Tag: Singapore

  • Jawatankuasa Bulan Bahasa Ke Geylang Serai

    Jawatankuasa Bulan Bahasa Ke Geylang Serai

    Sambutan Bulan Bahasa akan berlangsung dalam masa dua minggu dan orang ramai diajak untuk meraikannya bersama-sama.

    Dalam usaha untuk menyemarakkan lagi acara tersebut, Lembaga Warisan Negara (NHB) dan sekumpulan relawan mendekati masyarakat di Pasar Geylang Serai pagi tadi (22 Ogos).

    Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Bulan Bahasa, Zaqy Mohamad, yang juga AP GRC Choa Chu Kang berkata: “Bagi saya, saya berharaplah bahawa masyarakat Melayu akan terus bersama kami untuk menyokong pelbagai program yang akan diadakan dan juga saya rasa apa yang berlainan pada tahun ini ialah kita akan juga melancarkan kempen Bulan Bahasa kita di estet-estet perumahan seperti di Choa Chu Kang, di Jurong, di Tampines dan juga di Nee Soon.”

    Buku-buku nota dan maklumat mengenai sambutan Bulan Bahasa juga diedarkan bagi menggalak masyarakat Melayu untuk turut serta dalam acara-acara yang bakal dianjurkan.

    Satu lagi acara sebelum pelancaran yang serupa akan diadakan di Kampung Glam pada Jumaat akan datang.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Moving To Punggol Topaz Just Like Moving To Malaysia – Malaysia Telco Signal Stronger, No Free Parking On Sundays

    Moving To Punggol Topaz Just Like Moving To Malaysia – Malaysia Telco Signal Stronger, No Free Parking On Sundays

    Dear Editor,

    I recently moved in Blk 260B Punggol Topaz. Everything is ok with my new 4-rm flat but you know the kitchen is not that great. It is small and not easy to cook especially if you have many relatives and friends over.

    But what really make me angry, there is no free Sunday parking in my HDB parking. My house is not even near a mall or any facilities like swimming pool or a park. I don’t understand why HDB is taking away these simple privileges of Singaporeans. Do HDB really need the money from collecting Sunday parking?

    Let’s not forget Sunday free parking was started by Tan Cheng Bock who wanted to encourage Singaporeans to interact with their love ones and cherish family ties.

    Another problem is from my flat, my M1 line and my wife’s Starhub line always go to Malaysia telco. Our incoming calls becoming roaming calls and we pick up without even realising and end up chalking up high telephone bills.

    I really don’t understand why HDB is screwing up like that, hope that they can wake up their idea.

    Riduan

    [Reader Contribution]

  • ST Opinion Editor: Your MP Is Not Your Chief Social Worker; He’s Supposed To Raise Issues And Makes Laws

    ST Opinion Editor: Your MP Is Not Your Chief Social Worker; He’s Supposed To Raise Issues And Makes Laws

    There I was, scrunched  with the latecomer reporters, at the back of the PAP branch office in Clementi.

    Up front, Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam was introducing the party’s candidates for Jurong GRC for the coming General Election.

    Reporters who turned up an hour early got to sit right in front – cross legged on the floor. The lucky ones got chairs. Then the photographers positioned themselves in lines. Behind them, several stood on chairs to get better angles.

    And right behind the scrum – peering through the legs of those balancing themselves on chairs – were those of us who turned up later. Serves me right for not being kiasu.

    I couldn’t see the candidates’ faces except on the camera screens of colleagues in front of me. I could hear, but had to strain to keep my attention from wondering.

    One by one, each candidate spoke about their wish to build a more caring community in Jurong GRC.
    To be sure, they sounded sincere.

    Mr Tharman himself, although Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister with matters of state to occupy the buzzing brain underneath that gleaming bald pate, spoke passionately about the “Jurong way” – “our style in Jurong is to be on the ground all the time and to serve with our hearts. That’s our style.”

    Helping people when no one is looking, away from the glares of the camera, day in, day out.
    The incumbent candidates – Mr Tharman, Mr Desmond Lee and Mr Ang Wei Neng – highlighted some Jurong GRC initiatives: helping disadvantaged kids; giving second, third chances to ex-inmates; harnessing volunteers.

    The two new candidates in the GRC – Madam Rahayu Mahzam and Dr Tan Wu Meng – were also introduced as candidates with a genuine heart for the people.

    Indeed, Madam Rahayu, 35, has been a volunteer since she was 17. She has met many families in difficulty. She wants to work with disadvanted families and  youth.

    Dr Tan called himself “a doctor who has a heart to serve, who’s very concerned about helping make people’s lives better, who’s very concerned about looking after elderly residents”. He spoke about a Lions Befrienders seniors activity centre at Blk 420A in Clementi to befriend vulnerable elderly, a childcare centre nearby and a special needs early intervention centre elsewhere.

    But listening to them, my mind started to drift at the litany of the social programmes  in Jurong GRC.
    I started wondering: Were they standing as Members of Parliament, or angling for posts as Chief Social Worker in Jurong GRC?

    In Singapore, it seems MPs have to be all things to all men – and women, and children too.

    We want MPs to run town councils. They have to be financially trained too, to get accounts right.
    We want them to step in to sort out disputes, so they must be skilled mediators and negotiators.

    We want them to listen to our problems, so they have to be counsellors. We want them to help the poor and needy and the elderly and link them up with available resources, so they have to be social workers.

    We go to them to write letters of appeal to government agencies to waive fines or speed up/ review/ reverse a decision, so they are glorified scribes.

    We want them to get government agencies to put a playground here, or a bus stop there, and take away a funeral parlour elsewhere, so they are political lobbyists.

