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Helping students make informed career choices

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By Ng Jing Yng, TODAY, 10 Jul 2014

As an education beat reporter who meets students regularly, I would often ask them about their aspirations. The younger ones would say: “Mummy asked me to find a job that earns a lot of money.” Others would shrug their shoulders and smile sheepishly.

Like many, I once thought that is a phase every one goes through before one finds his or her sweet spot in life.

But after attending a dialogue session between students and members of the Applied Study in Polytechnics and Institute of Technical Education Review (ASPIRE) committee in January, I felt more guideposts could be provided to help students navigate their paths. Industry players have raised concerns over young people not knowing what they want, resulting in some following trends blindly. Some students also say that they know their career preferences only much later, during tertiary education, but by then, it may be too late for them to change course. A recent study trip to Switzerland with the ASPIRE committee provided further proof of the need to provide career guidance to students from young to empower them to make informed choices.

Switzerland’s 26 cantons (districts) have at least one career centre each and it receives children as young as 13 years old. Teachers organise visits to the centres and share their thoughts on various occupations in class. Concurrently, career counsellors visit schools to meet each child. Longer counselling sessions — with the inclusion of psychometric tests — can also be arranged for free at the nearest career centre. At the career centre in Bern city, half of its approximately 5,000 visitors last year were below 20 years old.

Swiss career counsellor Liselotte Stricker noted: “Students come to career centres to learn about their likes and dislikes. They have their favourite occupation, but they will also find out if their wishes are realistic.”

Other counsellors say they work with students through their secondary school years as passions evolve with time.

Singaporean Georgina Zoss-Koh, who is married to a Swiss and resides in Zurich, shared how her two sons benefitted from early career guidance. Both boys, now age 18 and 16, took psychometric tests at their local career centre to assess their strengths and preferences as well as spoke to counsellors on advancement options. Swiss students in secondary school will have a rough idea of the job nature and where their interests lie, she said.

TAPPING EXISTING STRENGTHS

Singapore is not starting from scratch on this. There are six career centres under the Singapore Workforce Development Agency islandwide, providing adults with advice on continual education and job matching.

The tertiary institutes also have career offices offering counselling and internships with companies. In schools, the Ministry of Education incorporated career guidance lessons into secondary schools this year, while an online portal (ecareers.sg) is available for students to explore their interests through self-assessment tests, among other things.

Nevertheless, from conversations with students and educators, the missing element seems to be the human touch. There is a need for counsellors to help students make sense of psychometric test results and advise them on their options.

Singapore teachers are laden with teaching and other administrative duties, resulting in career guidance inadvertently placed on the back burner.

As such, there is a need for trained personnel to administer psychometric tests and evaluate findings for a younger clientele. These counsellors also have to be aware of pathways in the education system to give advice accordingly.

We can extend the services of existing career centres to a younger crowd. Their locations in the heartlands make them accessible, while tie-ups with companies could help students secure internships in various industries. Students can also receive insights on labour market trends through data collated by these career centres. For psychometric tests, we can ride on existing resources such as MOE’s ecareers.sg. We can also consider how the Swiss caters to various needs, using simpler pen-and-paper questionnaires or flashcards.

CONVINCING PARENTS

Early career guidance can also help parents play a supporting role in their children’s passions.

Ms Stricker said counselling sessions give students an avenue to share their thoughts confidentially. But when parents hold a different opinion, there could be joint counselling sessions.

She even recounted counselling an entire family, including the grandfather. The parents wanted the academic path while the grandfather, a craftsman, preferred the vocational path. After several sessions, the family accepted the child’s decision to pursue an apprenticeship.

For the Swiss, another outcome from their early career guidance system is greater societal acceptance for vocational education.

Parents become more aware of advancement prospects in skilled industries after visiting career centres with their children.

It is normal for Singaporeans parents to be concerned about the prospects in certain jobs or their children having short-lived interests. Counsellors can reassure these parents by providing information on the labour market and mapping out progression opportunities.

Using scientific results from psychometric tests can also convince parents of their child’s inclinations.

BRIDGES FOR CURRENT LOT

How about those already in tertiary institutions who are pursuing courses outside their career interests? Some of them enrolled in these courses without knowing their preferred career choice.

I have also met students who were not aware of prerequisites for their preferred courses and were left with few options later on. For these students, help could come in the form of bridging modules so they could make an easier transition to a new course. This could be considered for certain industries that are facing manpower shortage, such as healthcare or early childhood. If science is required for health sciences courses, for example, there could be preparatory classes.

Bearing in mind the need for a critical mass for these classes, the three Institute of Technical Education campuses can collaborate to offer lessons. The five polytechnics can also work together on this.

When students’ strengths are identified and nurtured, many will go on to succeed in their respective fields.

We can definitely do more to help them play to their strengths and achieve their full potential.


Ng Jing Yng is a senior reporter at TODAY who covers the education beat.

*The ASPIRE committee, which is looking to revamp poly and ITE education, will be giving its recommendations later this year.



Handful of S'poreans taking part in Syrian conflict

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DPM Teo warns that some could return with terrorist skills, pose security threat
By Tham Yuen-C, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

SEVERAL Singaporeans are among 12,000 foreigners taking part in the armed conflict in Syria, including a couple of parents who had taken along their children.

Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean disclosed this in Parliament yesterday, when he warned that such fighters could return proficient in terrorist skills and pose a security threat.



Among the "handful" of Singaporeans is said to be a woman who went with her foreign husband and their two teenage children. "The whole family is taking part in the conflict in various ways, either joining the terrorist groups to fight, or providing aid and support to the fighters," said Mr Teo, who is also the Home Affairs Minister.

Another man, Haja Fakkurudeen Usman Ali, 37, took with him his wife and three children between the ages of two and 11. He is a Singapore citizen who was an Indian national, the Home Affairs Ministry had said in March when announcing that he was under investigation. Several other Singaporeans had planned to join the conflict but were detained before they could set off, and some others are under investigation, said Mr Teo.

He is the third minister here, after Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Education Minister Heng Swee Keat, who have spoken recently about the security threat posed by foreigners travelling to Syria to fight alongside rebels against the Syrian regime.

Their remarks come amid growing concern that foreign involvement could encourage the spread of violent extremism worldwide.

Mr Teo said social media had been a "game- changer" in the conflict, letting extremists market their cause and recruit fighters. "The presence of former foreign fighters in our region - whether they originate from South-east Asia or elsewhere - is a security threat to us. This threat is magnified if these returnee fighters are Singaporeans."

He also noted that Singaporeans who have helped militant organisations had "demonstrated a dangerous tendency to support, or resort to, violence to pursue a political or ideological cause". They pose a national security threat, he added.

Drawing parallels with the Soviet-Afghan war in the 1980s which drew scores of foreign fighters, he said Al-Qaeda had spawned from there. In 2001, the terrorist organisation had planned to attack Singapore through its regional offshoot, Jemaah Islamiah, after the Sept 11 attacks in the US. Foreign fighters returning from Syria may similarly "undertake terrorist activities in their home countries or overseas or... provide logistical and operational help to terrorists whom they befriended in Syria", he added.

Mr Teo urged Singaporeans to keep a lookout and alert the authorities if their family members and friends show signs of becoming radicalised. Those who want to help Syrian victims of the violence should check with the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, or Muis, that the humanitarian organisations they are donating to are bona fide and not fronts for extremists to raise funds, he added.

Another worry he highlighted is that if support for the fighting in Syria grows more widespread, it could cause "disquiet on the ground" in Singapore and breed mistrust between communities. He said the Government will work with religious leaders and community groups to counter the radical propaganda used by terrorists and will investigate those who intend to "engage in violence overseas".





Explaining Syrian conflict to Muslims in S'pore
Malay-Muslim leaders help spread message to guard against extremism
By Tham Yuen-C, The Straits Times, 11 Jul 2014

LEADERS of the Malay-Muslim community are taking steps to put across the right message about the Syrian crisis, which has drawn fighters from around the world to take up arms.

The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, or Muis, has roped in mosques, religious teachers and madrasahs to explain the conflict to Muslims here and to put things in perspective.

The Government has also started working with the Malay media, like the Berita Harian newspaper, to put out explanatory articles, and is looking into cyberwellness programmes that will guard against young people being radicalised via the Internet.

Some Malay-Muslim groups have also sourced for bona fide channels for Singaporeans to provide humanitarian aid and donations to victims of the conflict.

Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim said of the efforts: "It shows the community is taking ownership of the challenge and we want to do something about it."

Dr Yaacob was speaking to reporters after a closed-door dialogue with 60 community and religious leaders, at which he and Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean spoke of the Syrian crisis.



The conflict has claimed 150,000 lives and drawn foreigners, including Singaporeans, to join what some see as a jihad. This has sparked fears of the spread of extremism around the world.

Yesterday, Mr Teo, who is also Home Affairs Minister, reiterated concerns about the conflict's impact on security and social cohesion here, saying it has the potential to be worse than the Jemaah Islamiah threat. In 2001, Singapore arrested members of the terror group after the authorities discovered its plot to attack targets in the country, leading to worries it could affect community relations.

But radical ideology today, Mr Teo said, can spread more quickly than in 2001 because of the Internet and social media. The ease of air travel to Syria has also made it easier for people to join the fight.

And the scale of violence in the sectarian war in Syria and Iraq has "caused emotions to run high", drawing some to the fight.

Pergas president and co-chair of the Religious Rehabilitation Group, Ustaz Hasbi Hassan, said the rebels' calls for jihad "do not fulfil the teachings of Islam".

"This can lead to misunderstanding among Singaporean Muslims and also with non-Muslims. It can threaten the safety and harmony of our multi-racial and multi-religious society," he added.

Mr Teo stressed the actions of a small group should not be seen as representative of the Malay-Muslim community: "We need to understand that in Singapore all our communities believe in peace and harmony."

Dr Yaacob said the non-Muslim community can help spread the message that the conflict is not one Singaporeans should be involved in. Dr Wee Boon Hup, president of the National Council of Churches and bishop of the Methodist Church, said non-Muslims may be "concerned" about the developments, but noted "both the authorities and Muslim community leaders have a hold on the problem".





France unveils law to stop volunteer fighters
It will be used against those who join radical groups, as well as "lone wolf" terrorists
By Jonathan Eyal Europe Correspondent In London, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

THE French government has introduced legislation that will ban its citizens from travelling to fight with terrorist groups in the Middle East and gives the government powers to block websites used to recruit militant fighters.

"The law is a response to the development of the threat, to the growing intensity of the Syrian crisis," French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told lawmakers in Paris yesterday.

The French move comes amid growing worry in other European countries over the rising number of young Muslims being recruited by jihadist groups to fight in places like Iraq and Syria.

France alone is believed to have hundreds of its citizens fighting among jihadists in Syria.

In May, a Frenchman who had spent a year among militants in the Middle Eastern country was arrested on suspicion of shooting dead four people at the Brussels Jewish Museum.

In a recently released report, the Netherlands' security service said at least 130 Dutch citizens had joined jihadist groups in Syria and more were likely to join them.

A similar trend has been observed in Germany, where the government told lawmakers this week that "hundreds" of its citizens may have volunteered to fight in Middle East war zones.

Meanwhile, several Norwegian citizens have been identified by security officials as being leading members of ISIS, the terrorist group that now controls large chunks of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The French measures introduced yesterday are designed to stem the flow of volunteer fighters. It follows legislation already in force in Britain, where the authorities can cancel the passports of those planning to travel for violent purposes.

But the French government has also introduced a new twist, applying the law against not only those who join radical groups but also those who operate as individuals, the so-called "lone wolf" terrorists. If these people do manage to make their way abroad, they will be the subject of an international arrest warrant.

Under the new measures, airlines will be banned from carrying those who are deemed terror suspects and must notify the French authorities the moment one of them makes a reservation.

The proposed Bill also sanctions investigators to use fake identities to enter militant websites. Internet service providers can also be ordered to block access to sites "that provoke acts of terrorism or praise them".

Until recently, Europe's terrorist threat seems to have been receding. Radical groups in Britain, France and the Netherlands were tracked and dismantled.

But now all European intelligence services are flagging a rapid rise in the number of new terrorist volunteers.

They no longer group themselves in networks; instead, as the recent report from Dutch intelligence officials points out, today's terrorists operate more in the manner of "a flock of birds" - there is no fixed leadership, they gather in disparate hot spots and then move on elsewhere.

This new generation of fighters seeks instant action.

"It has no regard for religious or other leaders in the Muslim community and it's a fast-growing, horizontal, decentralised movement," Mr Hans Wansink, the editor of Volkskrant, one of the Netherlands' top daily newspapers, wrote this week.

One of the key factors behind their growth is social media and Islamic websites known for their virulent anti-Western propaganda.

But the key driver may just be generational change: Most of the new recruits are teenagers, people who dismiss Al-Qaeda as something their fathers supported, and are attracted to new radical Islamic movements with snazzy titles such as Sharia4Belgium or Islam4UK, which use the language of instant messaging to assert their modern image.

The potential for further radicalisation remains huge in Europe. The Netherlands, with 900,000 Muslim citizens, has produced about 130 fresh recruits to terrorism. Neighbouring Belgium, with a Muslim population of only 630,000, is estimated to be responsible for over 300 volunteer fighters. Meanwhile, France, home to 4.7 million Muslims, has about 900 volunteers fighting in Syria alone.

The assumption among counter-terrorism analysts is that at least half of these volunteers would either be killed in the fighting or choose to stay in the Middle East. But there will be plenty of battle-hardened veterans who could return home and spawn a new wave of violence, very much like a previous generation of Afghanistan veterans did.





Malaysia's terrorist recruits
By Salim Osman, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

MANY Malaysians were stunned to learn that one of their own killed himself in a suicide bombing in Iraq last month and that 15 others died fighting in Syria.

Worse was to come, with news that some Malaysians consider themselves "freelance" jihadists in their war against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime. They bear no allegiance to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) or to any Islamist militant group in Malaysia. Their cause, they say, is simply to fight against "injustice to Muslims".

How did it come to this? Malaysia has long had a reputation as a moderate Muslim country, not a hotbed of young religious extremists who think nothing of bearing arms in a far-away conflict.

Unlike some jihadist fighters from the West, the Malaysians face none of that sense of alienation that comes from being a religious minority.

So what is it that propels young Malaysians to leave the comfort of home for Middle East battle zones?

There is no definitive answer but the problem has at least three root causes.

The first has to do with the radicalising influence of Wahhabism, the puritan brand of Sunni Islam that has been blamed for encouraging greater intolerance among Malaysian Muslims.

Dr Faizal Musa of the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia believes that what we are seeing now is the result of the influence Wahhabism has gained over the years as its adherents gradually take control of religious affairs departments, mosques and other religious institutions and right-wing groups.

Writing in the Malay Mail Online news site recently, he said that many of these hardline preachers were first influenced by Wahhabi teachings taught by Saudi-funded charities and had gone on to propagate those views as they provided religious guidance to the masses.

Apart from demanding greater rigour in keeping to religious injunctions, Wahhabists also preach a message of internal purity of the Muslim community, one that excludes Shi'ites.

"The Wahhabist movement has been exporting hatred towards Shi'ism," wrote Dr Faizal in the commentary on Theofascism And The Myths Of Moderate Malaysia.

The anti-Shi'ite teachings are reinforced by the war waging in Iraq and Syria, which pits Sunni militants against Syria's President Assad and Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. The Iraqi leader is a Shi'ite and Mr Assad is an Alawite, a Shi'ite offshoot.

Other analysts point to a second root cause: a growing religiosity among young Malays who aspire to become better Muslims. In their zeal to do good deeds in the name of Islam, they are drawn to its call to struggle against injustice.

And the vivid videos available on social media on the plight of Muslims in war-torn Syria find ready volunteers among them.

Former Perlis Mufti and now university academic, Dr Asri Zainal Abidin, said that he had been approached "many times" by young Malays expressing an interest in taking part in the Syrian conflict.

"There is unhappiness over what is happening, a sense of injustice... many of these youths have good intentions because they see Muslims in Syria being bombed and killed so they feel that they want to help out whatever way they can," he told the Malay Mail Online last month.

Dr Asri said he would attempt to dissuade these misguided young men but feared they were prime targets for jihadi recruiters.

For some, no active recruitment is required. In self-radicalisation, the glamorisation of war, as portrayed in "selfies" posted by jihadists posing with their weapons, combined with an inchoate need to fight for justice and fulfil a religious duty can be just enough to push one over the edge.

A third factor behind the growing number of young Malaysian men joining the fight in the Levant is the rise of social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube; these help militant groups to spread their message and to win recruits.

It is telling that while there was international outrage over the ethnic cleansing of Muslims in the Bosnian war in the mid-90s, there was none of the large-scale surge of foreign fighters as is happening now in Syria and Iraq.

YouTube came into existence 10 years after the Bosnian conflict ended. It has since allowed ISIS to post its triumphant war videos and for assorted extremist Sunni clerics to justify war on Shi'ites based on their own interpretation of the Apocalypse. Al-Qaeda's Anwar al-Awlaki is dead but the American-born militant still sings praises of jihad in videos on YouTube to recruit fighters.

What's to be done to counter their messages?

Sadly, the response so far from Malaysian Islamic scholars has been largely confined to relatively tame expressions of disapproval about misguided thinking and the lack of proper religious education.

Far punchier were recent cutting comments by former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad on his blog: "If the opinion revolves around killing others and oneself to go to heaven, perhaps more Malays will wrap themselves in bombs and detonate them in order to kill other Muslims who are not known and are not hostile to them."

Islamic scholars need to take a leaf from Tun Dr Mahathir's book, at least in terms of making an attention-grabbing statement.

