Tag: Mohamed Fazli Talip

  • Former WP Member: Pritam Singh A Clown For Suggesting That MINDEF Also Charge For Parking

    Former WP Member: Pritam Singh A Clown For Suggesting That MINDEF Also Charge For Parking

    Another clown from the WP side. Made such comparison without thinking.

    By making NSMen to pay for parking space in camps is totally a bad idea. Firstly, most camps do have parking lots reserved for NSMen to park their vehicles during their call-ups. Do Mr Pritam Singh or WP do their call-ups before? Army camps are mostly situated away from any sights of residential or industrial areas. If many NSMen have to park their vehicles hundreds of metres away from the camps, they may jammed up the nearby parking spaces.

    Secondly, have he or WP made a comparison of the number of vehicle parked in camps and schools?
    In schools, the staffs that parked their vehicles are just a small fraction of estimated 20 vehicles. However in camps provided when thereare call-ups the number of vehicles parked could be more than 50 to 100 vehicles. MOST of the NSMen pooled their vehicles to reach to the camps.

    Now more and more clowns are talking points without having considerations to the People. Mr Pritam Singh and WP is now showing that they are just incapable in having “debates” for the People. Next GE, WP Aljunied may fall completely with such clowns voted in.

    Mohamed Fazli bin Talip

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • NSP CEC Member Mohamed Fazli Talip Resigns

    NSP CEC Member Mohamed Fazli Talip Resigns

    Ahead of the looming General Election, the National Solidarity Party (NSP) has been rocked by yet another resignation, this time of central executive committee (CEC) member Mohamed Fazli Talip.

    In a Facebook post on Monday (Aug 24), he said: “With a heavy heart, I have submitted my resignation from NSP with immediate effect. I wish the party all the best of luck in the coming (general election).”

    He told The Straits Times on Monday that he had tendered his resignation via e-mail on Sunday, and that the CEC had tried to convince him to stay on.

    “I wanted to spend more time concentrating on my career, and I was disappointed by some of the decisions that were made by the party,” he said, adding that he was saddened by the events of the past week that have impugned on the party’s credibility.

    Mr Fazli, 34, a branding consultant, was one of NSP’s 11 potential candidates at the upcoming polls,  widely expected to be held early next month.

    He contested the East Coast GRC in the 2011 polls on the Workers’ Party ticket.

    The NSP did two rounds of U-turns over the past week, first by announcing last Wednesday that it would enter into a three-cornered fight in MacPherson Single-Member Constituency (SMC) with the Worker’s Party and the ruling People’s Action Party.

    It prompted acting secretary-general Hazel Poa to quit the partylast Wednesday and pull out of the next polls.

    On Sunday morning, NSP council member Steve Chia, in another U-turn, said he would not be contesting MacPherson single-seat ward after all. He cited online criticism he had received over his role in the earlier decision.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

     

  • Mohamed Fazli Talip Introduced As Potential NSP Candidate

    Mohamed Fazli Talip Introduced As Potential NSP Candidate

    The National Solidarity Party (NSP) was back at its old stomping ground of Tampines on Saturday morning (Aug 15), led by its president Sebastian Teo and secretary general Hazel Poa.

    About 15 party members and volunteers turned up for the walkabout which started at 9am from Block 201D Tampines Street 21.

    Closely by the side of Mr Teo and Ms Poa as they greeted residents at the coffee shops and food market along the stretch and handed out pamphlets, were branding consultant Mohamed Fazli Talip, 33, and Cambridge-educated lawyer Lim Tean, 50. They were introduced as “potential candidates for the NSP”.

    While Ms Poa hinted that her party will be fielding its A-team for the coming election, as to who they are, she continued to keep her cards close to her chest.

    “We would prefer for the PAP to reveal its candidates for the constituencies that we are interested in first, before we announce our candidates. It’s always advantageous to know who you will be running against first before we decide on our final line-up,” she said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg