Tag: Lee Hsien Loong

  • Roy Ngerng: $29,000 Already Paid To Lee Hsien Loong’s Lawyers From Drew & Napier

    Roy Ngerng: $29,000 Already Paid To Lee Hsien Loong’s Lawyers From Drew & Napier

    Hello everyone,

    I just left Drew & Napier’s office a while ago.

    I got to their office at 5pm today and sat there for nearly 3 hours.

    The court had asked me to pay $29,000 to the lawyers of the Singapore prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, from Drew & Napier, for the summary judgment last year, for his lawyers’ costs.

    However, no one from Drew & Napier wanted to see me just now for nearly 3 hours. I sat at their waiting area for 3 hours while Drew & Napier would only speak to me via their receptionist. I even had to write down my queries on a piece of paper so that the receptionist could convey the message.

    When I made a call to an Angela Cheng from Drew & Napier, she hanged up my call halfway and did not want to speak to me.

    Later, I found out that the prime minister’s press secretary, Ms Chang Li Lin, once again issued a statement for him.

    She said that, “under the lawyers’ professional rules, a lawyer cannot, without the consent of the opposite party’s lawyer, deal directly with the opposite party”.

    So, Drew & Napier refused to accept my payment and Ms Chang went ahead to say that Drew & Napier can file an application in court “to compel payment and for costs”.

    “If that order is granted and payment is still not made, Mr Lee will avail himself of his legal remedies,” she also said.

    The prime minister wants to apply to the court to make me pay for most costs, if I don’t make the payment. But I was actually sitting in Drew & Napier’s office for 3 hours, waiting to make payment.

    I was initially unable to contact my lawyer earlier as he had a court case to attend to. Eventually, I managed to contact him and he was able to inform Drew & Napier to collect the payment of $29,000 from me.

    You can see the receipt below.

    Please note that this $29,000 is not what I have to pay to the prime minister in damages. This is only for his lawyers’ costs for the summary judgment.

    There will still be another hearing in June to determine how much I would have to pay the prime minister in damages. The prime minister has filed for the defamation suit in the high court, which oversees cases of more than $250,000, so this is the least that the prime minister wants me to pay to him.

    I am appalled that the prime minister’s press secretary has once again issued a statement on his behalf. The prime minister is not allowed to sue me in his position as a prime minister. As such, he is not allowed to use state resources, such as his press secretary, to release statements or act on his behalf.

    The payment to the prime minister’s lawyers has now been made. I will have to pay even more when the hearing on the damages is heard in June.

    On Wednesday, the CPF Advisory Panel released their recommendations. But I have explained yesterday that nothing has changed about the CPF. Singaporeans’ CPF will still be trapped inside and Singaporeans will still not be able to earn more in our CPF. The PAP businessmen will not help Singaporeans. The PAP businessmen will not protect Singaporeans.

    What happened today has caused much distress. But it’s settled. If you want your CPF to be returned to you, the only way you will get it back if you stand up and fight for it.

     

    Source: http://thehearttruths.com

     

  • Lee Hsien Loong Instructs The Revise Of Electoral Registers

    Lee Hsien Loong Instructs The Revise Of Electoral Registers

    Singapore’s voter rolls are being revised to ensure they are current.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has directed that the revision of the registers of electors be made and completed by April 30, according to Monday’s Government Gazette.

    This is the second time the voter rolls will be revised since the 2011 General Election.

    The Parliamentary Elections Act requires that the voter rolls be updated not more than three years after a general election. It also provides for the Prime Minister to call for revisions from time to time.

    But the last revision, which was done last year, had already fulfilled that requirement as the election was held on May 7 in 2011.

    When completed, it showed that there were 2,411,188 eligible voters as of March 31 last year.

    To qualify as an elector, a person has to be a Singapore citizen. He must also be 21 years old or older as of Feb 1 this year and also cannot be disqualified as an elector under any written law.

    In addition, the person must have a Singapore residential address registered with the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority as of Feb 1 this year.

    This is so that his name can be entered or retained in the register for a constituency.

    The Elections Department will give details later about public inspection of the revised electoral rolls.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Dear PM Can You Pass Me Your Minister?

    Dear PM Can You Pass Me Your Minister?

    I wonder which country in the world has a labour movement which writes to the head of Government to ask that he release an office-holder so that the man can vie for office in the…labour movement. But I guess it’s better than the parachuting of an unknown into a big office on someone’s say-so.

    It says much about the symbiotic relationship between the G (or is it the People’s Action Party?) and the NTUC, that no one has said anything about the above “poaching’’ process. One guess is that the concept is so in-grained or well accepted  that nobody talks about it anymore. The vision of the union and the G is aligned, and leaders move in and out. They even maintain offices on both sides of a (non-existent) fence!

