Tag: Singaporeans

  • My Children Almost Fell Out Of GrabCar Vehicle

    My Children Almost Fell Out Of GrabCar Vehicle

    Dear all,

    I booked from ‪#‎GrabCar‬ SKP8502B driver Ong Seng Thye H/p: 91075682/81389062 using his private car earlier this evening at about 6pm from Clementi Mall back home. I was with my husb, my helper & 2 kids.

    Along the way, my son pulled the left passenger door handle. I wasn’t aware just by doing that it caused the door to open slightly even when it is locked. The driver pulled over by the side & my helper closed the door. He then said even if the door is locked it can still be open from the inside. My husb asked “then what’s the point of locking if it can still be open?”. He told my husb to give a try which he did & yes the door could be open after locking! He added the lock is to only prevent opening from the outside but not inside.

    We continued our journey, my daughter who is seated at the right of the passenger seat then meddled with the door handle causing it to open slightly. This dont usually happen but after the commotion earlier she saw my helper & husb open & close the door she suddenly grab the door handle & pulled. Knowing this, the driver said “see now the right door open, if your daughter fall i dont know”. This time he did not stop the car instead he made a sharp and fast left turn & the right door fully opened. My daughter nearly fell off the car if I didn’t hold on to her! He only stopped the car when my husb asked him to. I closed the door quickly afterwards.

    He commented saying he never had this kind of prob not once but twice the door accidentally opened. He told us our kids was the problem. After he dropped us off we paid the fare my husb asked him what was his prob. He said his prob was our kids. He even added that we didnt know how to educate our kids. My husb wasn’t happy of course asked him to step off the car. But he refused he said he was going to call the police. We then told him to call the police at that moment while we wait for them to arrive. But he insisted he will go and make a report himself.

    Tried calling #GrabCar hotline but to no avail. On my part, a police report had been lodged by me. Is it my fault if his lock was faulty or whatever reason for it to open after locking? What do you expect in a 5 seater car with 4 adults(including driver) & 2 young kids aged 1 & 4? Purposely continuing driving & even made a sharp turned which caused my daughter to almost fall off the car is absurd!!! She could have fell off & hit the curb!

    If the vehicle he is using is supplied by #GrabCar please look into the lock matter. Young kids are curious they will touch & meddle with everything and anything. So it is not surprising for them to meddle with the door handle. & knowing the door can be open from inside even when it is lock is very dangerous especially with young kids on board!

    Today, i might be lucky my daughter didn’t fell off the car & hit the curb. But tomorrow it can happen to anyone else. This is not my first time booking under #GrabCar, i never had any kind of prob with the other drivers. DO NOT BOOK FROM ONG SENG THYE, SKP8502B!!

     

    Source: Izzati Hasan

     

  • Can Singapore Save Democracy?

    Can Singapore Save Democracy?

    Next Sunday, Singapore celebrates the 50th anniversary of its independence. There’s much to celebrate — for some at least. The city-state is indeed “exceptional” (as its leaders like to say) as a global hub for finance, trade, travel, and shipping. Its mix of languages, which include English and Mandarin, has made it the perfect gateway to an economically resurgent Asia.

    At the same time, inequality is rising. A Malay minority continues to lag behind Chinese and Indians. Antediluvian laws against gay sex and chewing gum remain in place.

    Most damagingly, Singapore has a democratic deficit. The same partyhas ruled it for 50 years. The media is compliant. Politicians have long used defamation suits to bully dissenters and even intimidate the foreign press.

    But it is complacent, and even dishonest, to judge the place without also asking what democracy really means today — and what it could mean for a small city-state like Singapore. The moral high ground should not be so easily accessible to citizens of present-day democracies.

    Democracy has not been much in evidence in the workings of the European Union’s technocrats, or indeed among the radicals of Syriza. Feckless wars, special-interest lobbyists, and political dysfunction have made the U.S. resemble late Byzantium rather than the small-town civic haven witnessed by Tocqueville. The runaway candidacy of Donald Trump exposes a growing constituency for demagogues in the world’s oldest democracy.

    India, routinely described as the world’s “largest democracy,” has been undergoing its own disturbing mutations. During the decades that Lee Kuan Yew pulled Singapore out of economic backwaters, many in the Indian middle class longed for a leader like him: an authoritarian technocrat who could make big decisions about economic development without going through parliamentary democracy’s messy and arduous processes of deliberation, debate and consensus.

