Tag: Singaporeans

  • Barry Desker: Mindset Shift Needed On MInimum Wage And Dual Citizenship

    Barry Desker: Mindset Shift Needed On MInimum Wage And Dual Citizenship

    Professor Barry Desker believes that Singapore should be prepared to have a minimum wage and allow dual citizenship. He also said that Singaporeans should welcome new citizens.

    “Attitudes need to change,” Prof Barry wrote in his opinion piece in The Straits Times.

    “We should welcome the presence of new Singaporeans and encourage their integration into Singapore society.

    “We should revise our laws to permit dual citizenship, which benefits some who are permanent residents but do not wish to give up the citizenship of their land of birth.

    “It would also allow the growing numbers of Singaporeans working abroad to retain their links with Singapore,” he said.

    “We should be prepared to adopt a minimum wage policy to protect vulnerable groups in our workforce and to ensure that cheap foreign labour does not displace Singaporeans in their twilight years eking out a living.”

    Prof Barry said that a minimum wage should be considered because “The ease with which foreign labour was recruited has resulted in depressed wages for a segment of our population with minimal educational qualifications, unskilled and often in their 50s and 60s.”

    But he admitted that even though there have been “calls for the introduction of a minimum wage”, the government has resisted implementing one over the years.

    Prof Barry also admitted that the “high levels of economic growth over the past two decades resulted from increases in capital and foreign labour deployed, not from significant productivity increases.”

    “However, the unsustainable sharp influx of foreigners granted permanent residence, as well as employment permits, in recent years has resulted in a backlash, making the issue of immigration politically toxic,” he said.

    Prof Barry said that as a result, for younger Singaporeans, they are “concerned about competition for university places or preferred jobs”.

    “Older Singaporeans worry about the changing environment around them, as they have neighbours with alien languages and different lifestyles.”

    However, he felt that “ethnic ghettos in HDB estates have disappeared, as legislation has ensured an ethnic balance”, even as he admitted that “condominiums are beginning to see such ghettos, as new immigrants and expatriates from certain nationalities congregate in preferred locations”.

    “The past year has seen rising anti-immigration sentiment in Singapore,” Prof Barry added.

    He said that these “views” have been “influenced” by “the pressure placed on Singapore’s infrastructure because of the sharp increase in the number of people residing in Singapore.”

    “MRT trains are crowded, hospital beds always full, traffic jams occur frequently, once-quiet parks are filled with foreign workers on weekends.

    “The rapid pace of the foreign influx resulted in growing criticism and an undercurrent of resentment reflected in social media sites.”

    Prof Barry also said that “the tightening of government policy on foreign workers in recent months” has led to Singaporeans being employed in “restaurants, offices and department stores, for example, cannot rely on cheap foreign labour”.

    He asked, “One wonders where these people were employed before the restrictions were imposed.”

    “But the reality is that immigration will continue and there will be more foreign labour employed, if low birth rates continue,” Prof Barry continued to say.

    But Prof Barry acknowledged the need for a minimum wage as “The pace of change over the past 50 years has left us with a pioneer generation lacking the education and skills to benefit from the transformation that has taken place in Singapore.

    He also suggested that the pioneer generation package is not a sustainable solution.

    “Ensuring a basic living wage will do more to retain their pride and sense of purpose than handouts as part of a pioneer generation package.”

    He also asked, “Do we retain Third World attitudes towards manual labour even as we proclaim ourselves a First World society?”

    He felt that “Internet chatter suggests that many in our community are unwilling to recognise that even temporary workers have rights and should be protected.”

    Prod Barry pointed to how “The Little India riots last December highlighted the risk of outbreaks of social unrest” and that “A minor dispute in Geylang or Beach Road on weekend nights involving Singaporeans and foreign workers could easily turn nasty.”

    He also warned of packing migrant workers into constructed ghettos because “As large self-contained dormitories are built, dissatisfaction on trivial issues could spark a destabilising wave of riots and public commotion.”

    Prof Barry also warned the government that “even as we want to focus on big ideas and grand plans for reimagining Singapore, reality will intrude.