Polite entreaties to pay closer attention to what is in the holy book will cut no ice with confused young men who get bombarded with images of strutting jihadists brandishing firearms and calling on others to join them in the name of religion. Some plain speaking is needed, aided by equally vivid video images of destroyed neighbourhoods, shell-shocked refugees, orphaned children and grieving parents of bombing victims.

The message to be driven home is that being a terrorist fighter is not "cool" and it is naive to think that jihad in its proper sense of a religious struggle amounts to simply shooting off some bullets and even blowing up oneself.


More needs to be done to point to the consequences of their actions.

It may not work with the hardcore militants but just might be enough to save those who want to do right but fail to see the dangerous path on which they are about to embark.


Related

Parliament Highlights - 9 Jul 2014

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MEDISHIELD LIFE DEBATE





'No tax rise planned' for subsidies on MediShield
Current Budget has taken that into account, says Health Minister
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

ALTHOUGH the payouts from MediShield Life will be more than the current scheme, the proposed mandatory medical insurance will be both sustainable and affordable over the long term, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong assured the House yesterday.


Part of the reason it will be sustainable is that the premiums collected will be enough not just for the year's payouts but also "for long-term commitments such as continuing claims for dialysis and cancer treatments", he said.

Closing the debate on MediShield Life, which will give lifelong cover to all Singaporeans and permanent residents, Mr Gan said the current Budget has taken into account the subsidies to tide people over the higher premiums when the scheme starts at the end of next year.

Over two days of debate, 24 Members of Parliament raised various concerns, including how premiums are decided, the need for social responsibility or strong oversight to keep costs under control, as well as a call to better regulate the Integrated Shield Plans (IPs) offered by commercial insurers.

Mr Sitoh Yih Pin (Potong Pasir) said the average person is not seized by how much of the scheme is funded by the Government. "The two biggest things on everyone's minds are how much will the premiums be in the long run, and how much will the payouts be when we need to use MediShield Life."

He also felt the scheme needs government control over what is covered.

Mr Gan agreed that hospitals "play a critical role in managing costs", and he promised to "develop and enforce strong clinical protocols to guide doctors on what is clinically appropriate".

Associate Professor Fatimah Lateef (Marine Parade GRC) and Workers' Party Non-Constituency MP Yee Jenn Jong suggested close monitoring of insurance claims and health-care consumption patterns.

Mr Gan replied: "We will need to curtail unfettered choice which does not translate into outcomes. We must work together to keep a lid on health-care inflation."

To the MPs who stressed the need for people to play their part by staying healthy, Mr Gan said this should include going for health screening regularly and treating chronic ailments.

He also told MPs, who asked for regulation of IPs covering private medical care, that his ministry will look into the issue.

But he warned against over- regulation, which could limit choice or increase premiums.

Mr Gan also took note of the MPs' call to explain the scheme clearly to people. Indeed, several Members of the House were themselves confused about the scheme.

One of them obviously failed to grasp the slogan "Better Protection. For All. For Life" when she asked why the Government is not "making all Singaporeans buy MediShield Life".







1-year premium respite for 50% of IP top-ups
By Joanna Seow And Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

ABOUT half the people who buy private insurance to get improved hospital benefits will not have to worry for one year about paying higher premiums for the extras.

They just have to pay whatever is the increase in their premiums under MediShield Life, to be introduced next year.

The Life Insurance Association (LIA) gave this assurance yesterday for the premiums of the Integrated Shield Plans (IPs) for hospitalisation in B1 and A wards in public hospitals.

These policyholders make up less than half of the 2.3 million IPs. The rest - 52 per cent - are for stays in private hospitals.

The LIA statement said the move will allow for a smooth transition for people renewing their IPs. The association includes the five insurers providing Medisave-approved IPs - AIA, Aviva, Great Eastern, NTUC Income and Prudential. It had previously said the increase in MediShield Life premiums would have "minimal impact" on IP premiums.

After the one-year grace period, the insurers will re-assess the IP based on actual experience, by looking at claims for instance, said LIA president Khoo Kah Siang.

He also said current B1 class plans are up for review as part of discussions with the Government on a standardised IP for B1 coverage, as suggested by the MediShield Life Review Committee.

All IPs currently incorporate MediShield and in future MediShield Life, which provides hospital cover for subsidised wards for all residents for life. So any changes to the basic scheme will affect the IPs.

Dr Khoo added that the commitment to not raise the insurers' portion of the premiums is "based on the assumption that there is no significant change to the regulatory and competitive environment".

Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said in Parliament on Tuesday that the overall increase for IP premiums resulting from the introduction of MediShield Life is expected to be the same, if not lower than the increase in Medi-Shield Life premiums. These will remain constant for the first five years.

But calculations for private medical care under IPs may take longer as costs are harder to anticipate than those for subsidised government care, and business considerations may come into play, said Dr Chia Shi-Lu, chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Health.

Health-care expert Jeremy Lim of consulting firm Oliver Wyman said the private insurers probably want to reassure policyholders of pricing certainty for at least the next two years, so they will not make hasty decisions on whether or not to cancel their plans.

For retiree George Chiang, 73, a one-year freeze is "not good enough". He pays around $3,000 in annual IP premiums in total for him and his wife and is considering cancelling the plan. He said: "What if they double the increase the next year to make up for it?"





Govt not collecting more premiums than needed
Sums received not meant to build up huge reserves, says Health Minister
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

MEDISHIELD Life will not collect too much in premiums in order to set aside huge reserves, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong made clear yesterday, saying it is a "misconception that MediShield is collecting more premiums than needed".

He was responding to Non-Constituency MPs Gerald Giam and Lina Chiam, who questioned the way the Government calculated the amount of reserves needed by MediShield and the impact this would have on premiums.

Other MPs, including Dr Lily Neo (Tanjong Pagar GRC) and Ms Tin Pei Ling (Marine Parade GRC), asked how MediShield Life premiums are decided.

Mr Gan said they are decided based on actuarial principles, and take into account benefits and expected claims, provisions for premium rebates as people age, reserves, and capital and administrative costs. He also rejected suggestions to cap premiums or to have the same premiums for all ages as that would mean older people would be claiming more than the premiums they paid. "The deficit will have to be paid for by the younger generation," he said.

Mr Gan also explained that long-term health insurance schemes like MediShield and MediShield Life must set aside enough reserves to honour not just current-year claims but also long-term commitments, such as continuing claims for dialysis and cancer treatments, and premium rebates for older age groups.

"It would not be responsible to all Singaporeans and policyholders if yearly premiums for MediShield just exactly balanced yearly payouts, as Mrs Lina Chiam has suggested, for this would mean that it cannot meet any continuing commitments for long-term dialysis patients or premium rebates," he said.

On Tuesday, Mr Giam, a Workers' Party NCMP, had suggested that the Government might be "setting aside too much for reserves". He also asked why MediShield has a target capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of 200 per cent when that set by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is 120 per cent.

CAR compares an insurance fund's financial resources with the capital it has to hold under MAS regulations. It is to hedge against risks - higher amounts represent safer products.

Mr Gan explained that 120 per cent is the minimum that MAS requires, and that "most commercial insurers typically aim for 200 per cent or higher".

Mr Giam also pointed out that last year, out of every dollar in premiums collected, MediShield only paid out 44 cents. In the United States, insurers that pay out less than 80 cents per dollar collected have to give premium rebates.

The minister explained that the figure of 44 cents did not take into account future liabilities. A better comparison was with the incurred loss ratio, which did. For example, someone with kidney failure will make dialysis claims not just in the first year, but also for the rest of the person's life.

If this payment is included in the calculations, then MediShield's incurred loss ratio over the last five years was 96 per cent - "sufficient to ensure sustainability of benefits but not excessive".

He added that a buffer is also needed in case there were unexpected claims.

Said Mr Gan: "I am keenly aware of the impact on premiums, but I would rather have sufficient reserves in MediShield Life and provide the necessary premium subsidies, than to put Singaporeans' health-care needs at risk."



No answers yet on three issues

ANSWERS on three major issues that MPs raised during the two-day debate on the new MediShield Life insurance will come later, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said yesterday. He promised to give "details when ready" on:
The proposed standard Integrated Shield Plan (IP), that provides coverage based on charges of the B1 ward in public hospitals, for people who want more than the basic subsidised care.
- The pre-existing medical conditions which will require a person to pay an extra 30 per cent in premiums for 10 years.
- How application for the permanent premium subsidy will be made as simple and convenient as possible for people.




MPs suggest regulation for Integrated Shield plans
By Rachel Au-Yong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

INTEGRATED Shield Plans (IPs) ought to be regulated by the Government to prevent profiteering, said several MPs yesterday as they raised concerns about these private insurance health-care plans.

One of them, Mr Sitoh Yih Pin (Potong Pasir), urged it to go further and take over the running of the standardised B1 plans, which are set to be rolled out next year, along with MediShield Life.

Get private insurers out of the B1 segment of the market, he said. The reason: They are unlikely to offer competitive benefits if the B1 plan is standardised across the board.

Currently, two-thirds of Singaporeans are on IPs, which are optional plans run by private insurers for hospitalisation in higher-class wards and private hospitals.

Their place and relevance have come under scrutiny now that all Singaporeans will be covered by MediShield Life at the end of next year. MediShield Life will provide hospital coverage for everyone in C and B2 wards.

The MediShield Life Review Committee, which came up with the MediShield Life proposals, recommended that the five private insurers offer a standardised B1 ward IP and the Government has accepted this recommendation.

Expressing the fears outside the House, Dr Lily Neo (Tanjong Pagar GRC) yesterday said insurers might "cherry-pick" the young and healthy to take on enhanced benefits at attractive premiums, but divert them to MediShield Life as they age.

They would do this by raising premiums at an age policyholders are more likely to make claims.

It is also likely that those who have run out of their Medisave money to service the private plans will end up downgrading from IPs to MediShield Life coverage, she added.

Insurers "stand to reap actuarial profits... at the expense of MediShield Life", she said.

To combat this, Dr Neo suggested that the Health Ministry extract a share of private insurers' actuarial profits.

Ms Denise Phua (Moulmein-Kallang GRC) went one step further, and asked the Government to play a regulatory role so that those with pre-existing conditions "would not be at the mercy of for-profit providers".

About 60 per cent of Singaporeans have bought IPs in various forms, which shows significant public interest, she noted.

"Persons with pre-existing conditions should not be deprived of the choice of upgrading to a B1 ward, because of either unfair risk-loading practices or private insurers' lack of interest to cover this target group," she said. "I ask the ministry to offer the standard IP for all, regardless of health conditions."

But Mr Sitoh was the boldest of all: Private insurers should concentrate on providing products for A-class and private hospital services, and exit the B1 segment altogether, he suggested.

"If you think about it, we'd want several providers for a certain product so that through competition, innovation and differentiation between providers, the consumer can benefit.

"But once a product is standardised, there is very limited, if any, scope for competition."

He added that the B1 ward is a "uniquely restructured hospital product", as it receives a 20 per cent subsidy. Most private hospitals offer few four-bed wards, and these are not subsidised.

Calling on the Government to take over the administration of IPs for B1 services, he said: "A single insurance provider will enjoy economies of scale and better risk-pooling."

In wrapping up yesterday's debate on MediShield Life, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said his ministry will study how to "strengthen the current regulatory and accountability framework for IP insurers, while being mindful not to over-regulate" them.

"Imposing requirements which are too onerous could limit choices or result in higher premiums for policyholders," he said.

He also said he will take members' suggestions into consideration when designing the B1 plan.





Putting a 'human face to the message'
Outreach to also clarify misconceptions, give assurances, says Amy Khor
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

HEALTH-CARE financing is a subject many Singaporeans know little about, which is why Dr Amy Khor has a plan to explain how MediShield Life will work for them and put "a human face to the message".

The Senior Minister of State for Health was responding to calls from many MPs to step up communication on the new universal health-care insurance scheme.

She promised that the outreach will go beyond merely explaining the technical nuts and bolts of the system, which may be difficult and off-putting for some.

It will also clarify misconceptions, give assurances and put "a human face to the message" so people know help is at hand if they need it, said Dr Khor, who stressed several times that people need not worry about whether they can afford premiums.

She said that when the MediShield Life review committee consulted the public, "what was very clear... was that many Singaporeans only have a very rudimentary understanding of the health-care financing system".

She singled out three areas that will need extra attention in the outreach exercise.

One, enhancing awareness of how Integrated Shield Plans (IPs) work. About 60 per cent of Singaporeans have these plans.

Dr Khor said not many people know that everyone who has an IP is already on MediShield, or MediShield Life when it is launched.

She compared MediShield to the base of a cake. IPs, provided by private insurers, are the "icing on top" that offer enhanced benefits like better ward classes.

Singaporeans may not be aware that while the premiums for MediShield and IPs are fairly similar when the policyholder is young, they will rise significantly with age, said Dr Khor.

"Many realise this only when they are in their silver years, when premiums rise sharply and the Medisave withdrawal limit becomes insufficient, making it necessary to top up their premium payments with cash," she said.

The Government will help IP policyholders understand how their plans work with MediShield Life so that they can make informed decisions. For instance, they might want to consider whether the wider base of MediShield Life's improved benefits is sufficient for their needs, or whether they still need IPs, said Dr Khor.

It will also work with private insurers to ensure that they market their products responsibly.

The second area she identified involved portable medical benefits that ride on MediShield Life.

She pledged that the Government will work with employers and union leaders to help them better understand how MediShield Life and IPs interact with employer medical benefits.

A tripartite working group, involving the Government, the Singapore National Employers Federation and the National Trades Union Congress, will look into the issue of portable medical benefits.

The Government will consider strengthening incentives for companies willing to offer portable benefits, such as through additional employer Medisave contributions or paying for employees' MediShield Life premiums.

The third area is how MediShield Life will tie in with the Pioneer Generation Package.

About 110,000 pioneers who are currently uninsured will now be covered by MediShield Life.

Existing coverage exclusions will be removed, though pioneers with pre-existing conditions may need to pay loading on their premiums.

But Dr Khor stressed that the most important message for all pioneers is: they will pay less than what they pay for MediShield today, for better protection.

Those aged 80 and above this year will have their MediShield Life premiums fully covered.

Dr Khor, who co-chairs a pioneer generation taskforce with Senior Minister of State Josephine Teo, said the Government would learn from its efforts and experiments in communicating the Pioneer Generation Package.

She highlighted the importance of face-to-face contact to give a personal touch to the outreach. The Government will thus tap grassroots leaders, community organisations and self-help groups.





Pensioners 'not worse off' under new scheme
By Kash Cheong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

SINGAPORE'S 32,000 pensioners enjoy significant medical benefits from the Government and a couple of MPs expressed concern that they could be worse off under the new MediShield Life insurance scheme.

One of them is Workers' Party MP Png Eng Huat (Hougang), who said that under MediShield Life, pensioners will lose the medical coverage for their dependents.

"The additional out-of-pocket expenses for hospital bills and the annual premiums for MediShield Life coverage for their dependents are additional costs to them," he added.

About 40 per cent of pensioners are on plans like the Comprehensive Co-payment Scheme, which gives them and their dependents heavy subsidies for hospitalisation in public hospitals and outpatient treatment at polyclinics. Those on the Fixed Amount on Ward Scheme, Mr Png said, have their hospital bills capped at $8 a day and get free treatment at polyclinics.

He also said some pensioners may not have enough savings in their Medisave accounts for co-payments and deductibles, as they were "not required to set aside any Medisave because they enjoy life-long retirement medical benefits".

He asked if pensioners could choose to be exempted from MediShield Life.

Non-Constituency MP Lina Chiam called on the Health Ministry to address concerns on whether existing medical benefits of pensioners would duplicate those in MediShield Life, and how this could be avoided.

Dr Fatimah Lateef (Marine Parade GRC) wants to know how MediShield Life would affect pensioners.

Replying, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong gave the assurance that pensioners would not be worse off under MediShield Life.

"Under the current MediShield scheme, the pensioner's spouse will lose coverage when the pensioner passes away," he said. "But going forward, the spouse will be covered under MediShield Life for life, even after the pensioner has passed away."

Mr Gan also referred to a Government announcement last week that pensioners in the Comprehensive Co-payment Scheme will get an extra 1 per cent in Medisave, when MediShield Life starts next year to offset higher premiums.

Pensioners on older medical schemes, which provide better benefits than MediShield Life, will have their premiums paid for by the Government.

The Goverment will write to pensioners with details by October.





Subsidised care: Is every doctor a good doctor?
By Chua Mui Hoong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

FIRST, a mea culpa.

A year ago, I wrote about MediShield Life shortly after the Prime Minister promised Medi- Shield would be revamped to bring in people with pre-existing illness. At that time, I predicted bitter wrangling over who should foot the cost of bringing this ill group into the health insurance risk pool, saying such debates would be "fractious".

I wrote: "After decades of exhortations about personal responsibility and reward based on individual performance and effort, we probably need a booster shot of altruism and solidarity."

Eleven months on, details of MediShield Life (MSL) and premium increases to cover the very sick, and the very old, are now made public. The Government will pay three-quarters of the cost of bringing in those with pre-existing illness. This group will pay 30 per cent more in premiums for 10 years as their share of the cost. Everyone else co-shares a modest part of the costs.

The cost-sharing formula has gone down well, and was accepted with little angst. Hardly anyone questioned why they had to pay a bit more and why taxpayers' money should be used to bring the sick into the insured pool.

I was wrong. And happily so.

There has been no fractious debate. Instead, MPs from three political parties joined forces in Parliament yesterday, to support a motion that the House endorses the MediShield Life Review Committee Report's proposals to implement universal health coverage in Singapore.

Over two days of debate, 25 MPs spoke. Workers' Party Non-Constituency MP (NCMP) Gerald Giam and Mrs Lina Chiam, an NCMP from the Singapore People's Party, were both concerned about MSL's long-term sustainability, an issue People's Action Party MPs like Christopher de Souza and Denise Phua were also seized with.

The promise of universal health coverage has attracted near-universal acclaim.

It's easy to forget how far we've come as a society. Not too long ago, government officials were robustly defending the status quo MediShield - one which leaves out the very old who most need financial security; excludes people with just one illness from all coverage; and leaves you out in the cold when you exceed lifetime claims limits. It wasn't too long ago that people argued it was unfair for healthy young people to pay more to cover the sick and old who are left out of MediShield.

Today, the acceptance of universal health coverage in MSL has changed us as a society for the better. How so? For one, MSL is based on solidarity. In the words of MP Sitoh Yih Pin, there's a spirit of "collective welfare", when everyone pays a bit to have universal coverage for all.

Solidarity also means not over- consuming health care, a point stressed by MP and general practitioner Lily Neo, warning against "unsavoury practices" from health providers, such as over-treating or over-testing.

Second, MSL reminds us that there are limits to personal and family responsibility.

Even if you take the best care of your health, you may fall sick and need expensive care some time. Even if your family members empty their Medisave accounts, it may not be enough.

Once MSL kicks in at the end of 2015, you no longer have to borrow or sell your home to pay your hospital bills. Instead, the rest of the community chips in.

Policy design used to be about protecting MediShield from people's large claims; now, it is about using MediShield Life to protect people from the anxiety of having to pay too-large claims. Some of the extreme risk is being shifted from the individual and his family, to the community (via the MSL risk pool) and the state (via subsidised premiums and Medifund).

What has not changed, though, are some basic principles that underpin personal responsibility, such as co-payments, and a high deductible so that small bills are still borne by the individual.

The Health Ministry (MOH) will also keep an eye on supplier- induced demand. For example, it has a Standard Drugs List, developed based on clinical and cost effectiveness. Drugs on the list are subsidised and the list is regularly reviewed to ensure access and affordability of treatments, said Health Minister Gan Kim Yong.

Which brings us to an important, rather under-discussed issue. MSL pays up to Class B2 and C charges. But how good is the care in these subsidised wards?

As Mrs Chiam remarked yesterday: "Some patients have even expressed the doubt of whether medications provided for patients have the same potency of those in B1 and A paying wards."

MP Fatimah Lateef, a doctor, assured Mrs Chiam that care, medication and treatment are the same across ward classes.

Anecdotally, however, the perception is rife that care at subsidised wards is inferior. It's not just about creature comforts like the lack of air-con.

It's sometimes whispered that some drugs and treatments not on the standard list aren't even offered to subsidised patients because doctors fear telling them about treatments they can't afford. And then there's the choice of doctors, which you don't get in subsidised wards. Can a rookie surgeon be as good as a senior consultant who's performed the surgery for 10 years?

With subsidised care being set as the norm, perhaps MOH should do what the Ministry of Education is doing, and embark on a campaign to say that B2/C care is just as good as care in an A/B1 ward, minus the difference in air-con and number of beds in a room.

Its tagline might be: Every doctor a good doctor.





KL has reassured Singapore over reclamation concerns: MFA
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

MALAYSIA has assured Singapore that no reclamation is currently taking place for its two controversial projects near the Johor Strait, said Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Masagos Zulkifli yesterday.

It remains committed to fulfilling its obligations under international law and will take all necessary measures to avoid any adverse transboundary impact, he said in Parliament.

"Singapore is very concerned about the potential transboundary impact on Singapore from reclamation projects in Malaysia that are in close proximity to Singapore," he said in response to questions from Dr Lim Wee Kiak (Nee Soon GRC) and Mr Ang Wei Neng (Jurong GRC).



The Republic has conveyed its concern on a number of occasions to Malaysia, asking for more information on these reclamation and construction works, he added.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke and wrote to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak on the matter in May.

National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan, who co- chairs the Malaysia-Singapore Joint Ministerial Committee for Iskandar Malaysia, also wrote to his Malaysian counterpart the same month.

The issue was also discussed in May at a meeting of the Malaysia-Singapore Joint Committee on the Environment in Malaysia.

Malaysia had responded on June 30 to Singapore's request for the projects to be temporarily suspended until the Republic receives and studies information on them. The Straits Times understands that Malaysia's Department of Environment was responding to a letter sent by the National Environment Agency.

The Malaysian Foreign Ministry then sent a diplomatic note to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) on July 1.

Malaysia has also given Singapore preliminary general information on the projects and promised to share all other information once ready, Mr Masagos said.

Singapore is seeking further clarifications on some of the information provided, and will study the projects' impact.

"We have proposed to hold consultations with Malaysia so that both sides can further discuss and exchange information on these projects," he added.

The major reclamation works first attracted controversy last month, with concerns over their possible impact on Singapore and the environment.

The first project, a luxury home complex on a man-made island three times the size of Ang Mo Kio, is located near the Second Link. Dubbed Forest City, it is developed by China's Country Garden Holdings and a Johor state company.

The second is a residential project by China developer Guangzhou R&F Properties named Princess Cove.

Singapore was not given prior information on either project, and it is concerned about the effect on the coastal environment and infrastructure, among other problems, said Mr Masagos.

Under international law, Malaysia is obligated to "not permit reclamation activities of this scale and nature to take place so close to Singapore without first conducting an environmental impact assessment", he said.

If damage to the environment has been caused or is imminent, Malaysia has a duty to immediately notify Singapore, he added.

Under a 2005 settlement agreement following a reclamation case, both countries must monitor their environments in the Johor Strait, share information and address any adverse impacts.

According to a Johor official, Forest City developers had voluntarily stopped work for about a week while awaiting approval from the Department of Environment. But a Straits Times check on June 25 found that work on a sandbank was still ongoing, as the developers had asked for more time to wind down operations.





'Handful' of Singaporeans went to Syria to join conflict: DPM Teo
By Imelda Saad, Channel NewsAsia, 9 Jul 2014

The Syrian crisis has raised the threat of terrorism in Singapore. Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean gave a sobering picture in Parliament on Wednesday (July 9) on the impact of the crisis to the country and why the developments go beyond security concerns and threatens social cohesion.

The Syrian civil war has been raging since mass protests broke out against the Bashar al-Assad government in 2011. The conflict has grown into a security concern for many countries including Singapore. As many as 12,000 foreigners may have already gone to fight in Syria, and the number is growing. A handful of Singaporeans have joined in the conflict too, Mr Teo, who is also Home Affairs Minister, revealed that a handful of Singaporeans have gone to Syria, to take part in the conflict.



“The Government knows of a handful of Singaporeans who have gone to Syria to take part in the conflict. One of them is Haja Fakkurudeen Usman Ali (Haja), a naturalised Singapore citizen of Indian origin. He brought his wife and three children then aged between 2 and 11 with him,” he said. “Another female Singaporean is believed to have gone to Syria with her foreign husband and two teenaged children. The whole family is taking part in the conflict in various ways, either joining the terrorist groups to fight, or providing aid and support to the fighters."

Several others had intended to travel to Syria or other conflict zones to engage in jihadist violence, but were detected before they could proceed with plans. Self-radicalised lawyer Abdul Basheer Abdul Kader has been detained under the Internal Security Act, while Zakaria Rosdan and Khairul Sofri Osman have both been issued Restriction Orders.

There are others who have expressed interest to join in the fight, and are currently under investigation. "We have established that they had been radicalised by the videos, articles and social media postings online. They subscribed to the sectarian-religious or ideological rhetoric that calls for engaging in militant jihad in Syria," said Mr Teo.

DPM Teo said the flow of foreign fighters into Syria poses a threat to the country as there are parallels between the current crisis and the Soviet-Afghan war in the 1980s. That war drew thousands of foreign fighters and led to the creation of Al-Qaeda. The Al-Qaeda, through Jemaah Islamiyah, had planned terror attacks on Singapore.

"The foreign fighters in Syria may similarly return from the conflict proficient in terrorist skills,” said Mr Teo. “They may undertake terrorist activities in their home countries or overseas, or at the very least provide logistical and operational help to terrorists whom they befriended in Syria. This has already happened. UK and French nationals who returned from fighting in Syria have already targeted Central London and the French Riviera respectively."

There have also been examples of foreign fighters who have travelled to Syria via Singapore, and extremists from neighbouring countries like Indonesia and Malaysia, trained in Syria.

"The presence of former foreign fighters in our region - whether they originate from South-east Asia or elsewhere - is a security threat to us. The threat is magnified if these returnee fighters are Singaporeans. Indeed, any Singaporean who assists violent organisations like the Al-Nusra Front, IS or any other violent group, would have demonstrated a dangerous tendency to support, or resort to, violence to pursue a political or ideological cause. They would thus pose a real threat to Singapore's national security," said Mr Teo. 

He also pointed to a possible impact on social cohesion - as seen in what happened after Singaporean JI members were discovered. "If more Singaporeans are discovered to have gone to fight or support the fighting in Syria, or to harbour intentions of doing so, it may cause disquiet on the ground, and give rise to mistrust and tension between our communities."

The challenge, he said, is to counter the radical propaganda. This is where religious and community groups will have to step in. The Internet has also been a real game-changer in the Syrian conflict, with many recruited as militants because of what they see and read online.

"Some foreigners have been lured by the sense of ‘adventure’ as marketed by the extremists online. Others are attracted by the ‘jihad cool’ factor, with selfies of fighters posing with weapons,” said Mr Teo. “Youths, who are the primary users of social media, are particularly vulnerable to such propaganda."

He said Singaporeans who wish to help can give humanitarian aid, but advised them to first check with the Islamic Religious Council on the local organisations to turn to. That is because some foreign humanitarian organisations are covers used by radical elements to raise money or to recruit fighters.

Mr Teo will meet religious leaders from various faiths on Thursday (July 10) to discuss the issue, so that the community can tackle any potential fallout together.





Unemployment rate remains low and stable: Manpower Minister
Manpower Minister Tan Chuan-Jin told Parliament that the slight increase in quarterly unemployment rates could reflect higher job search activity, more vacancies and greater availability of flexi-work arrangements in a tight labour market.
Channel NewsAsia, 9 Jul 2014

The key challenge in helping Singapore's unemployed find jobs is ensuring their skills remain relevant to evolving industry needs.

Manpower Minister Tan Chuan-Jin told Parliament on Wednesday (July 9) that although the quarterly unemployment rate for citizens rose slightly from 2.8 per cent in December 2013 to 3.0 per cent in March 2014, it remains low and has been largely stable for the past three years.

He said the slight increase in quarterly unemployment rates could reflect higher job search activity as higher wages, more vacancies and greater availability of flexible working arrangements in a tight labour market encourage more citizens to enter the labour force to look for jobs.

He said as the job search process may take some time, some slight increases in quarterly unemployment rates is expected and slight fluctuations in the unemployment rate are also to be expected across quarters.

"To help them upgrade their skills, we provide generous subsidies for the upgrading of skills through our Continuing Education and Training (CET) system. Jobseekers receive between 70 per cent and 90 per cent course fee subsidies depending on the type of courses and we also have Place-and-Train (PnT) programmes to help jobseekers find jobs and pick up the skills they need in their new jobs,” said Mr Tan.

“Most importantly, individuals must have the right mindset, learn new skills, and be open to different job opportunities in growing industries and of course we do need to create the conditions for which jobs are created so the economy needs to be healthy, in order for that to happen."

Jobseekers receive 90 per cent course fee subsidy for rank-and-file courses and 70 per cent course fee subsidy for PME courses.

"For (the) economically inactive who are returning to the workforce, being able to find a job that allows them to balance family and care-giving responsibilities is a key concern. We have recently enhanced the Work-Life Grant under the WorkPro scheme to provide greater support to companies to implement and sustain good work-life practices, such as flexible work arrangements," Mr Tan added.

Mr Tan said the profile of the unemployed is varied - about one in two of the unemployed citizens in March 2014 were aged 40 and over. In terms of educational qualifications, about half had secondary education or below. About one in five is long-term unemployed.

He said the ministry will continue to monitor the unemployment rate closely and work with tripartite partners to help unemployed Singaporeans find jobs.





Dialect restrictions not for all communication platforms, says Sim Ann
By Maryam Mokhtar, The Straits Times, 9 Jul 2014

Dialect is not prohibited on all communication channels, said Minister of State for Education and Communications and Information Sim Ann on Wednesday.

Ms Sim, speaking in Parliament, stressed that while restrictions on dialect were put in place on free-to-air broadcast channels and TV programming to encourage the speaking of Mandarin, the Government has been "relatively free in controlling" its use on other channels.

These include on DVDs, Pay-TV and public entertainment platforms.

She was responding to a question from Mr Baey Yam Keng (Tampines GRC) in Parliament on whether the Government will consider using free-to-air TV as one of the communication platforms for the Pioneer Generation Package, and what the difference is for dialect use on TV and in social media.

In March, the Government released a Hokkien video explaining the Pioneer Generation Package. It was broadcast on YouTube and during existing dialect programming time belts on both free-to-air TV and radio channels.

Mr Zaqy Mohamad (Chua Chu Kang GRC) wanted to know why priority had appeared to be given to dialects over the national languages of Malay and Tamil in producing explanatory videos. The Malay and Tamil versions have yet to be broadcast.



To this, Ms Ann said that in fact other materials and videos on the package had already been produced in all four official languages, before the dialect videos.

The dialect videos were made later in "recognition of the need to communicate with dialect-speaking Singaporeans," who might not have easy access to these material, she said, and a novel approach of a comedy skit was used.

Because it proved to be popular, it has created the impression that the dialect videos were produced first, she added.

Mr Baey also asked if there was a need for the Ministry of Communications and Information to better advise policymakers in creating policies that are easier to communicate and less complex.

In reply, Ms Sim said the Government understands that public communication should be as simple as possible, but policies often have to be complex in order to cater to very diverse needs and different situations.

"So simplicity and clarity must not come at the expense of accuracy in conveying important details," she said.





No Rainbow at A-mei's gig due to 'pro-LGBT message'
By Tham Yuen-c, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

TAIWANESE diva A-mei could not sing her song Rainbow at her recent concert here as she had encouraged fans to openly show affection for their same-sex partners during a rendition of it last year.

The images of those in the audience kissing, including of gay couples, were then projected on a big screen as she belted out the song. Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said yesterday that "this segment of the show promoted a pro-LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) message".

In his written reply to Nominated MP Janice Koh, who asked why the song was prohibited this time round, Dr Yaacob said that A-mei's Spring Wave 2014 concert last month was an outdoor event where passers-by may "chance upon the performances". As such concerts are typically given a General rating, the Media Development Authority had told the organiser that including the song would cause the event to "exceed a General rating", he said.

The organiser, which had submitted its licence application only days before the event, then decided to pull the song. Dr Yaacob said A-mei would have been allowed to sing the song if the organiser had made clear how it would be performed when applying for the concert licence. But the event would have gotten an Advisory rating for mature content, he added.

Ms Koh also asked if the song was banned from broadcast on radio. Dr Yaacob said the song in itself, did not breach the MDA's content guidelines. "The lyrics, which describe how the singer overcomes a failed relationship with the support of her friend, do not contain mature content when read on their own. There is therefore no issue with the song being played on radio and in public spaces," he said.





Game plan if haze disrupts SEA Games
By Rachel Au-Yong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

IN CASE the haze returns next year when Singapore hosts the SEA Games, organisers are making contingency plans to build in buffers in the competition schedule to postpone some events or move them indoors.

The Singapore SEA Games Organising Committee is developing a set of criteria to guide these decisions at different air quality levels, said Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong in Parliament yesterday.

This framework will refer to the air quality reports and public health advisories issued by the National Environment Agency, and will be overseen by sports representatives and experts in fields such as medical and security, he said.

"Based on this framework, we will postpone events or move them indoors, as and when the need arises," said Mr Wong.

The marathon, for example, is scheduled to take place early on in the programme but it can be postponed till later in the Games if necessary.

In preparing for the Games, arrangements will also be made for Singapore's athletes to train indoors where possible if the haze worsens.

Mr Wong was responding to questions from Nominated MP Nicholas Fang, who is joint chef-de-mission of the Games with Dr Tan Eng Liang, on contingency plans to minimise the impact of the haze on the Games.



The SEA Games will take place from June 5 to 16 next year, putting it during the annual dry spell between June and October, when haze has typically been an issue. The Government has already warned of a return of the haze in the coming months.

While contingency plans will be made, there are limitations, said Mr Wong.

Not all sports can be played indoors and there are limits to how much the competition schedule can be adjusted, he said.

"So if the bad air quality persists, then we may have no choice but to shorten or cancel certain events," he said.

But he assured the House that postponements or cancellations would not "incur significant costs" for the hosts.

This is because there are provisions made in the contracts so that cancellations can be made in these situations.

"I think we are able to manage the cost implications from the haze," he said.





Changes to basis for drawing on investment returns not ruled out
Govt will not bring into effect Article 5(2A) until position is clearer
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

AGAINST the backdrop of a rapidly ageing population and the shift towards greater social spending, the Government cannot rule out further refining, over the next five to 10 years, the tax system and the basis for drawing on the country's net investment returns.

That is why it still does not intend to bring into effect Article 5(2A) of the Constitution, Law Minister K. Shanmugam said yesterday in response to Nominated MP Eugene Tan.

The article states that if Parliament wants to amend certain elements of the Constitution, such as any provisions relating to the President's powers, it must be supported by at least two-thirds of voters in a national referendum.

