Tag: Hong Kong

  • Singapore – More Pleasant Than Hong Kong?

    Singapore – More Pleasant Than Hong Kong?

    Whoever thinks Hong Kong is a cool place should take a look at Singapore because it is a mini paradise and an efficient one at that.

    Yes, the heat is unbearable, which is odd when you think of Christmas in Hong Kong, but it didn’t ruin our family holiday. We were happy. No sweat.

    But it seems nothing is “free” in Singapore. I mean free speech, for instance, is not really free.

    There are too many rules but compared with Hong Kong in general, Singapore stacks up rather well.

    It’s also smart.

    Catching an air-conditioned double decker is a pleasant experience which is multiplied when you see a digital display of how many seats are available in the upper deck.

    Driving in Orchard Road, you’re struck by digital signages that show the number of available parking spaces in major malls.

    These conveniences are just some of the little things you’ll fall in love with.

    I know some Hong Kong startups that are planning to develop an app that shows this kind parking data but they’re being hampered by difficulties including a lack of a proper business model.

    In Singapore, these apps are free.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if Singapore, already a popular stop in the Formula One circuit, will be the cradle of the driverless car.

    I’m sure the Ferrari and Lamborghini drivers I happened to bump into at the South Beach Hotel would have no objections.

    Big data works best in a small city.

    Look at how well Singapore organised itself to farewell its founder, Lee Kuan Yew, when he died in March.

    Lee left behind a proud nation which is often compared with Hong Kong, with its can-do spirit, but often comes out on top.

    Singapore taxi drivers, unlike many of their Hong Kong peers, have so much positive energy to share about their city.

    One of them asked us if we had seen a beggar.

    No, we said, why? Because the government knows when people are unemployed, he said.

    The government helps them find shelter and a job that pays S$800 (HK$4,385) a month.

    Singaporeans can use their pension fund to pay for a public housing flat, which in general is about twice the size of a Hong Kong apartment.

    If you’re curious if mainlanders cause any trouble there, the short answer is no, according to two drivers we spoke to.

    We haven’t seen any obscene things either in the five times we have spent a holiday there.

    Yes, Singapore is a small, smart and super.

     

    Source: www.ejinsight.com

  • Stark Differences Between Hong Kong’s MTR And Singapore’s MRT

    Stark Differences Between Hong Kong’s MTR And Singapore’s MRT

    Earlier this year, CNN looked at why Hong Kong’s Mass Transit Railway (MTR) is so successful. CNN described MTR as the “most envied metro system” in the world (‘Hong Kong’s MTR: Taking a ride on the world’s most envied metro system‘).

    MTR was established as a public entity in 1973-74 before it was privatized and listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange as MTR Corporation Ltd in 2000. At the time, the Hong Kong government sold its stake in public utilities, with the aim of reducing expenditure and boosting overall efficiency. But the government remained majority shareholder of MTR Corp.

    MTR is both competitive and profitable, and able at the same time to serve the Hong Kong public efficiently.

    99% on-time performance

    “Hong Kong’s MTR is one of the best designed, best operated and most successful metro systems in the world,” said Robert Cervero, professor of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley.

    The system is world class in terms of finance, operation service and transit-property integration, says Jin Murakami, an associate professor at City University of Hong Kong.

    Hong Kong’s MTR carries more passengers (more than 5 million) than London’s subway and almost the same number as New York’s. This is despite Hong Kong having less track than London and New York.

    Figures show that MTR runs about 20 hours and 8,000 train trips per day, and it boasts a staggering 99.9% punctuality rate.

    In the first half of last year, MTR ran for 120 consecutive days without a single delay over 8 minutes, establishing a record for the company, if not the world.

    In contrast, there have been 60 over breakdowns and delays over the past 2 years for Singapore’s MRT, since LG (NS) Desmond Kuek took over SMRT Corp from his predecessor, Saw Phaik Hwa:

    The latest Singapore train service disruptions on Tuesday (7 Jul) affected 250,000 commuters at all 54 MRT stations on both the North-South Line and East-West Line, with many commuters taking their frustrations online, scolding SMRT – which runs both lines – and Desmond Kuek its CEO.

    MTR helps London Overground enhance its punctuality

    MTR’s reputation as one of the world’s top metros has attracted many international clients seeking its expertise.

    MTR now operates the London Overground, 2 lines of the Beijing Metro, as well as parts of the Shenzhen and Hangzhou Metro systems in China, the Melbourne Metro in Australia and the Stockholm Metro in Sweden.