    “Dealing with such challenges should not be seen as a distraction, but as part of the core test in remaking Singapore to meet the needs of the next generation.”

    Prof Barry is a Distinguished Fellow and Bakrie Professor of South-east Asia Policy at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University.

    As such, Prof Barry said that “the possibility of paradigm shifts should not be ignored.

    “The emergence of unexpected issues which become the focus of attention by policymakers can be seen in the current debate over the population challenge.”

    But he also resigned himself to the knowledge that, “What is striking is how much our imaginations are prisoners of the present.”

    Prof Barry is not the first to call for a minimum wage in Singapore. As he pointed out, there has been numerous calls in the past which the government has resisted.

    However, Prof Barry’s plea to the government is the latest, as worries about the threat of social rupture has crept in even for the well-heeled who are now finally beginning to worry about how the angry sentiments can impact Singapore’s social landscape.

    However, beneath Prof Barry’s plea is also an acknowledgement that the government might be choosing to overlook the social problems, while continuing to believe that it is able to plan for the future, based on old models of thinking. He cautioned the government about its state of denial, and is aware that his plea might just as well fall on deaf ears, as past warnings have as well.

    The state of the Singapore economy is in danger, as the government has over-extended its use of cheap labour which has not only resulted in depressed wages and livelihoods of Singaporeans which have suffered, but it also means that Singapore’s productivity is now backwards by more than a decade or so. This would mean at least a decade or more lost in Singapore, depending on when the government wakes up to its broken economic model.

    And until then, Singapore and Singaporeans will continue to lose out and by the time a change of mindset in the government, either by a mindset change by the current ruling party, the PAP, or by a change of government, decides to reverse the downward spiral of things, Singaporeans would have to brace themselves for the drastic restructuring to finally take place and one which has been postponed for far too long as the current government lacks the political will to do what is necessary to put Singapore back on track.

    But as Prof Barry tacitly acknowledges, any such change might take decades as the PAP is unlikely to change its mindset and neither is it likely to be willing to cede power to another government.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • First Deflation In 5 Years But Still No Savings On Food And Healthcare

    First Deflation In 5 Years But Still No Savings On Food And Healthcare

    Despite a strong Singapore dollar and falling oil prices, Singaporeans have said they have not noticed savings in areas such as food and healthcare.

    While the Consumer Price Index showed an overall decrease, food inflation for November stemmed the slide, rising 2.9 per cent year-on-year and up from 2.8 per cent in the previous month.

    This is despite oil prices driving down transport costs, and a strong Singapore dollar compared to regional currencies.

    The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said food prices rose 0.2 per cent due to more costly non-cooked food items, and higher prices of regional food supplies and hawker meals.

    F&B outlets Channel NewsAsia spoke to agreed, but cited other reasons too.

    Said Mr Dilip Ghosh, owner of Urban Fairways Golf Cafe and Bar: “Essentially, the costs of food and drinks rise because I believe for our supplier, rental and manpower costs go up. So as a whole, all our costs increase.”

    Rookery’s general manager, Mr Joshua Wee, said the two main cost drivers for his establishment were rent and labour. “We needed to invest in automation of some things, so that we do not have to pass back the high costs to the consumers,” he said.

    Senior economist at Mizuho Bank, Mr Vishnu Varathan, said that although a strong Singapore dollar buffers against rising costs in the region, it cannot absorb the increased cost for local services in a tight labour market, among other volatile conditions.

    He said: “If they are looking to see very rapid price drops in terms of food or any items they are consuming, that may not come through as quickly for three reasons. One, your labour costs may not be dropping. It may stabilise, but it may not drop as quickly, and businesses always need to build a buffer.

    “Two, even if you get oil prices dropping, that may not fully offset other things such as your Causeway toll going up and hence food from across the Causeway becoming more expensive.

    “Rentals also take a while to adjust, and in the meantime, hawkers may not be so willing to adjust their prices so quickly in case they get hit by a sudden increase in, say, oil prices, because certain things are volatile.”