The article has not been brought into force since the Constitution was amended in 1991 to establish the Elected Presidency.

Mr Shanmugam said the "complex and novel" nature of the changes that came along with the Elected Presidency meant that its provisions had to be revised and fine-tuned along the way. Such refinements must be put in place and fully ironed out before the scheme can be safely entrenched.

"To bring Article 5(2A) into force before that would otherwise potentially trigger a national referendum each time we needed to make a further refinement or adjustment," he said. "We should give ourselves more time before entrenching the provisions."

Mr Shanmugam said the Constitution had been further amended in 2008 to introduce a new Net Investment Returns framework. Currently, the Net Investment Returns Contribution makes a "substantial contribution" of about $8 billion a year - some 2 per cent of the gross domestic product - to the Budget. However, the Government will need to strengthen its revenue base to support the demographic and policy changes in the years ahead, said Mr Shanmugam.


Close to a million Singaporeans will reach retirement age in the next 20 years or so, while the Government has made major policy shifts that will significantly increase spending on infrastructure and social services, he added.

Health-care spending alone is projected to increase threefold to about $12 billion by 2020. Hence, the Government cannot rule out changing the tax system and the rules that govern the use of net investment returns. "We cannot decide today precisely how this should be done," said Mr Shanmugam. The Government must preserve its ability to make necessary adjustments so it can maintain Singapore's strong financial position, and a fair and progressive tax and transfers system.

Associate Professor Tan also repeated former Nominated MP Thio Li-ann's previous call for the Government to bring into effect two provisions of Article 5(2A) relating to fundamental liberties and general elections.

But Mr Shanmugam reiterated that the Government cannot do so. Article 5(2A) cannot be implemented in a staggered fashion as it would go against the intent that it should operate as a package.





12 sanctioned yearly for not serving NS on religious grounds
Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen says there has not been an increasing trend of such cases.
Channel NewsAsia, 10 Jul 2014

About a dozen national servicemen have been court-martialled and sentenced to detention every year for refusing to serve National Service (NS) on religious grounds in the past 10 years, said Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen.


Assoc Prof Tan had asked for the number of full-time and operationally-ready national servicemen who have been detained or sanctioned for their objection to performing NS on moral or religious grounds, and whether there was a trend of such objections. He also asked whether alternative forms of NS could be considered, subject to stringent requirements being satisfied.

In response, Dr Ng said under the Enlistment Act, all male Singapore citizens and permanent residents have to perform NS within the Singapore Armed Forces, the Singapore Civil Defence Force or the Singapore Police Force.

“This requirement, applied to all without exception, is fair and necessary to maintain strong support for NS,” he said.

“Only a small number are exempted for medical reasons based on professional assessment by an independent panel. Allowing individuals to opt out or choose alternative forms of NS because of moral or religious reasons will weaken support for NS,” Dr Ng added.


You can lead a horse to water...

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Public must make effort to keep up with policy changes

THE onus on ensuring that the public understands various government policies should not lie solely on the authorities, especially in a high-tech world where information is freely available ("Putting a 'human face to the message'"; yesterday).

While the Government uses various platforms such as the mass media and social media to disseminate messages, organisations and companies can play a role by inviting government officials to give briefings to their staff. This would further enhance the communication process and reduce confusion or misunderstanding.

Members of the public should not just sit back; they should keep up with the changes by accessing websites or reading newspapers. They can also seek clarifications through the various feedback channels.

Communication is a two-way process. Both parties have to actively engage in it to ensure that the correct message is conveyed.

Lim Lih Mei (Ms)
ST Forum, 11 Jul 2014

PM: Bilingual policy kept Mandarin alive

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Govt committed to helping S'poreans master mother tongue
Initiatives such as bilingual policy helped keep Mandarin alive: PM
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 11 Jul 2014

PRIME Minister Lee Hsien Loong has addressed concerns that Mandarin standards are slipping in a speech to mark the 75th anniversary of Chung Cheng High School, one of the first here to teach both English and Chinese at first-language level.

He also stressed that the Government remains committed to its goal to help all Singaporeans master their mother tongue to the best of their ability.



Speaking in Mandarin, Mr Lee said it was not appropriate to compare today's social and linguistic environment with that of the 1950s, when schools taught either in English or Chinese but not in both languages.

He also highlighted the critical role of the Government's language policies in safeguarding the learning and use of the Chinese language.

"If we did not introduce the bilingual policy, promote Mandarin and start Special Assistance Plan (SAP) schools, Singapore today might be a completely English-speaking society," he said.

Given an environment where English is the lingua franca and working language, it has not been easy to maintain Singaporeans' Mandarin standard at the level it is today, he added.


In that interview, released last week, he said that while Chinese standards may have slipped, he remained optimistic that Singapore could achieve about 95 per cent of its desired outcome in mastering the language.

Yesterday, he elaborated on this further, pledging that the Government would continue to work hard and do its best to help Singaporeans achieve their highest potential in their mother tongues.

Besides the support given to SAP schools, it has also extended resources to all schools to help more students excel in Mandarin.

Last year, 30 per cent of Chinese students took Higher Chinese at the O levels, almost double the rate in 2000, he noted. And some 100,000 teachers, parents and students take part in programmes by the Committee to Promote Chinese Language Learning every year.

These examples show that the Government's multi-faceted efforts to promote Mandarin have been effective, he said.

It aims to "ensure that all Singaporeans stay rooted in their mother tongue and culture, have good values and do not forget their roots". These are values that Chung Cheng has always taught its students, and were why SAP schools were set up, he said.

But at the start, it was not clear if SAP schools would succeed, said Mr Lee. It was a challenge for students to master Chinese and English at first-language level given the environment then. Many parents also wanted their children to study English instead of Chinese, as the former was perceived to have more economic value.

But the Government put in resources, teachers and students worked hard, and parents gave their support.

"All SAP schools submitted a beautiful report card in the end. You could say they all passed," said Mr Lee.

Ang Mo Kio GRC MP Seng Han Thong, who is Chinese-educated, said the bilingual policy aimed to counter the trend of parents sending their children to English-language schools, and help every student speak his mother tongue, at least at a basic level.

The policy's "net gain" is that the younger generation can communicate in Mandarin and English, rather than each group speaking its own dialect, as in the past.

Last night, banker Wee Cho Yaw, who has chaired the Chung Cheng school management committee for almost 20 years, announced that the gala dinner had raised some $2 million to be used for bursaries and the school's future development.





Singapore might be completely English-speaking without bilingual policy: PM
Channel NewsAsia, 10 Jul 2014

If Singapore did not introduce the bilingual policy, it might be a completely English-speaking society. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said as a result of introducing Special Assistance Schools or SAP schools, there are students who are bilingual and bicultural.

He said this in a Mandarin speech at Chung Cheng High School (Main)'s 75th anniversary gala dinner held on Thursday (10 July). Mr Lee said some Singaporeans told him they are concerned that the standard of Mandarin here is no longer as good as before. In response, he said we should not compare today's standards of Mandarin with the 1950s.

"We need to take a different perspective: If we did not introduce the bilingual policy, promote Mandarin, and start SAP schools, Singapore might be a completely English-speaking society. To achieve the standards of Mandarin we have now, in an environment where English is the lingua franca, is quite an improvement," said Mr Lee.

He added that the objective is to help every Singaporean learn Mother Tongue to as high a level as he is capable of.

SAP schools like Chung Cheng High were set up to develop bicultural and bilingual students firmly-rooted in Chinese traditions and identity, while being well-integrated in a multi-cultural and multi-racial Singapore.

Mr Lee also commended an old boy that exemplifies the Chung Cheng spirit of giving back to the community - Mr Wee Cho Yaw, who is the former UOB Chairman.

Mr Lee said he served the school management committee for nearly half a century and made significant contributions such as providing strong support of school activities, especially to promote biculturalism and preserve school values and traditions.

At the same event, Mr Lee announced that two iconic buildings of Chung Cheng High School (Main) located at Goodman Road have been gazetted as a National Monument by the National Heritage Board (NHB). Together, they form Singapore's 66th National Monument. 

Mr Lee said one of Chung Cheng's biggest strengths is the support it receives from the community. Funds raised from tonight's dinner will go towards developing the school.





Chung Cheng High School gazetted as national monument
Institution also celebrates rich cultural history on 75th anniversary
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 11 Jul 2014

A RICH heritage in the arts and the spirit of "yin shui si yuan" - the Chinese saying for remembering one's roots - are qualities Chung Cheng High School will celebrate to mark its 75th anniversary.

As part of the festivities, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong yesterday officiated at a ceremony to gazette its administration building and the entrance arch of its main campus as a combined national monument.

The two structures are part of the Chung Cheng family's collective memory, principal Pang Choon How of Chung Cheng High School (Main) said yesterday.

The administration building, designed in the Chinese National style, has been the school's "heartbeat", he added.

It was completed in 1968, with funds raised over 20 years. Officially opened by former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, the building housed the largest auditorium in Singapore at the time.

Mr Pang said the building has housed, over the years, performing arts and sports activities, the old library and, today, the school's heritage gallery.

He praised the forefathers for the legacy and their vision, foresight and perseverance.

The administration building and the arch will be Singapore's 66th national monument. It joins nine other school buildings which have also been preserved.

Urban planner and chairman of the Centre for Liveable Cities Liu Thai Ker, a Chung Cheng alumnus, said the gazetting shows the Government recognises the importance of historical buildings.

"The architectural style is quite distinctly Chinese. Recognising it is reinforcing the importance of respect for tradition."

Also celebrated yesterday was the school's rich cultural history and its reputation for grooming a pantheon of artistic talents from the late 1940s to 1960s.

PM Lee opened the new Lim Tze Peng art gallery, named after the artist and Cultural Medallion winner who donated some 100 artworks to his alma mater.

Mr Lim, 94, said it was an honour to give back. He was from a poor family, and the school had let him study for free and even given him a job at the school office.

"Chung Cheng loves me and I love my alma mater, too," he said in Mandarin.

He hopes his works will inspire students to be interested in art.

Dr Liu, 76, had been tutored by Mr Lim in art and calligraphy when he was in school. His father, pioneer artist Liu Kang, had also taught there. Reminiscing about the vibrant art and Chinese drama scene, Dr Liu said: "There was a strong emphasis on history, culture and tradition.

"It became part of the overall ambience of Chung Cheng."





8 things to know about Chung Cheng High, Singapore's latest National Monument
By Cheow Sue Ann, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

Chung Cheng High celebrates its 75th birthday on July 10 with a gala dinner at its main campus at Goodman Road. On the same night, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will officiate and announce another milestone in the school's already rich history.

The school has played a vital role in Singapore's culture and history since its establishment in 1939. The iconic buildings belonging to its main campus - the Administration Building (Zhulin Building) and the Entrance Arch - will be gazetted as a National Monument by the National Heritage Board (NHB). The two buildings will form Singapore's 66th National Monument.

Here are eight things you need to know about the school:

1. It was named after Chiang Kai-shek

The school was named after Chiang Kai-shek, one of the 20th century's notable political figures. He was president of the Republic of China from 1948 to 1975.

While Chiang Kai-shek is a household name, few know that he was also known as Chiang Chung-cheng in Standard Chinese.

2. It began as an all-boys private school

It only started to admit girls after World War II in 1945.

3. It was founded by a businessman and helmed by a war hero

Did you know that the school was founded by several businessmen, including the first Chairman of the School Management Board, Aw Boon Haw?

Aw is famous for not only introducing Tiger Balm to Singapore, but also the establishment of Haw Par Villa.

Chung Cheng's first school supervisor was Lim Bo Seng, a World War II hero. Lim established the Force 136 to fight against the Japanese, only to be tortured by the Japanese regime in 1944.

4. The original campus in Kim Yam Road was the site of several riots

In 1954, the Kim Yam road campus was the site for demonstrations against compulsory national service where 2,500 male and female students locked themselves in Chung Cheng High School.

While the demonstration was quickly cleared, these actions did hamper the first big-scale attempt to recruit male youths for part-time national service.

In 1956, the school was also a hotbed for the leftist student movement under the influence of the communist underground.

As the Government began to clamp down more harshly on communism, students gathered and camped at Chung Cheng High School and The Chinese High School.

The police entered the schools and cleared the students using tear gas, forcing the students to head for the city. In total, 13 people were killed and more than 100 were injured.

5. It has two campuses

Chung Cheng High School is split into two branches, Chung Cheng High School (Main) and Chung Cheng High School (Yishun).

In August 1947, to cope with the increased student population, part of the school moved into a new school building in Goodman Road. The school located at 40-56 Goodman Road is named as Chung Cheng High School (Main).

The old school at Kim Yam road continued to function and was renamed Chung Cheng High School (Branch) and subsequently relocated to 11 Yishun Street 61 and became known as Chung Cheng High School (Yishun).

6. The gazetted buildings were designed by one of their own

The buildings classified as Singapore's latest National Monument were designed by Mr Ho Beng Heng, a Chung Cheng alumnus.

7. The architecture bears symbolic significance

The architectural style was the so-called Chinese National style. The Chinese National style was an architectural movement rooted in patriotism.

The Administration Building, which is constructed using reinforced concrete, follows a modern functional layout and displays Chinese architectural features such as the prominent double-tier roof with glazed Chinese tiles, and cloud and bat motifs.

The Entrance Arch sits on ornamented high stone pedestals and is decorated with stylised bat motifs, which are meant to represent good fortune and happiness.

Similarly, the path through the Entrance Arch towards the Administrative Building is symbolic of the students’ journey towards higher education and a promising future.

8. The school holds a Guiness World Record for Longest Can-Chaining Project

In 2005, Chung Cheng made a mark in the Guinness Book of Records for the World’s Longest Can-Chaining Project for charity.

The Can-Chaining Project saw the school chaining together some 45,000 used drink cans to emphasise the importance of conservation and recycling as a means to conserve the environment.


Related

PMO responds to Zaobao editorial on Chinese language

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By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 11 Jul 2014

THE Prime Minister's Office (PMO) has responded to an editorial in Lianhe Zaobao that called for more space for dialects and for the social standing of the Chinese language to be raised.

In the reply published in the Chinese daily yesterday, the PMO said the reasons for launching the Speak Mandarin Campaign in 1979 remain relevant today as most people would not be able to master English, Mandarin and dialect at the same time.

The PMO also defended the bilingual policy, saying it is not to blame for falling Chinese standards and that without the policy, there would be a generation of Singaporeans who cannot understand, speak or write the language.

The Zaobao editorial was published on Monday, two days after Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong launched the 35th anniversary celebrations of the Speak Mandarin Campaign. The editorial highlighted the price exacted by the campaign and the bilingual policy. The urgency with which the campaign had been rolled out had turned the use of Mandarin and dialects into a "zero-sum game", it said.

It created a divide between the dialect-speaking pioneer generation and their mainly English- speaking grandchildren, leading to the loss of traditional Chinese values and hastening the Westernisation of society, it said.

In the letter, which was signed by the Prime Minister's press secretary Chang Li Lin, the PMO said this view was extreme, not objective and "does not do justice to the Government".

The editorial omitted to mention that similar shifts in values and attitudes are taking place even in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, the PMO said. Singapore upheld Mandarin to strengthen the younger generation's knowledge of their mother tongue and culture rather than to weaken their sense of belonging as the editorial argued, it added.

As for dialects, they have not been expunged but the young should focus on English and Mandarin. Hong Kong's experience with three languages shows Singapore's pragmatic approach is necessary and has worked, the PMO said. And without the bilingual policy, today there would be a generation of Singaporeans who cannot understand Chinese, speak Mandarin, or even read Chinese newspapers and entertainment news, it said.

The PMO also rebutted the argument that the language issue had largely lost its political hue as Singaporeans have internalised the importance of inter-racial, inter-religious harmony and that English is the lingua franca.

Ms Chang said this was a misperception. Singapore cannot be complacent about the need to treat race, language and religious issues with care, she said, citing the furore over the use of Mandarin in MRT station announcements and a New Year's Eve countdown. As the majority ethnic group, Chinese Singaporeans have a responsibility to remember Singapore is multi-racial. "We must never make non-Chinese Singaporeans feel marginalised in their own country."


Hri Kumar: Why I Do This – A Reflection on the CPF Forum

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By Hri Kumar, Facebook, 10 Jul 2014

A close friend of mine looked at the hullabaloo caused by my recent CPF Forum and asked why I bothered doing it. He had a point - it is easier to do nothing.

So why?

During the Second World War, General George Patton asked his troops to think about what they would tell their grandchildren. Do they want to be remembered for fighting the Nazis or for digging dirt in Louisiana?

Patton's point is clear - when times are tough, what did you do to try to make a difference? Did you do what was difficult or did you choose what was easy?

Today, we are also in a war - not the conventional kind - but one for hearts and minds of Singaporeans. There are groups who view politics differently, and who want to take Singapore in a different direction. And you can tell from what you read on the Internet or otherwise that some elements do not care how they win.

CPF matters to my residents. It is my duty to understand their concerns, clarify misunderstandings and to get everyone talking about how we can do things better. It did not trouble me that some netizens labelled the Forum a “wayang”. It did not even bother me that Kenneth Jeyaretnam wrote a post lying about what I said at the Forum – people are wise to him. Mdm Irene Yap’s speech grabbed all the attention, but it turned out that the CPF rules were applied properly and consistently in her case and she has access to her funds.

