Tag: Singapore

  • Girl, 6, Drowns In Hotel Pool While Dad Looking At Phone

    Girl, 6, Drowns In Hotel Pool While Dad Looking At Phone

    He was looking at his mobile phone while his six-year-old daughter, a non-swimmer, played in a swimming pool nearby.

    Mr Zacharias Alexander Karamoy later looked up and saw, to his horror, his little girl motionless at the bottom of the deeper end.

    The Indonesian national immediately jumped into the pool to rescue his child. But it was too late.

    Neisha Sandra Karamoy, who had not been wearing a flotation device, suffered brain death and died in KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH) two days later.

    The incident happened at the Grand Mercure Singapore Roxy Hotel at East Coast Road.

    Following an inquiry, State Coroner Marvin Bay found that her death was a tragic misadventure yesterday.

    Because drowning can occur swiftly and silently, he stressed that adults should not make use of mobile devices while supervising children.

    FLOTATION DEVICES

    Coroner Bay also said that young children should use personal flotation devices when they enter bodies of water.

    He added: “Nevertheless, it is important to remember these buoyancy aids, however helpful they may appear, are only aids and cannot drown-proof a child.

    “They certainly do not replace close adult supervision in water of all depths.”

    Mr Karamoy, his wife, Madam Ni Ketut Sawitri, and their two children, Neisha and her seven-year-old brother, had arrived in Singapore for a holiday on April 3.

    At around 10am the next day, Mr Karamoy decided to take the children to the pool while Madam Ni attended a course at the SIA training centre.

    Coroner Bay said: “Mr Karamoy sat at the side of the pool while the siblings played in the pool.

    “Mr Karamoy was browsing his mobile phone, and from time to time, he would check on them.”

    At the poolside, Neisha made a new friend, a five-year-old Singaporean girl, identified in court papers only as “Miss A”.

    The two girls were playing in the shallow part of the pool, which was 80cm deep, when Neisha wanted to go to the deeper side. That part of the pool was 1.2m deep while Neisha was only 1.15m tall.

    When they reached there, Miss A panicked after she realised she could not touch the bottom.

    Coroner Bay said: “She started to wave her hands vigorously and tried to get attention. (Neisha) was in front of her and was also seen struggling.”

    An unknown woman managed to rescue Miss A and took her back to the shallow side where the steps to the pool were.

    The little girl’s mother, who was nearby, rushed forward to console her daughter before the pair returned to their hotel room.

    At around 10.30am, Mr Karamoy looked up from his mobile phone and noticed that only his son was at the shallow end.

    He then spotted his daughter motionless at the bottom of the pool and immediately jumped into the water to pull her out.

    Hotel staff performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation on Neisha and an ambulance arrived at around 10.45am to take her to KKH.

    A CT scan later revealed she had suffered severe brain damage.

    Brainstem testing also showed that she had suffered brain death.

    After a family conference with her doctor, Mr Karamoy made the painful decision to withdraw his daughter’s life support at around 1.30pm on April 6.

    Coroner Bay said: “Mr Zacharias Karamoy was candid in stating that he did not pay enough attention to (Neisha) while she was playing in the pool.

    “Children should be accompanied by a supervising adult, who must know how to swim and ideally provide ‘touch supervision’ – that is to say, to be close enough to reach the child at all times.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • RM50 Dikenakan Bagi Kad Bayaran Jalan Raya Kenderaan Singapura?

    RM50 Dikenakan Bagi Kad Bayaran Jalan Raya Kenderaan Singapura?

    Seorang Anggota Dewan Negeri menyarankan agar kerajaan mengenakan bayaran RM50 (S$16.50) bagi kad-kad bayaran jalan raya untuk kenderaan-kenderaan yang berdaftar di Singapura.

    Anggota Dewan Negeri Kempas, Datuk Tengku Putra Haron Aminurrashid juga menggesa agar pelaksanaan Permit Masuk Kenderaan (VEP) yang disarankan, serta merta dilaksanakan, lapor laman The Star Online.

    Menurut The Star, Tengku Putra Haron berkata VEP sepatutnya sudah lama dilaksanakan, kerana ia mulanya dijangka dikuatkuasakan sepenuhnya tahun lalu namun sistem itu beberapa kali mengalami penangguhan.

    “TIDAK ADIL TANGGUNG BEBAN UNTUK KEMUDAHAN WARGA ASING”

    “Tidak adil bagi para pembayar cukai menganggung beban kos pembinaan jalan raya dan penyenggaraan di dalam negeri dan negara ini untuk kemudahan warga asing.

    “Malah juga tidak adil pembayar cukai terus membiayai mereka yang bekerja di seberang Koswe,” katanya seperti ditukil The Star dalam sidang media selepas dewan rakyat bersidang semalam.

    Tengku Putra Haron mendakwa bahawa cadangan mengenakan bayaran jalan raya untuk kenderaan asing bukan sesuatu yang baru, kerana beliau sudah menyarankannya menerusi satu memorandum pada 2002, ketika beliau ketua Biro Aduan UMNO Pulai.