    Mr Varathan said that because of this buffering effect, the public may not feel the price drop immediately. Instead, prices are likely to continue rising in the medium term, just at a slower pace.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Open Letter To MOE: Cease Hiring Of Male Gay Teachers

    Open Letter To MOE: Cease Hiring Of Male Gay Teachers

    Dear Sir & Madam,

    I am disappointed to know that another gay male teacher was charged in court recently. He was accused of molesting two boys aged 13 and 14 in his flat . After the Straits Times broke the news, social media users investigated and managed to uncover that he was a Head of Department of a primary school when those hideous acts were committed. Photos of him were posted on the internet [1].

    Clarence Hoe King Chuan was not the first gay teacher to be formally charged for his devious acts. Earlier in December, Chock Soon Seng, a 37 year old male former primary school teacher was sentenced to prison for sexually abusing a 14 year old boy and threatened to circulate his nude photos online [2]. In the same month, another 34 year old male teacher in a primary school molested a 12 year old boy who is under his care as a CCA teacher & discipline master [3].

    In July this year, a male Junior College teacher was convicted for underage sex with a 14 year old boy he met on the internet [4].

    Besides recent cases, a 33 year old gay male teacher in primary school molested and kissed 4 boys between the age of 10 and 12 years old last year November [5]. That same year, a 33 year old gay teacher had molested a 13 year old boy in a condominium swimming pool shower cubicle [6].

    In March 2012, another gay 38 year old primary school was sent to prison for jailed for 10 years for sexually violating two boys, one of them was only 8 years old [7].

    The examples I have listed above are certainly not exhaustive. I firmly believe that most of our teachers who entered the profession have regarded teaching as a noble case but I fear there is a small group of teachers who became teachers to satisfy their own immoral desires.

    Does MOE and her respective schools have any safeguards to ensure that our school grounds do not become a hunting ground for these sexual predators?

    I hope our Education Minister Mr Heng Swee Keat has not turned a blind eye to these incidents and I hope he can set a proper directive and address this issue before parents lose trust in our educational institutions.

    Jackson Tham

    [1] http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/eat-drink-man-woman-16/%5Bgpgt%5D-male-h-o-d-teacher-endeavour-primary-school-molested-two-young-boys-4913786.html

    [2] http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/courts-crime/story/man-jailed-three-years-sexually-abusing-and-threatening-teen-20141

    [3] http://www.tnp.sg/news/school-discipline-master-jailed-6-weeks-molesting…

    [4] http://news.asiaone.com/news/crime/jc-teacher-jailed-sex-boy-14

    [5] http://www.straitstimes.com/breaking-news/singapore/story/male-primary-school-teacher-accused-molesting-4-boys-between-10-and-12

    [6] http://thecourtroom.stomp.com.sg/courtroom/cases/13-year-old-boy-moleste…

    [7] http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest+News/Singapore/Story/A1Story20120328…


    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    IS Raih Untung Jual Organ Manusia Untuk Biayai Aktiviti Keganasan

    DAMSYIK: Kumpulan militan Negara Islam di Iraq dan Syria (ISIS) dipercayai meraih keuntungan besar dengan menjual organ manusia dengan hasilnya digunakan bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan di seluruh Timur Tengah.

    Kumpulan itu dikesan mendapatkan dana sehingga AS$2 juta ($2.63 juta) setahun daripada pelbagai sumber, termasuk pengeluaran minyak, pemerdagangan manusia dan penyeludupan dadah.

    Namun, sejak beberapa bulan lalu militan ISIS menggunakan khidmat doktor asing bagi mengeluarkan organ manusia – bukan saja daripada anggota mereka yang mati, malah daripada tawanan hidup, termasuk kanak-kanak dari seluruh Iraq dan Syria.

    Difahamkan, organ juga diambil daripada militan yang terkorban, mangsa cedera yang ditinggalkan atau individu yang diculik.

    Perkara itu didedahkan portal berita al-Monitor yang berpangkalan di Amerika Syarikat.

    Sumber portal itu dikenal pasti sebagai pakar telinga, hidung dan tekak, Encik Siruwan al-Mosuli.

