Tag: Potong Pasir

  • On The Campaign Trail With Lina Chiam

    On The Campaign Trail With Lina Chiam

    She may not want to call it her last hurrah, but there is real sense of finality in the way Singapore People’s Party (SPP) chairman Lina Chiam talks about the Sept 11 polls.

    She uses the term “last chance” when speaking about why she is returning to Potong Pasir again and talks about how she and her husband, veteran opposition leader Chiam See Tong, can be satisfied with the effort they have put in for the constituency.

    “I’ve done all I can. If I’m not elected, I’m satisfied. If it happens like that, the most important thing is that, Mr and Mrs Chiam believe that a good name is more precious than silver and gold,” she said.

    Mr Chiam had been MP for Potong Pasir for 27 years before the 2011 polls, when he left to helm a team in the adjoining Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC. He then chose Mrs Chiam to try carry the mantle in his stronghold.

    Both he and Mrs Chiam lost, with Potong Pasir ending up as the tightest race in the election. But the razor-thin 114-vote margin in Potong Pasir was enough to get Mrs Chiam into Parliament as a Non-Constituency MP.

    Despite a shaky start – Mrs Chiam’s uncertain performances while speaking in public used to come in for ridicule – she believes the past four years have steeled her for the contest this time around.

    Indeed, the 66-year-old has clearly grown into her skin as a politician in the past four years. On walkabouts, she now often walks ahead of her team, knocking on doors and introducing herself instead of letting a volunteer break the ice.

    She is also now more comfortable engaging in a little banter with residents, whether it is complimenting a man for his “dandy” hat in a coffeeshop or politely ending a conversation with a supportive but intoxicated man.

    Some of the improvement is simply down to practice, she says, and some is because she took in the criticism and tried to improve herself.

    “I knew that the feedback was not good at all, I knew it already. And I can feel it myself. I don’t have a lot of confidence in a debate, and I know it,” she says.

    Mrs Chiam went as far as to get a degree in communications to help her perform better in Parliament.

    In 2012, at age 63, she started spending all her Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays studying part-time for a Bachelor of Arts in Communications and Media Management from the University of South Australia.

    Prior to that, her only other professional qualification is a nursing certificate from the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital in London.

    “I want to improve myself and learn the nitty gritty of how to write, how to structure proper sentences in English. It helped a lot. And I also thought media management is very suitable for being a Member of Parliament.”

    Perhaps because of the effort she put into trying to be a better parliamentarian, she and Mr Chiam did not have to think twice about whether she should stand again this election.

    “He wants it very badly for me,” she said. “He feels that I’m competent: He’s seen my speeches in Parliament and he feels that I know the people here.”

    Mrs Chiam rejects the idea that her political brand is still too heavily reliant on her famous husband – who received a rousing applause when he spoke at the SPP rally on Friday night – even if she often introduces herself as Mr Chiam’s wife.

    They have an only child, Camilla, 39, who works as head of communications at a property development companage.

    “I respect my husband. He was MP for 27 years, so I have to somehow or other mention his name, but having said that I am my own person,” she says.

    “We are like two-in-one, we understand each other. We always plan our strategies together, even when he won the six elections.”

    She says though she stayed largely behind the scenes while he was MP, she was active and often went out to meet people and gave him feedback from residents. And she said he has not tried to interfere with her NCMP work.

    She adds: “And being a woman, I think I have a different style. Women can be more ‘kaypoh’ and we pay a lot of attention to detail.”

    And now that she is in charge of the day-to-day running of the SPP, she also says she is taking a different approach to how the party conducts its business.

    In a departure from previous outings, various SPP candidates are running almost independently and releasing their own manifestos for their battlegrounds.

    On her own chances against PAP’s Sitoh Yih Pin in Potong Pasir, she appears cautiously optimistic, hopeful that younger voters might shift in her favour.

    “When I lost, a lot of young people came to me and said wait for me Mrs Chiam, I’m only 18, in four years I can vote. Whether they still vote for me or not, we’ll have to see.”

    No matter how the party does at the polls, she recognises there are some difficult questions about the party’s future.

    At the moment, there is no clear successor. Mrs Chiam stresses she is thinking about renewal but isn’t going to name successors just yet.

