Tag: Singapore

  • Wanita Disiasat Kerana Dakwa Anak Nyaris Diculik

    Wanita Disiasat Kerana Dakwa Anak Nyaris Diculik

    Seorang wanita berusia 35 tahun sedang disiasat polis kerana dipercayai membuat aduan palsu bahawa anak lelakinya nyaris diculik.

    Polis semalam (14 Nov) menyatakan wanita itu memberitahu polis kelmarin bahawa seorang lelaki tidak dikenali cuba menculik anak lelakinya yang berusia lima tahun ketika beliau membeli-belah di Bukit Panjang Plaza. Beliau mendakwa lelaki itu cuba menculik budak itu dengan menolak kereta sorongnya, namun melarikan diri setelah wanita itu menghalang percubaannya itu.

    Polis mendapati banyak percanggahan semasa melakukan siasatan dan mendapati wanita itu memberikan keterangan palsu.

    Siasatan terhadap wanita tersebut sedang dijalankan. Jika didapati bersalah memberikan keterangan palsu kepada kakitangan awam, wanita itu boleh dipenjara sehingga setahun dan didenda sehingga S$5,000.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Elected Presidency Changes: Big Step Backwards For Malay community

    Elected Presidency Changes: Big Step Backwards For Malay community

    I worry about the unintended consequences of changes to the elected presidency, especially the move to reserve elections for minority candidates.

    I was brought up in an era where we Malays were told we had to fend for ourselves in school and in our careers, as Singaporeans of other races did. After initial trepidation, due in part to seeing how Malays in other countries in the region depended on race-based policies to help them advance, Malay Singaporeans grew out of their historical reliance on such crutches. And that has over time become a source of pride and motivation for the community.

    In my frequent travels to neighbouring countries and in the speeches I deliver there, I speak proudly of the significant progress the community has made as we proved we could stand on our own feet. That was thanks in no small part to the brave decision by our earlier leaders to take away our proverbial crutches and make us compete on a level playing field. Like everything else, healthy competition drives the community to a higher level.

    Now, I worry that all that is being undone. The announcement that next year’s presidential election will be reserved for Malay candidates strikes me as a major step backwards. Like it or not, it risks being read as a vote of no confidence in the community. It seems to suggest that we are still unable to compete on the same level with the rest of the population and that we remain a troubled community that requires – selectively – a big handicap. It makes me wonder what happened to our belief in boosting self-reliance and self-respect through doing away with affirmative action and race-based state aid in education and career progression.

    During the last three decades of minimal race-based policy assistance, Malays have worked hard to prove our self-worth with significant achievements in the education and professional arenas. Today, more private sector and business leaders are drawn from the community than ever before.

    There has been gradual but meaningful progress in all other statistics too, including education. The sense I get from my daily interactions with members of the community is that we are patient in waiting for further public sector achievements. I did not sense any clamour for the next president to be from the Malay community.

    America waited more than 230 years for a member of a minority race to be elected president. That did not make people from minority races there feel any less American. When the day finally arrived in November 2008 and Mr Barack Obama was elected America’s first black president, the outcome was greeted with great celebration not just within the country but in countries across the free democratic world, including those in Asia and Africa.

    Here in Singapore, the last time a president of a minority race was in the Istana was five years ago. The last time we had a Malay president was 46 years ago. I believe most Malays are willing to wait patiently for our next Malay president to be voted into office based on his own merit and in a contest against other capable Singaporeans of different races or creeds, however long it takes.

    I personally think that even without changes to the elected presidency, it will not take quite so long. After all, minority MPs have regularly won elections in single-seat constituencies while others have led teams in group representation constituencies – a scheme originally created to assist minority candidates to be elected into Parliament – instead of being pedestrian members of the GRCs.

    I would argue that more than a Malay president, what Singapore needs is policy consistency – we cannot afford policy twists and turns, especially on a selective basis, no matter how well intended.

    Still, if the chance to have a member of their community as president is offered on a platter, not many Malays will reject such a gift. That is human nature. But what would be even more satisfying is a hard-fought campaign leading to the election of a Malay president who deserves the position based on the famously Singaporean values of grit and merit.