    After flirting with one authoritarian prime minister (Indira Gandhi) and two technocrat-type successors (Rajiv Gandhi and Manmohan Singh), middle-class Indians may have found their ideal leader in Narendra Modi, who concentrates power at the top while shopping fantasies of squeaky-clean smart cities and bullet trains.

    Modi is unlikely to match Lee Kuan Yew’s achievements as an economic modernizer. In prosecuting his opponents, however, he has already surpassed the Singapore patriarch.

    Lee deployed stern libel laws against his detractors; he did not resort to large-scale subversion of Singapore’s genuinely meritocratic and honest bureaucracy. The ongoing campaign against Teesta Setalvad, one of Modi’s most resilient critics, has revealed yet again that the Hindu nationalist right won’t balk at undermining India’s very few sacrosanct institutions while settling political scores.

    Any criticism of Singapore’s democratic deficit should begin by acknowledging that there’s hardly any resemblance between the original idea of democracy and its current incarnations in India, Europe and the United States.

    In its classical Athenian form, democracy was a political regime where the equality of citizens was taken deeply seriously. The idea of citizenship itself was restrictive: It excluded women and slaves. But citizens in the Athenian city-state enjoyed a degree of control over their lives and protection from harm that their modern counterparts can only dream of.

    The demos, the people, held actual power in the absence of such mediating institutions as a professional bureaucracy, executive, and legislature. By contrast, today’s democratic states concentrate too much power in a few institutions and individuals.

    The “traditional” media, mostly owned by corporate interests allied with political elites, and prone to sensationalism, was always a poor substitute for the Athenian assembly of free citizens that facilitated open discussion and debate. Social media seems more suited to self-promotion and slander than democratic symposium. As for routine elections, they increasingly validate Rousseau’s sneer that the English were free once every seven years.

    Rule by and for the people seems to have been replaced in many formal democracies with rule by and for the rich and powerful. It’s clear now, after decades of rhetoric about democracy, that its original ideal — a community where human beings live together without holding power over another — can only be realized, imperfectly if at all, in small states.

    Here, Singapore has a huge advantage over centralized and dysfunctional democracies. It’s actually a functional city-state with a relatively small (5.5 million) and highly literate population, and it has no enemies.

    Astute management appears to have assured Singapore’s economic future. It can weather the shocks that make both haves and have-nots elsewhere crave the sweeping broom of authoritarianism.

    The conditions certainly exist for Singapore to move from being a showcase of efficient authoritarianism to an exemplar of that much-invoked but nearly extinct thing: democracy. Its insecure leaders may feel no sense of urgency to change the status quo. But it’s never too late for a 50-year-old nation-state to grow up.

    This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

    Source: www.bloombergview.com

  • A Look At Ng Chee Meng And His Powerful Family

    A Look At Ng Chee Meng And His Powerful Family

    Ng Chee Meng is touted as a potential candidate for the People’s Action Party (PAP). He and his brothers hold key positions in government. Take a look at where they are.

    The Ng Family

     

    Ng Chee Meng has just resigned as the Chief of Defence Force. Before he was the Chief of Defence Force, he was also the Chief of Air Force.

    This is a position he succeeded from his older brother, Ng Chee Khern, who was also the Chief of Air Force. Later, Chee Khern became the Director of the Security and Intelligence Division, and is now the Permanent Secretary of Defence Development.

    Their younger brother, Ng Chee Peng was the Chief of Navy. He is now the CEO of the CPF Board.

    Together, all three Ng brothers were the Chief of Defence Force, Chief of Air Force and Chief of Navy – they controlled military positions over the land, air and sea.

    Older brother Chee Khern is now a Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Defence. Younger brother Chee Peng is now the CEO of the CPF Board. Our defence and CPF are in their hands.

    Chee Meng is expected to run for the PAP and would be the highest-ranking military officer to run for election. He could even potentially become a prime minister. This means that he could head the government.

    If so, the Ng family would control the government, the military and our CPF.

    This is the Ng Family.

     

    Source: Temasek Review

  • Sitoh Yih Pin Unveils Lift Upgrading Program For Potong Pasir

    Sitoh Yih Pin Unveils Lift Upgrading Program For Potong Pasir

    Potong Pasir MP Sitoh Yih Pin yesterday had good news for residents of eight low-rise blocks of flats which previously did not qualify for lift upgrading as there were too few units to share the cost.

