Tag: SMRT

  • Newborn Baby Boy’s Body Found In Tampines MRT Station Toilet

    Newborn Baby Boy’s Body Found In Tampines MRT Station Toilet

    She was going about her daily cleaning duties at a toilet at Tampines MRT Station on Friday afternoon (June 3), when she stumbled upon a shocking find in a sanitary bin: The body of a newborn in a red plastic bag.

    “When I found it, of course I was shocked, and I thought ‘why is there a baby here?’. But I was quiet, I didn’t scream,” Mdm Jumiati Amat, 75, told reporters in Malay.

    The baby, later revealed to be male, was pronounced dead on the scene by paramedics when they arrived. The case is now being investigated by the police.

    When TODAY arrived at the scene at about 2.30pm, several police vehicles were on site. Curious onlookers had gathered outside the toilet, which was cordoned off and manned by more than 10 police officers. Several of the officers — along with forensics professionals — were seen walking in and out of the toilet. The cordon was maintained for at least two hours as investigations were carried out. A body bag was brought out of the toilet at around 4pm.

    Mdm Jumiati said that after discovering the body at 1.30pm, she removed it from the bin and placed it in her trolley. She then left the toilet to alert two SMRT staff, who called the police.

    “I start work at 7am and check if the toilets are dirty. In the morning, there was nothing … I’ve never found something like this in all my years of working,” she said.

    It is an offence to secretly dispose of a child’s dead body and hide the birth of the child. A person convicted of this offence may be jailed up to two years or fined, or punished with both. Last year, an Indonesian woman working here as a maid was arrested after she gave birth to a stillborn child, and hid the foetus in a drawer at her employer’s house.

    There have also been cases of child abandonment. Last year, two teenagers left their newborn son in an SG50 bag outside the father’s parents’ flat. The 14-year-old mother had given birth in a toilet. She was sentenced to probation by a youth court, while her 18-year-old boyfriend was sentenced to two years’ probation and 100 hours of community service.

    It was reported that there were 21 babies found abandoned by their parents between 2006 and 2015. Those found guilty of abandoning a child can be jailed for up to seven years or fined, or punished with both.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Khaw Boon Wan: Management Of Local Rail Operators Were Distracted

    Khaw Boon Wan: Management Of Local Rail Operators Were Distracted

    In hard-hitting remarks about the state of Singapore’s rail reliability, Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan said on Monday (May 30) that “complacency and certainly distracted management” led to the current state of affairs, as he outlined areas the rail operators need to shape up in.

    At a forum on infrastructure maintenance on Monday, Mr Khaw set an “audacious” target for local transport operators SMRT and SBS Transit by 2020: The Taipei Rapid Transit Corporation’s (TRTC) scorecard of clocking 800,000 train-kilometres before hitting a delay that exceeds five minutes. The current performance of the two local rail operators in the first quarter of this year averages out to 160,000 train-km.

    Pointing to how TRTC had studied Singapore’s rail network in its early years, Mr Khaw, who is also Coordinating Minister for Infrastructure, said: “We were then an exemplary MRT player and a subject of study. Unfortunately, maybe due to complacency and certainly distracted management attention, we lost our earlier mojo.

    “At the moment, I would describe the cup as ‘three-quarters empty’. But I appreciate the efforts of our colleagues who have made the cup ‘one-quarter full’. I am confident we will have a full cup in due course,” he added.

    TRTC is the second role model — and a more prolific one — that Mr Khaw has said Singapore’s rail network should emulate. In October last year, shortly after he took over the transport portfolio, Mr Khaw had said Hong Kong’s Mass Transit Railway’s performance of about 300,000 train-km between disruptions was a target for Singapore to catch up with.

    On Monday, Mr Khaw said that having been in politics for more than two decades, he believed in under-promising, so as to over-deliver. “However, when organisations (need) to be transformed, I think we need to do the opposite: Set clear stretch targets, motivate the troop, aim high and work our butts (off).”

    He added: “If we fail in absolute terms, it could still be very significant. But if we work hard at it, with a little bit of luck, we may achieve these audacious targets.”

    Mr Khaw also pinned down what he learnt about TRTC’s method to achieving their “remarkable” train reliability performance, from a study trip two weeks ago led by the Land Transport Authority (LTA). TRTC had an organisation structure where employees at all levels had strong ownership of service reliability. The operator’s engineering excellence shows in the way it captures and analyses data about the state of the network’s hardware, allowing it to carry out timely replacement and preventive maintenance. Workers are also passionate about their jobs, which speeds up response when incidents crop up.

    Mr Khaw set a target of 200,000 train-km between delays by year end and 400,000 train-km by 2018. He also said the LTA will develop a system that gives an overview of asset requirements across all MRT lines in the next three years. “This will enable us to systematically assess the asset condition and (let them be)reviewed by both operators and LTA,” he said.

    He added that a review of the operators’ incident response and recovery procedures is under way. Also in the pipeline is a new centre to boost currently “minimal” testing and repair capabilities for electronics in the rail network.