Ultimately, what was important was that the Forum helped us understand CPF better, and more importantly, to hear what others thought about it. And not surprisingly, there was a diversity of views. Most accepted that CPF was a good system, but could do with a few tweaks. Indeed, several spoke against allowing a complete withdrawal at age 55 or later. While they acknowledged the argument that people should have freedom to deal with their own monies, they countered that there is an equally strong argument that people should make provisions for their own retirement if they have the funds. Indeed, several spoke against the sentiment of one gentleman who said that it was his right to spend his money in Batam, and that if his funds run out, it was for God to help him! The reality is that it will be for the rest of us help him. So, the challenge is to find an acceptable balance between these two arguments.

Our society is evolving. We are made differently from the generation which built Singapore. We have different hopes, expectations and sense of fairness. We want more inclusiveness, less “swim or sink” or “winner takes all”. We measure success, not just by how well we do individually, but whether society as a whole is better off. We regard each other more as equals, and are less accepting of hierarchy. These are all good objectives. Our institutions and policies will therefore have to adapt. The Pioneer Generation Package and Medishield Life reflect that change.

However, it remains unknown whether what we are doing will achieve those results, or make things worse. Do not mistake the will for the deed - good intentions do not guarantee good results.

To me, the fundamental question is this - will Singapore continue to enjoy the same success it had in the last 50 years? Will our society continue to improve? What will it mean for my daughter’s generation, and their children?

To answer these questions, we need to understand WHY we have done well in the last 50 years. That is a question that is not discussed enough. We tend to answer it in very superficial terms – “hard work”; “free of corruption” etc. But there is surely more to it. What specifically was it about our institutions, our policies, our people that enabled that success? If we do not understand this, we risk changing what works and keeping what does not.

That is why I organised the CPF Forum. CPF is but one issue. We will have to confront a whole host of others – costs of living, minimum wage, income inequality, wealth redistribution, housing policies etc. These issues matter greatly to the future of Singapore and the well-being of our children. There are no easy answers.

I will therefore continue to urge my residents to openly share their thoughts on these and other important matters. People have the right to dismiss this or even snipe by the side. But if you care for Singapore, step forward and make a difference.


Role of the media in need of rethink

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Trust must be strengthened for meaningful work to continue
By Robin Chan Assistant Political Editor, The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014

THE issue of public trust in the Government has been a hot topic of late. Ministers and MPs have urged better communication of policies, so that the public understands why certain things are being done the way they are, and for civil servants and politicians to be closer to the ground to engage citizens and involve them in finding solutions.

Recently, a senior civil servant asked me: What can the media do to strengthen the public's trust in the Government?

It is an important question, but one I had difficulty answering. First, is it the role of the media to strengthen trust in the Government? And second, even if it is, can the media do it?

The answer lies in understanding the role of the media today. Against criticisms of suppressing press freedom, the Government has long defended its stand on what the media should be: It should not be an adversary to the Government, as is in more liberal media models, but one that is a partner with the Government in nation building.

In a speech at Columbia University in New York in 2010, then Home Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam laid this out. The media should: be a neutral medium for conveying news, with commentary clearly separate; report fully and fairly what goes on; probe and ask tough questions, without becoming a political actor.

I believe that this is a sensible argument, though playing these roles may not necessarily strengthen public trust in the Government if the Government is not already worthy of that trust. If the media should strengthen public trust in the Government, can it do it?

This is the harder question to answer, because of an evolving socio-political environment and perceptions of the mainstream media as being government-controlled.

As a young journalist with six years on the job, I have found some of the criticisms of mainstream media to be unfair. For each accusation of bias, I can point to a critical and insightful piece by my colleagues that has helped to deepen discussion on national issues, or exposed weaknesses in policy.

For sure, every media company anywhere in the world faces pressures from various stakeholders - the Government, shareholders, advertisers and the public alike.

That said, Singapore is far from having the free-wheeling style of journalism found in some democracies which some would like to see here. And there are longstanding factors which have continued to affect the credibility of mainstream media.

First, there is historical baggage. In the 1970s, former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew took a knuckle-duster approach to the management of the media. Newspapers were shut down and uncooperative journalists forced out or moved to other roles. Laws such as the Newspaper and Printing Presses Act were passed to regulate the industry. Local media companies have also come under criticism for appointing key players seen by some as being too close to the Government.

Over the years, the industry has been gradually liberalised. Gone is the knuckle-duster approach, but in its place is perhaps a "kinder, gentler" form of attempts to shape media coverage, through persuasion or even cajoling of journalists and editors.

Second, because there is no Freedom of Information Act, the Government does not always have to be forthcoming with data and information to the media. For example, there is no regular data on the income and education level of parents of students. Tracking this would give us a better idea of social mobility and whether students from different backgrounds are going to the best schools.

While there have long been many concerns that more students from well-educated families were going to top schools, Mr Lee revealed that this was indeed the case only in 2011. These findings have led to many reforms in the education system.

When data is hard to come by, it is challenging at times for journalists to provide thorough analysis, and really advance discussion on national issues.

Third, the media landscape has changed dramatically, with more online players in the form of news and opinion sites and individual blogs, creating greater fragmentation.

Some of them have gained credibility because they present contrarian views. While this is not in and of itself a bad thing, society is not well served when messages are distorted, untruths are spread, and soundbites and images create misperception and more confusion, in a vicious circle.

As some commentators have put it: It has given rise to a Wild Wild West of journalism, where news, opinion and entertainment are becoming merged and harder to distinguish.

While surveys have shown that The Straits Times and other mainstream media continue to be trusted sources of news and information among most Singaporeans, there is concern that trust is slipping among the younger generations.

Just anecdotally, among my peers, fewer tell me that they get their news from mainstream media, and those who do are not shy with their criticisms of it. (We are still friends, mind you).

This has made it harder for the Government to get its message across to the public. At the same time, these criticisms can be disheartening for many well-meaning and aspiring young journalists. Some may well seek to join what they believe to be "freer" media organisations.

In attempting to answer the question of whether the media can help strengthen public trust in the Government, the Government therefore first needs to help strengthen public trust in the media.

I believe this entails several things. To continue to be a credible source of news and information, journalists must have timely and broader access to government information and data.

Mainstream media must be a thought leader that is able to contribute a diversity of views and opinions that represent the increasingly widening and diversifying political and social spectrum of Singapore. Underlying this, the Government should respect and trust mainstream media journalists to act in the interests of the nation, and give them a wider space to operate in.

The Government has made substantial changes in recent years to make Singapore better prepared for the future.

Perhaps it is time too, to rethink the role of the media in Singapore, in order for the Government's and the public's trust in it to be strengthened.

This will allow journalists to contribute more meaningfully to addressing the challenges facing Singapore in an increasingly uncertain future.



CAAS eases rules on electronics in flights

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With the change in rules, passengers on approved local airlines will get more leeway to use their electronic devices during flights.
By Olivia Siong, Channel NewsAsia, 11 Jul 2014

Passengers on approved local airlines will now get more leeway to use electronic devices, like mobile phones and tablets, on flights, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) said.



In a statement issued on Friday (July 11), the CAAS said it has amended its regulations to allow Singapore carriers to expand passenger use of such devices on more segments of the flight, including during take-off and landing.

Passengers will now be allowed to use transmitting devices, such as mobile phones and tablets, provided the device is set to flight mode. Those who want to use the device in non-flight mode will have to wait until the plane is cruising above 10,000 feet.

Unintentionally transmitting devices, such as electronic games and cameras, will now be allowed throughout the flight, including during taxiing, take-off and landing. Previously, they were only allowed to be used when the plane is cruising above 10,000 feet.

Voice calls using mobile phones will still be strictly prohibited as voice communications, requiring strong signals to be sent out for receipt at great distances, may interfere with the aircraft systems, CAAS said.

Local carriers will have to ensure that their aircraft meet the certification requirements and conduct the necessary safety risk assessments, the authority said. This is to ensure that the use of such devices do not interfere with the performance of the aircraft navigation or communication systems.

Mr Yap Ong Heng, Director-General of CAAS, said: “CAAS regularly reviews its regulations taking into account the evolving needs of the travelling public and aviation industry, and technological developments.” He added that many of the Singapore carriers are already taking steps to ensure there would be no interference to flight operations before proceeding with implementation.

Singapore Airlines, the only airline currently approved to implement the new regulations, said it welcomed the move. "More and more of our customers are now travelling with portable electronic devices, and we are pleased to have implemented this for the benefit of our customers,” Mr Tan Pee Teck, Senior Vice-President of Product and Services said.


Safety remains the airline’s top priority, he said, adding that cabin crew will ensure passengers are advised on the safe use of electronic devices during flights.

The new regulations took effect on May 31 and are in line with recent regulatory changes made by leading aviation authorities, the CAAS statement said.


SBS, SMRT raising fares for premium services

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Higher operating costs cited as reason; three private firms set to follow suit
By Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014

COMMUTERS using non-basic bus services run by SBS Transit and SMRT can expect higher bus fares from Aug 3.

The two public transport operators announced yesterday that they will be raising prices to reflect higher operating costs.

And at least three private operators that run premium buses have also applied to the Public Transport Council (PTC) to raise fares, while two others said they do not intend to do so for now.

SBS Transit will lift fares on 41 non-basic bus routes - its Nite Owl, Parks, Chinatown Direct and premium services. The increase will range from 10 cents to 70 cents, depending on the route.

SMRT will increase adult fares by 50 cents to $1 on 15 of its premium, Bus-Plus and Weekend Bus services.

SBS Transit spokesman Tammy Tan said: "The revision comes amid rising operating costs including higher manpower, repairs and maintenance and depreciation costs."

Fares on SBS Transit's 31 premium bus services will go up by 20 to 70 cents. For instance, service 538 from Pasir Ris will cost $4.50, up from $3.80.

Senior citizens with concession cards will have to pay five to 10 cents more on park service 408 as well as Nite Owl and Chinatown Direct routes. The student concession fare is five cents more.

However, one group of commuters will pay less. Children under seven will enjoy free travel on those 10 SBS Transit services, but those taller than 0.9m will need a valid child concession card.

SMRT said fares on its 15 services "will be adjusted to reflect the rising cost of operations".

Fares on nine of its premium bus routes will go up by 50 cents, while the fare for premium route 546 from Geylang Bahru to Shenton Way will rise by $1 to $4.50.

Adults using the weekend bus service 926 from Woodlands to the zoo will have to pay 50 cents more, or $1.90. The fare for seniors and students is now $1.20.

Bus Hub's managing director V. Anilan said the PTC has approved the operator's application to raise fares for four premium routes, though he would not reveal the increment as he wants to inform his customers first.

"It's something we have to do because costs have been going up," he said, noting that the amount of revenue from a premium route is fixed as each bus can make only one trip to the city during the morning peak and standing passengers are not allowed.

Mr Alex Lim, the owner of Plus 1 Your Preferred Transportation, has applied to increase fares on one route - 568, from Serangoon North to the city.

Likewise, Ren Quan Transport has applied to raise fares on route 753 from Flora Road to Anson Road, citing higher ERP or electronic road pricing costs.

They have not had any reply from the PTC, which could not answer a query on which premium bus operators have applied to raise fares.

Two other operators, Xin Sheng Transport Services and Loh Gim Chong Transport, said they will not raise fares for now.


My Healthy Plate to replace food pyramid in Singapore textbooks

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More fruit and vegetables on HPB's My Healthy Plate
New guide replaces Food Pyramid, gives portion sizes, healthier options
By Kash Cheong, The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014

MORE than eight out of 10 Singaporeans do not eat enough fruit and vegetables.

To give them an idea as to what they should be consuming the Health Promotion Board (HPB) has launched My Healthy Plate - a guide that will be found in school textbooks and HPB leaflets.

It encourages people to fill half their mealtime plates with fruit and vegetables, a quarter with wholegrains, and another quarter with meat and protein. The educational tool urges people to use healthier oils, drink water instead of sugared drinks and stay active. It also asks people to consider the quality of carbohydrates and oils they consume, and the quantity.

My Healthy Plate will be used to educate primary and secondary school students on the importance of a healthy diet. It will replace the food pyramid diagram used previously to illustrate what constitutes a healthy meal.

Parliamentary Secretary for Health and Transport Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, speaking at the guide's launch yesterday, said My Healthy Plate is "easier for people to relate to".

Although the proportion of fruit and vegetables on the plate is relatively larger than carbohydrates, HPB nutritionist Benjamin Lee said the board is recommending five to seven servings of carbohydrates and two servings each of fruit and vegetables a day.

The exaggerated proportion of vegetables on the plate is to "correct for Singaporeans' current dietary patterns", Mr Lee added.

Up to 85 per cent of adults here fall short of the recommended fruit and vegetable intake.

Singaporeans are also overconsuming unhealthy refined carbohydrates, which could be replaced with wholegrains that promote the feeling of fullness and reduce the chances of overeating.

Unlike the pyramid, which urged people to use less cooking oil, My Healthy Plate also encourages healthier options like peanut oil as seven out of 10 people here consume too much saturated fat.

A reminder to choose water over sugary drinks is on the plate because six out of 10 drink two or more sugary drinks a day, adding empty calories to their diet.

Communications executive Claudio Chock, 26, said: "The chances of youngsters in primary school not eating enough vegetables are quite high. It would not do much harm to remind them to eat more vegetables."


Ho Kwon Ping: Why this Fellow? Because I always ask why

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Businessman Ho Kwon Ping's initial reaction when he was named the first S R Nathan Fellow for the Study of Singapore was: I'm not a "logical" choice. The 61-year-old is executive chairman of luxury hospitality group Banyan Tree and chairman of the board of trustees of Singapore Management University (SMU), and he felt that neither role qualified him for the one-year fellowship announced last week by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS). But ideas are beginning to take shape in his mind. The lecture series, he tells Maryam Mokhtar, will seek to get people thinking about key issues facing Singapore in the next 50 years, such as politics and governance, civil society and identity. He also has a message for young Singaporeans: The world is yours to change.
The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014


How did you feel when you heard you were the first S R Nathan Fellow for the Study of Singapore?

Very surprised. The only other time I'd been equally surprised was when I was asked in 1996 by then Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan Keng Yam (now Singapore's President) to head SMU. I'm not the logical person to head a university, nor am I the logical person to be the first S R Nathan Fellow.


Why?

The fellowship is for "the Study of Singapore", which is very broad and is supposed to cover public policy and governance.

To me, a logical person would have been perhaps a retired minister, retired civil servant or a mid- career person taking a sabbatical.

But it was explained to me that, as it is the first and because next year is Singapore's 50th anniversary, they wanted someone who was generally a little bit more outspoken and would be more willing to set the tone of what they hope the fellowship would be: of interest to the public, relevant and thought-provoking but not necessarily super academic.

This is not professor Ho Kwon Ping. It's just me, a public citizen, giving a series of six lectures which should be coherent and linked together.


Why does IPS feel your lectures will be interesting, relevant and thought-provoking?

When people ask me what is the essence of leadership and where it originates from, I've always said the key attribute is contained in a three-letter word: "Why" - the ability to ask questions and not accept the status quo.

I suppose they think I do ask a lot of 'whys' and so it'd be good to ask it in public over the next year. I'm not asking people to be simply rebellious by asking why. I'm just saying you need to think through all the questions - be it religion, politics, society, and so on - and make your own conclusions.


Next year is a seminal point for Singapore - we turn 50 as a nation. In your view, how should we measure how far we've come as a nation?

My broad view is Singapore is an improbable nation. Despite the improbability, Singapore's success story is huge. Even so, the success has been overwhelmingly in the economic domain.

The challenge in the next 50 years will be in other spheres of life: the creation of civil society, and creating a sustainable participatory democracy which does not rely on the vision of some exceptional individuals, pioneers like former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, who are not likely to ever walk in Singapore again.

Given those circumstances, would Singapore be able to take the necessary steps to become a truly sustainable society and nation state?


How do you plan to structure the six-part series?

I'm thinking of several broad areas - politics and governance, economics and business, demography and family, civil society and identity, and sustainability.

Another big issue will be to rethink the fundamental institutions and pillars of Singapore and ask whether some need to be changed to be relevant for the next 50 years.


What are some of these institutions?

Take CPF (the Central Provident Fund). It represents our whole philosophy towards social security and pensions. If I were to say GIC, it represents our whole attitude towards our management of reserves.

Another is SAF (the Singapore Armed Forces), which represents our entire policy on deterrence; HDB, the whole policy of public housing. And the final one would be EDB (the Economic Development Board), which represents the whole process of industrialisation and economic direction.

These are probably the five pillars of Singapore's strategy for the next 50 years. The questions we need to ask would be, how would these pillars continue if unchanged, or where should they be tweaked over the next 50 years.

As you can see, I'm really in a complete mess in deciding what to do (laughs).


The changing political landscape will be a defining point for Singapore. Are you keen to explore it?

What I'd be interested in looking at as a purely quasi-academic observer is, what are the possible directions Singapore politics could evolve towards, with no clear road map and some indications perhaps from past examples.

There are not too many countries with democratic systems where a founding political party is able to stay on for 60, 70 or 80 years. The pattern seems to be that after a period of time, the ruling party degenerates. It's not ascribing fault, just historically, maybe the electorate changes in its expectations.

If that is the historical trend, regardless of how well the party serves its people, then what does that augur for Singapore?

One could look at Taiwan and say the (ruling) Kuomintang has to lose an election and come back again.

On the other hand, you could say Taiwan's case doesn't really match Singapore's because Taiwan had a clear cleavage between the island-born people and the so-called Chinese from China.

Our leadership is also very concerned when they talk about constructive politics.

What they're saying - being leaders they cannot name it - but obviously what they're saying is: Do we want to go the way of Hong Kong? Where you can throw things at the Chief Executive, where you can have brawls in public - is that constructive politics?

What's to prevent us from going that way and what must we do to not go that way?


What are some possible political routes Singapore may take in future?

