Tag: Singapore

  • Change In NCAA Rules Will Allow Schooling To Keep S$1m Gold Medal Reward

    Change In NCAA Rules Will Allow Schooling To Keep S$1m Gold Medal Reward

    Joseph Schooling’s historic victory in the 100m butterfly at the Olympic Games on Saturday morning (Aug 13, Singapore time) turned the 21-year-old into an instant millionaire, as he is set to pocket S$1 million as part of Singapore National Olympic Council’s (SNOC) Multi-Million Dollar Awards Programme (MAP).

    While Schooling will be required to give 20 percent of his MAP incentive – amounting to S$200,000 – to the Singapore Swimming Association (SSA) for ‘future training and development’, he is still expected to pocket close to S$750,000 after taxes.

    And following changes to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules last year, the University of Texas student will be able to keep every cent of that sum of money, reported US newspaper USA Today.

    NCAA rules prohibit United States college athletes participating in events such as the Olympics from accepting prize money or money from endorsements. Instead, they will be awarded prize money according to terms set out by the US Olympic Committee (USOC) Operation Gold program, which sees gold medal winners earn up to US$25,000.

    But following a change to the NCAA rules, which came into effect on Aug 1 last year, the Operation Gold programme now “does not apply to international student-athletes”.

    The exception allows international student-athletes to keep the monetary incentives from their country’s Olympic governing body “based on their finish in one event per year that is designated as the highest level of competition for the year by the governing body.”

    Schooling previously attended and trained at the Bolles School in Florida in 2009, before enrolling in the University of Texas two years ago to train with the Texas Longhorns swimming under former US head coach Eddie Reese.

    He delivered on his vast potential on Saturday as he beat Michael Phelps, Chad Le Clos and Laszlo Cseh in the final of the 100m butterfly to clinch Singapore’s first-ever Olympic gold medal in a new Olympic record time of 50.39s.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Man Found Hidden Under Maid’s Bed, He Wasn’t An Intruder

    Man Found Hidden Under Maid’s Bed, He Wasn’t An Intruder

    A 78-year-old female employer of a maid from Myanmar, got the shock of her life when she discovered a man hiding under her maid’s bed.

    Her dog had woken her up at midnight and led her to the maid’s room. She opened the door and was startled to find a man hiding under her maid’s bed and her maid not in the room.

    She quickly called her son-in-law for assistance as she had been home alone with her 86-year-old bedridden husband. Her daughter and son-in-law rushed over. Finding the man under the bed, the son-in-law kept the man in the room and called the police.

    The man struggled to get out of the room and the son-in-law had to use his weight to keep the door of the maid’s room shut. He heard the man inside make a call on his mobile phone, possibly for assistance from his friends. In the meantime, his father-in-law, who had already suffered from two strokes, went into shock. Thankfully his wife, a doctor, was able to stabilise him.

    When the police arrived, they got the man out of the room and he knelt on the living room floor crying and saying he was sorry. The police questioned him and then let him go as no offence had been committed.

    It turned out that the maid from Myanmar who had been with the family for six weeks had invited the man into the house.The maid denied knowing the man who is thought to be working near Bukit Timah. However, the police determined that the man had been invited into the house and had not broken in.

    The family have employed maids for over 20 years and have never experienced anything like this before. They have sent the maid back to the agency. As his father-in-law is bedridden and his elderly mother-in-law is unable to care for him alone, they will be hiring another maid soon. However, not before installing further security in the house.

    Source: http://sg.theasianparent.com

  • Sikap Sambil Lewa Musnahkan Kerjaya Aliff Aziz, Mahu Bangkit Kembali

    Sikap Sambil Lewa Musnahkan Kerjaya Aliff Aziz, Mahu Bangkit Kembali

    KUALA LUMPUR: Pengalaman lalu mendewasakan bagi penyanyi kelahiran Singapura, Aliff Aziz.

    Membuka mulut tentang perjalanan seninya yang sering dilanda kontroversi sebelum ini, Aliff, 25 tahun, mengaku tidak berfikir panjang sehingga sentiasa membawa padah kepada diri sendiri.

    Pada usia begitu muda, Aliff yang juga bergelar pelakon berkata dia sering berfikiran negatif sehingga kerap terpalit cerita sensasi, lapor laman Berita Harian Malaysia.

    “Dulu saya berasa seperti boleh melangkah jauh dalam bidang seni, tetapi kerana sikap sambil lewa terhadap kerjaya dan hidup, semua itu musnah sekelip mata,” kata Aliff.

