrer Road on Tuesday morning (Oct 6), after his father was found injured outside a neighbourhood police post.

    Police have classified the case as unnatural death.

    The case was uncovered after police officers at the Bukit Timah Neighbourhood Police Centre found an injured man outside the centre at 5.17am. The 42-year-old man, believed to be Caucasian, was sent to the hospital.

    After questioning the man, the police went to a D’Leedon condominium unit believed to be on the 32nd floor. There, they found the body of a five-year-old boy – the son of the man – lying motionless in the bedroom.

    The boy was pronounced dead by paramedics at 6.17am.

    His father is helping the police with their investigation.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Singapore’s Population Growth At Slowest In More Than A Decade

    Singapore’s Population Growth At Slowest In More Than A Decade

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Singapore’s population rose 1.2 percent over the past year, the slowest in more than a decade, as it tried to reduce numbers of foreign workers, while long-standing efforts to encourage citizens to have more children bore some fruit.

    The total population stood at 5.54 million as of June 2015, according to data released on Wednesday, including 3.38 million citizens.

    The citizen population continued to age, with 13.1 percent 65 or older, compared with 12.4 percent last year, due to slowing fertility rates and increasing life expectancy.

    Singapore has for years tried to get its well-educated and well-off citizens to have more children, with little success but births in 2014 rose 7 percent, to 33,193, close to the 2012 level, which was the highest in a decade.

    Increasing numbers of foreign workers led to grumbling about high property prices and crowded public transport and in response, the government has been curbing numbers, exacerbating a labour crunch, particularly in manufacturing, services and construction.

    Businesses faced a tight labour market but help was at hand, the government said in its 2015 population report.

    “The government will support businesses to shift towards skills- and capital-intensive ways to grow, so that businesses can continue to grow and succeed here, to create quality jobs for Singaporeans,” the government said.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Ello Ed Mundsell Bello Remorseful Over Remarks

    Ello Ed Mundsell Bello Remorseful Over Remarks

    Ello Ed Mundsell Bello, the Filipino nurse sentenced to four months imprisonment in Singapore for sedition, is “truly remorseful and sorry” for what he did, which was posting disparaging comments against Singaporeans on Facebook, according to his lawyer.

    “A long time ago before the trials, he said that he’s truly remorseful and sorry because of what he has done,” said Mark Goh in an interview after the court slapped Bello, 29, with the sentence Monday.

    Goh noted that Bello, 29, pleaded guilty for the charges.

    “My client has surrendered. In fact he has already decided on a personal level that it has caused him already a lot of anxiety and stress. And therefore he did not want to perpetuate the trial and decided to plead guilty,” he said.

    Aside from posting seditious messages on Facebook, Bello was also convicted for lying to the police.

    All in all, he faced one count of sedition and two counts of lying to the police before District Judge Siva Shanmugam. An additional count of sedition and another count for false reporting were considered by Shanmugam.

    Deportation

    Goh said after serving jail term, Bello will be deported back to Philippines and banned to come back to Singapore for a certain period of time.

    “He will definitely be repatriated. Under Singapore immigration law, he will not be able to come back to Singapore for a certain period of time and after that period of time, subject to good review, he may be able to go back to Singapore,” the lawyer said.

    Bello’s disparaging comments against Singaporeans made rounds on social media in early January. In his post on The Real Singapore’s Facebook page, he said, “Now the Singaporeans are loosers (sic) in their own country, we take their jobs, their future, their women and soon, we will evict all SG loosers (sic) out of their own country hahaha. The best part, I will be praying that disators (disasters) strike Singapore and more Singaporeans will die than I will celebrate. Remember Pinoy better and stronger than Stinkaporeans.”

    He further commented, “We will kick out all the Singaporeans and SG will be the new filipino state.”

    Bello initially reported to the police that he did not post the comment, claiming his account was hacked. Goh said his client lied because he feared for an online backlash.

    The controversy cost Bello his job in Tan Tock Seng Hospital, where he worked as a radiographer.

    Ready to take punishment

    Goh said the decision to plead guilty means that the accused himself does not want to fight and does not want to contest the matter in trial. “It is a personal decision and not a legal decision,” he said.

    He added that by pleading guilty, Bello has “mentally accepted his guilt and he is mentally prepared to take the punishment.”

    “The reason why Ed was mentally prepared is because he felt that he has caused enough stress between the Filipino community working here and also the Singapore citizens,” Goh said. “So he wants to move on.”

    “After the course of these proceedings, there was a lot of unhappiness on the ground. That’s not denied. He also felt that it was also very difficult for him to stay here in view of this situation. In a way he described to me, in his own words, like shooting himself on the foot. And he has already been punished with all the negative publicity and that he just wants to get on with his life,” Goh added.

    The Philippine Embassy in Singapore, through Consul General Victorio Dimagiba, Jr.,
    released a statement, sayin “Mr. Ello’s penalty which was metted out by the court was deemed appropriate to the charges he had been convicted.”

    The embassy hopes that “since Bello has accepted the verdict of the court, this will close the issue for all parties concerned.” —KBK, GMA News

     

    Source: www.gmanetwork.com

  • She Would Rather Spend To Help Migrants To Makan

    She Would Rather Spend To Help Migrants To Makan

    She organises dinner parties for migrant workers and Singaporeans – and they cost more than $1,000 each time.

    But 29-year-old self-employed tech entrepreneur Adrianna Tan told The New Paper: “I really don’t mind spending that money because this means more to me than shoes and handbags.”

    She said it gives the groups an opportunity to mingle and to get to know one another, rather than living in different worlds.

    Miss Tan tries to gather about 100 migrant workers and 100 Singaporeans for every Kitchen Culture dinner, which happens once every three months.

    It takes her and her team of volunteers about two weeks to organise each dinner.

    Miss Tan and the other Kitchen Culture volunteers head down to hot spots where migrant workers hang out and hand out fliers to invite them to dinner.

    The volunteers share the duties involved, such as ordering and collecting the food and inviting guests.

    Miss Tan said that Kitchen Culture is not an attempt to “quell or address xenophobia”, but it “raises awareness of some of the migrant groups present among us”.

    She said: “I was shocked at some of the rampant anti-foreigner sentiments that I came across online and even in real life.

    “I am disappointed at how acceptable it seems to be for some people to say things like foreign talents are the cause of all our problems or that they hate a specific group of people.”

    Even though she goes on business trips almost every week, Miss Tan does not think she will be stopping these dinner parties any time soon, especially after receiving an appreciative message from one of the migrant workers who attended a dinner party.

    She said: “The text message read: ‘Thank you for the dinner party. Today was the best day of my life.’

    Said Miss Tan: “Knowing that I managed to make such an impact on someone’s life is a priceless feeling.”

    I really don’t mind spending that money because this means more to me than shoes and handbags.

    — Miss Adrianna Tan

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg