Quantcast
Channel: If Only Singaporeans Stopped to Think
Viewing all 7504 articles
Browse latest View live

MH370: S'pore sends more planes, ships to help in search efforts

$
0
0
By Lee Hui Chieh, The Straits Times, 10 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE has sent more military planes and ships to help in a multi-country search for the Malaysia Airlines (MAS) plane that went missing on Saturday.

Two military transport planes, a naval helicopter, two warships and a submarine support and rescue vessel were dispatched, the Ministry of Defence said in a statement yesterday.

These exclude the first military transport planedeployed on Saturday, which has since returned, the ministry added. Two other C-130 planes have taken its place.


Singapore's efforts are part of a growing international effort to find the missing jetliner, which is widely presumed to have crashed in the waters between north-eastern Malaysia and southern Vietnam.

Malaysia has taken the lead in search efforts by ordering 15 air force planes, six navy ships and three coast guard vessels to search for the missing plane.

Seven other countries - China, the United States, Vietnam, the Philippines, Singapore, Australia and Indonesia - have since deployed ships and aircraft to the South China Sea and the Malacca Strait to aid in search operations.

Vietnamese and Malaysian search teams have discovered large oil slicks in the waters near the plane's last known location. But no one has found conclusive evidence or signs of the wreckage.

Meanwhile, reports said experts from the US National Transportation Safety Board were on their way to Malaysia to be in place should any wreckage of the Boeing 777-200 be located.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation was also dispatching personnel to Malaysia, though the authorities declined to give details.

Several Singapore leaders, including Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, called their Malaysian counterparts on Saturday to offer their sympathies as well as assistance in the search operation.

In a post on its Facebook page, the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) said its missile corvette, frigate and naval helicopter joined in the search for MAS Flight MH370 early yesterday morning.

The Sikorsky S-70B Seahawk naval helicopter - which can deploy sonar - is on board the RSS Steadfast. This is one of the navy's Formidable class of frigates - its most advanced warships that are designed for stealth, speed and manoeuvrability.

The RSS Vigour belongs to its Victory class of missile corvettes - fast attack vessels with search capabilities that form what the navy calls "the backbone of the RSN's strike capability".

The RSN added that its submarine support and rescue vessel, the MV Swift Rescue, which had been preparing for the operation through the night, sailed later yesterday. It is equipped to search underwater, and has divers on board.














Memorial service for MacDonald House bombing

$
0
0
250 mark MacDonald House tragedy
Memorial service said to be first of its kind for 1965 bombing victims
By Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

A PART of Ms Rusmah Mohammed Yasin died with her father when he lost his life in the MacDonald House bombing.

Mr Mohammed Yasin Kesit was one of three victims killed by the blast 49 years ago - the worst attack in Singapore during Konfrontasi, the Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation which lasted from 1963 to 1966.

The 60-year-old said she initially thought her friend was joking when he told her about the incident, before the news sunk in: "I feel half of my soul has gone with my father."

Ms Rusmah and her brother, Mr Rapii Mohamed Yasin, were among 250 people who attended a memorial service in front of MacDonald House yesterday.


It is believed to be the first of its kind to mark the MacDonald House tragedy and was organised by the Singapore Armed Forces Veterans' League (SAFVL) for victims of the bombing and fallen soldiers of Konfrontasi. Relatives of the victims shed tears as they laid flowers at the memorial.

SAFVL president Brigadier- General (NS) Winston Toh said: "Though this significant event happened five decades ago, we as Singaporeans must never forget this part of our nation's history."

The ceremony took place several weeks after Indonesia named a new warship after Indonesian saboteurs executed in Singapore for the bombing. The decision revived painful memories of the incident, which also injured at least 33 people.

Survivors also attended the service, along with 40 veterans.

The SAFVL has petitioned the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) to find suitable ways to remember the victims of Konfrontasi and educate younger generations about it.


Speaking at the memorial, Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong backed the petition and said his ministry will work with groups like the SAFVL and schools to "do more to remember our past and celebrate our heroes".

