Tag: Singaporeans

  • Volunteers Blameless In SEA Games Closing Ceremony Debacle

    Volunteers Blameless In SEA Games Closing Ceremony Debacle

    Spectators who were affected by the lockout from the SEA Games closing ceremony at the National Stadium on Tuesday were unhappy about the experience, but drew the line at the abuse of volunteers and spoke up against such behaviour.

    Calling the volunteers blameless and praising them for doing what they were instructed to under difficult circumstances, members of the public instead blamed the organisers for the chaos.

    Believed to number in the hundreds, some spectators could not enter the 55,000-seat arena despite having purchased tickets. This is because those already inside had waited at the concourse area after failing to find their seats when the lights went off for the ceremony. It meant stadium personnel had to close the gates as a safety measure to prevent greater crowd congestion.

    On Tuesday, the Singapore SEA Games Organising Committee (SINGSOC) apologised for the incident, offering a full refund for the tickets, which cost up to S$40, and a supporter’s medallion. As of press time last night, SINGSOC had yet to respond to TODAY’s queries on the situation.

    Several of the affected spectators yesterday criticised the people who took their frustrations out on the volunteers.

    Said Ms Teo Su Xin, 23, who had to wait 40 minutes before being allowed in: “We (crowd) couldn’t enter. They (volunteers) said it was a full house and volunteers kept asking us to move from one gate to another and I just followed the crowd, but there was this uncle who was agitated and raised his voice at the volunteers.

    “I didn’t think they deserved such treatment as they were merely carrying out instructions given to them.”

    Spectator Mark Tan was also unable to enter. “They (volunteers) were … effectively abandoned by whoever should have been coordinating them,” he said.

    Ms Paddy Low, 50, who waited for 45 minutes before deciding to go home instead, added: “The volunteers at the gate were put in a difficult spot as they didn’t know why there was such a situation. I felt sorry for them as they kept getting scolded by people.”

    Said a volunteer who declined to be named: “The crowd definitely grew rowdy, frustrated and impatient, shouting at the security and volunteer team on duty at Gate 14. A man carrying a baby also shouted at those on duty.”

    The lockout is probably one of the few blots of the 28th SEA Games, which were otherwise praised for the way they were run.

    SINGSOC roped in 17,000 volunteers to help run the biennial meet.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Impose Reformative Training With Caution

    Impose Reformative Training With Caution

    Although reformative training is aimed as a rehabilitative sentencing option for youth offenders, it should be imposed “cautiously”, given the nature and duration of the punishment, said a district judge.

    Reformative training involves an offender between 14 and 21 years old who is institutionalised for at least 18 months and up to 30 months. It results in a criminal record, while a community sentence is rendered spent after it is completed. Probation is deemed not to be a conviction.

    While reformative training aims to be rehabilitative, the courts have recognised that it is incarcerative in nature, said District Judge Lim Keng Yeow, in his grounds of decision for rejecting prosecutors’ call for the penalty to be imposed on a teenager who had beaten up foreign workers to practise his martial-arts skills.

    “Given the nature and duration of reformative training as it now stands, it should be imposed cautiously, perhaps with as much care as when a physician prescribes very strong medication carrying notable potential side effects,” he wrote. “The courts have absolutely no reason to flinch from imposing reformative training, where it is appropriate. But care ought to be taken not to impose it gratuitously.”

    The judge had sentenced Daryl Lim Jun Liang to 10 days of detention and other conditions, ruling that reformative training for the 18-year-old would amount to a “sledgehammer approach”, given the offender’s high capacity for community rehabilitation. Even adults who commit the exact same offence of voluntarily causing hurt would not have been sentenced to a substantial prison term lasting several months, he added.

    In his written decision issued last month after the prosecution indicated that it would appeal — which it did yesterday (June 16) — the judge felt community sentencing for Lim was the most fitting option, as probation was insufficiently retributive or deterrent.

    A short detention order would mean Lim would still undergo the grim and harsh experience of being locked up, he said. In addition, he was ordered to do 150 hours of community service, report daily to a supervision officer for a year and remain indoors from 10pm to 6am.

    The judge said Lim’s probation and community-sentencing suitability reports were positive — he had a supportive family, was able to talk to his mother about past involvement with a gang, and the restaurant he had interned at re-employed him even after knowing about his offence. He demonstrated a capacity for rehabilitation “high enough to outweigh other retributive or deterrent considerations calling for tough sanctions”, DJ Lim said.

    Together with three friends, the teen looked for foreign workers who were smaller in build to beat up last September and October, and mocked the victims by dancing in front of them.

    The prosecution contended that a deterrent sentence was needed as Lim had targeted a specific class of people, but the judge felt the teen’s offence was not targeted at any particular nationality, race or cultural group, as foreign workers are a large and varied class of individuals.

    In his judgment, DJ Lim also made observations about the prosecution’s “unfortunate and undesirable” about-turn in submissions on sentence. It had made no submissions on this at the start, yet objected to probation and pushed for reformative training after the favourable presentencing reports despite having “not more but less reason to press for tougher sanctions”, he said.