    “I’m still looking, searching and testing people. I won’t anoint a successor and then their head is all swollen up,” she said, likely a reference to the string of successors her husband chose that eventually ended up falling out with him.

    They included Singapore Democratic Party chief Chee Soon Juan, whose falling out with Mr Chiam ended in the latter leaving the party he founded; and Singapore Democratic Alliance chief Desmond Lim. That tiff ended with the SPP being yanked out of the opposition alliance.

    Though neither she nor Mr Chiam want to talk about retirement now, she says: “Wait till after the election, when the results have come out. When everything is settled, I may be able to give you the answer.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Potong Pasir – The Last Remaining Sign of Chiam See Tong

    Potong Pasir – The Last Remaining Sign of Chiam See Tong

    On Oct 1, something important is going to be removed in Potong Pasir.

    It is a covered walkway, built in 2008, leading from Potong Pasir MRT station to Block 147 at Potong Pasir Avenue 1. It has to go because a mall and a condominium would be coming up, so residents were told. This might not seem like a big deal – except this is one particular walkway which had been talked about and argued over, even in Parliament and during elections. And is probably one of the last remaining sign of Mr Chiam See Tong’s 27 years stewardship of Potong Pasir.

    The walkway built by Mr Chaim See Tong at Potong Pasir. The walkway remains but sign board with Mr Chiam's face has been removed.
    The MRT walkway built by Mr Chiam See Tong at Potong Pasir. Picture taken in August 2015.

     

    The area where once stood the sign with Mr Chiam's face.
    The sign by Mr Chiam’s Potong Pasir Town Council about when the MRT walkway was opened has been removed. Picture taken in August 2015.

    Today, the PAP announced its candidate for Potong Pasir. Mr Sitoh Yih Pin, 51, will be defending his seat after narrowly scooping it up from Mrs Lina Chiam in 2011. Mrs Chiam is of course, the wife of Mr Chiam See Tong, who has been synonymous with Potong Pasir since he became an MP in 1984. Mr Sitoh told reporters this morning that the past four years has not been about removing Mr Chiam’s legacy, but whether intentional or not, that is what it has felt like to the residents here who, like me, have come to love the neighbourhood as it was under Mr Chiam’s charge.

    When Mrs Chiam lost the Potong Pasir seat by a mere 114 votes, there were plenty of tears not just for the Chiams’ Singapore People’s Party but for what it meant for the ward’s identity. In the months following that May day, my tiny town was invaded by camera-toting Singaporeans, from as far away as Woodlands and Tampines, who wanted to see for themselves the housing estate that had withstood 27 years of wooing by the People’s Action Party.

    Was it really a slum?  Did Mr Chiam really conduct his Meet-The-People Sessions (MPS) in an open-air void deck?  Did residents really suffer from a lack of amenities in the estate?

    My constituency, where I have lived for 20 years, became a curiosity. Visitors would get off the train at Potong Pasir MRT station, and recall that it was supposed to be named Sennett, and was rumoured to stay closed even when the Northeast Line began operation in 2003.

    They would walk along that walkway to Block 147 and recall how politicised this walkway became during the 2006 elections, a story involving a concrete path sheltered by trees, to having solar powered lights that was left abandoned, and that eventually became that sheltered walkway.

    They would have their photograph taken in front of the ‘Welcome to Potong Pasir’ signboard, which had a a smiling Mr Chiam, before it got taken down.  They would then head to Block 108, where Mr Chiam had his MPS with the residents, and marvel at the table and chairs.

    Potong Pasir, 8 June 2011
    ‘Welcome to Potong Pasir Constituency’ Signboard. Picture taken in June 2011.

    Next stop would be the coffeeshop at Block 136, which Mr Chiam makes a point of visiting after each election victory. Then visitors will walk by the river in the estate, experiencing the quiet charm of a slower paced Singapore.

    This was a constituency without an NTUC Fairprice supermarket (it used to be at Block 136, but it was closed after the elections in 1984), nor a bank (POSBank used to be at Block 146, but it was closed after the elections in 1988). There was not even a Post Office (there was Promax Stationery, a Postal Agent, at block 148, which performed some postal services, but it closed in the 2000s). Potong Pasir’s lifts did not stop on every floor then.