    That is worth waiting for. The changes to the Constitution relating to the elected presidency may have inadvertently denied me and other members of Singapore’s minority communities the pleasure of seeing that happen.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Wajib Daftar Semula NRIC Apabila Cecah Usia 55 Tahun Mulai Januari Depan

    Wajib Daftar Semula NRIC Apabila Cecah Usia 55 Tahun Mulai Januari Depan

    Semua warga dan Penduduk Tetap (PR) Singapura yang akan mencecah usia 55 tahun pada atau selepas 1 Januari 2017, dan belum diberikan kad pengenalan (NRIC) ganti dalam tempoh 10 tahun sebelum ulang tahun mereka yang ke-55, perlu mendaftar semula bagi mendapatkan NRIC baru mulai Januari tahun depan

    Ini diumumkan Penguasa Imigresen dan Pusat Pemeriksaan (ICA) hari ini (14 Nov).

    Bayaran pendaftaran S$10 dikenakan bagi warga Singapura dan S$50 bagi PR, menurut ICA, iaitu kos yang sama untuk mendaftar bagi NRIC pada usia 15 tahun dan pendaftaran semula pada usia 30 tahun.

    ICA menjelaskan bahawa proses itu perlu dijalankan kerana gambar pada NRIC sedia ada menjadi lapuk sedang usia para pemegang NRIC meningkat, dan mungkin menyebabkan mereka sukar dikenal pasti, terutama warga emas.

    “Selain mungkin menyusahkan para pemegang NRIC, ini juga boleh menimbulkan risiko keselamatan kerana pihak berkuasa mungkin tidak dapat mengenal pasti seorang individu secara tepat berdasarkan gambarnya yang sudah lapuk,” menurut ICA.

    Timbalan pengarah Pusat Khidmat Rakyat di ICA, Chui Wai Cheng, juga berkata: “Terdapat juga risiko bahawa jika kad itu diambil orang lain, individu itu boleh mengambil identiti pemegang kad asal. Ia mungkin dari segi urus niaga kewangan, atau percubaan membeli barangan dan perkhidmatan dengan menggunakan identiti orang lain.”

    Mediacorp difahamkan bahawa ICA sudah menerima maklum balas tentang kes-kes sedemikian, namun tidak menjejak perangkaan itu kerana sesetengahnya adalah insiden privet dan tidak dilaporkan.

    Tambahan lagi, ICA menyatakan mulai 2017, ia merancang untuk mengumpul imej mata ketika NRIC baru dikeluarkan.

    Ini setelah Parlimen pada 10 November meluluskan pindaan pada Akta Pendaftaran Nasional untuk mempertingkatkan keberkesanan dan kecekapan operasi ICA.

    PENDAFTARAN SEMULA ADALAH WAJIB

    Mereka yang dikehendaki mendaftar semula bagi NRIC mereka akan menerima surat notis dari ICA sebulan sebelum ulang tahun ke-55 mereka. Mereka akan diberi tempoh setahun untuk membuat pendaftaran semula – selepas mereka mencapai usia 55 tahun hingga sebelum mereka mencecah usia 56 tahun.

    Mereka yang tinggal di luar negara boleh mendaftar semula NRIC dalam tempoh setahun selepas pulang ke Singapura.

    ICA menyarankan agar pendaftaran semula dibuat secara online menerusi laman ICA.

    “Mereka juga boleh mendaftar semula menerusi kios-kios layan diri di eLobby di tingkat satu Bangunan ICA.

    “Pemegang NRIC yang tidak dapat mendaftar semula online boleh mengisi borang permohonan dalam surat notis ICA dan mengirimkannya kepada Pusat Khidmat Rakyat ICA,” menurut ICA.

    Pendaftaran semula yang dibuat online akan mengambil masa sekitar tiga hari kerja untuk diproses, sementara tempoh untuk permohonan menerusi surat diproses akan mengambil masa sekitar dua minggu, menurut ICA.

    Ketika membuat pendaftaran semula, pemegang NRIC perlu mengemaskini perincian peribadi mereka dan menyerahkan gambar terkini mereka.

    Kad pengiktirafan akan dikirimkan sekiranya permohonan mereka diluluskan. Para pemegang NRIC boleh membuat temu janji online atau menerusi app mudah alih ICA untuk mengambil NRIC mereka.

