Tag: Singaporeans

  • Young lions SEA Games Campaign Off To Winning Start

    Young lions SEA Games Campaign Off To Winning Start

    Hosts Singapore have begun their South-east Asian (SEA) Games men’s football campaign with a 1-0 win over the Philippines at the Jalan Besar Stadium this evening (June 1).

    The only goal in the Group A encounter came on the stroke of half-time when defender Abdul Hadi flicked Safirul Sulaiman’s free-kick past Filipino goalkeeper Florencio Badelic.

    Forward Sahil Suhaimi had a glorious opportunity to double the Young Lions’ lead in the second-half after substitute Irfan Fandi had set him up, but he dragged his shot just wide of the post.

    Singapore’s next match in Group A is against Myanmar on Thursday.

    In Monday night’s other match, a 44th minute strike by midfielder Rungrat Phumichantuk gave record 14-time SEA Games champions Thailand a narrow 1-0 win over Timor Leste in a Group B match at the Bishan Stadium.

    Here are the match highlights from tonight.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Singapore Football Tackles Defence In Hunt For Gold

    Singapore Football Tackles Defence In Hunt For Gold

    Football coaches are wont to state the obvious that to win a match, their players must score goals. What they do not say often is that to avoid defeat, the team cannot afford to concede them.

    This has been the niggling problem for Singapore’s SEA Games under-23 football squad during their preparations in the past six months.

    Their losing streak includes a 5-0 drubbing by the Hamburger SV’s under-23 team, 3-0 to Yemen, as well as 8-1 and 3-1 defeats by the respective Japan and Cambodia under-22 teams.

    Three key weaknesses surfaced from those matches: The haphazard organisation of the backline, a lack of effective communication and players being intimidated by rivals who were faster and bigger.

    A tight defence inspires confidence in a team attempting to move forward in search of goals, and as the players prepare for their opening Group A match against the Philippines at Jalan Besar Stadium today, midfielder Anumanthan Kumar is confident that the defensive problems have been fixed.

    The 20-year-old has been fielded in central defence along with Amirul Adli by coach Aide Iskandar in recent matches, and he said assistant coaches S Subramani and Kadir Yahaya have helped them learn to cover each other more effectively.

    “After the string of losses, the defenders came together and worked with the coaches on ways to improve the defence and what we needed to do,” said Anumanthan.

    “We worked in the training sessions and found a lot of new ways to defend. Previously, our backline tended to get bullied by bigger and taller strikers, but we have come up with new strategies to handle them, and these seem to be working in our past few games.”

    During the team’s training tour in Japan last month, they lost 2-1 loss to fourth-division side Azul Claro Numazu, but bounced back to notch a 3-0 victory over Shinzuoka Sangyo University.

    They also beat Laos 5-1 and Timor Leste 3-0 in warm-up matches in the past week.

    Said Amirul: “The coaches have worked on the defensive organisation and how we move and gel as a unit. During the past few weeks, we worked on this area, and I think we are much better than we were previously.

    “We are also more compact, better organised and comfortable with one another in defence. There is confidence now that we have one another’s back and the belief that we can help the team get results.”

    Communication among players is key, and keeper Syazwan Buhari will play a crucial role in organising his backline to check looming dangers.

    “The coaches spotted areas on which I had to improve, and one of these is to talk more to the defenders to stop the shots at goal,” said the team’s No 1.

    “We worked on this in training, and in Japan, we performed better when we came under attack.”

    Singapore’s under-23 side are itching to get their first group fixture out of the way as they kick off their gold-medal campaign against the Philippines today.

    The Filipinos did not compete in the 2013 SEA Games in Myanmar, and they return to the biennial event this time with a squad comprising a mix of players who either turn out for university or the country’s United Football League teams.

    They have three foreign-born players, including Enzo Cheng and Dominic del Rosario, who were raised in Australia, Kennedy Uzoka from Nigeria and Filipino-British Connor Tacagni.

    Thirteen players also featured in the AFC U23 Championship two months ago in Bangkok, where they lost all their matches against Cambodia (3-1), Thailand (5-1) and North Korea (4-0).

    In their final tune-up for the Games, the under-23 Azkals last week trained in Blacktown, Australia, notching two wins and three losses in their friendly matches.

    The Filipinos, led by head coach Marlon Maro, are an unknown quality, but Aide cautioned against underestimating them.

    “In any tournament, opening matches are never easy, because everybody starts on the same level,” said the coach.

    “We are trying to settle down as quickly as possible to get our rhythm, and for the Philippines, they have nothing to lose playing against the home team.

    “We have a game plan and we just have to focus on what we need to do.”

    With the defensive leaks having been sorted out, Aide said everyone on the team could rely on one another to get the results, and he was going into the SEA Games more confident of their abilities.

    “We have been working hard in every department and it is paying off. Everybody now knows their role and I believe we won’t be conceding silly goals anymore,” he said.

     

    Football at the SEA Games

    When: June 1 to 15

    Where: Group A (Jalan Besar Stadium), Group B (Bishan Stadium), semi-finals and final (National Stadium)

    Number of medals: One (men’s football)

    Ticket prices: S$10, S$20

    *Tickets to the Singapore v the Philippines match are sold out.

     

    SINGAPORE’S SQUAD:

    S/N NAME POSITION CLUB

    1 Syazwan Buhari GK Courts Young Lions

    2 Rudy Khairullah GK Courts Young Lions

    3 Shakir Hamzah DF Courts Young Lions

    4 Al-Qaasimy Rahman DF Courts Young Lions

    5 Sheikh Abdul Hadi DF Courts Young Lions

    6 Fadli Kamis DF Courts Young Lions

    7 Amirul Adli DF Courts Young Lions

    8 Ho Wai Loon DF Balestier Khalsa

    9 Faris Ramli MF LionsXII

    10 Safirul Sulaiman MF Courts Young Lions

    11 Stanely Ng MF Home United

    12 Anumanthan Mohan Kumar MF Courts Young Lions

    13 Adam Swandi MF Courts Young Lions

    14 Suria Prakash MF Courts Young Lions

    15 Pravin Guanasagaran MF Courts Young Lions

    16 Shahfiq Ghani FW Courts Young Lions

    17 Sahil Suhaimi FW LionsXII

    18 Shamil Sharif FW Courts Young Lions

    19 Irfan Fandi FW Courts Young Lions

    20 Amy Recha Pristifana FW Courts Young Lions

     

    THE PHILIPPINES’ SQUAD:

     

    1 Florencio Badelic Jr GK Global FC

    2 Jaime Cheng GK Global FC

    3 Ace Villanueva GK UP and Pachanga Diliman FC

    4 Nathaniel Alquiros DF DLSU and Stallion FC

    5 Mark Besana DF UP

    6 Ian Clarino DF UP and Global FC

    7 Neil Dorimon DF SBC and Mendiola FC 1991

    8 Shirmar Felongco DF Stallion FC

    9 Francisco Santos DF UP and Pachanga Diliman FC

    10 Ronnie Aguisanda MF Green Archers United FC

    11 Arnel Amita MF FEU and Manila Jeepney FC

    12 Fitch Arboleda MF Stallion FC

    13 Paolo Bugas MF FEU and Global FC

    14 Dominic Del Rosario MF JP Voltes FC

    15 Daniel Gadia MF UP and Pachanga Diliman FC

    16 Paolo Salenga MF NU and Global FC

    17 Richard Talaroc Jr MF Global FC

    18 Connor Tacagni FW SBC and Mendiola FC 1991

    19 Kennedy Uzoka FW Green Archers United FC

    20 Jinggoy Valmayor FW UP and Pachanga Diliman FC

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Police Identify Man Shot Dead And Two Arrested After Incident At Shangri-La

    Police Identify Man Shot Dead And Two Arrested After Incident At Shangri-La

    The Singapore Police Force identified a man shot dead in the incident at the Shangri-la Hotel as Mohamed Taufik Bin Zahar.