    It lacked amenities, yes, and this lack contributed to the laid-back, kampung feel of Potong Pasir. Without an NTUC, you would have to patronise the estate’s wet market at Block 148, or the neighbourhood dry-goods uncle’s shop at Block 137, or the 24-hour neighbourhood supermarket at Block 136.  The shopkeepers and stall holders will always have time to banter with you.

    New stage area built between Blk 136 and 140 at Potong Pasir.
    New stage area built between Blk 136 and 140 at Potong Pasir. Picture taken in August 2015.

     

    walkway at Potong Pasir
    The iconic walkway with a pavilion in the centre that was completed in July 2000. It has been demolished in the recent upgrading. Picture taken on 4 Jan 2013, by Matthew Ang.

    Residents find it painful to use the stairs because lifts do not stop at every floor, yes, but this meant that they had more time to chat with each other while waiting at lift landings. Helping an elderly aunty lugging her grocery up the stairs became the norm.

    While there wasn’t a Post Office or a bank, there was the facility-filled, ever-bustling Toa Payoh Hub, a short bus ride away on the only bus service in Potong Pasir (there was another bus service serving the estate, but it was rerouted after the elections in 1991).  And when Serangoon Nex opened its doors in 2010, it was an even shorter train ride away.

    One Potong Pasir quirk was the signs by the Town Council showing when amenities and improvements were installed. They were everywhere: in playgrounds, parks, and even on trees planted by Mr Chiam.

    Tree planting sign board at Potong Pasir.
    Tree planting sign board, during Mr Chiam’s stewardship at Potong Pasir. Picture taken in May 2011.

    Almost all have been replaced or removed because of the intense upgrading programme Mr Sitoh Yih Pin, the PAP MP, has embarked upon since 2011. Potong Pasir is being made over. You see it – the “keep out” hoardings. You hear it – the pounding of construction equipment.

    Since 2011, an NTUC Fairprice supermarket, a Post Office, a bank, and even a gym has come up.  We have lifts that stop on all floors save for eight blocks in the estate.  We have more sheltered walkways being constructed, and a beautiful riverside park newly opened for residents.  A new street soccer court has been built beside Block 109, as there are plans to reuse the space of the street soccer court built by Mr Chiam. We also have more family service centres at void decks serving the residents.

    The new futsal court in Potong Pasir.
    The new futsal court in Potong Pasir that was built by Mr Sitoh Yih Pin. Picture taken in August 2015.

     

    The old futsal court in Potong Pasir that was built by Mr Chiam
    The old futsal court in Potong Pasir that was built by Mr Chiam See Tong. Picture taken in August 2015.

    Progress comes at a price. A few of our old-time shops have closed down, and I don’t know where uncle has gone. The supermarket and the bank bring more non-residents into our estate.  Our coffeeshops are now so crowded and I have to ‘ta-bao’ my family dinner instead of having my family eat there. It is now more difficult to linger and catch up with people in the estate you know.

    I dread the upcoming mall and condominium.  I have an inkling that it would be like going to Nex at Serangoon. You find yourself swept in a shifting sea of people, able to only wave a ‘Hi!’ to a familiar face before being pressed on. My in-laws already complain about the lack of parking spaces in their carpark that is just next to the NTUC supermarket.

    Sometimes, I wonder if all this infrastructural ‘upgrading’ is just to show activity and money spent. If something is upgraded or new, does it follow that it must be good? All the busy-ness is hurting the connections that residents have built up over time. Soon, the new, shiny Potong Pasir will be just like any other PAP ward with no sign left of Mr Chiam’s struggles to maintain the estate for 27 years – and the residents’ efforts to be self-reliant.

    I intend to snap several pictures of the walkway to keep the memories of this undaunted little place alive.

     

    Source: http://themiddleground.sg

  • Lina Chiam: SPP Will Stand In Potong Pasir No Matter

    Lina Chiam: SPP Will Stand In Potong Pasir No Matter

    In a media interview today (28 July), NCMP Lina Chiam said that she will continue to contest in Potong Pasir SMC and that her party “will not budge” even if there’s a 3-cornered fight in Potong Pasir.

    “The SPP will not budge and I’ll still be standing in Potong Pasir even if it’s a three-cornered fight. Because I promised the people of Potong Pasir that I’ll return and I shall return,” Mrs Chiam said.