    ICA menambah bahawa adalah satu kesalahan di bawah Akta Pendaftaran Nasional sekiranya pemegang NRIC gagal mendaftarkan semula NRIC-nya dalam setahun selepas mencapai usia 55 tahun, atau dalam setahun selepas pulang ke Singapura jika beliau tinggal di luar negara.

    ICA juga menyatakan ia akan mengirimkan surat-surat peringatan enam dan sembilan bulan selepas pemegang NRIC mencecah usia 55 tahun untuk meminta mereka membuat pendaftaran semula, sekiranya belum berbuat demikian.

    Bagi rakyat dan PR Singapura yang mencapai usia 55 tahun sebelum 2017, pendaftaran semula NRIC secara sukarela akan diperkenalkan mulai 2018, menurut ICA. Butiran lanjut akan diberikan tahun depan.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Malacca Harbour Plan Raises Questions About China’s Strategic Aims

    Malacca Harbour Plan Raises Questions About China’s Strategic Aims

    A RM43 billion (S$14 billion) harbour being developed in Malacca aims to overtake Singapore as the largest port in the region, but questions are being raised about the need for the added capacity and whether China’s eager participation has to do with good business or its crucial strategic interests in the Malacca Strait.

    For China, not only does most of its trade pass through the Malacca Strait, but so does up to 80 per cent of its energy needs. This prompted then President Hu Jintao to make the “Malacca Dilemma” a key strategic issue as far back as 2003.

    “There is the strategic element of the Malacca Strait. It always starts with an economic presence, which can develop into a naval one, because China will be obliged to ensure the safe passage of its commercial ships,” said Dr Johan Saravanamuttu of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, who studies the Malaysia-China relationship.

    The Melaka Gateway joint venture is part of a wider port alliance between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing to increase bilateral trade and boost shipping and logistics along China’s much-vaunted Maritime Silk Road.

    Chinese firm Guangxi Beibu International Port Group already owns 40 per cent of Kuantan port, which faces the disputed waters of the South China Sea, and 49 per cent of the Kuantan Industrial Park in Pahang, the home state of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

    The Malaysian authorities are talking up the game-changing Melaka Gateway deal between little-known KAJ Developments and energy giant PowerChina International, which will form a joint venture and spend RM30 billion to reclaim three islands off Malacca’s coast. The entire Gateway development will be completed in 2025 but the deep-sea port is expected to be ready by 2019. The Malaysian government hopes to attract the bulk of 100,000 vessels, most of them Chinese, that ply the Malacca Strait annually.

    Some industry players have expressed concern about the cannibalising of existing ports along the strait, especially in the light of Singapore’s own port expansion.

    Though the Malaysian government has said a new port is needed because Klang, the country’s most important port, will be full by 2020, studies appear to show otherwise.

    A World Bank study commissioned by the government last year showed a new port on Malaysia’s west coast is not necessary, as existing facilities have yet to reach capacity, according to sources. Both operators at Port Klang – Westports and MMC – have also made expansion proposals that would double the port’s capacity, the sources added.

    “Because there seems to be no logic to the Melaka deal, many are questioning if this has more to do with military rather than commercial interests,” a logistics player told The Straits Times.

    Sources also said the reclaimed islands would be given freehold status and the port granted a 99-year concession – both rare and generous terms. Melaka Gateway did not respond to a request for comment.

    China’s military presence around Malaysian waters has increased significantly since last year. In September last year, all three branches of the Chinese armed forces took part in a six-day joint exercise on “disaster relief” in the Malacca Strait.

    China has also gained access to Kota Kinabalu, a crucial dock in Sabah close to the disputed Spratly Islands, where Beijing’s construction activities have been a source of diplomatic strife in the region.

    A former port authority chief noted that China has made moves to reduce its reliance on the Malacca Strait, such as via port-and-rail or pipeline projects in Pakistan, Myanmar and Eastern Europe, which means “we cannot take Beijing’s commitment here for granted”.

    “If China pulls out her support, the port becomes useless because it has no hinterland, unlike Klang and Penang which serve a big local market. In fact, many businesses prefer to send their goods to Klang by road instead of the existing Malacca or Penang ports because it is more efficient.”

    Critics have questioned Malay- sia’s over-reliance on China, in the light of the huge deals struck during Datuk Seri Najib’s recent visit to Beijing, as well as a whopping RM55 billion loan to build a railway that will eventually link Port Klang on the west and Kuantan port in Pahang and also Terengganu and Kelantan.