    The 34-year-old Singaporean was the driver of the car that crashed through barriers near the hotel early on Sunday (May 31) where a high-level security summit is taking place, the Singapore Police Force in a statement early on Monday morning (June 1).

    The two passengers in the car who were arrested were identified as Mohamed bin Ismail, 31, and Muhammad Syahid bin Mohamed Yasni, 26, police said. Both are also Singaporeans.

    Mohamed bin Ismail sustained injuries during the incident but was conscious when taken to hospital. Substances believed to be controlled drugs and an item, believed to be a drug-taking utensil, were found on the two men who were arrested, police said. They found no weapons were found on the three subjects.

    Police said the deceased man was wanted for failing to attend court for an offence of criminal intimidation, involvement in drugs and has other criminal records.

    Ismail is also wanted for drug related offences and for failing to stop at a roadblock. Both he and Muhammad Syahid bin Mohamed Yasin have drug related offences and criminal records.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • SPF Update On Shangri-La Incident

    SPF Update On Shangri-La Incident

    A dash through incident was reported at 4.36am on 31 May 2015 in the vicinity of Shangri-La Hotel. Police shot dead one man and arrested two others in relation to this incident.

    Due to the ongoing Shangri-La Dialogue, security measures including vehicle and person check points were put in place in the vicinity of Shangri-La Hotel. These checks are an important part of Police’s standard operating procedures to ensure that all vehicles and persons entering or approaching the secured venues are checked for dangerous weapons and explosives that could be used to harm persons attending a major security event.

    The trio was earlier stopped at a security checkpoint set up along Ardmore Park. When the subjects were questioned by the Police officers, the driver, Mohamed Taufik Bin Zahar (34 years old) suddenly accelerated the vehicle towards the police officers, in the direction of Shangri-La Hotel.

    When the said vehicle crashed through the concrete barricades that were put in place to prevent such an intrusion, Police officers responded swiftly to prevent the vehicle from approaching Shangri-la Hotel. Despite repeated warnings to stop, the vehicle continued to drive dangerously across the security checkpoint and headed towards the secured venue. Officers fired at the vehicle to stop it from causing harm to others and from proceeding further.

    The driver was pronounced dead at scene. His two passengers, Mohamed bin Ismail (31 years old) and Muhammad Syahid bin Mohamed Yasin (26 years old) were arrested. Mohamed bin Ismail sustained injuries during the incident and was conveyed to hospital conscious. All three men are Singaporean. Substances believed to be controlled drugs and an item, believed to be a drug-taking utensil, were found on the two men arrested. No weapons were found on the three subjects.

    Police and officers from Singapore Armed Forces’ (SAF) Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Explosives Defence Group (CBRE DG) searched the Singapore-registered vehicle, a red Subaru Impreza. No explosives, arms or weapons were found in the vehicle. A bag containing white powdery substances believed to contain controlled drugs was recovered in the vehicle.

    The deceased was wanted for failing to attend court for an offence of criminal intimidation and has drug related antecedents as well as other criminal records. Mohamed bin Ismail is also wanted for drug related offences and for failing to stop at a roadblock. Both he and Muhammad Syahid bin Mohamed Yasin have drug related antecedents and criminal records. Investigations are still ongoing. The two men are being investigated by Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) for drug-related offences and will be charged on 1 June 2015 for a drug trafficking offence under the Misuse of Drugs Act.

    The Special Investigation Section of Criminal Investigation Department (CID) is investigating the death of Mohamed Taufik bin Zahar as part of the Coroner’s Inquiry process. All shooting cases are treated seriously and will be thoroughly investigated by the Police.

    Preliminary investigations indicate that this is an isolated incident and is not terrorism related.

    Police have developed a calibrated approach to public security to ensure that Singapore remains safe and secure. Enhanced security measures are put in place for major security events because these events are attractive targets for terrorist attacks. The public are advised to comply with Police’s directions to ensure their safety and security.

    PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT
    SINGAPORE POLICE FORCE
    1 JUNE 2015 @ 2.00AM

     

     

    Source: Singapore Police Force

  • Roy Ngerng: One Year After Being Sued By Lee Hsien Loong

    Roy Ngerng: One Year After Being Sued By Lee Hsien Loong

    Today is one year since I was sued for defamation by the Singapore prime minister.

    Since then, the government admitted for the first time that it has been taking Singaporeans’ CPF retirement funds to invest in the GIC. Previously, the government has kept denying this.

    Also, more and more has been revealed. The government claims that Temasek does not invest our CPF but it has been found that the government had taken our CPF to fund the construction of infrastructure then gave them to Temasek to manage.

    After I trawled through the government websites to dig up these evidence, I was told to take down two articles I wrote about these and the government then changed and deleted the information on these websites.

    We now know that the prime minister, deputy prime ministers and several ministers and ex-ministers also sit on the board of the GIC but the GIC still claim that the government does not interfere in it and the government still claims likewise. But how can that be possible when they are run by the same people?

    In the past, many Singaporeans would cry out about the CPF. Indeed, Singaporeans have one of the least adequate retirement funds in the world and we also have the lowest returns on our retirement funds in the world.

    However, the GIC and Temasek Holdings which take our CPF to earn are the among the top 11 richest sovereign wealth funds in the world. We still do not know how much their management pay themselves using our CPF monies, because there are no full reports from the GIC and Temasek Holdings.

    We continue to demand that the PAP government be transparent and accountable to Singaporeans but the PAP has simply ignored Singaporeans. Once, Lee Hsien Loong also told The Telegraph newspaper that the funds are accountable to the government. But who is the government accountable to? He said that he does not believe that transparency is everything.

    But if transparency is not everything, then what is? Today, many elderly Singaporeans cannot retire because they simply cannot earn enough to do so. Not only that, several academics and even government officials have also estimated that 30% of Singaporeans are living in poverty today, which means that a third of Singaporeans cannot even earn enough to pay for basic necessities.

    Last year, Khaw Boon Wan finally admitted that the government controls the construction of the HDB flats. He also admitted that the PAP fixes the prices of the flats.

    Today, we know that of the money that Singaporeans pay into the CPF, as much as three quarters are spent having to pay for the flat mortgages. The PAP claims that the flats are affordable. Why then are Singaporeans paying for the most expensive public housing in the world? The PAP Old Guards wanted to build truly cheap flats so that Singaporeans can have a home. But the current PAP has instead turned the flats into money making machines for themselves.

    Yet, the PAP would dare claim that it is losing billions by building the HDB flats. But we have found out instead that the government has not declared $20 to $30 billion in surplus every year to Singaporeans, because of the money it earns from the land. And then, the PAP makes Singaporeans pay 60% of the flat prices into land, even though we will not get to own the land and even though the PAP has bought the land very cheaply from Singaporeans in the 1960s and 1970s. This is a lot of money that the PAP is earning from us.

    Indeed, the tens of billions in surplus that the PAP earns from Singaporeans every year would enable Singaporeans to have free healthcare and education, all the way from childcare to university, and still have a lot to save. However, the PAP refuses to do so. Instead, it does not even declare this surplus that it has earned from Singaporeans.

    Today, Singaporeans are made to pay for one of the most expensive university tuition fees in the world, if not the most expensive. We are also made to pay possibly the most expensive childcare fees in the world. Yet, the PAP would not take care of our own children, but would spend $400 million every year to give out free scholarships to foreign students. And then, Singaporeans are made to pay $400 million to study in our own universities. The money that the PAP gives to foreigners will be able to educate our children. But the PAP does not want to take care of Singaporeans.

    Not only that, the PAP also spends the lowest on healthcare among the developed countries, so much so that Singaporeans also have to pay the most out of our own pocket to pay for healthcare, in the world. What’s the point of having nice-looking hospitals when many Singaporeans simply cannot afford to go there and have to sell their homes to pay for their medical bills or even choose to die?

    But even so, the PAP and their cronies keep telling Singaporeans to live within our means. For goodness sake, Singaporeans are already trying their darnest to live within our means. But how else does the PAP expect Singaporeans to do so, when the PAP would not even let Singaporeans earn enough to even live?