Many young Singaporeans do not even know about Konfrontasi, Mr Wong noted - partly because that period of Singapore's history was not taught in schools until the mid-1980s as events were thought to be too recent.

"Since then, we have begun teaching our students the Singapore story," he added. "But we need to do more to bring that story alive, not only to the young but also the general public."

Retired Lieutenant-Colonel Daljeet Singh placed a wreath outside MacDonald House yesterday to commemorate fellow veterans. The 73-year-old saw combat during Konfrontasi as a young commander with the 2nd Battalion of the Singapore Infantry Regiment.

He recalled an ambush in 1964 in South Johor that killed nine soldiers from another platoon. It took eight weeks of fighting before the 60 enemy soldiers were rounded up or killed, he said.

He said: "We were doing our duty, but it's very, very sad when innocent civilians get killed by terrorists. Singapore has done a good thing to remember them."







Little India Riot COI: Day 12

$
0
0
Differing views on role alcohol played in riot
Witnesses say it was a key element but local Tamil group disagrees
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THREE foreign workers who saw the riot unfold in Little India, said public intoxication was a key element that led to the mayhem.

A local Tamil group, however, disagreed, saying there could be other aggravating factors for the violence besides alcohol.

"If it was the case... then there should be a riot every weekend," said Mr P. Raveentheran from the Singapore Tamil Community, who was testifying at yesterday's Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the unrest in the Indian enclave.

"I spoke to a lot of friends... it's a joke," he added. "If alcohol was the cause, then every weekend there should be a riot."

The Singapore Tamil Community is an online group that focuses on the welfare of all Indians living or working here. They have about 3,900 members.



The group's other representative, Mr M. Govindaraju, told the COI that the situation on Dec 8 was inflamed because first responders to the fatal traffic accident that sparked the riot, did not have the "right approach" when handling the crowd.

"One person got crushed under a bus and those surrounding him were thinking of how to save him," he said. "They wanted, if possible, to move the bus forward, and retrieve the man from underneath (but) the first responders who came on the scene, they chased the crowd away instead of asking them to help."

He said the workers grew rowdy only after their attempt to help their countryman was spurned by rescuers. Many workers from India, he added, also had unpleasant brushes with the law; often being scolded and fined for actions like littering - not an offence in their hometowns - by enforcement officers who were disrespectful and did not speak the same language.

This, he explained, was evident because rioters chose to focus their violence on both the police officers and their vehicles, instead of members of the public.

But when the COI asked how he had come to those conclusions, Mr Govindaraju - who was not at the scene that night - said it was mainly hearsay from members of their community and shopkeepers from Little India - none of whom was willing to give evidence.

Earlier, COI chairman G. Pannir Selvam asked the Singapore Tamil Community to share only information in line with the terms of reference - such as factors leading to the riot - because reports it had submitted covered issues "beyond our power and function".

The three workers who appeared before the COI yesterday said it was clear to them that alcohol was to blame for the escalation of the violence.

Mr Solaimalai Krishnan, 37, from India, said rioters behaved badly because they had been drinking and were angry after seeing their countryman being run over.

It was also not uncommon to see workers "creating trouble" in Little India after having had a few drinks, said a 30-year-old site supervisor from India, who asked not to be named.

Mr Alagarsamy Rajasekar, who has worked here for five years, agreed: "I believe the riot was caused by people who were under the influence of alcohol because my countrymen tend to get unruly when they drink."

The 24-year-old from India witnessed a mob lobbing glass bottles at the bus that ran over and killed his countryman Sakthivel Kumaravelu earlier that night.

"Even in India, they do this: Drink and fight, and they also destroy the cars," he said, adding violence also often breaks out after road accidents, including cases where drivers would get into a tussle. When Mr Selvam asked if they would fight with the police, Mr Alagarsamy said: "Yes, they have. Many people have died."

Two more foreign workers, witnesses from migrant workers group TWC2 and representatives from a construction firm and the Singapore Contractors Association are expected to testify when the public hearing resumes today.