    “There is the question of over-dependence, and the diplomatic leverage involved if Beijing were to move in more aggressively. So far, Najib is still hedging, but when it comes to investments, you can’t expect as much from America as you can from China. If you want to go up against Singapore, then this port makes sense, especially when it is in the form of foreign investment, given Malaysia’s fiscal constraints,” said Dr Saravanamuttu.

    Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai batted away these concerns on his return from Beijing, telling reporters that “with the economy growing, we need more ports”. He said: “The port alliance… has seen results, bringing more competitiveness to our ports and logistic sectors.”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Officer Rejected Request For Toilet Stop, NSF Forced To Defecate Into Ziploc Bag

    Officer Rejected Request For Toilet Stop, NSF Forced To Defecate Into Ziploc Bag

    Hi Singapore, here’s a story that got removed from TIFU, a tribute to all our NSFs with a personal story of mine.

    In honor of the usual tifu tradition I shall tell my tale of a fuck up months after it had occurred.

    I’m from Singapore, and as a rite of passage for a male citizen of this democratic society I have to go through the reluctant torture of serving my nation for 2 years as a low-waged soldier for the army. Anyways I shall spare you readers the usual Singaporean sob story of being forced into serving our nation for 2 years.

    At the beginning of our training phase it is customary to go through BMT(Basic Military Training); the period where all the usual social stigma of abusive sergeants, enciks(old men who have gone slightly deranged from opting to stay in the army) and sirs come to surface in daily conversations. During this period is where my fuck-up came to haunt me for the rest of my life.

    Day of the incident: 5 weeks into my BMT phase and blah blah blah here I am on the day where I would finally shoot live rounds on my SAR21 And we are required to be transported out of Pulau Tekong (a godforsaken island northbound of Singapore) to mainland Singapore to execute our training.

    Ferry Terminal: The entire company is currently lined up and ready to board the ferry towards the mainland. It is at this point where my sergeant told us to head to the washroom to take a dump or a piss as the ride would long. I thought nothing of it, little did I know 🙁

    5 minutes on the bus: I’m onboard the bus towards the firing site and my tummy starts grumbling.

    10 minutes on the bus: Satan started brewing a concoction of pure evil to summon his child within my bowels. I turned to my buddy on my left and started to beg him to distract me from the terrors within me.

    15 minutes on the bus: I started groveling to my sergeant to let me take a dump somewhere. He says, “HOLD IT IN, WE’LL BE THERE IN 10 MINUTES”

    20 minutes on the bus: I’ve been begging him for 5 minutes. Sergeant calls the supervising officer for his advice.

    22 minutes on the ride of my life: My request has officially been rejected.

    25 minutes on the highway to hell: I’ve started to contemplate my options: A. Release Satan’s child into my helmet B. Relieve myself casually like a fuckin’ 3yo C. Release the Kraken into a ziploc bag which kept the contents of another platoon mate’s soldierly tools

    30 minutes on the spiral to nirvana: I have voiced out my options to my sergeant and advised him that I’ll be taking option C.

    30 minutes and 30secs into this fuckup: I’m squatting on the stairs of the backdoor of the bus, carefully aiming my explosive rounds into a tiny ziploc bag with my ass out.

    32 minutes into this shameful bus ride: Bus driver decides that I’ve released too much toxins in the atmosphere of the bus and opens the backdoor.
    note: we are on the expressway now

    33 minutes: A van drove by, packed with passengers and their shocked faces from watching a bare-assed soldier in his uniform take a dump in a ziploc bag.

    35 minutes of pure shame: After 2 minutes of screaming at the bus driver for what’s left of my dignity, the door closes. I ordered for something to wipe my ass with. 5 packs of tissue were thrown to me like how my pride and dignity were thrown away.

    36 minutes of .__.: I’ve cleaned up and left my bag of shit at the back of the bus.

    End of the day: I’ve been immortalized as a legend of the company. Nothing spilled from the ziploc bag. I clinched a 31/32 for my firing. Natural marksman 😀

    TL;DR: Didn’t listen to my superiors advice, civilians witnessed a soldier having explosive diarrhea into a ziploc bag at the back of the bus on the expressway @70km/h.

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

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