    “I’ll be continuing to do what is needed for the residents of Potong Pasir regarding feedback, whatever improvements that they want to that still needed to be done. I’ll be continuing to do the work that was left by Mr Chiam.”

    Mrs Chiam lost to PAP MP Sitoh Yih Pin by just 114 votes in GE 2011.

    Financial counsellor Leong Sze Hian told TRE that Mrs Chiam has been attending to residents every week even though she isn’t their elected MP. Mr Leong himself is helping Mrs Chiam in Potong Pasir by giving free financial counselling to the residents.

    “I’ve been helping Mrs Chiam for a few years already. She herself has also made it a point to meet the residents every week even though she is not their MP,” Mr Leong told TRE earlier in response to NTUC Chief Chan Chun Sing’s recent remarks about opposition politicians may be contesting in elections not for the residents but only for winning elections (‘Chan to oppo parties: Your heart must be pure‘).

    “In fact, we see residents from all over Singapore. We don’t turn them away just because they are not from Potong Pasir,” Mr Leong added.

    DPP Pwee ‘optimistic’ about Potong Pasir

    The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) has earlier indicated that they also want to contest in Potong Pasir. In fact, DPP’s secretary-general, Mr Benjamin Pwee, is optimistic regardless of how many people will be contesting.

    “If we have one very strong opposition candidate that can stand up against the PAP, it will ultimately be a two-man fight and not a three-cornered fight. But definitely we feel that it would be wonderful to have a very strong alternative candidate that can stand in Potong Pasir against Sitoh Yih Pin and win Potong Pasir back from the PAP,” said Mr Pwee.

    However, quite a number of netizens are not enthusiastic to see a three-cornered fight in Potong Pasir (‘DPP slammed for provoking multi-cornered fights‘). Many are quick to condemn the actions of DPP with one saying on TRE:

    “Guaranteed to lose terok terok if you enter into a 3-cornered fight. Don’t tiew nian ok.”

    Another said:

    “Fly-by-night parties that ‘wake’ up during GEs gunning for multi-cornered fights better understand their own strength before they jump. Opposition supporters will vote for only credible and viable candidates, not the more vocal or those with dubious track record.”

    Yet another wrote a heartfelt open letter to Mr Pwee (‘A heartfelt open letter to DPP’s Benjamin Pwee‘):

    Dear Mr Pwee :

    I will be nice to you.

    The task at hand is to free Singapore from the curse of the great white sharks, or at least put up an effective check on their excesses. I do not know what your objectives are, but surely I do think that they are noble and that you have very good alternative plans for the people, and that you would be an effective voice in Parliament if you and your colleagues get voted in.

    However, please be realistic at this moment in time. We are at a very crucial point in history – make or break. The stake is monumental : the taking back of Singapore from the sharks and returning it to Singaporeans.

    It is not about catching rats, or building a walkway, or fighting dengue or making buses more reliable and less crowded (which not even the WP has the ability yet). Not the local neighbourhood issues. It is not about which party can serve which HDB blocks better. WE are all past there.

    We are now tackling gigantic national issues which have plagued Singaporeans at all levels –

    • the non-stop intake of immigrants
    • the ever squeezing of transportation
    • diminishing apartment sizes (corridors shrunk to < 1.2m)
    • the fixation on extracting more and more money from the people
    • turning our PMETs into taxi drivers and security guards
    • refusal to let us claim our CPF at 55
    • Etc

    Only by going 1-to-1 against the PAP do we have any hope of increasing Opposition seats in Parliament. Please work out a plan with the other parties, in a coordinated attack plan.

    Despite an absence from the electoral scene for some 14 years, this is not the first time the DPP has entered into multi-cornered fights. In 1997, a 4-cornered fight in Chua Chu Kang SMC saw DPP’s Tan Soo Phuan lose his deposit with a mere 1.9% of the valid votes. This set a new record for the lowest share of popular votes until 2013 when SDA had less than 1% of the votes.

    Will 2015 prove to be déjà vu for DPP?

    More promises of facilities for Potong Pasir from PAP MP Sitoh if elected

    Meanwhile, PAP MP Sitoh Yih Pin said more facilities are in the pipeline if he is re-elected in Potong Pasir.

