Tag: Singaporeans

  • Former Warrant Officer Jailed For Providing False Information To Traffic Police

    Former Warrant Officer Jailed For Providing False Information To Traffic Police

    A former warrant officer who lied in his statement that his wife, and not him, had driven a vehicle was jailed for one week on Monday.

    Christopher Chua Chun Kiat, 44, provided false information to the Traffic Police to avoid further investigation into his alleged offence of drink driving.

    Chua admitted to lying that his wife, Ms Goh Seok Lin, 40, was behind the wheel of a car along Bukit Timah Road at about 2.30am on June 3, 2013, instead of him.

    He had made the false statement in writing to an officer at Traffic Police at Ubi Avenue 3 on June 4 that year.

    The court heard that Station Inspector Sharul Osman was stationed at a bus stop along Bukit Timah Road, about 100m from a road block where his colleagues were, when he saw Chua drive into the driveway of the Church of the Latter Day Saints before Balmoral Plaza at about 2.30am on June 3 that year.

    He followed Chua’s car and saw him change seats with the front-seat passenger Ms Goh. A friend was seated behind.

    During the interview, Chua admitted to having consumed three glasses of beer at a nearby hawker centre. He also admitted that he had driven the car into the church to switch seats with his wife.

    A breathalyser test was not done as Chua complained that he had breathing difficulties. He was conveyed to hospital for his blood sample to be taken.

    Investigation later confirmed that contrary to his statement, he was indeed the driver of the car at the material time.

    Chua’s lawyer had asked that a fine be imposed, saying his client, who runs his own security company, had an exemplary record in the Singapore Armed Forces, and the offence was out of character.

    But Judge Shaiffudin Saruwan agreed with the prosecution a custodial sentence was warranted. He said Chua aggravated the situation by instigating two others to make the false statement to help him.

    Chua could have been jailed for up to one year and/or fined up to $5,000.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • “Return Our CPF” Protester Fined $300 For Causing Public Nuisance

    “Return Our CPF” Protester Fined $300 For Causing Public Nuisance

    A 42-year-old woman, the only one to plead guilty of the six charged for causing a public nuisance with the “Return Our CPF” rally last year, was sentenced to a S$300 fine on Monday (Mar 9).

    In sentencing Chua Siew Leng, the district judge noted that her involvement in the incident was minor and that she had pleaded guilty early.

    Speaking to reporters after her sentencing, Chua said she decided to plead guilty to be able to carry on with her personal plans. She did not elaborate.

    Chua and the other five, including activist Han Hui Hui and blogger Roy Ngerng, were charged for disrupting a YMCA Proms@the Park event held at Hong Lim Park on Sep 27 last year. They were holding the “Return Our CPF” rally at the same place at the same time.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    SINGAPORE – The Future Music Festival Asia 2015 will be officially cancelled and festival-goers will receive refunds, said organisers on Sunday.

    In a post on their Facebook page, the group apologised to festival-goers for the “inconvenience (they) have been put through” and said details on the refund would be made available on Monday.

    Festival organiser Livescape had twice applied for and failed to secure a public entertainment license from the authorities here. Livescape then submitted an appeal to the Minister for Home Affairs on March 3, but that was rejected too.

    About 15,000 tickets have been sold for the event, which was scheduled to be held for the first time in Singapore at the Changi Exhibition Centre on Friday and Saturday, March 13 to 14. Big acts such as Public Enemy and The Prodigy were slated to perform.

    Started in Australia in 2006 and considered one of the biggest dance music festivals in South-east Asia, the event made headlines last year when six of its concert-goers died from drug overdose in Kuala Lumpur.

    Tickets to the festival in Singapore, which cost between $148 and $388, were sold via Sistic, as well as on the festival’s website.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com and www.futuremusicfestival.asia

  • PAP Engineering A Subservient Middle Class

    PAP Engineering A Subservient Middle Class

    Every stable well developed first world country will have one common characteristic, a large and strong middle class. A strong middle class is the basic building block of a mature and developed economy and society. A strong middle class provides the consumption as well as the inputs needed to drive and sustain a country’s economy.

    I offer an alternative perspective to the author’s rendition of needs and wants.

    Needs are defined as a necessity for survival for every living creature. It is however not unique to the middle class or any class. Healthcare, safety, law and order, housing, education.. are universal requirements.

    Wants are the source of inspiration and motivation for a better quality of life for ones family. This is the basic DNA of humanity that drives its ability to create, innovate and progress a nation forward. Without wants, a state of mediocrity will exist.