    In 2014, it won a contract for a new rail project in Sydney. As part of the US$6.5-billion deal, MTR will deliver and operate the Australian city’s North West Rail Link, the largest public transport project in the country and its first fully automated rapid transit network.

    MTR also provides consultation services to railway networks around the world. According to a 2013 Wall Street Journal report, these overseas operations have improved both the network’s punctuality at home, as well as its profitability. London Overground enhanced its punctuality from 88.4% in 2007 to 96.7% in 2013 after MTR took over its operations for a year.

    Will the PAP government consider engaging MTR to help LG (NS) Kuek and his cohort of SAF officers? Or perhaps PAP thinks that SAF scholars and soldiers are better?

    Continual investment in maintenance, upgrades and renewals to train system needed

    Another key to MTR’s success in keeping Hong Kong’s subway in tip-top conditions is its willingness to continuously reinvest profits back into its MTR system.

    “A railway requires ongoing investment and a lot of resources in order to keep it in tip-top form,” said Jacob Kam, the operations director of MTR. “Even for a system considered state of the art, in 10 years time, everything – signaling systems, urban railways – will have changed.”

    Each year, US$645 million is invested in maintenance, upgrades and renewals to the MTR system. It’s a significant amount compared with many other cities and systems, said Prof Cervero.

    In contrast, during the public inquiry in May 2012 into the major train breakdowns occurred in Dec 2011, previous CEO Saw Phaik Hwa became defensive when the COI questioned her about SMRT maintenance budgets.

    AGC presented data showing SMRT did not raise its maintenance budgets in nearly 10 years since 2002, despite rising ridership, more frequent train runs and ageing assets. Ms Saw then stoutly defended the SMRT’s maintenance regime. She said SMRT had not only met, but exceeded, maintenance standards set out by rail manufacturers and the LTA. She claimed that money spent on mid-life upgrades for the trains had actually helped in saving maintenance cost.

    When it was pointed out to her that the upgrades were mainly for the train cabins and air-conditioning units, Saw then said parts such as wheels and propulsion systems are “upgraded continuously” and are “changed on a regular basis.”

    “If there is any need to upgrade, anything in the system, it would have been,” she added. Saw also blamed the new trains for the spike in train faults. The new trains were a source of bugs, she said. One of the COI panelists, Prof Lim of NTU, cited an SMRT internal report showing a 20% drop in maintenance cost per kilometer operated. Saw replied “that could be wrong numbers” or “errors in the parameters”.

    She said the events that triggered the train breakdowns on Dec 15 and 17, 2011 were unprecedented. The trains stopped because a section of the electrical ‘third rail’ had dropped off after several support claws were dislodged. No power was being supplied to the trains. She said that nothing like that had happened before. Prof Lim then pointed out that the ‘third rail’ did sag in 2010 and before 2006. Saw said management was not aware of the seriousness of the events because the dropped claws were reinstated. To that, Prof Lim retorted, “You knew the risks, and you didn’t do enough. You implemented cable ties.”

    High-tech tools to aid operations

    MTR also invests and employs a range of high-tech tools to aid operations.

    After the last trains depart from stations at about 1 a.m., more than 1,000 workers spring into action to maintain the system.

    “Because of the high demand for track space and the small amount of down time, we need to quickly move engineering trains, deliver materials and provide space for people,” said Mr Kam. “We have an A.I. system that helps us optimize the use of space in a limited time.”

    The A.I. program was specially designed and built for the MTR. “We also apply a lot of radio-frequency identification technology that helps monitor the condition of the trains and machinery and gives us an early warning in case of potential problems,” he explained.

    Infrared monitors on tracks are used to detect cracks too small for the human eye to detect.

    “We use man to do what machines can’t do, and machines to create efficiency and accuracy that’s beyond the reach of man,” said Mr Kam, summing up a principle that’s made Hong Kong’s MTR the envy of the world’s mass transit systems.

    In the case of Singapore, it sounds more like a case of “What’s wrong with collecting more money?”

    This is specially so on hearing what was revealed by the COI in 2012 that SMRT did not raise its maintenance budgets in nearly 10 years since 2002, despite rising ridership, more frequent train runs and ageing assets. In fact, COI reports showed that there was a 20% drop in maintenance cost per kilometer operated by SMRT.

    A former SMRT staff even told TRE that many of the experienced engineering staff were “forced to retire” under the pretext of reorganization during Saw Phaik Hwa’s time. Apparently, these experienced engineering staff were deemed too “expensive” and their salaries would eat into SMRT’s profits.

    He said, “I can tell that during Saw’s time many veteran ASP Trains were forced to retire under the pretext of Re-Org. Those officers with decades of rail experience were considered too costly. They hired younger and fresh diploma holders without rail experience but cheaper and with few benefits especially medical and leave benefits.”