Local Tamil group has its say at COI
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

TWO representatives from a group called the Singapore Tamil Community (STC) had their say at the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the Dec 8 riot. This was part of their exchange with the COI members yesterday.


Why did the crowd gather around the bus that ran over and killed an Indian national along Race Course Road?

Mr M. Govindaraju from the STC: One person got crushed under a bus and those surrounding him were thinking of how to save him.

They wanted, if possible, to move the bus forward, and retrieve the man from underneath (but) the first responders who came on the scene, they chased the crowd away instead of asking them to help.

COI member John De Payva: Where did Mr Govindaraju get this information from?

Mr Govindaraju: It's from what I heard, what our group gathered from speaking with others... Some neighbouring shop(keeper)s, they don't wish to be named, I spoke on the phone with the shops.


Was alcohol a major factor that led to the riot?

State Counsel Sharmila Sripathy: Does STC accept that alcohol was one of the contributing factors to the riot on that night?

Mr P. Raveentheran from the STC: If it was the case, and if there's alcohol (being drunk) every weekend, then there should be a riot every weekend.

I spoke to a lot of friends, this is the constant refrain: "It's a joke. If alcohol was the cause, then every weekend there should be a riot."



Related
Little India Riot COI: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 11

Pioneer unionist and PAP founding member dies

$
0
0
Unionist Lee Gek Seng described as self-sacrificial and generous mentor
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

MR LEE Gek Seng, a pioneering unionist and a founding member of the People's Action Party, died last Saturday from heart failure, said family members. He was 87.

Mr Lee was among the PAP's 14 convenors when the party was officially inaugurated on Nov 21, 1954, and one of 11 men on the party's first pro-tem committee.

Yesterday, politicians, unionists, community leaders and family paid tribute to a man they described as humble, self-sacrificial and a generous mentor.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong visited the wake at Mount Vernon Sanctuary late last night, spending close to an hour speaking to the family and looking at old photos of Mr Lee.

He also noted in a Facebook post Mr Lee's many contributions, including serving as PAP deputy secretary-general and as a community leader in Jalan Besar and Toa Payoh.

PM Lee said he had just met Mr Lee at last month's Pioneer Generation party at the Istana. "He came in a wheelchair, but was clearly very happy to be there. Now he has left us."

In a condolence letter to Mr Lee's elder son, Lionel, NTUC president Diana Chia and secretary-general Lim Swee Say praised Mr Lee for the instrumental role he played in setting up the Singapore Union of Postal and Telecommunications Workers in 1947 and later, in forming the Amalgamated Union of Public Employees (AUPE).

It was formed from a merger of Mr Lee's former union and the Union of Postal and Telecommunications Uniformed Staff.

He then went on to serve as general secretary of the postal and telecommunications branch of AUPE for 20 years and remained an AUPE trustee after he retired.

In their letter, Mr Lim and Ms Chia said Mr Lee had staved off promotion at Singapore Telecoms for more than 20 years so that he could continue being a unionist to represent and fight for workers. Mr Lim said Mr Lee "laid a very strong foundation" in expanding the public sector into a core pillar of the labour movement and building up AUPE to the No. 1 union in NTUC's public sector arm.

Mr Lee's younger son, Lewis, 55, recalled that as a fiery young unionist, his father first met Mr Lee Kuan Yew, the lawyer engaged to represent the union, in 1952 after his father led a postal and telecoms workers' strike.

Dr Lewis Lee said his father "was a trade unionist at heart and a political activist as a consequence".

On why he chose to join the PAP in those early years, Mr Lee Gek Seng said in a 1999 party publication: "Politics was out on the streets. I looked around and saw that the PAP, even though it was left-wing, was genuinely interested in serving the people and would fight for them. So, I threw my lot with the PAP."

Mr Lee, who never contested in the polls despite his colleagues' urging, was a stalwart in the Jalan Besar and Toa Payoh branches and, after retiring at 65, at the PAP headquarters and the PAP Community Foundation.

Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean said he had worked with Mr Lee at the PAP HQ during his first few years in politics.