    For now, staff from the LTA and both operators will be sent to workshops in Taiwan to improve their asset maintenance practices and engineering.

    Mr Khaw said: “This will allow our operators to jump-start their review of their maintenance programmes and reliability efforts. There’s no point reinventing the wheel. Please chuck away whatever ‘not invented here’ syndrome. We have no time for reinvention anyway … our commuters can’t wait.”

    Transport analyst Lee Der-Horng, from the National University of Singapore, said the difference between TRTC’s and Singapore’s rail reliability performance lies in operations. Employees there have a strong sense of ownership and strive to be perfectionists at work, he noted.

    But he pointed out that as wages in Taiwan are also comparatively lower, it frees up resources to be channelled towards other areas of need.

    Dr Walter Theseira, a senior lecturer at UniSIM, felt that tackling major disruptions would be more important in keeping commuters happy.

    “Major disruptions that take down the entire system or parts of it and require commuters to find alternatives such as bus bridging are much more of an inconvenience than just momentary delays of a few minutes,” he said. “The public continues to be sceptical that quality has actually improved because the frequency between major disruptions has not improved.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Stop the Untrue Rumours of the SMRT Staff Who Died

    Stop the Untrue Rumours of the SMRT Staff Who Died

    Nasrulhudin Bin Najumudin
    26, Single

    There have been so many speculations about him getting married, had a pregnant wife and more that really upset us. We, his immediate family, are here to clarify that most of the rumours you have heard or received may be untrue.

    He was a fine young chap and a well- mannered guy who never forgot his responsibilities as a Muslim and son. So we want the rumour mill to just stop. Let’s not play the blaming game or spread more fitnah. If you don’t know the story, ask someone who knows the family or rather, shut the rumours away and offer your prayers instead.

    We thank each one of you who gave us support and encouraging words in this difficult time. A sudden departure of a loved one is definitely not easy but HE knows best. Redha.

    Source: Dean Sabbie

  • May The Deceased SMRT Staff Be Granted Paradise For Their Jihad In Providing For Their Family

    May The Deceased SMRT Staff Be Granted Paradise For Their Jihad In Providing For Their Family

    Do you know that going to work to seek nafkah was described as “jihad” by our Prophet s.a.w?

    Nabi S.A.W was once asked by his companion regarding a man who was physically strong and was working tirelessly on a heavy labour: the companion of Rasul asked : “Ya Rasulullah if only this strong man joins us for Jihad in the way of Allah”

    Nabi s.a.w answered: “If he works hard to feed his kids, he is in Jihad.. if he works hard to feed his old parents he is in Jihad.. and if he is working to feed himself, to exalt himself from begging then he is also in Jihad in the way of Allah”

    We hope that those who lost their life in the accident yesterday attained husnul khatimah as mujahidin in the way of Allah.. and most importantly i think it also reminds us of our daily struggle at work, our own jihad.. and to always reallign our niat so that we truly are upon Allah’s way da-iman wa abadan..

    wallahu’alam..

     

    Source: Khairul Anwar

  • Open Letter To SMRT: Don’t Be Too Quick To Shift Blame To Deceased Staff

    Open Letter To SMRT: Don’t Be Too Quick To Shift Blame To Deceased Staff

    We have heard it all before.

    You say you are sorry. And that you share our sadness.

    But you will return to your families and sleep easy tonight, while we mourn a tragic loss. Tomorrow morning, you will not have to make the dreadful trip to the mortuary to identify the lifeless and mangled body of a loved one. How can you say that you share our sadness? You do not understand our grief.

    Yet you ever-so eloquently say that you are “very saddened by the loss.” But to you, the two young lives lost today are just a statistic; A number that you have to account for in the face of public outrage. Just collateral damage. Soon, you will forget. Your career goes on. Your life goes on.

    To us they were beloved sons, brothers, cousins, nephews, friends. Brilliant human beings who had promising futures ahead of them.

    Honest young men who woke up one morning, had breakfast with their families, and eagerly showed up for work. Brave young men who, a few hours later in the hot midday sun, responded to a train track fault only to be struck by a train. They followed your orders only to be betrayed.

    As Muslims we try to live life right, to be kind to others, and live life knowing that one day we will return to our Maker. We do not fear or resent death.

    What we resent are your attempts to clear yourselves of any fault, insisting that you have observed all the standard operating procedures. If you did everything right, then your standard operating procedures must be flimsy.

    Your carefully maneuvered words make us wonder: are you attempting to shift the blame to the deceased? You know it is easy to blame someone who can no longer speak for himself.

    Instead of being so quick to protect your interests, seek the humanity deep within you to acknowledge your mistakes and learn from them to ensure that this tragedy does not happen to any one else’s son. Will you take responsibility? Or will your public relations team continue to craft words to protect you from blame?

    At this point, the families are grieving at the loss of a beloved. But grief will soon turn into anger.

    The author is a relative of one of the deceased who passed on in the SMRT train tragedy on 22 March 2016 at 11.10 a.m.

     

    Source: http://kentridgecommon.com