    Menurut Encik Siruwan, pegawai kanan ISIS melantik doktor asing bagi menjalankan sistem pemerdagangan organ meluas dari hospital di Mosul yang di bawah pentadbiran ISIS.

    Katanya, pulangan perdagangan organ manusia amat menguntungkan.

    Disebabkan itu, ISIS menubuhkan bahagian khas bagi mengendalikan penyeludupan organ yang bertanggungjawab menjual jantung, hati dan buah pinggang manusia di pasaran gelap antarabangsa, katanya.

    “Saya mengesyaki ada sesuatu tidak kena apabila melihat ramai pakar bedah Arab dan asing diambil bekerja, tetapi dilarang berinteraksi dengan doktor tempatan. Desas-desus kemudian mengatakan mereka terbabit dalam aktiviti penjualan organ.

    “Pembedahan dilakukan di dalam hospital sebelum organ diperlukan dipindahkan segera melalui rangkaian pemerdagangan manusia,” kata laporan itu.

    Bagaimanapun, maklumat mengenai penjualan organ akhirnya bocor, lapor Press TV.

    Assyrian International News Agency pula melaporkan, kebanyakan organ diseludup keluar dari Syria dan Iraq ke negara jiran seperti Arab Saudi atau Turkey untuk dijual kepada kumpulan jenayah yang kemudian mendapatkan pembeli dari seluruh dunia.

    Tindakan menjual organ manusia itu merupakan salah satu cara bagi membiayai aktiviti keganasan kumpulan mereka.

    Menurutnya lagi, pembedahan dilakukan di hospital dan organ mayat diedarkan segera melalui rangkaian khusus dalam pemerdagangan organ manusia.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

     

  • More CCTVs Higher Fines To Deter Illegal Parking

    More CCTVs Higher Fines To Deter Illegal Parking

    A tiered fines system for illegal parking will be introduced from next year, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) said on Monday.

    Under the new rules, motorists who receive their second offence notice within a year will have to pay more in fines.

    For example, a motorist caught parking a light vehicle along unbroken double yellow lines will be fined $110, instead of $70, if that is his second offence within 12 months.

    Penalties

    “About half of all illegal parking traffic notices issued between 2011 and 2014 are committed by repeat offenders,” LTA said.

    The number of demerit points, which are meted out for more serious illegal parking offences, will remain unchanged.

    To enforce and deter illegal parking, CCTV cameras will also be installed at 40 more locations, such as along the stretch of Grange Road between Mandarin Gallery and Cineleisure, and along Rochor Road in front of Fu Lu Shou complex.

    These CCTV cameras, which provide round-the-clock enforcement, have already been installed at 30 locations.

    Dr Chin Kian Keong, LTA’s group director for transportation and road operations, said the authority has “observed improved traffic conditions along some stretches of roads which used to suffer from obstruction caused by indiscriminately parked vehicles, such as along Beach Road, Bishan Road and Pasir Panjang Road”.

    “Besides improving traffic flow for cars and other road users, our bus commuters have also benefited from smoother traffic along these roads,” Dr Chin added.

    To deter illegal parking, closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras will be installed at 40 more locations around the island, the Land Transport Authority said on Monday.

    These CCTVs, which offer round-the-clock enforcement, are currently used at 30 other locations. These areas have since seen improved traffic conditions, the LTA added.

    The new batch of CCTVs will be ready in the first half of 2015.