    The prosecution is allowed to change its mind, but DJ Lim said it could have discharged its duty to the court better in this case, given its “remarkable and yet quite inexplicable” about-turn on sentencing submissions.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 1965 Dramatic Thriller, Not Lee Kuan Yew Biopic

    1965 Dramatic Thriller, Not Lee Kuan Yew Biopic

    Scenes of the race riots of the early 1960s juxtaposed against happier occasions among Singapore’s ethnic communities, and a clip of actor Lim Kay Tong as Singapore’s first Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew calling for Singapore to be a multicultural nation.

    Film-makers Randy Ang and Daniel Yun shared a glimpse of the highly-anticipated film 1965, when they screened the film’s trailer at a press conference yesterday (June 17) at Shaw Lido.

    However, both Mr Ang and Mr Yun were quick to reiterate that the movie, which tracks events in Singapore in the early 1960s leading up to independence in 1965, is not just about the race riots.

    “It is not a biopic of Lee Kuan Yew, it’s not a propaganda film, it is not a documentary or a political film,” said Mr Yun, the executive producer and co-director for 1965. “It’s a dramatic thriller based on historical events, and touches on something fragile — racial harmony and some of the peace that we experience right now.”

    Mr Yun also said the movie was not just about looking back into the past. “Towards the end of the film, we sort of ask, ‘What’s next?’ That really is what this film is about. We showed what happened in 1965, then there’s a segment where we show the present day, but then we ask what’s the next 50 years going to be like.”

    More importantly, he added, it stresses the idea of home, a sentiment that actress Joanne Peh, who plays Chinese immigrant Zhou Jun in the film, echoed. “Until I did this movie, I never questioned the sense of home,” she said. “I was born in the ’80s and there was peace and harmony. For (my character), coming from China and settling in Singapore was a temporary situation … but we take (the idea of home) for granted.”

    Also introduced at the press conference were the official promotional posters and two songs written for the movie: Selamat Pagi by Sezairi, who also has a role in the film, and a new song by singer-songwriter Gentle Bones.

    Mr Yun is aiming high for the movie. “We hoping that this is a movie that can (have) box office (takings) of S$3 million to S$6 million. You never know — we could do better,” he said.

    Despite the movie being a period piece set in Singapore, Mr Ang said the film has legs to run well beyond SG50. “There are some universal truths in the film,” he said. “The film may be released for SG50 but even more than that, the racial and social discord (in the film) is something that is still happening. We had it here in the past, but elsewhere it’s still happening.”

    Mr Yun agreed that the film could have international appeal, adding that they are looking to market the film outside of the Republic, like in Malaysia, India and China.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • PAP Gaining Political Mileage From National Day Funpack Giveaway

    PAP Gaining Political Mileage From National Day Funpack Giveaway

    Partisan political mileage on state budget? Got signature from my “grassroots advisor” (read PAP, MP or otherwise) some more, so personalised. We got our NDay fun pack last year when we went for one of the NDP shows. It was fun and my boy and I played with the items for a long time.

    This year cannot go but never mind, “grassroots advisor” want to give me funpack to celebrate NDay with her. Not quite appropriate leh. Just give lah, why must stick “grassroots advisor” name and signature to it. A bit the spoil mood. Wonder who is “giving out” the funpacks in Aljunied, Hougang and Punggol East … “stand united” …

    Fact: Minister Ng Eng Hen announced during Budget this year that every Singaporean and PR household, 1.2 million, will each receive the funpack. Total cost is $10 million, partly covered by corporate sponsorships.

     

    Source: Daniel PS Goh

  • Japan Raves Over ‘God-Like’ Izwan Mahbud After Draw

    Japan Raves Over ‘God-Like’ Izwan Mahbud After Draw

    Izwan Mahbud put up a stellar performance in goal against Japan in Saitama to earn Singapore a 0-0 draw on Tuesday (June 16) night.

    While the national goalkeeper, who plays for the LionsXII in the Malaysian Super League, has been roundly praised on our shores, the 24-year-old was also a major hit with Blue Samurai fans.

    At least two Japanese YouTubers have put up videos of Izwan’s – referred to as Mahbud by Japanese fans – outstanding saves while describing him as ‘god-like’.

    This video from bourin work is titled: “Japan vs Singapore: god-like saves of (Izwan) Mahbud compilation”.

     

    In another highlight reel, user JP SP described Izwan as a guardian deity (守護神) goalkeeper.

    The plaudits wasn’t just restricted to YouTube as Japanese tweeters were effusive in their praise of Izwan.

     

     

    No translation needed here – MVP just means MVP.

     

     

    If you guessed from the hand clap emoticon that Haruman726 applauded Izwan’s performance, you’re absolutely correct.

     

     

    Apart from cheering on the Japanese team for trying, this user dedicated the second line of this tweet to Izwan for being a strong player.

    Users like akiras2futbol looked up Izwan on Twitter and found his account, telling his followers to click the link to learn about the man who made those god-like saves against Japan.

     

     

    User WEPESJP even dug up a video of Izwan celebrating the LionsXII’s recent Malaysian FA Cup win over Kelantan.

     

     

    Of course, Blue Samurai fans were also extremely frustrated by Izwan’s heroics.

     

     

    Here, presumably after Izwan foiled yet another Japanese attack, jgdjgdjgd is saying: “It’s you again Mahbudddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd!”

    Perhaps Izwan could be set for a career change in the J-League if his stock continues to rise in the Land of the Rising Sun…

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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