    “Our responsibility and focus and our attention must be to the residents and the voters there. While we have done a lot in the last four-and-a-half years, both in terms of hardware and software, a lot more needs to be done in the next five years,” said Mr Sitoh.

    “So when the election comes, I hope our voters can give me another opportunity to complete the journey we have started.”

    In 2006 before the GE that year, Mr Sitoh was gunning for Potong Pasir. At the time, Mr Chiam was the incumbent MP and he was trying to unseat Mr Chiam then.

    He also promised a lot of things as reported by ST on 5 Feb 2006 [Link]:

    PAP’s Sitoh has 10-year facelift plan for Potong Pasir

    THE People’s Action Party (PAP) man in Potong Pasir, Mr Sitoh Yih Pin, provided clear indications that he will contest the next election there when he spoke yesterday of his 10-year plan for the opposition-held ward.

    WOULD YOU LIKE MORE?

    Speaking before he helped serve abalone porridge to some 4,000 residents attending a Chinese New Year celebration he hosts annually, he said that he wants to see the constituency transformed. Through what he termed his ‘five-plus-five-year’ plan – till 2011 and 2016 – he hopes to have lifts upgraded and stopping on every floor as this will benefit the ageing population in HDB estates there.

    And the Kallang River, which runs through the ward, will be given a facelift so canoeists and watersports enthusiasts can use it, while joggers and others can have activities along its banks.

    Fuller details will be made known over the next two months, he said.

    Mr Sitoh, who is adviser to grassroots organisations in the constituency, contested the 2001 election but lost to long-serving Potong Pasir MP Chiam See Tong of the Singapore Democratic Alliance by just 751 votes.

    He has remained active there since, meeting residents and organising activities, including offering shark’s fin soup for $1 during National Day celebrations, free haircuts for senior citizens and organising $88 one-night trips to Port Dickson in Malaysia.

    Although there have been rumours recently that these would be suspended if Mr Sitoh loses to Mr Chiam again, the 42-year-old accountant said that such talk was unfounded.

    ‘The ice-cream auntie told me people think that maybe next year, there won’t be abalone porridge any more,’ Mr Sitoh told residents, speaking in both English and Mandarin.

    ‘But that’s not true. We will continue to do these as long as you support us and our programmes.’

    Since winning Potong Pasir in 2011, it’s not known if he still continues to dish out abalone porridge to the residents there.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Crane Toppled At Construction Site Near Potong Pasir MRT

    Crane Toppled At Construction Site Near Potong Pasir MRT

    The accident happened at the worksite of the upcoming Sant Ritz condominium in Potong Pasir. No one was injured, says SCDF.

    A large crane toppled at a construction site along Tai Thong Crescent on Tuesday afternoon (Feb 24) and ended up in the front porch of a house opposite.

    The accident happened at the worksite of the upcoming Sant Ritz Condominium near Potong Pasir MRT station.

    Construction workers told Channel NewsAsia the crane went down at about 4.30pm and the boom of the crane hit the gate of a semi-detached house opposite. It was seen lying across the road, when Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) arrived.

    No one was in the crane at the time of the accident, workers said. SCDF said no one was injured.

    A resident from a neighbouring semi-detached unit who identified herself as Ms Huang said: “I was on the phone when I heard a very loud sound – like glass shattered. I came out and I saw the crane toppled next door.”

    Toppled Crane 3 Toppled Crane 1 Toppled Crane 2

    Ms Huang, who is in her 80s, added that no one has been living in that house for a while, but said the owners had visited it recently.

    Two police cars were present when Channel NewsAsia visited the scene at about 6pm. Police said investigations are ongoing.

    A representative from Santarli Construction which is in charge of the Sant Ritz development said an architect has issued a directive for a safety officer to investigate the incident.

    The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) said Santarli Construction has been instructed to stop work at the site.

    “SCDF informed the Ministry of Manpower on Feb 24 about an accident that took place at Santarli Construction’s workplace along Pheng Geck Avenue on the same day,” said an MOM spokesperson. “Officers from MOM’s Occupational Safety and Health Division commenced investigations immediately.”

    Manpower Minister Tan Chuan-Jin also visited the accident site late Tuesday night, and in a Facebook post said that it was “fortunate no injuries occurred”. He added that contractors will be dismantling the crane, and will need to bring in a heavier one to lift the collapsed crane.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com