    But in fact, the core of an MPs’ role is as a legislator.

    MPs make laws in Parliament that determine how a country is run. They decide on policies. They decide how much money to give to which ministry to get programmes done.

    Your MP isn’t your social worker, although doing social work is a good way to win hearts and minds – and votes. These programmes also make a genuine, often lasting impact on people’s lives. They are wonderful.

    But your MP should also be your representative in Parliament, championing issues you believe in.
    And so, from the back, blocked from view, I asked a friendly photographer standing on a chair in front of me, to raise a hand  to get Mr Tharman’s attention.

    I just had to ask this question.

    I asked each candidate to highlight one issue he or she  would like to champion in Parliament. I added: “ And please don’t say ‘caring, inclusive society’, which is a catchall. Please try to be specific – one issue that might be close to Singaporeans’ hearts that you want to champion in Parliament.”

    Mr Lee, who is Minister of State for National Development, highlighted housing for seniors and helping families live close together. He  went on to speak with considerable conviction, if less than perfect syntax, about his wish to “build communities of stakeholders” such as those around Pulau Ubin and the green rail corridor:  “Bringing in one cosy room, stakeholders from Green groups, heritage groups, academics, musicians, artists, cyclists, educators, social anthropologists, come in together and each and everyone of them, not just having a say, not just giving a view but also actively participating in the constructive dialogue and a process that results in actual things happening on the ground both immediate and long-term.”

    Madam Rahaya wants to  focus on issues to do with family.  Dr Tan plans to focus on healthcare: to help residents  have better access to healthcare nearer their homes, integrating hospital care with community care. Mr Ang will focus on education, reducing the emphasis on grades, and transport. In the last, he wants to focus on the “first and last mile connection. So whether it’s the cycling path, whether it is a walkway, covered walkway – making it easy for people to connect to the transport modes.”

    Listening to the issues they want to champion gave me a glimpse into what matters to these candidates.

    It also makes them more relatable. I found myself agreeing with Mr Lee (retaining Singapore’s green spaces is important) and Mr Ang: indeed, it is often the last mile connection that lets us down – if only there were a safe path to cycle to   the MRT station so we don’t have to wait for the feeder bus.

    In the next few weeks before the polls, every candidate aspiring to enter Parliament will stress his  willingness to serve and maintain she has a heart for the people. In many cases, this will be true. But it is not enough.

    Candidates must also articulate their positions on policies, and say what they wish to retain, adapt or see changed.

    This is especially critical for those on the PAP slate expected to be parachuted into  office-holder positions if elected,  such as Ong Ye Kung, Chee Hong Tat and Ng Chee Meng, and perhaps one or two others.
    Serious-minded Singaporeans will want to know their positions on issues that have been hotly debated publicly for the last few years.

    This applies too to opposition candidates. Whether from the PAP or other party, candidates also shouldn’t hide behind party manifestos and slogans and give up the challenge of articulating what they themselves believe in or stand for. In fact, political parties too should be clearer about their stands on issues.
    Voters want to know what their representatives in Parliament will fight for.

    On immigration – do they  support the move to tighten the tap on foreign workers or should it be loosened? On the economy – do they agree with those who say Singapore’s high-cost, high-wages growth model benefits the high-waged elite, but is a burden  on the low-waged who  struggle to have a dignified life in a high-cost living environment? Should SMRT, which is listed, be corporatised, and  public transport become a public service provided by the state?

    What do  the future leaders of Singapore, whether from the PAP or the opposition, stand for?

    Or are they  all for the status quo? In which case,  Singapore’s future is dim indeed.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • SDP Asking Elections Department To Clarify Rules For Coming GE

    SDP Asking Elections Department To Clarify Rules For Coming GE

    The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) has written to the Elections Department seeking clarification on several elections rules, especially those on the use of promotional material and access to counting centres .

    The letter from SDP chairman Jeffrey George, which was released to media on Friday, said the party was seeking “clear, concise and written rules that will be practised by all Returning Officers”. The letter goes on to outline incidents in previous elections where the party said there was confusion over procedures its polling agents and counting agents were required to follow.

    “In short, the multiple standards of operations by the Elections Officials at the various Polling and the Counting centres resulted in us not being able to fully utilise our resources and ground supporters/ volunteers,” wrote Mr George.

    The SDP is also asking if it can play party music during campaign rallies and also if it can have a decorated campaign bus.

    “We have the intention to advertise via bus wrapping advertisement on a Private Hire Bus for the nine days of electoral campaigning starting from Nomination Day for the upcoming General Election,” said the letter.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • PAP’s Tampines GRC Team Unveiled

    PAP’s Tampines GRC Team Unveiled

    The People’s Action Parts (PAP) today (Aug 22) announced its slate of candidates for Tampines Group Representation Constituency (GRC). New face Ms Cheng Li Hui will join the five-member GRC team, along with NTUC deputy director Desmond Choo who previously contested the Hougang Single Member Constituency (SMC) during the 2011 General Election and the 2012 by-election.

    Ms Cheng, who is the deputy chief executive of Hai Leck Holdings, has been Councillor in the Northwest CDC since 2004. She is also the Vice-Chairperson of the Tampines East Citizens’ Consultative Committee and the Tampines East Community Club Management Committee.

    It was earlier announced that the two current Members of Parliament (MPs) for Tampines, former National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan and Ms Irene Ng will be leaving politics

    The other PAP candidates to contest in Tampines GRC are Education Minister Heng Swee Keat, Second Minister for Home Affairs and Foreign Affairs Mr Masagos Zulkifli and Mr Baey Yam Keng.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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