"I was always impressed by his commitment, his wisdom and his willingness to share his experiences and his knowledge with others, young people like me," he said.

Also at the wake yesterday were former PAP colleagues such as presidential candidate Tan Cheng Bock and former senior parliamentary secretary Chan Chee Seng. Mr Chan paid tribute to his "great friend", who took him under his wing as a rookie MP and supported him as his election agent in Jalan Besar.

Dr Lee said his father always made time for his family, recalling excursions to the open-air cinema and long walks for kaya toast breakfasts.

He was with his father when he attended last month's Pioneer Generation party. To Dr Lee, his father exemplified the can-do spirit of the pioneers, dropping out of Raffles Institution at Secondary 2 because he needed to support his family after World War II.

"Someone asked him at the party, why did you do what you did? My father said, 'During those times, if you were me, you would also have done the same thing.'"

Mr Lee leaves behind five children, 13 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.


108 lauded on virtual Women's Hall of Fame

$
0
0
By Theresa Tan, The Straits Times, 6 Mar 2014

ON A wall at the Waterloo Street home of the Singapore Council of Women's Organisations (SCWO) are tributes to nine women who improved the lives of others here.

Now the SCWO is expanding the wall by taking it online, where it will honour, for a start, 108 remarkable women, such as activists, movers and shakers in various professions, and a housewife who has cared for more than three dozen abused or abandoned children.

The national co-ordinating body for women's groups will launch its virtual Singapore Women's Hall of Fame at a gala dinner on March 14 to mark International Women's Day this Saturday.

Its president Laura Hwang said: "We want to make sure these women's lives are documented as they are so significant and inspiring and they can serve as role models, especially to the younger generation."

The nine on its wall include war heroine Elizabeth Choy; the former Member of Parliament who campaigned for the Women's Charter Chan Choy Siong; and women's rights activist Shirin Fozdar, who initiated the formation of the Syariah Court. The Women's Charter is a set of laws that protect and advance women's rights.

Mrs Hwang said it did not start with a fixed number of women to celebrate, but a selection panel, headed by Ambassador at Large Tommy Koh, had pared the list down from more than 200 names.

Those on the list include well-known names such as novelist Catherine Lim, corporate heavyweights such as Temasek Holdings' chief executive Ho Ching and SingTel CEO Chua Sock Koong, politican Halimah Yacob and former swimming champions Patricia Chan and Joscelin Yeo.

Others include leaders such as Dr Noeleen Heyzer, the first Singaporean chosen to head a UN agency, the United Nations Development Fund for Women, in 1994. She later became the first woman to lead the UN's Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, overseeing regional development for Asia-Pacific states. She is now special adviser to the UN chief for Timor Leste.

Said Dr Heyzer, who is in her 60s: "I'm very honoured and humbled that my work is recognised by Singapore."

Also honoured are pioneers in various fields, such as Dr Lee Choo Neo, who became Singapore's first female doctor in 1919 and Mary Quintal, one of the first women to be recruited as a police constable and who rose to become the first female assistant superintendent of the Singapore Police Force in 1961.

Also in the Hall of Fame are ordinary women who gave of themselves generously, such as Madam Indranee Nadisen, a housewife in her 70s who fostered more than three dozen abandoned or abused children.

The public can also nominate women they think deserve to be inducted into the Hall of Fame.

The website, www.swhf.sg, goes live on March 14.





Work on launch began 2 years ago
By Wong Kim Hoh, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

The virtual Singapore Women's Hall of Fame will be launched on Friday but work on it began two years ago.

The ball started rolling when nine researchers from the Singapore Council of Women's Organisations (SCWO) started searching the National Library and other archives to look for women who have made an impact in Singapore.

SCWO president Laura Hwang said: "We wanted to show a diversity of women in various fields. What is key is that the women must be pioneers, first in their fields, or have significant contributions. We have a whole list of must-haves, including the X-factor."

The research team came back with a list of more than 200 names such as Teo Soon Kim, the first female lawyer, and Lee Choo Neo, the first female doctor, in Singapore.