    Locations with CCTV already installed 

    1. Beach Road (near Golden Mile Complex)
    2. Marine Parade Central (near Parkway Parade)
    3. Upper Bukit Timah Road (after The Linear)
    4. Ardmore Park, Draycott Park (near Ardmore Park & JC Draycott)
    5. Commonwealth Avenue West (Clementi MRT, both directions)
    6. Serangoon Central (Serangoon MRT, near NEX mall)
    7. Boon Lay Way (Boon Lay MRT, near Jurong Point)
    8. Bishan Road (Bishan MRT)
    9. Jurong Gateway Road (around Jurong East Central, near Jurong East MRT)
    10. Jurong West Street 63 (Pioneer MRT)
    11. Ang Mo Kio Ave 3 (AMK MRT)
    12. Boon Lay Way (Lakeside MRT)
    13. New Upper Changi Rd (Bedok MRT, Bedok Centre)
    14. Pasir Panjang Road (AVA centre to shophouses before MAS Currency House)
    15. Woodlands Road (Kranji MRT, both directions)
    16. Collyer Quay (both directions)
    17. Choa Chu Kang Avenue 4 (Lot 1, CCK MRT/LRT)
    18. Choa Chu Kang Loop (outside CCK Bus Interchange)
    19. Jalan Sultan (Textile Centre)
    20. Tampines Central 1 (near to bus interchange, Tampines MRT)
    21. Beach Road (at Golden Mile Food Centre)
    22. River Valley Road (in front of Spize, Boon Tong Kee)
    23. Tanjong Katong Road (near Parkstone Road)
    24. Woodlands Ave 7 (Admiralty MRT)
    25. North Bridge Road (opp and along Bugis Junction)
    26. Jalan Besar (Eminent Plaza)
    27. Punggol Road (junction of Punggol Central, both directions)
    28. Sembawang Road (Jalan Lengkok Sembawang)
    29. Serangoon Road (Tekka Centre)
    30. Upper Serangoon Road (junction of Simon Road & Florence Road)

    Locations selected for CCTV installation in 2015

    1. Ang Mo Kio Street 52 (in front of Block 527)
    2. Bukit Batok East Avenue 3 (in front of Block 284)
    3. Beach Road (from Purvis Street junction to Middle Road)
    4. Beach Road (from Seah Street junction to Purvis Street)
    5. Buffalo Road (from Serangoon Road junction to lamp-post 5)
    6. Cambridge Road (in front of Block 43)
    7. Cambridge Road (in front of Blocks 41A & 42)
    8. Choa Chu Kang Avenue 1 (in front of Hong Kiat seafood)
    9. Cluny Park Road (in front of French Embassy & Cluny Court towards the direction of Bukit Timah Road)
    10. Cluny Park Road (taxi stand, opposite unit 89)
    11. Collyer Quay (access road next to OUE Bayfront)
    12. Dunman Road (from Joo Chiat Road junction to Onan Road junction)
    13. Grange Road (between Mandarin Gallery and Cineleisure)
    14. Jalan Kembangan (Kembangan MRT)
    15. Jalan Pelepah (opposite AVA centre)
    16. Joo Chiat Road (in front of I12 Katong Mall)
    17. Jurong West Street 91 (in front of Blocks 962 to 959)
    18. Marina Coastal Drive (in front of Marina South Pier)
    19. Marymount Road (in front of Marymount MRT)
    20. New Bridge Road (from Keong Saik Road junction to junction of Kreta Ayer Road)
    21. Outram Road (in front of Tan Boon Liat building)
    22. Owen Road (in front of Pek Kio market)
    23. Pasir Ris Drive 4 (in front of Pasir Ris polyclinic)
    24. Race Course Road (from Little India MRT to taxi stand F27)
    25. Rochor Road (in front of Fu Lu Shou complex)
    26. Selegie Road (between POMO and Parklane Shopping Mall)
    27. Seletar Road (in front of Greenwich Shopping Centre)
    28. Sengkang West Avenue (in front of Fernvale Point)
    29. Serangoon Road (in front of The Verge Shopping Mall)
    30. Tampines Avenue 4 (in front of Tampines Mall)
    31. Tiong Bahru Road (Redhill MRT – bus stop)
    32. Tiong Bahru Road (Redhill MRT – pick up bay)
    33. Toh Tuck Road (in front of SingPost)
    34. Upper Paya Lebar Road (Tai Seng MRT – exit B)
    35. Upper Paya Lebar Road (Tai Seng MRT – exit A)
    36. Upper Serangoon Road (Serangoon MRT – exit B)
    37. Upper Serangoon Road (in front of eateries near Sunshine Terrace)
    38. Woodlands Street 82 (in front of Woodlands North Plaza)
    39. Worcester Road (before right bend into HDB car park, both sides)
    40. Yishun Avenue 11 (in front of Block 419)

    Source: www.straitstimes.com