    What caused SMRT to degenerate into a “money worshiper” at the expense of public service?

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • One Of Four Patients In Hong Kong Tested Negative For MERS

    One Of Four Patients In Hong Kong Tested Negative For MERS

    One of four patients admitted to hospital suspected of carrying Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers) has tested negative for the virus, hospital officials announced on Thursday.

    It was unclear whether the three remaining patients had also tested negative, with the hospital authority only saying that no confirmed case had been found so far. The authority confirmed the 22-year-old woman who sought treatment at a clinic operated by the Quality HealthCare group in the Tsing Yi MTR station had tested negative.

    The suspected cases, picked up at the city’s health centres, marked the first time the wider community may have been exposed to the deadly virus.

    All four fell ill after visiting South Korea, where an outbreak has killed nine people and infected 108.

    Until now, all of the suspected Mers cases in Hong Kong were intercepted during temperature checks at the airport.

    From noon on Tuesday to noon on Wednesday, more than 30 suspected cases were reported, but about half initially tested negative for Mers.

    Our experts have assessed that the risk of importing cases [to mainland China] has increased significantly
    MAO QUNAN, CHINESE OFFICIAL

    The cases within the community – which followed a tightening in the reporting regime – came as Chinese health authorities warned that mainland China was facing a heightened risk of the virus.

    In the first Hong Kong case on Wednesday, the 22-year-old woman who has since tested negative was rushed to Princess Margaret Hospital after seeking treatment at a clinic operated by the Quality HealthCare group in the Tsing Yi MTR station. The woman showed signs of fever and a running nose after visiting Seoul between May 23 and 27. She did not show any symptoms until she had been back in the city for almost two weeks.

    READ MORE: What Mers is, how it spreads and how to avoid it

    Three other suspected cases were reported at other Quality HealthCare medical centres on the same day. One was a young woman who visited Seoul between May 26 and 30, and sought treatment for fever and diarrhoea at the centre in Prince’s Building in Central.

    Another young woman, who was in South Korea last Friday and Saturday, had a fever and a running nose after the trip. She went to the group’s clinic in Pacific Centre, Tsim Sha Tsui, and was sent to Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

    The fourth suspected case, a middle-aged woman, visited the centre’s clinic in Tung Chung with a fever after returning from South Korea on Monday.

    Watch: New Mers deaths in South Korea brings the total to nine 

    Despite concerns about community exposure to the virus, infectious disease experts said there was no increased risk facing the city as people were more aware of precautionary measures.

    However, the initial scare spooked the stock market. The benchmark Hang Seng Index had dropped 228 points, or 0.85 per cent, by 3.05pm, with heavy selling starting at about 2.30pm when the news of the first suspected case broke.

    On mainland China, Mao Qunan, a spokesman of the National Health and Family Planning Commission in Beijing, said the country’s risk of having imported Mers cases had increased.

    Health officials in protective clothing investigate at the Tsing Yi clinic. Photo: Sam Tsang

    “Because our country has relatively frequent contact with people from South Korea and the Middle East, and especially now that South Korea has an outbreak, our experts have assessed that the risk of importing cases has increased significantly,” he said.

    The commission said on its official microblog that a Chinese citizen working at a South Korean hospital was confirmed to be infected with Mers.

    But Mao sidestepped the issue of whether Beijing would follow decisions by Taipei, Hong Kong and Macau to issue travel warnings against South Korea.

    The Tsing Yi clinic was closed as health officials investigated. Photo: Sam Tsang

    “Whether we are going to issue any ban or warning over travelling, it’s something we need to discuss with members of our tourism department,” he said.

    A 44-year-old man, who is the son of a confirmed Mers patient in South Korea, is being treated in a hospital in Huizhou in southern Guangdong province. The man travelled to Huizhou late last month via Hong Kong.

    The Southern Metropolis News reported that all 75 people who had come into close contact with the 44-year-old after he entered mainland China were about to finish their 14 days of quarantine after testing negative for the virus.

    Additional reporting by Associated Press

     

    Source: www.scmp.com

  • Han Hui Hui: Malaysia Better Than Singapore, More Tolerant of Dissent

    Han Hui Hui: Malaysia Better Than Singapore, More Tolerant of Dissent

    GEORGE TOWN, May 28 ― Malaysia is more tolerable of dissent compared to Singapore although Putrajaya barred entry to Hong Kong Umbrella Revolution activist Joshua Wong, Singaporean activist Han Hui Hui has said.