Six months ago, a selection panel headed by Ambassador At Large Professor Tommy Koh and comprising Mrs Hwang, non-resident Ambassador to Finland Jaya Mohideen, chief executive of National Library Board Elaine Ng and adjunct law professor Kevin Tan, started whittling down the list.

"It took us two lunch meetings and several e-mail discussions over six months before we arrived at the happy number of 108 for 2014," says Prof Koh. "This is just a first shot. More names will be added in the future."

Settling on the final 108 women for this year's list - which includes activists and high achievers from 13 different sectors - was no easy task.

"When the list was first presented, I felt there was a gap in certain sectors, such as science and industry. So I asked Professor Andrew Wee, Dean of Science at the National University of Singapore, for help. He came up with some names," Prof Koh says.

Dr Kevin Tan says: "The selection panel gave some priority to the older women as we felt that their tributes are overdue. Besides, there are many more opportunities for the younger ones to be recognised in the future."

For Mrs Hwang, several of the women honoured have touched her life personally. They include Mother St Mathilde Raclot who founded the Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus (CHIJ) schools.

Born in 1814, she entered the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Infant Jesus when she was 18. She was sent to Penang and later Singapore to set up a convent school for girls. She started the CHIJ school at Victoria Street and also founded an orphanage and a home for abandoned babies.

Mrs Hwang says: "Without Mother Mathilde, I would not have the education I have had. It was also through the orphanage that I first learnt that we have a part to play in helping others."





Pioneers and high-fliers
The Singapore Council of Women's Organisation will unveil its Singapore Women's Hall of Fame on Friday honouring 108 activists and achievers in 13 sectors including law, medicine and social work. The Sunday Times finds out how the women were selected and profiles several of these high-fliers.




No anger towards mum who sold her as a slave
By Wong Kim Hoh, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

Janet Lim's life story would make for a gripping television melodrama.

Although she was born into a well-to-do family in southern China, life took a dark turn after her sinseh father died when she was eight years old.

Her mother - who lost her father's estate to an uncle - and stepfather sold her as a mui tsai (little sister) or child slave and she was trafficked to Singapore in 1930.

She managed to escape a life of servitude, get an education, become the first local hospital matron and marry an Australian doctor. Now 90, she wrote a book, Sold For Silver, about her tumultuous life, in 1958. The book was reprinted about 10 years ago.

On the phone from Brisbane in Australia, where she has lived for the last 45 years, she sounds sprightly.

Madam Lim, who has three children and six grandchildren, is hard of hearing so her daughter-in-law, Mrs Eleisha Strang, 50, helped her answer questions during the phone interview.

She says that she does not harbour bitter feelings towards her mother.

"I've always loved my mother in spite of what she did. She did not have any choice, she was that poor," says the eldest of four children. Her two sisters died in their infancy; her brother died when he was four years old.

The couple who bought her from her mother in Ampo, a town near Shantou in China, trafficked her to Singapore where a towkay and his second wife bought her for $250.

The businessman made her life a living hell by always trying to molest her.

In 1932, the British colonial powers banned the import of mui tsai and required the registration of existing ones.

The law saved her. Madam Lim ran away and convinced the Chinese Protectorate Office that she was being ill-treated by the towkay.

She was placed in an orphanage in York Hill and later sent to the Church of England Zenana Missionary School, where she received an education.

After leaving school, she worked as a nurse at St Andrew's Mission Hospital.

But her life was thrown into turmoil again when World War II broke out and the Japanese invaded Singapore.

She tried to flee to India on a ship but the ship sank after it was bombed by the Japanese. She was rescued by a fisherman and taken to Sumatra only to be captured by the Japanese.

For three years, she was tortured and beaten, and was nearly made a comfort woman.

"My faith helped me through my darkest periods," says the Anglican.

After the war, she helped comfort women at the Social Hygiene Hospital before returning to work at St Andrew's.

In the late 1940s, she became the first nurse from Singapore to study nursing in Britain. Two years after she returned in 1952, she became the first Asian nurse to be appointed hospital matron at St Andrew's.

