Tag: immigration

  • Tan Cheng Bok: PAP Will Lose Elections Because Of Foreigner Issue

    Tan Cheng Bok: PAP Will Lose Elections Because Of Foreigner Issue

    The PAP Government may be trying hard to fix problems caused by the large inflow of foreigners, but it has got itself in a tight bind, said 73 year-old former presidential candidate Tan Cheng Bock.

    Its difficulties could help the opposition Workers’ Party in the next general election, he said.

    The former PAP MP for Ayer Rajah spoke on the future of both political parties in an hour-long interview with the media at his home.

    Since the watershed 2011 General Election, the Government, especially its younger ministers, has been “trying very hard” to resolve issues – like immigration – that contributed to its loss of votes, he said.

    In 1999, when he was still an MP, he had called on the Government to tone down its talk on attracting foreigners, earning rebukes from ministers, including then Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

    “Now, (the Government) has a quota system for foreigners in HDB,” noted Dr Tan.

    But they have got themselves into “a very tight situation” by letting in too many foreigners.

    “The original lax policy has created a lot of problems. If you suddenly pull the brakes too hard…you titrate wrongly, you have a big, big problem, because the companies will suffer,” he said, adding that the Government may now be “overdoing it” in tightening labour flows, as businesses are facing a manpower crunch.

    This means there is “a very likely chance” the WP could win more seats at the next election, given that some wards in the last election were won narrowly by the PAP.

    “I think it’s good because the WP can make the Government work harder, and also I think debate on issues will be much better,” he said.

    Asked what he thought of PAP’s criticism that WP often sits on the fence or does not voice out its position on several issues, Dr Tan said: “They don’t have to put forth an alternative every time an issue comes up. You can always wait. Timing is very important in politics… So they will know when to push their agenda.

    “I think the PAP is the same, because (when rolling out) some of their policies they will wait.”

    With next year marking 50 years of independence, “if I were the Government, I would capitalise on it”.

    One thing working for the party now is its renewed vigour in fighting for votes, he noted.

    But despite efforts to communicate more with citizens, “I don’t think they have really nailed it yet…there is still a lack of trust” in the Government and its leaders, he said.

    They have also yet to solve the “divide” in the party, where grassroots activists can feel snubbed after “they work like hell but they don’t get to be MP” when the leadership parachutes elite “prefectorial, army, navy types” who are not in touch with the ground.

    One exception is Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, whom he praised as “down to earth”.

    “Tharman is the type of person we should look for, and if we can get many people like him, I think the PAP will win (future elections) hands down,” he declared.

    “I think Tharman is a very practical chap, he knows how to move the ground…he’s got the charisma to convince me that I want to go along with him,” he said.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Influx Of Foreigners ‘The Mother Of All Issues’

    Influx Of Foreigners ‘The Mother Of All Issues’

    Immigration is likely to be a hot button issue in the general election campaign, some political observers said yesterday, after news broke that Nomination Day will be Sept 1 and Polling Day, Sept 11.

    Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan said the influx of foreigners into Singapore is the “mother of all issues”.

    “That’s because people point to immigration as the cause of things such as high cost of living, high cost of transport, high property prices,” he said, adding that while property prices have stabilised, “they are at a high”.

    Political analyst Derek da Cunha echoed this. “The Population White Paper of 2013 has really brought this issue to the fore. The different aspects over the changing nature of Singapore society due to the vast numbers of foreigners in Singapore, and the many more expected to emigrate here, will likely focus the minds of quite a number of voters,” he said.

    Gillian Koh, senior research fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies, also said that it is “inevitable” that opposition parties will bring up the issue of immigration, and that it is not unanticipated.

    But she added that Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has taken pains to address immigration concerns and introduced a slew of measures to curtail the influx of foreigners. These include the cutting of foreign worker quotas for the services and marine sectors.

    Associate Professor Tan, a former Nominated Member of Parliament, said the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) is likely to stress qualities like competence and integrity in the light of the Workers’ Party’s (WP’s) management of the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC).

    In February, the Auditor General’s Office identified lapses in AHPETC’s accounting and governance practices, and found its accounts unreliable.