    Beliau bagaimanapun bersyukur kerana pengalaman-pengalaman dilanda kontroversi sebelum ini mendewasakan diri dan mengambil peluang untuk belajar daripadanya.

    “Saya bagaimanapun bersyukur semua itu menjadi ruang untuk saya memperbaiki diri dan seterusnya menjadi insan lebih matang. Sebagai manusia biasa, saya tidak dapat lari daripada melakukan kesilapan. Saya tak dengar nasihat orang yang menyayangi diri saya ini.

    “Saya anggap semua itu bayaran yang perlu saya terima akibat kesilapan diri sendiri. Di sebalik segala-gala yang terjadi, saya masih diberi peluang untuk bangkit kembali,” luah Aliff kepada Berita Harian Malaysia.

    Ini terbukti apabila anak muda berbakat itu diberi peluang oleh syarikat rakamannya untuk menghasilkan album baru.

    “Syarikat rakaman Sony Music juga masih percayakan bakat saya dan menghadiahkan album berjudul Rebirth. Judul album itu sendiri, seperti saya pernah katakan, umpama kelahiran semula saya di arena seni,” katanya.

    Aliff kini turut sibuk dengan drama terbaru Meh Sandarkan Padaku, terbitan Zeel Productions.

    Menerusi drama itu, Aliff buat pertama kali bergandingan dengan pelakon wanita yang sedang meningkat naik namanya, Mira Filzah dan dijangka menghiasi kaca televisyen pada bulan Februari tahun depan, lapor BHM lagi.

    “Saya percaya, bukan semua orang akan diberikan peluang seperti itu. Jadi, saya akan ambil peluang berkenaan dengan keazaman untuk tidak lagi menimbulkan isu mahupun kontroversi,” kata Aliff.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • ‘Stealth Bikers’ Clamping Down On Traffic Offenders

    ‘Stealth Bikers’ Clamping Down On Traffic Offenders

    Motorists using mobile phones while driving, lorry drivers breaking speed limits and failing to keep left, and motorcyclists weaving across lanes recklessly – the Traffic Police’s (TP) latest enforcers have been catching them all.

    A video posted on the Use Your RoadSense Facebook page on Monday shows the TP’s Special Operations Team (SOT) on black “stealth bikes” as they clamped down on errant drivers, like a speeding motorcyclist going against the traffic flow.

    The two-minute clip has drawn over 300,000 views and more than 7,200 shares.

    “These ‘men in black’ look out for common traffic offences, such as driving while using the mobile phone, and ensure that motorists are ever-alert on the roads – a timely reminder not to #PokemonGo and drive,” the post said, referring to the popular Pokemon Go mobile game in which players catch virtual creatures using mobile devices.

    The Singapore Police Force, which shared the video on its Facebook page, said the traffic situation continues to show improvements in various areas, but a minority of road users endanger the lives of others.

    It added: “The TP will continue to take strict enforcement against such errant motorists even as we focus on education and enforcement efforts, reminding them that all road users have a role to play in keeping our roads safe.”

    Also called covert officers, the TP’s stealth bikers have been on the roads since June. Clad in black jackets, the officers ride black 900cc motorcycles that are more manoeuvrable and have proven effective in curbing errant motorcyclists.

    TP commander Sam Tee told The Straits Times that it was not easy for officers to go after motorcyclists in unmarked cars as they can lose sight of them in heavy traffic. In contrast, the “stealth bikes” are much more manoeuvrable.

    TP statistics show that last year, 4,875 motorcyclists and pillion riders were injured, a 5 per cent rise from 2014. This group also accounted for almost half of all road deaths last year – 72 out of a total of 152.

    In their first month of operations, TP’s stealth officers detected more than 700 violations.

    The SOT’s officer commanding, Assistant Superintendent Firdous Haniff, 30, said the unmarked motorbikes have proven effective and that foreign police forces, such as those in Australia, employ similar tactics.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Reality Check Needed For Singaporeans With Unrealistic Expectations

    Reality Check Needed For Singaporeans With Unrealistic Expectations

    Class is back.

    Between the end of World War II and the late 1960s, leftist politics flourished, particularly among labour unionists, and high school and university students. Inspired by Marx and Mao, the language of class resonated here, especially its association with colonialism and exploitation, and jostled among competing visions of the future in the emerging independent polity of Singapore.

    Gradually, as the People’s Action Party (PAP) government triumphed over leftist political parties as well as trade union and student organisations, the language of class took a backseat, though it never completely disappeared.