    Katanya lagi, beliau ketika itu menyerahkan memorandum yang mengandungi saranan untuk mengenakan levi RM10 (S$3.30) bagi setiap kenderaan berdaftar di Singapura yang memasuki Malaysia menerusi Koswe di Johor Bahru dan Link Kedua di Gelang Patah.

    “MUNGKIN BOLEH MENGAUT UNTUNG BERBILION RINGGIT JIKA IKUT SARANAN”

    Menurutnya, sekiranya kerajaan melaksanakan saranannya ketika itu, negara itu mungkin mengaut RM2 bilion (S$660 juta) sepanjang 14 tahun lalu, dan RM400 bilion (S$132 juta) dari jumlah itu boleh digunakan untuk memperbaiki prasarananya.

    The Star melaporkan, beliau juga menyarankan agar bayaran RM50 (S$16.50) setiap tahun yang perlu diperbaharui dikenakan pada kad-kad yang digunakan untuk memotong caj VEP.

    Katanya, kerajaan akan menerima untung sekitar RM6 juta (S$2 juta) setiap tahun sekiranya bayaran tambahan itu dikenakan.

    Tambahnya lagi seperti ditukil The Star, Singapura sendiri mengenakan bayaran S$10 (RM30) setiap tahun bagi kad Autopass.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Unemployment In Singapore Rises, More Workers Made Redundant In Q2

    Unemployment In Singapore Rises, More Workers Made Redundant In Q2

    Amid weaker economic conditions, Singapore’s unemployment rate rose in the second quarter, according to the Ministry of Manpower (MOM).

    The overall unemployment rate rose from 1.9 per cent in March to 2.1 per cent in June, figures released in the ministry’s half-quarterly Labour Market report showed. Among citizens, unemployment rose from 2.6 per cent to 3.1 per cent and rose from 2.7 per cent to 3 per cent among residents.

    Unemployment rose further among residents aged 30 and above, and in particular, for those aged 50 and above, which saw unemployment rise for the fifth consecutive quarter. Those with higher qualifications were not spared, with unemployment rates among degree holders rising to their highest level since 2009.

    Total employment grew by 4,200, down from 13,000 in the previous quarter and 9,700 in the same quarter a year ago.

    MORE JOBSEEKERS THAN OPENINGS

    For the first time since June 2012, there were more jobseekers than job openings during the second quarter, according to the report.

    The number of seasonally adjusted vacancies fell from 50,000 in March to 49,400 in June, continuing a downward trend since March 2015. Coupled with the increase in unemployed people, the ratio of job vacancies to unemployed people fell to 93 openings per 100 seekers, compared to 103 in March.

    MORE WORKERS LAID OFF

    A total of 4,800 workers were made redundant during the second quarter, up from 4,710 the previous quarter and 3,250 in the same period a year ago. This was the highest second-quarter redundancy since 2009, which saw 5,980 jobs shed, according to MOM.

    Altogether, 9,510 workers were laid off in the first half of the year, also the highest since 2009.

    Based on Central Provident Fund (CPF) records, 45 per cent of residents laid off during the first quarter re-entered employment by June, the lowest rate since June 2009, the ministry said.

    Responding to the Manpower Ministry’s half-quarterly Labour Market report, NTUC Assistant Secretary-General Cham Hui Fong, said: “While we continue to see slower growth in employment and anticipate that more workers may be made redundant in the coming months, we noted that total employment continued to grow with improvement in productivity. Hence, to ensure sustainable employment growth, we need to push for higher productivity via jobs redesign or re-skilling.”

    Ms Cham added that according to the latest JobsBank statistics, there are more than 60,000 job vacancies across different sectors. “NTUC will work with the tripartite partners to encourage working people to attend relevant training programmes so that they are equipped with the right skills to take on the available jobs as the economy restructures,” she added.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

  • Govt Puts Up White Paper On Elected Presidency Scheme

    Govt Puts Up White Paper On Elected Presidency Scheme

    Proposed changes to the Elected Presidency (EP) gathered pace on Thursday (Sept 15), after the Government released a 49-page White Paper on the recommendations by a commission tasked to review specific aspects of the scheme.

    The Government has broadly accepted the recommendations — which were released last week — but it disagreed on some of the nuts and bolts, such as the minimum tenure in qualifying office for public-sector candidates, the threshold for Parliamentary override on President’s decisions and when the President’s opinion should be published in the event that he exercises his veto.

    The Government also detailed its reasons for rejecting a return to the previous system of having Parliament appoint the Head of State — a recommendation which was beyond the commission’s terms of reference. Among other reasons, it reiterated that a President who is elected, with direct mandate from Singaporeans, would ensure that the office has the moral authority and mandate to disagree with an elected Government. The EP scheme remains the “most workable and effective solution” for Singapore at this moment, the Government said.