Others have said that perhaps Singapore would evolve towards, given our unique circumstances, a dynamic equilibrium with an opposition that has a sizeable minority and it would stabilise at that level.

Another scenario is the PAP (the ruling People's Action Party) would split into two.

It's interesting in a public lecture to say, with some research, that this is what has happened to other countries; how is it relevant or not relevant to Singapore and what are the signposts as to what may happen here?

Is it good to have a ruling party split into two, or is it not so positive?


What are key issues in civil society that need to be discussed as we move forward?

One thing that concerns me is Singapore's identity, whether it is shaped more by a shared sense of who we are not, as opposed to who we are. I'm not quite sure of the answer.

You see it expressed when Singaporeans go overseas. When you are in Paris and you see another Singaporean, you identify with the Singaporean because you are not French. To what extent is there a really very positive identity and what is that identity? One has to question, and this is where I want to throw up issues rather than say it's a policy procedure.


You grew up, worked and lived in several countries. Have you also defined yourself as Singaporean by what you are not?

It's quite precisely that. Although I was born in Hong Kong, I never really lived there except for a while when I was married.

I spent the bulk of my childhood in Thailand and I feel emotionally close to the country but I'm a total alien there. I've realised that to some extent you have to create your own identity, and I found it comfortable that in Singapore I could create my identity.

I cannot say who I am but I can say who I'm not. I've lived and thrived in the US and I understand American culture quite well but I'm not American. I spend a lot of time in China and I empathise a lot with the Chinese side of me, but I'm not Chinese.

So if you're not any of these things, then you're Singaporean (laughs).







How different would be the challenges facing young Singaporeans in the next 50 years compared with those faced by you and your peers?

Mr Lee Kuan Yew and his generation were the ones left with the problems of nation building. They were the founders and my generation were the nation builders.

The issues then were pretty clear - ending poverty, the creation of a new, just society not based on colonialism. These were easy markers for success.

What are the markers for success when the direction is not going to be so easily marked?

One cannot minimise Mr Lee's role in making Singapore what it is. But his dominant presence and absence create problems, too. We now deal with a post-LKY era and a post (Prime Minister) Lee Hsien Loong era. Once that is gone, you have a big vacuum.

Your generation will have to deal with leadership selection.


If you look back at your 25-year-old self, what advice would you give him?

I don't think I would want for one day to ever change the things that I wanted to do, or did. But I could have been - in many of the things I have done, whether it was brash business decisions which lost a lot of money, or brash decisions which cost me my freedom - more thoughtful and less headstrong.

But when I said that to some older people, their rejoinder was: If you had been less headstrong, you may not even be doing what you're doing today.

(Mr Ho was arrested and jailed for two months under the Internal Security Act in 1977 for his articles in the now-defunct Far Eastern Economic Review that were critical of the Government.)



Big Idea No. 6: $5 meals, $500 holidays and $50k homes for SG50

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Our columnist continues his monthly series of Big Ideas for the nation: Be happy for a year, when Singapore turns 50 next August. Celebrate Singapore's success - because there's practically zero chance of repeating that success in future.
By Kishore Mahbubani, Published The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014


BIG Idea No. 6 will seem corny at first glance. This is why it is important to read to the end of this column, especially the last paragraph, to understand its full import.

Here is the idea for my fellow Singaporeans: Let's decide to be happy for one year - from Aug 10 to next Aug 9, when it will be the 50th year of Singapore's existence. And why be happy for this one year? The reason is simple.

We have had, by any standards, an extraordinarily successful first 50 years. The chances of us being equally successful over the next 50 years are practically zero.

I will explain why later.

Since we have had a good run and are about to embark on a more difficult run, let us rest and celebrate before the hard slog. A mountaineering metaphor comes to mind. We have reached a good base camp. Before we climb to higher and more difficult altitudes, let us drink teh tarik and celebrate how far we have come.

Since so much has been written about Singapore's extraordinary success story, I will not dwell much on it. Our per capita income has gone from US$500 in 1965 to almost US$64,584 (S$80,253) last year, based on purchasing power parity terms. No other nation state can match this record.

More importantly, we have had no conflict, at home or with our neighbours. Ninety per cent of our citizens live in homes they own. And we have wonderful education, health, civil service and military systems, and so on.

To understand how well-off we are, just read the following aspirations of Indians after they elected Mr Narendra Modi as their Prime Minister. Mr M. J. Akbar, a well-known journalist, asks his fellow Indians: "Why cannot we have a simple home with a toilet for every Indian family by 2022? Broadband in every village? Electricity around the clock? A clean country, rid of garbage and filth that poisons life and nature, by 2019, as a tribute to Mahatma Gandhi on his 150th birth anniversary? These are not luxuries in the 21st century: they are bare necessities."

We have achieved everything on his list and achieved it long ago.

Yet, it is also clear that our citizens are tired of this success narrative. They remember only the difficulties of recent years: the surge of foreigners, the crowded Mass Rapid Transit trains; the long wait for Housing Board flats; the traffic jams on our highways; the soaring COE (Certificate of Entitlement) premiums and so on.

Hence, instead of approaching our 50th anniversary in a jubilant mood, there are hints of a sour mood in the air. The goal of this article is to dispel the sour mood.

Hard times ahead

PARADOXICALLY, the best way to do this is to tell Singaporeans that harder times are coming. First, since our track record in the first 50 years was so exceptional (even freakish by most historical standards), it will be impossible to match the same success. My generation has had it exceedingly good. And I experienced it personally. I went from a three-figure monthly salary in 1971 to a five- figure salary now. My children will not experience this dizzy climb upwards.

Second, as I have said in earlier columns, we do not have enough land for each and every Singaporean to achieve the dream of the five Cs (car, condo, country club, cash and credit card). The last two we can all have. The first three we cannot all have. There isn't enough land to have millions of cars. Singapore already has one of the highest car ownership populations for a city; as of April, about 560,000 households owned at least one car each for a total of 605,184 cars.

Nor can we build condos for each Singaporean family. And the land for country clubs is shrinking. Singaporeans therefore belong to a unique tribe: They have to deal with the existential angst of not having the land to fulfil their dreams.

Third, we are losing, if we have not already lost, our first-mover advantage. We were the first to open up to global MNCs. Today every country does so. We were the first to set new global standards in services and logistics.

Dubai Airport used to describe itself as a disciple of Changi Airport. But now our disciple has a much busier airport. In the past year, 67.3 million international passengers passed through Dubai, compared with 53.1 million through Changi. Indeed, Dubai is now No. 1 in the world for international passengers, surpassing even London's Heathrow Airport.

Similarly, Emirates used to look up to Singapore Airlines for inspiration. Now it has become twice as big.

In each area that we have excelled, we will have to deal with tougher competition. That's why the next 50 years will be a harder slog.

So, let's celebrate this very special moment. And how should we celebrate? There will, of course, be many national parties in 2015. And we should participate in them heartily.

But let us also celebrate at the individual level. Let us appreciate some unique and simple joys that all Singaporeans, rich and poor, can enjoy together. Let me cite some simple pleasures we can indulge in (and since we are celebrating our 50th birthday, I am using the number five in each category).

A toast to $5 meals

FIRST, Singapore is one of the few developed countries where one can get good meals at less than $5 per head. It took a colleague of mine, who recently arrived in Singapore, to remind me of this exceptional gift we have.

Mr Steve LaNasa used to be the president of Donnelly College in Kansas. Since coming to Singapore with his wife and two children, aged 10 and 13, in early January, he has been taking his children out to hawker centre after hawker centre. And he is absolutely amazed at the good-quality food you can enjoy in Singapore at such astonishingly low prices.

He says: "Despite the fact that 'fast food' is ubiquitous throughout the United States, it's nearly impossible to find good, healthy prepared food at convenient locations, and what is available certainly isn't worth what you pay for it."

Sometimes it takes a foreigner to remind us that we live in a food paradise. Why not indulge in this food paradise for less than $5 a head and toast Singapore each time we do so?

$500 holidays

SECOND, Singapore is fortunate to be situated in the most diverse cultural environment of our entire planet, South-east Asia. No other region can claim to have all the world's leading civilisations and religions living in relative harmony in such close proximity to one another. Many middle-class people from all over the world spend thousands of dollars to appreciate the special beautiful attractions of South-east Asia.

So for one year, let us stop dreaming of going to London or Paris, New York or Orlando. Instead, for less than $500 a head, we can experience magnificent historical sites and some of the most hospitable cultures on our planet.

I hope that my next book will be on South-east Asia. Its tentative title is The Most Blessed Corner Of The World. We Singaporeans are truly blessed to be situated in the heart of this blessed corner. Let us enjoy it for one year very cheaply with $500 holidays.

$50,000 homes

MY THIRD suggestion will be both controversial and difficult. It is very difficult to buy a decent- sized condo unit for less than $1 million in Singapore. Yet, we can buy a small home somewhere in South-east Asia for less than $50,000. Ultimately, this may be the best solution to the existential angst of living in Singapore. We can experience the freedom of space in our neighbouring countries if we cannot experience it in Singapore.

In looking for cheap properties in rural areas, we will simply be emulating the normal behaviour of citizens who live in crowded cities and look for homes in rural areas in South-east Asia within easy reach via budget airlines.

Let me add another truly outrageous suggestion. Why don't we encourage our rich developers, who have profited from 50 years of economic growth in Singapore to develop projects selling $50,000 homes in South-east Asia to fellow Singaporeans? The Government can also step in to help as it will make many Singaporeans happier.

And why is happiness important? I believe that the most important goal for Singapore in the next 50 years will not be economic growth or political stability. Instead, it will be social resilience.

Only strong social resilience will carry us through the inevitable stresses and strains Singapore will encounter in the next five decades. Happiness does not just help at the individual level. Happy societies are also more resilient societies. We have had a happiness deficit for some time. Let us party for one year and build up our happiness quotient. After that, we will be ready for the more challenging five decades coming our way.

Postscript

IN MY column on April 12, I wrote: "Hence, for 2015, when we celebrate our 50th anniversary, I hope that one of Singapore's philanthropists will award a $500,000 prize for the best history book written on Singapore."

I am pleased to inform Straits Times readers that an anonymous donor has contacted me to support a project to promote a deeper understanding of Singapore's history in future generations of Singaporeans and the world.

He has agreed to donate $500,000 for this Singapore history project prize. The money will go towards an endowment fund whose interest will be used to support a book prize every three years. He told me he became a Singapore citizen this year, even though he has lived here for many years. He would like to do something for Singapore.

The writer is dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. He was named one of the top 50 world thinkers this year by Prospect magazine, a British publication.





Anonymous donor gives $500,000 to start book prize
By Priscilla Goy, The Straits Times, 12 Jul 2014

AN ANONYMOUS donor is giving half a million dollars to writers who can tell Singapore's story best.

From 2018, and every three years after that, the best history book on the nation will get a $50,000 prize.

The idea to do this came from Professor Kishore Mahbubani, dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore (NUS). He reveals the good news in his latest column published in the Opinion section of The Straits Times today.

The noted academic, who contributes regularly to the paper's By Invitation column, had appealed for a donor in an earlier article on April 12. "For a good history book to be convincing, it must tell the stories of failures and successes together. Indeed, the best way to escape the grip of history is to write about it openly...," he wrote then. "Hence, for 2015, when we celebrate our 50th anniversary, I hope that one of Singapore's philanthropists will award a $500,000 prize for the best history book written on Singapore."

Prof Mahbubani said yesterday that the $500,000 will be placed in an endowment fund, and the interest would be used to support the book prize every three years.

The donor, who met Prof Mahbubani last month, does not want to be named. Prof Mahbubani would say only that the man became a Singapore citizen this year, after living here for many years. "I think it's wonderful that he wanted to donate, and I hope this will inspire others to donate to other kinds of prizes which celebrate Singapore's 50th anniversary," he said. The competition will be organised by NUS.

Prof Mahbubani, who said earlier that there were no good history books telling the story of post-independence Singapore, had noted that there were more than enough materials and historical records to document the country's journey from Third World to First.

However, any book which "connects Singaporeans, not just scholars or historians, to their past", will be considered.

Pointing to 12 Years A Slave, the Oscar-winning film adapted from the autobiography of American Solomon Northrup who was sold into slavery, he said that he hoped the books would be equally compelling. "It was something powerful, and more than just a pure chronicle of facts."



Pioneers honoured at harmony event

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By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

The pioneer generation of Singapore's seniors was honoured last night at an annual racial and religious harmony dinner.

At the 11th Inter-Racial Inter-Religious Harmony Nite dinner at Marina Bay Sands, Thye Hua Kwan Moral Society chairman Lee Kim Siang said that the country's founding fathers and the pioneer generation had worked hard, and that their experience and wisdom made Singapore what it is today.

Pointing to recent reports of war and bloodshed in some countries because of religion, race, language or culture, he said that it was sad to see people suffering from the break-up of families, mass killings, and countries and nations splitting, as well as the hundreds of thousands of refugees from these wars or sectarian fighting.

"Fortunately for Singaporeans, we are lucky, blessed and happy to live in a prosperous and harmonious country which we all call home," he said.

"Every day, we see people of different races, cultures, religions and colours, mixing around, working together and living next to each other as good neighbours."



The dinner for some 2,000 grassroots and religious leaders, as well as members of the public, was organised by the Thye Hua Kwan Moral Society, together with the Inter-Religious Organisation, the Singapore Indian Development Association (Sinda), Malay self-help group Mendaki, Chinese Development Assistance Council, Eurasian Association, Chee Hia Kog Moral Society and Chee Hoon Kog Moral Promotion Society.

President Tony Tan Keng Yam and his wife Mary were the guests of honour.

Before the vegetarian meal, a prayer was said for the iftar, or breaking of Muslims' fast, and each of the nine religious leaders from the Inter-Religious Organisation led an invocation.

The audience was treated to an array of performances by Orkestra Melayu Singapura, Sinda's Nrityalaya Aesthetics Society, songsters from Yayasan Mendaki, and others.





Racial harmony is about 'building trust'
By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Growing up in Queenstown in the 1970s, Mr Mohamed Nasim Abdul Rahim was barely conscious of race.

The son of Indian Muslim immigrants from Kerala was "a minority in a minority", and raised among Chinese, Malay, Sikh and Eurasian neighbours. His childhood was more about watching Ultraman on television at friends' homes than asking about their cultural and religious practices.

That changed when he started national service. "I realised, oh, I have to go to the Muslim cookhouse," said Mr Nasim, a 48-year-old educator.

And the teenage teetotaller declined to give non-Muslim friends his ration of beer. "To my friends, I was too 'goody-goody', but they understood my religious beliefs and that I did not drink alcohol."

After the Sept 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, the long-time mosque volunteer found himself explaining his faith to friends. "I realised just being a member of the passive, silent majority was not good enough," he said.

Around the same time, he became a councillor with the Central Singapore Community Development Council and started outreach programmes such as visits to places of worship, and getting people of different races and faiths to open their homes for visits and cultural demonstrations.

At Serangoon North, where he is chairman of the Jalan Kayu Zone 3 residents' committee, he has started a similar programme. He is also on the board of OnePeople.sg, a national body to boost racial ties.

Mr Nasim is disappointed with online racist and xenophobic sentiments. So he never tires of getting asked the same questions about his faith.

"To foster racial harmony, one must always be open to questions because questions are asked more often to clarify," he said.

"One misconception cleared can go a long way in developing healthy relationships."

He and his wife, housewife Noorunnisa Ibrahim Kutty, 45, have three children: two sons, aged 16 and nine, and a 13-year-old daughter.

He counts many from other races among his close friends.

"The message I always have for my children is, make more friends - make many friends from all races and religions.

"We don't use the word 'tolerance', which suggests there's a limit that can burst one day, but we use the word 'trust'," he added.

Recently, his elder son did a fine job of explaining to friends why Muslims pray five times a day, said the proud father.

"Harmony is not about preaching," he stressed. "It's all about building trust."





Building bridges through kindness and friendship
By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Madam Jayamani Overithi has a knack for defusing a touchy situation - with humour or kindness.

If someone cuts into the queue in front of her, she pipes up: "Excuse me, the queue is behind."

And if they glare? She tells them, with a smile like a sunbeam: "It's okay, you can take my place, I'll go behind."

And when the 66-year-old overhears racist or xenophobic comments being made at the local coffee shop, she might sit down at the table to ask: "Excuse me, are you a member of any community club or residents' committee? We have many events - sports for your children, talks for the parents."

"I feel they may not understand other races or religions," she said. So she invites them to activities of all sorts, not just events pushing racial or religious harmony. "And sometimes, they come," she said.

Madam Jayamani herself is involved in plenty of activities. After she was slowed down by an injury 15 years ago, the former in-flight cleaning supervisor took up light volunteering to keep busy.

A tutoring stint with the Singapore Indian Development Association turned into commitments with the Red Cross, Lions Befrienders, Salvation Army, two Hindu temples and the Inter-Racial and Inter-Religious Confidence Circle in Yew Tee - to name a few. Last night, she attended the Inter-Racial Inter-Religious Harmony Nite event.

Madam Jayamani has no children and lives with her younger sister in Bukit Panjang. The daughter of a forklift-driver father and vegetable-seller mother grew up in Kampong Bahru, and, despite being Hindu, attended the Catholic CHIJ St Theresa's Convent near her home.

She was a teenager when, in July 1964, she went with Malay-Muslim friends to Geylang to watch a procession marking the Prophet Muhammad's birthday, and found herself in the middle of one of Singapore's infamous race riots.

"Suddenly we heard, 'tolong, tolong' (Malay for 'help'), and screaming," she recalled. Her father herded the children together, Indian and Malay alike, and drove them home in a lorry.