    Today, Singaporeans earn one of the lowest wages among the highest-income countries. The poorest in Singapore also earn the lowest among these countries. However, the PAP would pay themselves the highest salaries in the world. It wants to earn high salaries, so it asks Singaporeans to foot the bill. And to do so, it claims that this is to prevent corruption and to have capable leaders.

    But what a fluke. Today, Singaporeans are seeing the worst leaders we have ever seen since independence. The trains have been breaking down for many years now and the walls in new HDB flats crack as soon as they are built. The PAP’s only solution to grow the economy is to depress wages and import cheap substitution labour, and allow Singaporeans to languish, as we are forced to accept depressed wages and where many of our degree holders are forced to lose their jobs and have to compete with people who have degrees from degree mills. And even then, the PAP would still defend these degrees and say it is willing to overlook them.

    This is the PAP. This is the capability that they want us to pay for them. And yet, they want us to keep letting them to run the country. Sure, that is if we want to continue to let them run the country to the ground.

    It is clear to most Singaporeans by now that all the PAP care about is money and profits for themselves. The Economist has also ranked Singapore as 5th on the crony capitalism index, which means that Singapore is the 5th easiest place in the world for the rich to get rich, if they are affiliated to the government. Indeed, the rich in Singapore has gotten richer – the share of income that goes to the richest 10% in Singapore has grown from 30% in 1995 to 42% in 2011. The richest 10% most probably owns half of the income in Singapore today.

    However, the rich-poor gap has only kept growing bigger and bigger. Today, Singapore has the highest income inequality among the developed countries and Singapore also has the highest poverty rate among the developed countries.

    And this has resulted in many social problems. Because Singapore has the highest income inequality among the developed countries, this has resulted in Singapore having the highest rate of prisoners, after the United States. We also have the lowest level of trust, after Portugal. Singapore also has one of the lowest social mobilities among the developed countries.

    The PAP keeps wanting to psycho Singaporeans to make believe to us that it is taking care of Singaporeans. But it has been revealed that the PAP spends the least among the developed countries on social protection, and on healthcare and education, for Singaporeans.

    In fact, Singapore is one of very few countries in the world which still do not a minimum wage and we are still one of very few countries in the world which still do not have unemployment protection for Singaporeans who have lost their jobs.

    But the PAP would let themselves and the rich among them earn higher and higher incomes. In fact, the PAP reduced income tax over the years so that it can allow itself and the rich with it to pay the lowest tax among the developed countries, and one of the lowest in the world. Yet, the PAP then forced Singaporeans to pay the highest social contribution rate in the world, into the CPF.

    The PAP wants to let itself keep its own income while making Singaporeans lose ours.

    The PAP keeps claiming that the CPF is not tax and should not be lumped together with tax. But do you know that the PAP gives Singaporeans the lowest returns on our CPF, among retirement funds in the world, so much so that if we have $200,000 inside our CPF, there is at least another $100,000 that the PAP should have returned to us but which they have taken to earn instead – Singaporeans are being robbed of as much as half of our CPF which is rightfully ours. The interest that the PAP has taken to earn and not returned is known as implicit tax. The PAP is making Singaporeans pay implicit tax on our CPF.

    Not only that, the PAP fixes the housing prices and keeps increasing the prices, thus forcing Singaporeans to lose even more of our CPF towards buying them. The PAP has also made Singaporeans pay more than $70 billion into the Medisave but only allow Singaporeans to use less than 1.5% of it every year. And when Singaporeans grow old, the PAP takes the rest of our Medisave to put inside MediShield. In short, the PAP has found many different ways to lock up our CPF, so that they can earn for themselves. And this is not forgetting the CPF Minimum Sum (now known as the Full Retirement Sum) which the PAP keeps increasing to lock even more of Singaporeans’ CPF inside.