    So Mr Chan Chun Sing is the man of the moment. The PM has said okay and Mr Chan has to win the votes of delegates in October to get the top job of secretary-general. We all know that the head of the NTUC has to be politically acceptable. As well as the ability to win the hearts and minds of workers. So both have to go together.

    There is a precedent in the form of Mr Lim Chee Onn, once the flavor of the month and among the front-runners for the premiership. Although he got the top job with the blessings of the political leadership, he was removed as the secretary-general because his leadership style rankled on the rank-and-file. I’m basing this on memory because I’m having a hard time researching the background. I’m not sure if he was removed at a conference or simply told to step aside in favour of someone more palatable, in this case, the late president Ong Teng Cheong.

    I am among those who were surprised at the choice of the NTUC central committee. MSM reports that even unionists were surprised. In fact, I am more surprised that there has been no successor groomed for Mr Lim Swee Say’s job after all these years. Nobody knew that Mr Lim was going to turn 62 soon and has to retire? Its current crop of deputy/assistant sec-gens not good enough?

    As for the choice of Mr Chan, the surprise is that a career civil servant whose only experience has been in one “unique” sector, the military, should have been the choice of the key union leaders. Perhaps, it is because he heads the Ministry of Social and Family Development, which deals with bread-and-butter issues of the less privileged that makes top union leaders think he is a good choice? It cannot only be because he drinks coffee with taxi-drivers; he’s an advisor to the taxi drivers’ unions. Or because he can adopt as folksy a manner as Mr Lim?

    All I can say is that we seem to have an amazing paucity of talent, so much so that established institutions here have to raid each other, like companies poaching in the private sector. Or is there a bigger, long-term objective in sight, such as Mr Chan is being tested for an even bigger job. Much as Mr Lim Chee Onn was. Getting the endorsement of the labour movement, which has nearly one million members, is a big deal. Given that Mr Chan is a first-term MP, you might call this “hot housing’’.

    Okay, I am rambling. Sorry.

    Anyway, I have always liked Mr Lim Swee Say, since the days he was an officer in the Economic Development Board. Power and position hasn’t changed him one bit. I liked him even more in the past few years for what he was doing for the labour movement. For too long, I’ve always thought the NTUC was placing too much focus on the “social’’ aspects of its mission, such as setting up its “finest’’ supermarkets and pre-skools which it can’t spel, instead of the “organising’’ aspects of a trade union. It should be looking at wages, recruitment and workplace practices. I blame the union for not detecting the long stagnation of wages at the lowest levels.

    But I can see more “organizing’’ work done in recent time. It has managed to pry open the two integrated resorts and unionized their workers. It has tried to rectify the low wages of some sectors by combining a wage floor with a productivity ladder. It has pushed for $50 salary raises within the National Wages Council. And it has finally managed to get PMEs under the labour movement’s umbrella. I still think it needs to do a better job of selling the “re-hiring’’ of older workers to the people. That is not about working till you drop dead, but about being able to work beyond a certain age if you want to.

    It has also always been a source of wonder to me that the NTUC does not have its own labour experts in a strategic policy unit who can crunch the numbers on wages and employment. The labour movement should be leading the charge, rather than depend on the statistics and pronouncements of the Manpower ministry.

    If Mr Chan does get the vote in October, I hope that he will carry on the organizing aspects of the movement. After all, he has headed a big organization like the military and is now the PAP organizing secretary. Perhaps, under his charge, the NTUC will be the first thing that comes to the minds of workers who feel they have been short-changed in some way. And that it is not just a place to buy groceries.

    It remains for me to wish Mr Lim and Mr Chan all the best!

     

    Source: https://berthahenson.wordpress.com

  • Lee Hsien Loong Invited To Pink Dot Annual Gay Rights Rally

    Lee Hsien Loong Invited To Pink Dot Annual Gay Rights Rally

    Singapore’s Prime Minister was left fumbling for answers Saturday after agreeing to a live Facebook chat with increasingly strident citizens turning to the Internet to voice dissent in the tightly-controlled city-state.

    Lee Hsien Loong opened the conversation on his personal Facebook page from the social network’s Singapore offices and was inundated with nearly 1,500 comments during a hectic 45-minute session.

    The premier managed to post just 27 replies as foreigners and locals alike lobbed questions ranging from the trivial (“Do you like cats?”) to demands for better protection of gay rights and single mothers.

    Lee provided brief replies to verbose complaints about spiralling healthcare costs, public transport and public housing, but avoided straying into more controversial waters.

    “It’s been a lot of fun this last 45 minutes, reading your questions, answering them, typing furiously and keeping up with the flow,” Lee said in a video post after the chat ended.

    “I am sorry I couldn’t answer all of the questions you have asked,” he added.

    Perhaps predictably Lee failed to respond to a personal invitation to the city-state’s annual “Pink Dot” gay rights rally.