    What the reporter Rachel advocates is that for the Singaporean middle class to accept mediocrity, and become the subservient workforce to support the PAP elitist policy of providing for themselves, super rich and rich. Such policies like the freeze on medical student intake remaining the same since the beginning of times, the removal of the recognition of law degree programs from overseas universities, the PAP propaganda to discourage our youth from pursuing higher education, the prejudice of university scholarships against our Singaporean youth. By denying the opportunities for advancement for our youth, the PAP government is once again engineering themselves to dominate over Singaporeans and to rule forever.

    Therefore as the subservient workforce forever doomed to a life of submission, the middle class should have no ambition for improving their quality of life, and therefore not harbour any desires for wants. Needs is enough for the middle class and for all Singaporeans, except the PAP and the rich.

    The PAP is saying to all Singaporeans to accept the life of mediocrity and serve the rich and elites.

    PAP has no credibility

    Comment appeared in TRE article: ST reporter says middle-class can’t tell ‘needs’ from ‘wants’

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Pre-Schools Feel The Squeeze In HDB Void Decks

    Pre-Schools Feel The Squeeze In HDB Void Decks

    Long considered the “default” option for situating affordable, accessible childcare centres in Singapore’s heartlands, public housing void decks that are big enough or have the right layout to accommodate them are becoming increasingly challenging to secure.

    Although the demand for childcare continues to grow, adequate space is running out in older estates, while childcare operators said void decks in newer estates are smaller. A spokesperson for PAP Community Foundation (PCF), which runs 360 kindergartens and childcare centres here, said it has noticed a crunch in void-deck spaces since 2013, with spaces in new estates harder to secure.

    NTUC First Campus, which runs more than 110 My First Skool pre-school centres and plans to open another 10 this year, said it has had to combine four to six bays under the same or nearby blocks of flats for seven of its 22 new centres over the past two years to get around the space crunch.

    Late last month, Minister for Social and Family Development Chan Chun Sing, responding to a question in Parliament, acknowledged the shortfall in the number of childcare places in built precincts that lack void-deck spaces. His ministry has worked with the Ministry of National Development to ensure space is provided for in the new towns. More details will be given on other ways to address the lack of childcare places in estates without enough void-deck space for centres, he said. At a separate event, he also suggested that centres could be designed upfront onto the second floors of Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats or car parks.

    PCF said the crunch in void-deck space has been more evident in areas such as Punggol and Jurong West. “(Void-deck spaces here) are either too small for development or reserved for community use,” added its spokesperson. In areas where demand is high, it will look into expanding existing centres. “PCF is exploring alternative spaces such as community centres … and malls with integrated development,” the spokesperson said.

    Agape Little Uni’s director Chris Lim felt the problem lies with how allocated void-deck spaces are not “purpose built”. “I would like to see (a) more holistic and focused approach towards it. Not so much finding different corners to park a childcare centre, whether it’s (a) void deck (or) any other part that is a usable space,” he said.

    Architect Ong Ker-Shing of Lekker Architects, which was commissioned by Lien Foundation to look into innovative design for pre-schools, said void decks often have structural walls that cut the space into pieces, which is not ideal. Indeed, in building some of its centres across several HDB blocks, NTUC First Campus had to build more kitchens, pantries and toilets at these locations, and faces the challenge of ensuring principals are within easy reach. It has also built centres on less conventional sites such as the former Serangoon bus interchange.

    Lien Foundation CEO Lee Poh Wah said a pre-school in a void deck can typically take about 80 to 100 children, which may not be the most economically efficient. In comparison, St James’ Church Kindergarten has an enrolment of 1,200, enabling it to be more efficient, he said, adding that there are about 1,500 pre-schools. In comparison, there are 182 primary schools.

    Asked about the void-deck crunch and plans to set aside second floors of HDB blocks for childcare centres, the Early Childhood Development Agency said it monitors local demand and works closely with the HDB to facilitate expansion of such capacity. “In new estates with more young families, childcare centres are pre-built into new Build-To-Order developments to cater to demand ahead of time,” said its spokesperson. Alternative premises such as workplaces are being explored.

    The agency also said it is on track to meet the target of creating 20,000 new childcare places by end-2017.

    Currently, Little Footprints Preschool at Punggol Field sits on the second floor of an HDB block, which is also connected to the landing deck. While this is one way of addressing the shortfall in spaces, Mr Ong said the feasibility of doing so depends on the size of the centre and configuration of each HDB building. Also, potential challenges include congestion at drop-off and pick-up times, as well as noise. “The planning of childcare centres works best when more open, flexible areas are available to allow for the complexities of managing the flow of classrooms, activity spaces and toilets,” he added.

    Mr Lee said: “There is a need to rethink the space and economics of preschools in order to build quality and affordability for the long term.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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