    In short, the PAP is perhaps right to say the CPF is not tax. It is a goldmine for the PAP. Your money and my money is being taken by the PAP to earn heaps of money for itself. Meanwhile, the PAP forces Singaporeans to work the longest hours in the world, and earn one of the lowest wages among the highest-income countries, and force Singaporeans to struggle and fight among ourselves, in order to survive. But for the PAP and the rich among them, Singapore becomes their playground as the rest of us languish beneath them.

    This, my friends, is what some of you had voted for. This is what we have allowed to control us and take advantage of us. We allow the PAP to become our masters and us their slaves.

    A study funded by NASA showed that all unequal societies in the world have all collapsed in history, because as the elites grew richer and more arrogant, they started enriching themselves and started to become detached from the common people. They become out-of-touch, as the PAP has today. Then as the rest of the population suffer and fight among themselves for the leftovers, the elites remain oblivious to the problems until the problems become so big that it is too late, and the whole society collapses.

    This is what Singapore is going through today. Many Singaporeans keep quiet and pretend that everything is fine. We choose to keep our heads down and hope that if we don’t think about these things, they will all go away. They will not.

    In fact, if we don’t do anything about it today, it will be your children and their children who will suffer tomorrow.

    So, my friends the question to you is, are you willing to take a good look at what is happening around us today and admit that things are in need of dire change? If we wait any longer, we might not have much else to wait for by the time comes.

    The opposition parties have proposed many policies. In fact, the academics and think tanks have also proposed many solutions that need to be implemented in Singapore real soon, in order for us to turn Singapore around. However, the PAP refuses to do so. The PAP refuses to define a poverty line, implement minimum wage, reduce rents, reduce their own salaries and increase subsidies for healthcare, education and retirement so as to kickstart domestic consumption and the economy – these are the most basic solutions that need to happen in Singapore soon but the PAP refuses to implement them.

    My friends, if we want our families, our children and our future to be protected, there is only one solution. We need to vote the PAP out.

    We need to vote in the opposition parties to form a new government. We need a new government that will be willing to take care of and protect Singaporeans.

    Only then will Singapore continue to have a chance. Only then will we continue to have a new lease of life.

    The answer is clear. But it is up to us to be willing to see what is going on in Singapore and for us to be willing to see the PAP for what it is.

    We no longer have a government in Singapore. The PAP is not a government. It is a bunch of businessmen who only have their own self-interests at heart. They do not care for Singapore and will not care for Singaporeans.

    The PAP Old Guard cared for Singapore. Under their leadership, in the first 20 years of Singapore, wages went up, the CPF interest rates went up and income inequality went down. Singapore was becoming a better place. We were indeed moving from the Third World to the First.

    However, under the current PAP, Singapore is already moving backwards, from the First World back into the Third World.

    So, my friends, it is no longer the time for us to pretend and put our heads in the sand. It is time for us to look up and look to the future. It is time for us to face up and look at the possibilities that stand in front of us.

    For our country and our children’s future, there can only be one answer. This current bunch of PAP does not care for Singaporeans and do not have our interests at heart. It is time to stop hoping that they will do anything for Singaporeans. We waited for 30 years. They have made used of us for 30 years.

    This coming general election, let us finally stand on our two feet. Let us finally put our feet down and decide once and for all that we want to protect ourselves and that we want to do what is right for ourselves. Let us fight for our future and let us give our children a hope and a dream to look forward to.

    It is time we take control of our own country. It is time we stop letting someone else take over our country and leave us in the dust. No, we will take back our country. We will own our country.

    50 years ago, our forefathers fought for the independence of our country.

    Today, as Singapore goes into the 50th anniversary of our country, we will renew their fight and we will take back our country.

    We will renew the fight for independence and regain our lives back.

    For ourselves, our own future, our families and our children, it is time we stand up and we start anew, as a promise to ourselves and as a respect to our forefathers, to let our country regain the hope that it once was, and start ourselves in a new journey for our country, and for ourselves.

    It is time, my friends. It is time we take a stand.

    My next hearing will be held from 1 to 3 July to determine how much I would need to pay the prime minister in damages.

     

    Source: http://thehearttruths.com

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