    The Housing Board has given in-principle approval to select their blocks for the national programme, he said in letters to 32 households that will get lift access, which he delivered in the evening.

    Mr Sitoh told reporters that he “had been working very hard” to get the blocks included and hopes construction work can begin in the first six months of next year.

    He also hoped residents would continue to give him a mandate to do more for them.

    “I went to take a look at our manifesto in 2011,” he said. “We can put a tick to every box, we have fulfilled all the promises we have made.”

    Lift upgrading was a key platform of Mr Sitoh’s campaign to spruce up the ageing ward in the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) bid to wrest the seat from veteran opposition politician Chiam See Tong.

    Mr Sitoh won the seat on his third attempt in the 2011 General Election, when Mr Chiam left the ward he held since 1984 to contest neighbouring Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC.

    Mr Sitoh had a majority of just 114 votes against Mr Chiam’s wife – Mrs Lina Chiam of the Singapore People’s Party (SPP) – who intends to contest again in the next general election.

    Yesterday, Mr Sitoh ran into Mr and Mrs Chiam and over 20 SPP activists at a coffee shop during their respective walkabouts, and they met up like old friends over peanut pancakes and coffee.

    Mr Sitoh said he respected Mr Chiam enormously, and disclosed that for many neighbourhood renewal projects that were being carried out, he had given instructions to retain plaques that bear Mr Chiam’s name beside the facilities.

    “As much as possible, even if we are to open a new amenity, at best our plaque will be side-by-side with his. His 27 years of legacy in Potong Pasir are intact,” he added.

    Mr Sitoh has expanded the neighbourhood’s community club and brought in FairPrice and a POSB outlet to Potong Pasir in the four years since he took over as MP.

    Yesterday, he asked residents for a chance to embark on “the next chapter” of his 10-year plan, which includes a project to cover up all the drains and install more surveillance cameras in the estate.

    “We know exactly what we need to do, and our manifesto is ready. We will unveil it when the hustings come,” he said.

    Yesterday, Mr Chiam was fondly greeted by Potong Pasir residents. Mrs Chiam told reporters later that she and the SPP will speak up on issues such as rising medical costs, housing and transport if elected, and try to “bring the kampung spirit back” to Potong Pasir, “of course with modern facilities”.

    “The needs of the residents come first, not the facade of a constituency,” she added before visiting Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC and Mountbatten where SPP also plans to contest.

    Also working the ground in Potong Pasir yesterday was former National Solidarity Party (NSP) secretary-general Tan Lam Siong, who handed out rations to residents a day after he said he would contest there as an independent.

    The Democratic Progressive Party is also interested in the ward .

    Asked about such a contest, Mr Sitoh said: “That’s interesting, isn’t it? (But) our attention and our focus must be on the residents here.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Muslim Women In Singapore Did Not Wear The Hijab Before Early 1970s

    Muslim Women In Singapore Did Not Wear The Hijab Before Early 1970s

    As proof that the cultural trend of wearing the hijab is a fairly recent phenomenon in Singapore’s history, here are some photos of Muslim women in Singapore/Malaya before early 1970.

    In everyday life:

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    54eaba5f-7ff8-4c06-9aa2-e01a310be376

    7836ccdb-8fef-4036-a7d8-0340a2a2c1ec

    Malay ladies

    old-tekka-market-1971

     

    In special occasions:

    malay wedding

    malay wedding 2

    malay wedding 4

     

    In film and pop culture:

    tunang pak dukun

    rachun dunia

    Cinta

    beer ad

     

    From the above photographs, it is evident that before the early 1970’s, the hijab was not part of the Islamic dress code. Then, most Muslim women went about bareheaded or even sporting perms that were popular during that era. Even the more conservative did not wear the hijab, but rather draped a loose shawl or scarf over their head.

    The increasing religiousity of Muslims around the region has obviously impacted Muslims in Singapore, as evident from the changes in our daily habits and dress code. While this in itself is not necessarily a bad thing, but we should not be so quick to also import the customs and culture of other Muslim nations, and in doing so, erode away our own beautiful Malayan heritage.

     

    Source: www.aiseyman.com

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