    The amendments to the scheme will be introduced at the Parliament sitting next month and Members of Parliament will debate on the White Paper in November.

    The nine-member Constitutional Commission, headed by Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon, was tasked with studying the eligibility criteria for prospective candidates for the Presidential Election, safeguarding minority representation in the presidency, and the framework governing the exercise of the President’s powers. The commission’s report was submitted last month, after six months of deliberations involving public hearings and written submissions from the public.

    Among other proposals, the Government has accepted the recommendation to raise the bar for candidates to keep up with the times: Prospective private sector candidates would have to have helmed companies with S$500 million in shareholders’ equity, up from S$100 million in paid-up capital.

    However, the Government will be taking a more cautious approach when it comes to minimum tenure for qualifying offices. While the commission had proposed that the requirement be doubled to at least six years, the Government is retaining the existing minimum tenure of three years.

    While the Government agreed with the commission on the need for a currency requirement – which specifies the period where the tenures have to fall wholly or partly within – it said that it would proceed cautiously on this by setting the period at 20 years of a Presidential Election, instead of 15 years as recommended.

    For public sector qualifying offices, the Government has opted to retain the offices of Accountant-General and Auditor-General on the list, despite the commission’s suggestion to remove these because they play “ancillary and comparatively narrower roles” compared to other qualifying offices. The Government said would like to consider this recommendation “more carefully” and would retain the status quo for now.

    To safeguard minority representation, the Government will adopt the “hiatus triggered” mechanism recommended by the commission where presidential elections will be reserved for a particular race which has not been represented in the office for five consecutive terms. “It strikes an appropriate balance between maintaining the ultimate long-term goal of multi-racialism, and ensuring the representation of minority races in the Presidential office as we progress towards that ideal,” said the Government.

    The Government also agreed with the commission that the President should consult the Council of Presidential Advisers (CPA) on all fiscal matters and key public sector appointments, and any disagreement between the President and his advisers will have to be brought before Parliament. But it disagreed with the proposal to calibrate the threshold for Parliamentary override according to the level of support among the council for the President’s decision. Doing so could unintentionally politicise voting patterns within the CPA instead of emphasising “the collective judgement of the council as a whole”, the Government said.

    Beyond its terms of reference, the commission called for stricter rules on presidential election campaigns, citing instances of candidates overpromising beyond the powers of the President in the 2011 polls. They proposed, among other things, a clampdown on acts which could divide people or flame emotions. The Government said it would study this carefully and decide on the necessary changes to the rules governing campaign methods and preventing misinformation “in due course”.

    Speaking at a dialogue yesterday organised by the South East Community Development Council – which was attended by some 400 grassroots leaders and residents – Law Minister K Shanmugam addressed questions on the White Paper from the participants, such as on the shorter qualifying tenure proposed by the Government, and whether the changes went against the concept of meritocracy and would slow down decision-making processes.

    In response, Mr Shanmugam pointed out that all candidates, regardless of race, will have to possess certain qualifications before they can run for President. Replying to a question on whether the changes were meant to prevent certain individuals from contesting in the next presidential election, which must be held by August next year, Mr Shanmugam reiterated that Singaporeans need to ask themselves if the changes being made are valid and in the interests of Singapore. The vast majority of the participants agreed with him that the President should hold custodial powers and be elected, and successful candidates should meet some criteria and these should be reviewed regularly. “Do we as a Government do what is right, based on the system, or do we worry (that) some people are going to say this is to knock out people we don’t like?” he said.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Bas Terbakar Di Yishun St 11

    Bas Terbakar Di Yishun St 11

    Sebuah bas terbakar di Yishun Street 11 petang tadi (15 Sep), hingga keseluruhan bahagian belakang kenderaan itu hangus dijilat api.

    Jurucakap Pasukan Pertahanan Awam Singapura (SCDF) menyatakan ia dimaklumkan tentang kebakaran itu sekitar 4.35 petang.

    Kebakaran itu menjejas kompartmen enjin bas itu, menurut SCDF, yang mengerahkan sebuah kereta bomba, Red Rhino, dan dua motosikal bomba ke tempat kejadian.

    Kebakaran itu dipadamkan menggunakan semburan dua jet air, menurut SCDF, dan menambah lima penumpang dipindahkan sebelum ia tiba di tempat kejadian.

    Tiada kecederaan dilaporkan akibat insiden itu, menurut SCDF. Punca kebakaran masih disiasat.

    Mediacorp difahamkan bahawa kenderaan terbabit ialah bas privet.

    Seorang saksi, Ng Leong Keong mengirimkan video insiden itu. Beliau memberitahu Channel NewsAsia bahawa kebakaran itu bermula sekitar 4.30 petang dan menjilat keseluruhan bahagian belakang bas tidak lama selepas itu.

    Beliau menambah terdengar bunyi ‘bang’ beberapa kali dan terhidu bau kuat besi terbakar ketika kebakaran berlaku.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

deneme bonusu