    “My invitation still stands. Send me a PM (personal message),” Facebook user Lim Jialiang wrote to the premier.

    Singapore’s penal code criminalises sex between men, a law first introduced by British colonial administrators in 1938.

    Some small business owners used the session to bemoan the government’s move to cut its reliance on foreign workers, stemming from citizens’ complaints about overcrowding and a tighter job market in a city where 29 percent of “non-residents” — those working, studying or living in the country — are from abroad.

    “Many small-medium enterprises have experienced the same problem as you,” wrote Lee to one Singaporean who said he was finding it difficult to hire locals for “entry-level jobs”.

    “We have tightened on foreign workers, but we have not shut them off,” Lee added.

    Lee, who has nearly 470,000 followers on Facebook, has stepped up his social media engagement in recent years. The Singaporean leader is also active on Twitter and photo-sharing network Instagram.

    Social media has emerged as a key political battleground as the tiny island republic of 5.5 million people transitions from strict political control to a more open democracy.

    Singapore is known for its tough stance on crime and retains the death penalty as punishment for serious offences, as well as caning for crimes such as spraying graffiti.

    With the local mainstream media still widely seen as pro-government, blogs, forums and Facebook have become a magnet for anti-government sentiment.

    Lee’s People’s Action Party, in power since 1959, suffered its worst ever electoral performance in May 2011, garnering an all-time low of 60 percent of the popular vote after the opposition and its supporters relied heavily on social media for campaigning.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • 8 Questions Singaporeans Secretly Want To Ask Lee Hsien Loong

    8 Questions Singaporeans Secretly Want To Ask Lee Hsien Loong

    Who says constructive politics can’t be light-hearted?

    So PM Lee just announced on Instagram (Wow, so hipster) that he will be hosting a live Question and Answer (Q&A) session on Facebook (Wow, hipster count number two).

    The highly anticipated session will be held this Saturday on 24 January, from 11.45am to 12.30pm. (Working on a Saturday? It’s either PM Lee doesn’t observe work-life balance very much or elections are coming.)

    We bring you the top eight questions you know you want to ask PM Lee, but won’t get answered.

    lhl session

    1. On Taylor Swift

     Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 1.01.34 pmSource

    He probably receives a lot of flak as PM because there’s always going to be that faceless keyboard warrior waiting to gun him down each time. Maybe his personal music choice will tell us how he deals with such people.

    If he says Taylor Swift…

    shake it off

    …we know he doesn’t care about his haters.

    If he votes Meghan Trainor…

    all about the bass

    Then you’ll know for sure it’s election year. (cause everything’s perfect.)

    troll face

    2. On the potential alcohol ban

    Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 1.09.17 pm

    The latest to come out from Parliament is that a potential Bill will ban public consumption of alcohol from 10.30pm to 7am. Zouk clubbers are up in arms, while residents of problematic places couldn’t welcome this Bill any better.

    There was already uproar when the Ministry of Health (MOH) announced the ban on shisha in November last year. Now, the limit on alcohol? What’s next, ban on smoking? Oh wait, plans are already in place.

    3. On public transport fares

     Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 1.12.13 pm

    “Why are fares so quick to increase yet so slow to respond to falling oil prices?”

    fishy

    4. On clubbing with the PAP

    “Did you enjoy clubbing with Lim Swee Say and Indranee Rajah?”

    PM Lee went to Zouk (yes, the club Zouk) to celebrate PAP’s 50th anniversary in 2004. Look, we even have photographic evidence!

    pm lee zouk
    pm lee zouk 2

    5. On his salary

    “Will you take further pay cuts?”

    Even after PM Lee took a 36% pay cut after the 2011 General Elections, he still remains the world’s best paid politician. Obama earns only $400,000 a year, a paltry amount when compared to PM Lee’s $2.2 million.

    pm lee hahaha

     

    6. On how he views himself
    pm lee cute

    Watch your back, Ho Ching.

    7. On life

    Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 4.21.28 pm

    If the last question had been asked a few months ago, back when HDB was still trying to rush out its BTO flats, PM Lee might actually have seriously considered it.

    Instead of merging schools or by *cough* burning, PM Lee should turn schools into “purpose-built dormitories” for our foreign workers.

    8. On delicious chicken wings

    “Were the chicken wings at Redhill good?”

    Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 6.02.07 pm

    If this question gets answered, we can expect a Xin Jinping to happen. The Chinese president visited a steamed bun restaurant and paid his own way, to the shock of many patrons. After this unexpected publicity stunt, crowds in excess of 400 visited the same bun stall.

    chicken wings

    We love PM Lee

    Some haters argue that he could have and should have done more, whilst others are just madly in love with him and his dapper suits. 

    Screen Shot 2015-01-20 at 2.47.47 pm

    Source: http://mustsharenews.com