In 1959, she married an Australian doctor, Errol Strang. The couple moved to Australia in the late 1960s after working stints in Kuala Lumpur and Hong Kong.

Writing and publishing Sold For Silver took several years.

"I wrote quickly but had to stop many times because it was very emotionally draining. I was always crying," she recalls.

Of all the upheavals in her life, she says being lied to by her mother was the most traumatic.

"She lied to me and told me we were going away and we would be happy. I trusted her but she took me away to be sold instead."

Madam Lim devoted her life to raising her three children after settling down in Australia. Her husband died in 2002, but she kept herself busy with Bible study classes and gardening. A fall last year has slowed her down.

Mrs Eleisha Strang, who works as a bookkeeper, says her mother-in-law - who will be attending the launch of the Singapore Women's Hall of Fame on Friday - is a remarkable woman."She's extremely resilient. If I had experienced what she did, I know I would never live to 90 without being resentful and bitter.

"She has a lot of strength, and it has allowed her to forgive the people who have wronged her."





Swim Queen in the Asian Games
By Wong Kim Hoh, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

It is 9.30pm in Melbourne and Junie Sng sounds a tad pooped.

Holding down a job as an IT specialist and parenting two boisterous sons, she says, is hard work.

"I'm always running after them, trying to get them to clean up their rooms, clean up after themselves," she says of her two children, Zachary, 10, and Sebastien, six.

In fact, the 49-year-old says with a laugh, parenting is a lot harder than the training she used to put in to become Singapore's Swim Queen of the 1970s and early 1980s. Her eight years in the pool reaped two Asian Games gold medals and 38 golds from four SEA Games.

"With training, it's just yourself. But bringing up little people is different, you have two personalities who will not always do what you want them to do. But they're gorgeous boys. I just hope I'm doing right by them," she adds.

She is chuffed that she, along with 107 other women, are honoured in the Singapore Women's Hall of Fame.

"A lot of hard work went into that," says Sng who ruled the pool for eight years until she retired in 1983.

She will be flying here from Melbourne - where she has lived since 1980 - with her two boys and nightclub promoter husband, Geoff Holden, 60, to attend the gala dinner on Friday.

She hopes the evening will give her sons a better idea of what Mummy achieved in her youth.

"They've seen some photographs but I don't think they really understand what I did. Hopefully, the experience will give them something to aim for should they have a sporting career," she says.

The younger of two girls (elder sister Elaine also has several Asian Games medals) of an artist and a teacher, she made a splashing debut at age 11 at the 1975 Seap Games, winning one gold and one silver.

There was no stopping her after that. In 1977, she won five gold medals and broke six meet and two Asian Games women's records at the Sea Games in Kuala Lumpur.

The year 1978 proved to be even more glorious.

At the Asian Games in Bangkok, she took two golds (400m and 800m freestyle) and one silver, making her the first Singaporean woman swimmer to win an Asian Games gold medal, and also the youngest ever to win not one but two gold medals in the Asiad.

In 1981, the country was dismayed when its Golden Girl and her family emigrated to Australia. But she gave Singapore a magnificent present at the 1983 SEA Games when she amassed 10 golds in the pool.

She retired after that to concentrate on her studies and graduated with an applied science degree from the Queensland University of Technology in 1987.

In retrospect, she says she should have trained one more year so that she could take part in the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

"For any athlete, that is the highest form of competition you could aim for," says Ms Sng who made the finals in the 400m and 800m freestyle at the 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Canada.

She could not go to the Montreal Olympics in 1976 because Singapore swimmers were then banned from competing against China. Moscow in 1980 was another lost opportunity when Singapore joined the United States in boycotting the Games after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

Not having swum in the Olympics is the only regret she has about her sporting life.

"I'd do it all over again if I could," she says. "It did me a lot of good. I represented my country, travelled, met many people. I've been very lucky to go as far as I did."

Ms Sng, who still holds a Singapore passport, has not gone into the pool much since retiring.