Asked if language is ever a barrier in her community work, Madam Jayamani admitted it can be.

"In some of my committees, the majority are Chinese and sometimes, they start talking in Mandarin. So I raise my hand and say, 'Please, I don't speak Mandarin.'"

Friendship, she said, is the foundation of racial and religious harmony. Among her longtime friends are a Chinese woman who worked with her in a factory in 1970, and a Malay former neighbour. "She still has a set of my house keys," Madam Jayamani said.





More to learn on other religions
By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Mr Pung Whei Meng was on a work trip in Shenzhen, China, last month with colleagues of different races.

In restaurants, the group opted not to order pork dishes out of respect for their Muslim colleague.

Mr Pung, a senior commissioning manager at a project-commissioning firm, said he is still learning.

The 37-year-old bachelor last year became the youngest leader appointed to an Inter-Racial and Religious Confidence Circle, or IRCC, since the movement was started in 2002.

He has been involved in the Cher Lian Tong Buddhist Temple since he was a child, and is now its secretary. He also joined the Bukit Panjang IRCC as its representative in 2006.

The IRCC organises public visits to places of worship, such as Hindu or Sikh temples.

The groups that go on the trips are mostly Chinese, and not many of the participants have been to a Sikh temple, Mr Pung said.

"I was quite tolerant before, but from such activities I actually got to understand more about other religions," he added.

Though he felt such interactions could be deeper and more meaningful, "for the moment, we are trying to engage as many people as possible".





The dancing dynamo
By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Last year, Madam Tng Kwee Tin visited Sri Lanka for the first time.

The 77-year-old retiree was there with a group of friends to visit a Sri Lankan friend, a woman who had attended her void-deck exercise sessions regularly.

Madam Tng, who is more comfortable speaking in Mandarin, Teochew, Malay and other Chinese dialects than English, found her friend's accented English hard to understand. "I just nod," she said in Mandarin. "She laughs, I laugh."

Madam Tng has been holding exercise classes at Haig Road since 2006. In 2011, the retired People's Association dance and arts instructor added dance classes as well.

"We have lots of people coming - some Malays, a Sri Lankan lawyer whose daughter was studying here... a woman from Hong Kong whose daughter is married to a Singaporean," she said.

But when she was growing up in Rochor Road, she attended Chinese schools.

"In Primary 2, my mathematics teacher spoke Cantonese and I couldn't understand a word," said Madam Tng, who is Teochew. "So I scored zero marks!" Later, she picked up Hokkien, Cantonese and some Hainanese as well.

Last night, Madam Tng attended the Inter-Racial Inter-Religious Harmony Nite and appeared in the organisers' new video that honours the pioneer generation's contributions.

She has family members of different religions as well: Her son is Christian while her daughter is a Buddhist.

"I don't want to inconvenience anyone, so I told them, when I die, just scatter my ashes at sea.

"I love to travel, so at sea I can travel to my heart's content," she said with a laugh.


Singapore to get first marine park

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Guided walks planned for Sisters' Islands; research, conservation work to be ramped up
By Grace Chua, The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Singapore's southern Sisters' Islands, and the waters around them, will be the site of the country's first marine park.

The 40ha park, the size of about 50 football fields, will include the western reefs and intertidal zones of nearby Pulau Tekukor, a former ammunition dump, and St John's Island, which currently houses research and recreational facilities.



Minister of State for National Development Desmond Lee announced this yesterday morning at the annual Festival of Biodiversity, a nature-education fair held at the VivoCity mall this weekend.

"With the new Sisters' Island Marine Park, I hope that even more Singaporeans will enjoy and value our natural richness," he said. "The charm of the Sisters' Islands is in their undeveloped character, and... the marine environment is fragile."

Apart from letting more people enjoy its charms, designating the area a marine park also means that research and conservation activities will be ramped up there.

The area was picked for its variety of habitats such as coral reefs, seagrass areas and sandy shores, and is rich in marine life such as sponges and giant clams.

In 2011, for instance, the neptune's cup sponge, long thought to be extinct here, was rediscovered off St John's Island.

The Sisters' Islands have been marked out as a marine nature area in the Urban Redevelopment Authority's Parks and Waterbodies Plan since it was introduced in 2003. Nature areas are high-biodiversity areas that are kept as long as possible till they are needed for development.

As a public park, the marine park will be managed by the National Parks Board (NParks), which will take over from Sentosa Development Corporation.

People will be able to sign up for guided walks from next month by visiting www.nparks.gov.sg/sistersislandsmarinepark.

The details are being worked out, said National Biodiversity Centre director Lena Chan, but there are plans for downloadable trail guides, explanatory signs and live streaming of the islands' wildlife.

Currently, there are no regular ferry services to Sisters' Islands and boats need to be chartered for those who want to get there.

Other activities planned for next year include workshops, camps and talks at an outreach and education centre on St John's Island.

The National Biodiversity Centre's coastal and marine deputy director, Dr Karenne Tun, said NParks would be doing a feasibility study to fully map the islands, take a census of reef life and work out how many visitors can be allowed without harming wildlife.

NParks also plans to use the park for research and conservation, and to reintroduce giant clams and corals to its waters.

Those lobbying for Singapore's blue space to be better protected were encouraged by the news.

Said Professor Barry Halliwell, deputy president for research and technology at the National University of Singapore (NUS): "Marine biologists have long advocated for the establishment of such a park and this is very good news.

"NUS and NParks have collaborated on many projects over the years and we look forward to more joint projects after the marine park is established."

Nature enthusiast Ria Tan, 53, who runs popular wildlife site wildsingapore.com, said: "It's the first marine park that Singapore has, so it's something to celebrate. And hopefully it's the first of more."

But she raised concerns about fishermen using driftnets which entangle horseshoe crabs and other marine life. In response, Dr Chan said details of the budget, manpower and enforcement plan for the new park were still being finalised. Dr Tun said NParks would work with the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority to engage fishermen on the issue.

In 2009, civil society groups presented a Blue Plan to the Government, calling for several areas including Sisters' Islands, Pulau Hantu, Cyrene Reef and Pulau Ubin's Chek Jawa to be formally designated high-biodiversity areas.

Dr Tun would not say if there was scope for other marine parks.

"The role now is just to make this park a success," she said.

Limited spaces for guided walks at low tide on Aug 14 and 15 are available.



'Right to die' Bill backed by ex-archbishop

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Drop in longstanding opposition comes 'in the face of the reality of needless suffering'
The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

London - The former leader of the Church of England George Carey says he has changed his mind and would support a British Bill to allow assisted suicide in certain cases.

The former cleric, 78, who is now a lord and sits in Britain's upper chamber the House of Lords, said yesterday he would support the Bill which would allow mentally capable adults to request help to die if they were suffering from a terminal illness and had less than six months to live.



Lord Carey - the spiritual leader of the world's Anglicans until he retired in 2002 - told the Daily Mail that he had dropped his longstanding opposition.

"The fact is I've changed my mind," he wrote in a piece for the British newspaper.

"The old philosophical certainties have collapsed in the face of the reality of needless suffering," he explained.

But the current Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby later restated his and the Church's opposition to the Bill, saying it could open the way to abuse and neglect of older people.

The Bill is to be debated in the House of Lords next Friday.

Members of both Houses of the British Parliament are being given a free vote on the issue and several members of the government, including care minister Norman Lamb, are expected to vote in favour. A series of opinion polls in Britain have shown increasing levels of public support for a change in the law in principle.

But the Church of England has consistently argued against any law change, and its current leader repeated his opposition.

"It would be very naive to think that many of the elderly people who are abused and neglected each year, as well as many severely disabled individuals, would not be put under pressure to end their lives if assisted suicide were permitted by law," Archbishop Welby wrote in The Times.

"It would be equally naive to believe, as the Assisted Dying Bill suggests, that such pressure could be recognised in every instance by doctors given the task of assessing requests for assisted suicide," he warned.

A spokesman for the Church of England told the Mail Online that in February 2012 the Anglican General Synod passed a motion which affirms the intrinsic value of every human life and expresses its support for the current law on assisted suicide as a means of contributing to a just and compassionate society in which vulnerable people are protected.

The British Medical Association has also rejected calls for it to soften its opposition to assisted dying

According to the Mail Online, Rabbi Jonathan Romain, chair of Inter Faith Leaders for Dignity in Dying - a British alliance of clergy of different faiths in favour of assisted dying - said: "The former archbishop's words are like a breath of fresh air sweeping through rooms cloaked in theological dust that should have been dispersed long ago.

"He shows that it is possible to be both religious and in favour of assisted dying.

"It also indicates that the debate is not - as is often thought - a battle between the religious and secular camps, but is within the religious community too," he told the Mail.

Lord Carey said it was clear that assisted deaths were already happening "in the shadows", where doctors, friends or relatives privately carry out mercy killings.

He said it had become clear to him that "both the Bible and the character of God laid far more importance on open-hearted benevolence" than on upholding the existing law. Lord Carey's Daily Mail article urged opponents of reform to remind themselves that "one of the key themes of the gospels is love for our fellow human beings".

"In strictly observing the sanctity of life, the Church could now actually be promoting anguish and pain, the very opposite of a Christian message of hope," he added.

AFP






Man with locked-in syndrome inspires decision
The Sunday Times, 13 Jul 2014

Lord George Carey's change of mind was inspired by the case of Mr Tony Nicklinson, who suffered for years from locked-in syndrome.

The father of two had campaigned in vain to be allowed to end his life, until he died two years ago.

Mr Nicklinson, 58, was left paralysed but fully conscious following a stroke on a business trip to Athens in 2005.

His death from pneumonia in August, 2012 came just six days after the London High Court rejected his bid to declare that any doctor who killed him with his consent would not be prosecuted.

Mr Nicklinson, a former corporate manager and rugby player, was unable to move from the neck down. He was forced to communicate by controlling a computer with eye movements although his mind was unaffected and his condition was not terminal.

Mr Nicklinson had described his life as "dull, miserable, demeaning, undignified and intolerable", an Agence France-Presse report said.

"It was the case of Tony Nicklinson that exerted the deepest influence on me," Lord Carey wrote in the Daily Mail.

Mr Nicklinson's widow Jane said Lord Carey's decision was "huge", the BBC reported yesterday. "I'm amazed actually and thrilled because the Church has always been one of our greatest opponents," she told BBC Radio 5 live.


Advance Care Planning: Sign this form to have the final say

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More patients are asked to take part in advance care planning, which empowers others to make medical decisions for them should they be unable to do so themselves
By Joan Chew, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

When Mr John Tay's 90-year-old mother could not be woken up from her sleep to take part in a family barbecue event in 2011, the family whisked her off to Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH).

She fell into a coma afterwards and doctors said she had little chance of recovery and would be bedridden.

Mr Tay and his family already knew what to do - stop all life-sustaining treatment and focus on making her last days comfortable.

After all, it was what she had wanted. Three years earlier, she had taken part in advance care planning (ACP), a process in which she decided on her end-of-life care and had these wishes written down.

In the two-page document, Madam Yap, who suffered from congestive heart failure, type 2 diabetes, hypertension and renal impairment, had chosen her only son, Mr Tay, a cab driver who is now 63, as her substitute decision-maker. She has five other daughters. Madam Yap had not wanted to have her life prolonged if she was in a vegetative state, so her doctor did not put her on intubation and ventilator support.

To fulfil her wish to die at home, she was discharged from TTSH and managed to spend her last three days at home with family members by her side, although she was unconscious throughout. Said Mr Tay: "She had a meaningful death as we had strictly followed her wishes. Once, I even told her that she could just sit back and enjoy life as everything had already been planned for."

That experience prompted Mr Tay to firm up his own ACP, with the help of facilitators at TTSH, in January last year, nominating one of his two daughters to be his substitute decision-maker.

Mr Tay has several medical conditions, including type 2 diabetes and glaucoma. He has also encouraged his sisters to do likewise. One sister and her husband have taken his advice, while two other sisters and a brother-in-law will be getting their plans done soon.

FACILITATORS ON THE RISE

More people, such as Mr Tay and his family, are being guided through ACP by health-care professionals who, in recent years, are increasingly being trained to act as facilitators.

Dr Irwin Chung, director of the care integration division of the Agency for Integrated Care (AIC), said more than 1,000 health-care professionals, comprising mostly doctors, nurses and medical social workers, have undergone training in this area.

They are taught to broach the topic with patients and their families, assess patients' decision-making abilities and help them outline their treatment preferences in standardised forms from AIC, which oversees the long-term care sector.

These preferences include whether they would like to proceed with cardiopulmonary resuscitation if they should go into cardiac arrest, the extent of medical intervention to prolong their lives and, in the event of deterioration, their preferred places to receive medical treatment and die.

MORE AVENUES NOW OPEN

Two weeks ago, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong announced several key changes to the palliative-care sector at the sixth Palliative Care Conference at Singapore Polytechnic.

Among them was that two regional health-care groups, led by TTSH and Khoo Teck Puat Hospital (KTPH), will train staff at 14 nursing homes in ACP, geriatric care and end-of-life care. This is a step up from the days when ACP was offered as pilot projects at public hospitals.

TTSH was the first to run such a project in 2010. A year earlier, it had invited members of a United States ACP organisation called Respecting Choices to train its staff as facilitators.

The practice of ACP is now in full swing in many medical institutions here.

Six public hospitals and one private hospital now routinely offer ACP to selected groups of patients, such as those suffering from heart or kidney failure. Raffles Cancer Centre at Raffles Hospital offers ACP to patients suffering from advanced stages of cancer. Both national heart centres also now offer ACP to inpatients.

Last September, Singapore General Hospital rolled out ACP to more than 33 departments, such as psychiatry, geriatric medicine, haematology, infectious diseases and family medicine. The hospital started offering ACP in October 2012 only to patients being cared for by the departments of renal medicine and respiratory and critical care. With the change, about 70 patients have had their wishes formally documented.

At KTPH, an ACP clinic which was set up last October in the geriatric clinic has helped 50 patients decide on end-of-life care.

In all, 312 patients have completed ACP since the hospital expanded it from patients in the palliative-care service to frail and elderly patients who are frequently admitted to hospital. It also extended it to those with multiple medical conditions and those suffering from dementia, kidney disease or diabetes, said Dr Siew Chee Weng, locum principal resident physician at KTPH's department of geriatric medicine.

The list continues to grow.

From Monday, Changi General Hospital will begin a pilot programme for patients suffering from advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

TALKING ABOUT DEATH

The planning process can be time-consuming, said KTPH's nurse clinician Sim Lai Kiow.

These conversations on end-of-life care usually take hours and, sometimes, require several sessions before decisions are penned down. Even then, these wishes can be altered at any time, such as when a patient's medical condition or life circumstances change.

Checks showed that at least five hospices here conduct ACP routinely with all their patients. This is not a surprise, as day- and home-care patients handled by hospices have a prognosis of a year or less, while inpatients are not expected to live beyond three months.

Such conversations have always been "part and parcel of hospice work", said Dr Tan Yew Seng, medical director of Assisi Hospice, although there was less focus on documenting preferred care plans previously when there were no standardised forms.

However, he stressed that filling up forms is less important than what transpires during these conversations with the patient, their loved ones and the health-care team.

Sometimes, patients think they should die in hospital so that they do not burden their families. It is only through speaking about this that they learn that their families do not feel this way at all.

ACP facilitators whom MYB spoke to said there are still patients who resist ACP because they are superstitious or see it as a sign that they are giving up on themselves or their loved ones.

"People should know that they are planning for a situation which may or may not happen," said Dr Tan. "If it doesn't, then we simply do not have to make use of these plans."






Five steps of advance care planning

In advance care planning (ACP), your preferences will be recorded and used to guide the medical team and your loved ones in making health-care decisions on your behalf if you are unable to do so.

There are five steps in this process:
- Talk to your health-care provider or make an appointment with a certified ACP facilitator.
- Discuss what living well means to you in open conversations with your loved ones and the ACP facilitator.
- Choose up to two substitute decision-makers to be your voice should you be unable to speak for yourself.
- Document your preferences with the help of your ACP facilitator.
- Review your ACP document when your medical condition or life circumstances change.
Source: Agency for Integrated Care





Key changes to the palliative-care sector
By Joan Chew, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

The palliative-care sector has been given a booster shot, with the Ministry of Health (MOH) investing in four areas - improving the quality of care, expanding services, ensuring affordability and raising awareness.


Today, between 5,000 and 6,000 people receive three types of palliative care - inpatient service, day-care activities and home-care assistance - in the community, said an MOH spokesman.

MOH projected that by 2020, more than 10,000 will require palliative care.

Here are the key changes announced by Mr Gan:

National Guidelines For Palliative Care

This new document spells out what is required for individualised patient care; how caregivers and families should be supported, including the bereavement period; what is required for good staff and volunteer management; and what is needed for safe care.

MOH will partner the Singapore Hospice Council, the umbrella body for palliative care in Singapore, to promote and implement these guidelines in different care settings.

Care providers will get help to meet these guidelines, such as through voluntary self-assessment tools, staff-training programmes and quality-improvement projects.

Manpower and training

From this month, a new graduate diploma in palliative medicine will allow more doctors to be trained in palliative care.

The one-year part-time course is launched by the Chapter of Palliative Medicine Physicians, in partnership with the division of Graduate Medical Studies at the National University of Singapore.

Home-care capacity

The capacity of home palliative care will be increased by at least 1,000 more places by 2020, up from about 5,000 now.

Services will also be extended to patients with end-stage organ failure and not only to cancer patients.

Inpatient capacity

Beds for palliative care will be increased to at least 360 by 2020, from just 147 now.