    Analysts said that the PAP may be riding on a “feel-good” factor by calling the GE now, following several milestones such as the country’s recent 50th birthday and the national mourning of the passing of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew on March 23.

    Dr Koh said: “The timing shows that they would like to take advantage of the celebrations, the reminiscing of the passing of Mr Lee Kuan Yew and perhaps, a flight to safety, with the global economy in stormy weather.”

    The analysts said that while they had expected the election to be called soon, they were not expecting it to be held on a Friday as it has traditionally been held on Saturdays.

    Alan Chong of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies speculated that Sept 11 could serve as a good international backdrop. This is because most of the First World will be remembering the tragic events of the terrorist attacks in the United States.

    Prof Chong said that it would provide a backdrop for the ruling party to remind the electorate of global danger, and to vote wisely.

    An estimated 2,460,977 Singaporeans will vote in the Sept 11 polls for 89 MPs in 16 group representation constituencies and 13 single-member constituencies.

    In 2011, the PAP won 81 of the 87 seats. Its share of the national vote was 60.1 per cent, down from the 66.6 per cent at the 2006 General Election.

    Former Nominated MP Siew Kum Hong said he believes the PAP will, at best, garner “in the mid-sixties” of the votes.

    Veteran opposition observer Wong Wee Nam believes that the ruling party will also rely more on door-to-door campaigning instead of mass rallies, where it may not draw a sizeable number of supporters.

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • ICA Arrests 29 For Immgration Offences In Islandwide Operation

    ICA Arrests 29 For Immgration Offences In Islandwide Operation

    Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) officers arrested 29 people on Tuesday for immigration offences.

    Twenty-six offenders were overstayers from China or India, aged between 26 and 62 years old.

    One of the remaining three arrested was a work permit holder who was caught possessing duty unpaid cigarettes. The remaining two were arrested under suspicion of harbouring illegal immigrants or overstayers. Investigations are ongoing for those arrested.

    If charged, the overstayers can face a jail term of up to six months and a minimum of three strokes of the cane.

    Those found guilty of harbouring overstayers or illegal immigrants intentionally or recklessly may be sentenced to a jail term of between six months and two years. They will also face a fine up to $6,000.

    If found to have unknowingly or negligently harbouring offenders, the homeowner will face a fine of up to S$6,000 or a maximum of a 12 year long prison sentence, or both.

    The ICA arrested a total of 2,040 immigration offenders in 2014, a 19 per cent decrease from 2013. Out of those arrested, 1,690 were overstayers. The remaining 350 were illegal immigrants.

    In 2014, the ICA also arrested 319 harbourers and employers of immigration offenders. The same year, they detected a total of 93,380 cases of contraband smuggling.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 50 Singaporeans Were Denied Entry into Batam Every Week For Talking or Using Handphones

    50 Singaporeans Were Denied Entry into Batam Every Week For Talking or Using Handphones

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    Several Singaporeans found themselves turned back from Batam immigration yesterday after possibly flouting new rules.

    Miss Ann Fernandez and two friends were among a group of eight who were turned back from the Batam Centre Ferry Terminal after taking the 9.40am ferry there.

    The 33-year-old tutor said they were waiting to clear Indonesian immigration when an officer made them, along with another woman, stand in a separate line. Their travel documents were also taken away, she said.

    The women said a senior immigration officer made an announcement to the entire hall and gestured at a sign which portrayed a finger on the lips.

    “It wasn’t until much later that another officer came out of a room and asked us to follow him,” she said. “He also handed our passports to a worker from the ferry service operator.”

    They were taken to the departure point, where there were another four Singaporeans who had apparently been picked out earlier for either talking or using their mobile phones.

    Miss Fernandez said immigration officers could have at least told the group what they had done wrong. They found out more details only after they returned to Singapore.

    A previous report in Chinese evening daily, Shin Min Daily News, quoted ferry operator Wave Master Holidays Club saying that about 50 Singaporeans are turned back every week.

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com/news/singapore/new-batam-immigration-rules-faze-some-singaporeans

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