"I would always choose something else, like working out at the gym. Swimming is not at the forefront, probably because I did so much of it as a kid," she says, adding that her husband is now the athlete in the family. A steeplechaser, he will soon be taking part in a national event for veterans.

She is not ruling out getting into competitive swimming again though, especially since her elder sister has started competing in veterans' swimming meets in Queensland.

"It's hard to find the time now but when the kids are older, who knows?"





Senior cop 'never saw gender as an issue'
By Theresa Tan, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

Senior Assistant Commissioner (SAC) Zuraidah Abdullah, 51, is no stranger to making history.

The eldest of four children of a bus driver and a mother who worked three jobs, she was the first in her extended family to attend university.

She was also the first Malay graduate to join the Singapore police force in 1986, through its direct entry scheme where university graduates became senior officers.

Last year, she became the first woman to be promoted to the post of senior assistant commissioner. She is now the highest-ranking female police officer here.

She said: "We live in a meritocratic country that provides equal opportunities, so never use your gender or race as an excuse for not performing. My motto is to work hard and never stop learning."

She learnt discipline, diligence and resourcefulness from her parents at an early age.

"My mother is my greatest influence. She always told me to find solutions to problems, instead of blaming the problem," she said.

For example, when money was tight, her mother, who has died, would cook and sell lontong to make ends meet, on top of juggling three jobs as a nanny, cook and cleaner.

To earn money to buy snacks and other treats, the young Zuraidah caught grasshoppers and seafood such as eels and crabs and collected empty bottles to sell.

SAC Zuraidah, who holds an engineering degree from the then Nanyang Technological Institute, graduated during the economic slump in 1985, when engineering and other jobs were scarce.

So she went into teaching but left after six months as she felt it was not the right fit for her. A recruitment advertisement for police officers with the tag line, "every day is different", caught her eye.

Even as a rookie cop, she never felt intimidated in a profession dominated by men.

At her university, there were eight males to one female in her engineering class.

SAC Zuraidah, who described herself as a "stickler for discipline and punctuality", said: "I never saw gender as an issue. We trained together with the men and we had to do the same things they did. It was not like men ran 10km, and women, 8km.

"I have had to earn respect by demonstrating that I can do the job - regardless of my gender."

She is married to retired policeman Abdul Aziz Mohamad Noor, who is 15 years her senior. Mr Abdul has three adult children from his first marriage.

In her 28 years with the police, she has been involved in the whole gamut of police work from investigations and operations to planning and training.

She was a team leader in the Crisis Negotiation Unit, which talks people out of killing themselves.

She recalled a construction worker who was perched on top of a crane that was 10 storeys high. His girlfriend had left him, he had problems with his boss and he wanted to end his life.

After 17 hours of persuasion, SAC Zuraidah and her colleagues managed to coax the man to get down.

She is also the first woman to be appointed to the board of the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore and was previously seconded to be the chief executive of Mendaki, the self-help group for the Malay/Muslim community.

Today, 17 per cent of the more than 8,000 police officers in Singapore are women, a number which has grown significantly from her rookie days, she said.

SAC Zuraidah, who hopes the recognition she has won will inspire other women, added: "You can do it too."





She put Singapore on UN map
By Theresa Tan, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

Dr Noeleen Heyzer, 66, is best known for putting Singapore on the United Nations (UN) map.

In 1994, she became the first Singaporean to head a UN agency, the United Nations Development Fund for Women (Unifem), which gives aid to improve women's lives in more than 100 countries.

In her 13 years as the Unifem chief, she was credited with putting issues affecting women high on the UN agenda, significantly increasing its budget and improving its programmes.

In 2007, she became the first woman to head the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (Unescap), the UN's regional development arm.

She was said to have strengthened its capacity and effectiveness in engaging and supporting the Asia-Pacific countries in economic and social growth.

Now, the UN veteran of almost 25 years is the special adviser to the UN chief for Timor Leste, to support the country's nation-building after 25 years of being occupied by its neighbour Indonesia.