    The 23-year-old, who is in Malaysia to give a series of talks on youth activism in remembrance of the bloody Tiananmen Square 1989 crackdown in China, said Singapore would not allow foreign speakers in for such talks.

    “So speaking as a Singaporean, I feel Malaysia is still much better than Singapore because in Singapore, we are not allowed to invite foreigners to speak in the country unless they are going to praise the PAP government,” Han toldMalay Mail Online in an interview.

    The youth activist pointed out that despite the deportation of Wong, who had planned to give the talks along with her in Malaysia, she was allowed to come here even though her event was not pro-government.

    “In Singapore, even if you want to invite a Singaporean to speak, they want to know who it is before allowing the event,” Han said.

    She said it was wrong and against human rights for Malaysia to expel Wong, but acknowledged the geopolitical ramifications surrounding the pro-democracy student leader’s presence here.

    “It simply means China is a big power here and we can’t deny that,” she said.

    Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar has described Wong as an “undesirable” person and said the activist was expelled Tuesday over concerns that the 18-year-old could risk Malaysia-China ties.

    Wong is widely regarded as the impetus behind the 2014 mass protests in Hong Kong to demand the right to directly elect the head of the semi-autonomous administrative region. He was named amongTIME Magazine’s “Most Influential Teens of 2014”.

    Han shared her experiences in organising “events”, albeit protests, in Singapore during her talk at the “Uprising of Youth and New Social Activism in Singapore and Hong Kong Forum” here Tuesday night.

    “I wouldn’t call what I held in Singapore ‘protests’ but ‘events’ because we have not had any protests in the past 50 years and it is illegal,” she said.

    Several street demonstrations have been organised in Malaysia, however, although the police have cracked down on mass rallies like the Bersih protests for free and fair elections. But some other rallies have been allowed to go on peacefully.

    Han has been organising protests since 2013 over issues like the Singapore government’s alleged mishandling of the Central Provident Fund (CPF), which is the country’s retirement scheme, the education system and rising unemployment.

    She, along with five others, was arrested in September last year for organising an illegal protest over the CPF issue and charged with causing a public nuisance.

    Han told Malay Mail Online that her talks in Penang, Ipoh, Johor and Kuala Lumpur this week aimed to encourage millennials, or those born in the 1990s, to get involved in activism.

    “We can’t be allowing those born in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s to continue to plan policies. They can’t plan out an education system that will fit the times. Ultimately, it is the people who had went (sic) through the system now and will know whether it is good or bad,” she said.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • HK’s Umbrella Revolution Student Leader Joshua Wong Deported From Malaysia

    HK’s Umbrella Revolution Student Leader Joshua Wong Deported From Malaysia

    KUALA LUMPUR, May 26 — Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong was detained by Malaysia’s Immigration officers and subsequently deported shortly after landing at the Penang International Airport today, sources confirmed.

    Richard Chin, a member of the committee in charge of organising a series of talks Wong was scheduled to speak at, confirmed that he was detained and sent back to Hong Kong, but did not disclose any additional information.

    “It’s true,” he said in a brief phone interview with Malay Mail Online, when asked if Wong was detained by immigration and sent home.

    Wong was the face of the “yellow umbrella” revolution in Hong Kong which occupied some of Hong Kong’s busiest streets for 79 days as a means of civil disobedience, calling for electoral reforms.

    At a press conference later this afternoon, Chin explained that Wong had arrived in Penang at 11.55pm but was stopped and told at the immigration counter that he would be deported.

    “The authorities only told him that the government gave orders for him to be deported back to Hong Kong,” Chin said during the media conference at the airport.

    Chin also played a recorded telephone conversation between him and Wong that purportedly transpired as the latter was being escorted to Dragon Air flight KA 634 that departed at 12.55pm.

    In the brief two-minute conversation, Wong can be heard saying that he was being escorted to the flight by several immigration officers.

    “They told me I have to go back, they are dragging me along,” Wong said in the phone call before pausing to yell “don’t use violence, I’m talking to my friend here.”

    “What can I do now? They are quite firm about getting me on the flight back,” he then added.

    Chin then advised him to do as the authorities said for his own safety and that they will keep in contact.

    Chin, who is a member of the organising committee of the forum titled “Uprising of Youth and New Social Activism in Singapore and Hong Kong”, said Wong, together with another youth activist Han Hui Hui, from Singapore were supposed to speak about peaceful activism at the forum here tonight.

    The forum will be held at 8pm at Auditorium A in Komtar today and will also be held in Ipoh tomorrow, in Johor Bahru on Thursday and in Kuala Lumpur on Friday.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com