    In its place was the language of meritocracy and equal opportunity. This was based on the PAP’s “democratic socialist” vision of Singapore, one that carried the promise of freedom from poverty and the prospect of social mobility in a vibrant, but not unbridled, capitalist economy for its people, many of whom were migrants who left China or India in search of a better life.

    As is familiar history by now, a strong PAP government has delivered on its promise to provide jobs, healthcare, housing and education over its long, unbroken tenure. Singapore enjoyed sterling economic growth in the 1970s and early 1980s, home ownership grew and education expanded.

    So successful was Singapore as one of the four Newly Industrialising Economies that social upgrading became the buzz-word. The Singapore Dream, encapsulated in the notion of the 5 Cs — cash, car, credit card, condo, country club membership — not only spelled the “good life”, but conveyed the comforting idea that class origin does not determine destiny. In the popular imagination, therefore, class, while present, does not quite matter. Some would in fact even mistake equality of opportunity for social egalitarianism or class equality itself.

    The undeniable fact is that most Singaporeans were mobile, and visibly so, even if the range, degree, and probability of mobility were not equal for all. But during the past decade, the city-state has reached a mid-life crisis of sorts, with the re-emergence of a more class-conscious society because of income inequality and unequal relative social mobility — which persists despite the PAP government’s efforts at providing more income transfers and educational opportunities — amid greater turbulence and uncertainty in the global economy.

    This has a significant impact on reshaping society and politics insofar as a large segment of the citizenry perceives that the Singapore Dream may increasingly elude them and their children.

    MID-LIFE CRISIS

    Clearly, as Singapore crossed into the 21st century, it faced some serious threats to the Singapore Dream: A mature economy; stiff global competition; low fertility; and a rapidly ageing population. With a growing middle class, most armed with tertiary education, with all aspiring to well-paying, high-prestige jobs and comfortable living standards, there was growing competition for the “good life”.

    In recent years, the PAP government has shifted somewhat more to the left of centre. It provided significantly more help to citizens, without de-emphasising self-reliance, by introducing various new policies and measures, with different degree of success, to address the “hot-button” issues. These relate to cost of living, including healthcare costs, competition from foreign labour and migrants, dissatisfaction with public transportation and housing.

    But the language of class is still bubbling up from those at the bottom and in the middle rungs.

    Low-income Singaporeans are concerned about stagnant wages, the high cost of living and rising income inequality. Meanwhile, middle-class people worry about not being able to live the secure, comfortable life they believe they deserve from having been relatively successful in the mobility game. They are also concerned about their children not being able to live the Singapore Dream, given the rise in property and car prices over the past decade and uncertainties over whether a university degree can still guarantee a good career in future.

    In addition, those in the sandwiched generation have concerns over their ageing parents’ healthcare costs, even as they fund the education of their children.

    In the lead-up to the 2015 General Election, the PAP government introduced various schemes and measures, such as the Pioneer Generation Package, MediShield Life and SkillsFuture to address the above issues. These may have contributed to a large extent to the PAP’s impressive electoral performance last year, reflecting a flight to safety, and a return to the survival ideology, now as version#2.

    The support for survival ideology version#1 has helped to propel Singapore from Third World to First World. Hopefully, the support for survival ideology version#2 will help Singapore stay the course in an era of high expectations engendered by years of experiencing an upward trajectory of improving living standards and social mobility attributed primarily to a capable, paternalistic government — one that has staked its legitimacy on enhancing the human capital of citizens, creating sufficient well-paying jobs and enabling a majority of Singaporeans to climb the social ladder.

    This is not to suggest that the economy, with a 2 per cent annual growth rate, is in poor shape.

    However, the threat of job loss remains. This produces a sense of insecurity and fear of downward mobility, together with anxieties of not being able to meet financial commitments, especially among middle-aged, middle-class Singaporeans. Yet they continue to harbour an unrealistic expectation that things would quickly return to “normal”, coupled with a strong dependency on the government to help get them back on track.

    The journey ahead would, however, be more hazardous, making it more challenging for the PAP government to deliver the “good life” that an aspiring middle-class society expects. This could lead to a heightening of class consciousness, resulting in a stronger clamour for more handouts, which would be unsustainable.

    Should this occur, the PAP government would have to work out a new social compact with Singaporeans — one where its legitimacy shifts from delivering the good life to a “good enough” life, as it nudges citizens to focus on constant skills upgrading and living within one’s means.

    It is hoped that this will prevent class-based tensions from appearing. But the process requires that Singaporeans understand the risks, uncertainties and disruptive effects of global competition and technological advancement, as well as the cost of supporting an increasingly ageing population. Ultimately, they have to get a reality check on their unrealistic expectations and stay resilient for the long haul.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

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