Tag: Singapore

  • 5 “Concerned Citizens” Say They Will Run As Independent Candidates

    5 “Concerned Citizens” Say They Will Run As Independent Candidates

    According to Channel News Asia, reporters spotted a group of 5 people at the Elections Department premises today, who turned up to collect their nomination papers to contest in the upcoming General Elections as independent candidates.

    Oddly enough, one of the 5, 46 year-old Ms Fatimah Akhtar, said that they were not there to contest seriously, but were there to send a message.

    “We are sending out a message to all political parties that whatever it is, you should be sending candidates who are qualified and capable.”

    “Some of the candidates fielded inspired me to run, because with their background, my potted plant can be an MP.”

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Osman Sulaiman, M Ravi Dan Roy Ngerng Antara Yang Akan Turun Padang Menentang PAP Di GRC Ang Mo Kio

    Osman Sulaiman, M Ravi Dan Roy Ngerng Antara Yang Akan Turun Padang Menentang PAP Di GRC Ang Mo Kio

    Parti Reform (RP) hari ini mengumumkan barisan calonnya di GRC Ang Mo Kio bagi pilihan raya akan datang.

    Pasukan seramai enam orang itu akan diterajui oleh Encik M Ravi, seorang peguam.

    Turut menganggotai pasukan RP tersebut ialah penulis blog Roy Ngerng, yang disaman oleh Perdana Menteri Lee Hsien Loong atas tuduhan fitnah berhubung isu CPF, penerbit filem Siva Chandran, aktivis sosial Gilbert Goh, mantan pegawai bank Jesse Loo dan pengarah perniagaan di sebuah syarikat hiasan dalaman, Osman Sulaiman.

    Meskipun kedua-dua Encik Goh dan Encik Ngerng pernah menyertai bantahan-bantahan di Sudut Pidato di Hong Lim Park, setiausaha agung RP, Kenneth Jeyaretnam menegaskan pasukan itu bukanlah kumpulan pembantah.

    Encik Osman, 40 tahun, mengetuai pasukan RP di GRC Ang Mo Kio pada pilihan raya 2011, yang memperolehi 30.4 peratus undi.

    “Perlantikan ini datang dengan tanggungjawab yang berat. Saya diharapkan berjuang bukan sahaja untuk bangsa Melayu, bukan sahaja untuk penduduk Ang Mo Kio tetapi untuk semua warga Singapura dan sekaligus berbakti kepada masyarakat umum,” ujarnya.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Damanhuri Abas – A Champion Of Malay Rights

    Damanhuri Abas – A Champion Of Malay Rights

    Until recently, Mr Damanhuri Bin Abas has been the Director of Muhammadiyah Islamic College. He has extensive experience in managing educational organizations, and spent over a decade teaching and training.

    Married with five children, Daman holds a Bachelor degree in Architectural Study from the National University of Singapore. Thereafter, he holds a Diploma in Teaching and Training from Cambridge, UK, and a Diploma in Counseling from Kaplan, Singapore.

    As a Malay Muslim, Daman is perturbed about the institutionalization of discrimination in Singapore. For example, many Malays feel that they are not being trusted to be in the arm forces. It is also easy to notice the lack of Malay students in Special Assisted School. Daman wishes to ensure that such inequality is being addressed.

    He joins the Singapore Democratic Party because it is the only party that concretely spelt out a stand on the Malay issues that he can identify with. An example of the effectiveness of the SDP’s Malay policy paper can be seen in the introduction of Edusave and the recent announcement by the Government to help improve secular education in Madrasah. He hopes Singaporeans will let him be their Voice in Parliament.

     

    Source: http://yoursdp.org

  • K Shanmugam To Lodge Police Report Against Sangeetha Thanapal For “Inaccurate And Seditious” Facebook Post

    K Shanmugam To Lodge Police Report Against Sangeetha Thanapal For “Inaccurate And Seditious” Facebook Post

    Law and Foreign Affairs Minister K Shanmugam says he intends to lodge a police report against independent scholar Sangeetha Thanapal on Friday for a Facebook post he called “inaccurate and seditious”.