There are also plans to set aside more beds in community hospitals for patients on palliative care.

End-of-life care at nursing homes

Staff at 14 nursing homes will be trained in advance care planning, geriatric care and end-of-life care.

The homes have a total of 2,800 beds. The training will be conducted by the National Healthcare Group and Alexandra Health System.

Medisave withdrawal limits

From Jan 1 next year, the daily withdrawal limit for those staying in hospices will go up from $160 to $200, and the lifetime limit for home palliative care will rise from $1,500 to $2,500.

However, this cap will be lifted for those with terminal illness, such as cancer or end-stage organ failure. These patients can use as much as they want from their Medisave accounts.

Home palliative care funding

From this month, home palliative care providers will be funded based on the number of patients they look after, instead of the number of visits they make, reflecting a shift of focus on outcomes.

This move enables providers to plan and deliver patient-centric services. They also get greater flexibility to test new models of care.

Public education

The Agency for Integrated Care will work with voluntary welfare organisations to raise awareness of advance care planning, with an aim of reaching out to 1,500 seniors in the community.

It also aims to train at least 150 people at voluntary organisations in the next three years as advocates for advance care planning.





Honouring last wishes
By Joan Chew, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

When you are lying on a bed in the intensive care unit of a hospital, so sick that you are no longer able to interact with anyone, what would you choose?

Do you want to have a tube placed into your windpipe to help you breathe, through a procedure called endotracheal intubation?

If your condition worsens, do you want to be cared for in a hospital or elsewhere, such as in a nursing home, hospice or at home?

It may seem unthinkable that someone in such dire straits can still make choices. However, he can, if his preferences have already been made known to the health-care team and his loved ones, in what is known as advance care planning (ACP).

Drafting an ACP document involves a series of conversations with the patient, substitute decision-makers and an ACP facilitator - usually a doctor, nurse or medical social worker.

Several public health institutions here started offering ACP since 2010. So far, their efforts appear to have helped patients to fulfil their final wishes, statistics show.

Since 2012, of the 28 patients who did an ACP and subsequently died at National University Hospital, 15 died in their chosen places, 22 received their preferred treatment and 12 had both wishes met.

In all, 78 patients, including those from National University Cancer Institute, Singapore (NCIS) and National University Heart Centre Singapore, made ACPs during this period, said Dr Noreen Chan, a senior consultant at the department of haematology-oncology at NCIS.

At Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH), more than 95 per cent of patients who signed an ACP and died at the hospital between October 2011 and June this year received their preferred medical treatment, said Dr Raymond Ng, a consultant at the hospital's department of palliative medicine. For example, some did not wish to proceed with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

Another 23 per cent died in their chosen places, added Dr Ng. The findings came from an audit of 172 patients. In all, 741 patients did an ACP at TTSH and 348 have since died.

Similarly, most of the patients at Khoo Teck Puat Hospital (KTPH) who had done an ACP had their wishes honoured.

The hospital helped 312 patients with their plans, of whom 137 have died. About 80 per cent of them were treated in their preferred places and 64 per cent died in their chosen places.

WHY WISHES WERE NOT MET

However, all three hospitals did not analyse why some patients' wishes, as outlined in their ACPs, were not met.

Doctors say reasons may include a lack of caregivers at home, while some caregivers may find it challenging to care for the patient at home. The rapid deterioration of a patient's condition can also prevent him from being sent home in time to die - if that was what he wanted.

Dr Siew Chee Weng, a locum principal resident physician at KTPH's department of geriatric medicine, noted that reasons as to why wishes are not met are "usually medical rather than social".

AT KTPH, one patient received CPR when she did not want it. Her family, although aware of the ACP, had called for an ambulance when she vomited blood and the paramedics applied CPR as they were not aware of the details.

PLUGGING THE GAPS

This is a problem which Singapore Hospice Council chairman R. Akhileswaran wants to solve, by getting paramedics to check ACP documents before they proceed with CPR.

This is because anxious family members may still call for an ambulance, even after they have been told not to do so in order to honour the patient's wishes, added Dr Akhileswaran, who is also the chief executive of HCA Hospice Care, the largest home palliative care provider here.

Members of the Singapore Hospice Council are now in talks with the Singapore Civil Defence Force to plug this gap.

Serious illnesses can also strike the young, which is why his colleague, Dr Chong Poh Heng, is offering ACP to children and young adults with life-limiting or life-threatening conditions, under the Star Pals (Paediatric Advanced Life Support) home-care service by HCA Hospice Care.

Since the programme started in April 2012, it has served 110 patients, of whom 50 have completed ACP. However, fewer than 10 were done with input from a child.

Besides the fact that some young patients are cognitively impaired, others chose to let their parents decide their treatment. Other parents chose not to "burden the child with such decisions", said Dr Chong, programme director of Star Pals.

Sixteen-year-old Nina Adriana, who suffers from advanced chronic lung disease, took part in the ACP process with her housewife mother and cab-driver father last September.

In the event that she collapses suddenly due to respiratory or cardiac arrest, she has opted to have endotracheal intubation and ventilation for no longer than five days. In addition, she has declined external cardiac compressions and advanced life support measures.

Dr Chong wants to help more patients like her through the Paediatric and Young Adults ACP Taskforce, which he co-chairs.

The taskforce - set up last year with eight health-care professionals, including paediatricians, social workers, counsellors, and nurses and doctors trained in palliative care - is looking to introduce workbooks for children and parents to prompt discussions about ACP.

They are also looking to roll out the ACP forms used by his Star Pals team to other institutions that treat children with life-threatening conditions, as well as train other health-care professionals on how to offer ACP to their young charges.

Despite their young age, such conversations can help parents and doctors to understand the child's mentality towards medical treatments and uncover his fears about dying.

Dr Chong has had some children express their anxiety that their parents will forget about them when they die, or worry that their toys may be given to people they do not approve of.

"If the odds of dying are so high, it may be more important for a child to go to school to stay connected with his friends than to receive aggressive treatment in the hospital," he said.

Currently, Nina needs to be connected to oxygen devices around the clock to help her breathe, but she still attends school regularly.

She has told her parents and Dr Chong that the only thing she fears is that she cannot breathe.

"It is not all about what we want for her," said her mother, Madam Suriani Saini, 39.

"It's also about what she wants for herself."





It helps to be ready for the end
By Poon Chian Hui, The Straits Times, 10 Jul 2014

Death is always out there, somewhere.

It looms in the newspapers, announcing its presence as gory murders, accidents and in obituaries; in most blockbuster movies, where characters perish in all ways imaginable; and in video games, where you can "die" many times over.

Closer to home, one may have experienced the demise of elderly loved ones, while those with pets may have endured the grief that death brings when their animal companions depart.

But have you thought about your own death? Specifically, how you would like to be cared for as you approach the end of your tether.

Morbid as it may be, the process goes beyond outlining medical care to doctors and family members.

In a survey of 60 patients at the National Heart Centre Singapore, 70 per cent felt the discussion helped them to reflect on their personal values and identify their end-of-life care preferences.

Indeed, when you are asked to choose how you want to bow out, it indubitably makes you ponder about what matters the most.

Is dying at home, in your own bed, meaningful to you? Or is it enough to have your loved ones by your side, be it at a hospital or elsewhere? Would you refuse life support or continue to cling on for awhile, just so your family members have time to say goodbye?

Whatever your preferences may be, it is important to discuss them with your loved ones.

A study by Singapore General Hospital published in 2012 found that patients were often at odds with their kin over final wishes.

In one in three cases, patients and their closest relatives had different ideas about life support.

Some may argue that death is too taboo to be spoken about so openly. Yet, it is inevitable.

Just as we seek to find meaning in life, there is, perhaps, also some meaning to be found in death.


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Simpler forms, waiver of registration fees for Lasting Power of Attorney

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Application forms for Lasting Power of Attorney simplified, registration fees waived
By Imelda Saad, Channel NewsAsia, 12 Jul 2014

The government is trying to encourage more Singaporeans to make an application for a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA).

That's when one legally appoints another person to make decisions and act on his behalf, in the event he's mentally incapacitated.

This could be if dementia strikes, if a person has a stroke or if he suffers head trauma, as a result of an accident.

Over 6,000 applications have been made since the LPA was introduced four years ago.

It's hoped that more Singaporeans will come on board early.

Hundreds of cases are brought to court every year because of ambiguity over who takes charge of the welfare or assets, of a person who has lost his mental capacity.

Without an LPA, appointed Deputies - those who are acting on behalf of a family member who has lost his or her mental capacity to make decisions - often have to go through a long-drawn court process to settle their family members' affairs.

On average, there are about 200 court orders to appoint Deputies every year.

To encourage more people to make an LPA application, forms have been simplified, taking away legal and technical jargon.

The S$50 registration for applications have also been waived for the basic LPA Form 1 form for the next two years.

Registration fees will still apply if an applicant needs to customise his LPA.

Applicants will still need to pay professional fees charged by LPA certificate issuers, such as accredited General Practitioners and lawyers.

Fees for this cost at least $50.

To make it more convenient, SingPost will offer free postal service for the submission of forms over the next two years.

The changes come after feedback about the LPA, since it was launched four years ago.

The new initiatives kick off from September this year.

The LPA was introduced as part of the Mental Capacity Act, taking into account Singapore's ageing population.

Minister for Social and Family Development Chan Chun Sing said: "People with children and lots of family responsibility should seriously think about this because while we are working very hard today to provide for our families, we never really know when something untoward may happen towards us and it's also not just for us but for the rest of the family members and our children."

And it's not just about appointing someone trusted to settle your financial affairs. The person appointed, known as the LPA Donee, can also make decisions on a person's well-being.

The LPA donees can be changed at any time.

Most LPA applicants are between the ages of 56 and 70. It's all about encouraging people to sign up early, even before they need it. Young Singaporeans are also encouraged to sign up as one will never know when an accident may strike.

Richard Magnus, chairman of the Public Guardian Board, said: "When an accident happens and you lose your mental capacity then who decides? Who provides the consent for your medical care and your medical treatment? We have seen quite a number of cases like that."



The LPA also comes in useful to settle any disputes among family members.

Mr Chan explained: "Some people have different next-of-kin and they have to choose one next-of-kin to decide. For example, some of the stories we have heard, they have many brothers or sisters and they need to find an agreement to come to a consensus on what needs to be done.

"And sometimes in a critical moment, whether it's for medical reasons or otherwise, you need someone to take charge and say that this is the person who will act on my best interest. This is the reason why even though we all have our next-of-kin, we should try to find that one person to facilitate that whole process because sometimes these are critical decisions."

The LPA form can be downloaded from this website.



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HPB to Subsidise Healthier Cooking Oil at Food Joints

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Oil subsidies to promote healthier fare at food joints
HPB wants food outlets to buy palm-canola mix of cooking oil
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 14 Jul 2014

TO MAKE eating out healthier for food-loving Singaporeans, the Health Promotion Board (HPB) will be spending millions a year on subsidies to get food joints to use healthier oil.

Starting this month, the HPB will absorb the difference in cost between palm oil - which is generally used by food outlets - and a healthier mix of palm and canola oil, which costs 20 per cent to 30 per cent more.

The HPB is subsidising wholesale oil suppliers to get them to sell the healthier mix to restaurants, hawker stalls and other food outlets at the same price as palm oil. The aim is to get 20 per cent of food outlets to switch from palm oil to the canola mix by 2020.

Palm oil is the cheapest cooking oil and costs around $6 to $8 for a two-litre bottle in retail shops. But it has 50 per cent saturated fat, clogs up the arteries and can lead to heart attacks and stroke.

The canola and palm oil mix reduces the fat saturation to 38 per cent.

The HPB hopes that this will make a huge difference to diners' health - provided they do not use it as an excuse to eat more deep-fried food.

Said Mr Zee Yoong Kang, HPB's chief executive officer: "By the time the oil gets down to the individual plate, we're being literally poisoned for one or two cents a plate.

"But if you sell 5,000 plates, it makes an appreciable difference to the bottom line."

One of the oil suppliers involved in the scheme is Sime Darby. Its marketing manager, Ms Valerie Ong, said that some food outlets will go for the healthier oil if it does not cost them more. But others may resist, fearing it could affect the standard or taste of their food.

Mr Zee, however, said that tests have shown that people cannot taste any difference when palm oil is replaced with the healthier mix.

Health Minister Gan Kim Yong had said in Parliament last week that the Government would work with community partners to make healthy living as "effortless as possible".

But experts are divided on how effective the scheme will be.

Cardiologists The Straits Times spoke to said that even with the saturation at 38 per cent, deep-fried foods are still bad for health, though nutrition scientist Jeyakumar Henry said there will be benefits on a national level.

Said Dr Chin Chee Tang of the National Heart Centre Singapore: "A slight decrease in the percentage of saturated fats in the cooking oil would probably not have a substantial effect on the overall healthiness of the dish. More relevant would be the food that is being cooked in the oil - as well as the amount of salt and sugar used."

But Professor Henry, director of the Clinical Nutrition Research Centre, which was set up by the National University Health System and the Agency for Science, Technology and Research, said: "It will not be the panacea for all ailments, but it is a move in the right direction and the HPB should be lauded for its initiative."

Ms Ong suggested using soya oil instead, as it costs less than half the price of canola. But Prof Henry said soya does not have the same heart-healthy benefits as canola, which contains omega-3, omega-6 and alpha-linolenic acid.



1 in 4 secondary students 'admits to cyber bullying'

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Survey also finds that 1 in 5 primary school pupils has been bullied online
By Janice Tai, The Straits Times, 14 Jul 2014

ONE in four secondary school students admitted that they have bullied their peers online within the past year, a poll has found, while one in three said they have been victims of cyber bullying.

These ranged from spreading rumours or vicious remarks about a person on social networks, to "defacing" a person's picture and then circulating it online.

One in five primary school children, too, reported being "cyber bullied".

The survey of 3,000 secondary school students and 1,900 primary pupils was done by Touch Cyber Wellness, the main agency that runs online safety talks in schools here.

The data on the prevalence of cyber bullying in Singapore was collected over the last year after a 2012 Microsoft study found that Singapore had the second highest rate - 58 per cent - of online bullying worldwide, after China. The two countries were the only two of the 25 surveyed where bullying online was more pervasive than in the real world.

Counsellors said the number of cyber bullies among young people looks set to grow further.

"There will be more bullies because cyber bullying has become more common over the years and such social behaviour is being normalised," said Ms Esther Ng, president of volunteer group Coalition Against Bullying for Children and Youth (CABCY).

In 2006, CABCY did a study which found that one in four primary and secondary school students suffered online bullying at least once in their lives.

The rising number of online bullies is worrying, said Mr Chong Ee Jay, assistant manager of Touch Cyber Wellness, because its victims may suffer from consequences that are potentially more serious than face-to-face bullying.

"On the Internet, the taunting and rumours can be relentless over 24 hours and this information can even come back to haunt one in future," he said.

"The potential audience is much wider and so the shame or emotional trauma suffered can be more intense than actual physical injuries," he added.

Indeed, a study on the consequences of bullying on Singaporean youth, published last February in the International Criminal Justice Review, had found a "significant link between bullying victimisation and school truancy and suicidal thoughts".

It is not only the victims who suffer. A 2007 study done in the United States found that teens who have been bullied and the bullies themselves are almost twice as likely to have attempted suicide than those who have not been.

So why do these teens become cyber bullies when it does not pay?

Observers think the less-developed impulse control and social skills of the young may play a part when they navigate cyberspace.

"They are egged on by their peers and act out in the heat of the moment," said Mr Chong.

Ms Ng said some children do not realise the reach and impact that their words can have online.

"The cloak of anonymity can also change the mildest of people into terrible bullies because they feel emboldened and powerful," she added.

Others ironically become bullies after being victims of cyber bullying. Mr Chong said he once came across a group of primary school girls who used to ignore the online flaming done to them by another group. But the attacks became worse over time and they decided to retaliate and humiliate the other group by altering their pictures and posting them online.

Counsellors said the new harassment law passed in Parliament this year is an important step in deterring such cases of cyber harassment. Those who are the targets of false and malicious online content can similarly get orders requiring the content to be taken down and for correction notifications to be published in their place. Victims can also sue perpetrators for civil damages.

Apart from resorting to legal recourse, Touch hopes parents and educators will keep up with the latest trends so as to better guide their charges. Together with SingTel, it launched the first cyber wellness app here last week for parents to get tips from experts.

For Ms Ng, it is equally important to rope in witnesses of online bullying to speak up against such behaviour. CABCY is currently doing a study with about 1,000 tertiary students to find out why bystanders do not come forward to help the victims.

"For every kid that is bullied online, there are at least two or three more who would have seen it and could have done something," she said.

"We need more positive voices to intervene and set the norm."





New app offers safety tips
By Janice Tai, The Straits Times, 14 Jul 2014

PARENTS who want to find out more about what their children get up to in cyberspace can now do so while on the move.

SingTel and Touch Cyber Wellness launched Singapore's first cyber-wellness mobile app - dubbed notAnoobie - last week.

In popular lingo, the term "noobie" refers to a novice.

The free app aims to be a one-stop information source to help parents better understand and protect their children from online risks.

Parents can be kept in the loop about the latest cybertrends in six key areas via the app: gaming, social media, cyber bullying, inappropriate online content, mobile technology and online privacy.

In each section, there are resources such as game reviews and real-life stories of young people who had to grapple with online bullying or online scams and pornography.

"Many parents have told us that they are often clueless about their children's online activities. Yet, they are and should be the first line of defence when their children run into problems," said Mr Eugene Seow, executive director of Touch Community Services.

The app is available for download on the Apple iTunes and Google Play stores.



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