    He said her post – which has since been taken down – had misrepresented remarks he made at a Singapore Press Club talk on Thursday on how regional trends can affect Singapore.

    “What Ms Thanapal wrote is inaccurate and seditious, and attributes to me sentiments that I do not hold and have never held,” he said in a Facebook post last night.

    “I intend to file a police report about this tomorrow.”

    He added: “She unfortunately twisted what I had said and suggested that I was an ‘Islamophobic bigot who thinks Malay-Muslims are a threat’. I had not said anything like that.”

    Ms Thanapal, 33, took her post down less than an hour after Mr Shanmugam’s post was put up at around 8pm. She also said she was seeking legal advice.

    Mr Shanmugam, responding on her Facebook at about 11.15pm, said he held “no personal animosity” towards her, and said he would be happy to speak to her.

    Shortly afterwards, she responded saying: “I am very sorry for all that has happened. The post took on a life of its own, and came out differently from how I intended. Thank you so much for agreeing to speak with me. I will make myself available anytime you wish to do so.”

    Mr Shanmugam then asked for a telephone number and said he would contact her today. As at midnight, there was no indication in the exhanges about whether he would still file a police report.

    When Mr Shanmugam first posted about Ms Thanapal’s remarks, he said the point he actually made at the event was that the Malaysian education system was not good for integration.

    “The Chinese leadership in various local areas in Malaysia want to maintain control over the Chinese population. It suits them to have Chinese students go to Chinese schools instead of mainstream Malaysian schools. And the schools are more Chinese (because they are effectively single race),” he wrote.

    “At the same time, many mainstream schools in Malaysia are becoming more Malay (because the students are largely Malay) and Islamic (e.g. through the way some principals and teachers handle matters) which discourages the Chinese from going into those schools. So you end up with having more Malays going to mainstream schools, and more Chinese going to Chinese schools. As a result, the different races are kept apart from a young age.”

    Ms Thanapal’s Facebook post appeared to take issue with Mr Shanmugam saying that mainstream schools in Malaysia were “becoming more Malay and Islamic”.

    She wrote: “The only reason you would consider this important enough to make statements about, is if you are an Islamaphobic bigot who thinks Malay-Muslims are a threat.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    Dear Editors,

    In a sign of skyrocketing costs of living and business after this upcoming polling day, HDB had sent us a letter right after the election was announced warning us that they intend to raise the rental of our HDB rental unit by a whooping mind-boggling 37%! That’s more than one-third of our current rental and more than $700 per month! But that’s not all. It seems like the letter (see the attached) is a standard letter that is sent to all HDB commercial and industrial property tenants, so we are not the only tenant who is affected.

    The PAP ministers had repeatedly claimed they wanted to help Singaporean businesses and workers thrive in Singapore. However, their actions speak louder than words. By increasing our rental by 37% and more than $700 per month, we will have no choice but to cut our workers’ salaries, retrench one of them, or increase our product prices to offset our rental increase so that we can stay in business and pay HDB the higher rental.

    We are a small setup and we hire strictly Singaporeans only, so our labour costs are already much higher than our competitors who hire foreigners. We value our workers and we do not wish to put them out of job. But if you are in our shoes, faced with a worsening economy, increasing competition, declining business and skyrocketing rental, you will also have no choice but to take one of the above-mentioned courses of action or go out of business. Increasing our product prices will make our products less competitive and result in lower sales, so it is not an option. Cutting our workers’ salaries will lower their morale and they may quit in no time. Retrenching one of our workers is therefore the only option and the remaining workers will just have to share some of the additional workload. This is not an ideal situation but what else can anyone in our shoes do when forced by HDB to cough out more money for them?

    As the largest landlord in Singapore, the PAP government, be it HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings or otherwise, wields the sole power to set our costs of living and business, and by extension, our quality of life. We elected them and pay them multi-million dollar salaries to work and fight for a better standard of life for us, not to make life miserable and worse off for us. As Mr Low Thia Khiang rightly pointed out, we are the owners of this country instead of the government. Why do we have to keep paying HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings etc. more and more to use our own land to do business or live?

    SG50 is not working out well for us so far, so we cannot imagine how much worse SG100 will be.

    Mai Kee Chiu
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

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