Her husband, former Malaysian Member of Parliament and social activist Fan Yew Teng, died in 2010 of cancer. She has twin daughters who are in their 30s.

Born to a Eurasian father and a Chinese mother, she was six when her mum. Her dad remarried and she was brought up by her grandmother, a widow who was uneducated but who stressed the importance of education.

Coming from an "extremely poor" background, Dr Heyzer said in an interview: "There were circumstances that made me a leader because I saw so many things falling apart as a child, both within the country and at home.

"I found that either I took leadership and found solutions, or things would get worse or wouldn't get done."

She received her Bachelor of Arts and Masters of Science from the then University of Singapore and a PhD in sociology from Cambridge University.

She worked in banking for less than a year, found it unsuitable, and her "outrage over human suffering and injustice" propelled her into development work, she said in interviews.

Among her proudest professional achievements, she told The Sunday Times, was to get the UN Security Council to look beyond maintaining international peace to also focus on how war affects women, such as rape being used as a wea-pon of war, and to stop the abuse.

With the Security Council implementing the landmark Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, this paved the way for women to participate in peace negotiation and the electoral process and to help shape their post-conflict societies.

She said the landmark resolution led to equal inheritance laws in Burundi in east-central Africa, women being given full citizenship rights in Afghanistan and more women entering politics in countries such as Rwanda and Liberia, among other things.

As Unescap head, she worked closely with Asean and the Myanmar government to assist in recovery efforts after Cyclone Nargis ravaged Myanmar in 2008.

After that, she was able to win the trust of Myanmar's leaders and initiate dialogue between international scholars, such as Nobel Prize economist Joseph Stiglitz, and Myanmar government agencies to help develop the country.

She has been recognised as helping to catalyse the opening up of Myanmar.

Ambassador-at-Large Tommy Koh said Dr Heyzer has "invigorated" Unescap, "bringing a new vision, energy and relevance" to the organisation.

He added: "Singaporeans of both genders ought to know more about Noeleen Heyzer and admire her good work. She was an eloquent champion of women's rights."

Dr Heyzer said she was most moved when member states of the UN gave her a standing ovation when she stepped down from the UNESCAP recently.

Dr Heyzer, who has lived overseas for more than 30 years and is now based in Bangkok, said: "Eventually, I plan to come back to Singapore."





A champion for the helpless
By Wong Kim Hoh, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

For someone who will start the first of 10 radiotherapy sessions for gum cancer tomorrow, Miss Daisy Vaithilingam is remarkably upbeat.

"I've worked in hospitals and I come from a family of doctors. And I know the doctors will take very good care of me," says the 88-year-old social work pioneer whose illness was diagnosed earlier this year.

There is another reason for her high spirits.

"I'm so impressed by the reactions of my family and friends. They have been so caring and loving. I feel so cherished; what is there to worry about?"

Many call and visit her regularly at her three-room HDB flat in Toa Payoh; some have set up a taxi fund for her visits to the hospital.

There is just one downside, she says with a grimace.

"There are a lot of things I can't eat because I can't chew. Everything has to be blended and tastes like nothing. I can't add chilli, not even ginger."

Her treatment means she cannot attend the Singapore Council of Women's Organisation gala dinner on Friday where she will be honoured as one of the 108 women in the Singapore Women's Hall of Fame.

The youngest of four children, she had always wanted to care for the helpless and needy.

Her mother, a nurse, and her stepfather, a doctor, were her role models.

She has left huge footprints on Singapore's social work scene. She started the first fostering scheme for children, assigning abandoned children to hospital attendants and amahs for care.

She also lobbied for financial aid for parents of intellectually disabled children, helped set up the Singapore Association of Social Workers and chaired the first Committee of the Care of the Aged.

Although she read English Literature, economics and geography at the now defunct Raffles College, she went into social work after listening to a talk by a medical social worker at the university.

In the 1950s, she left for England to be trained in social work and returned after three years to help set up a social service structure at the Singapore General Hospital.

Miss Vaithilingam, who is single, was a social work lecturer for 15 years at the National University of Singapore.

She has never been afraid to speak up. "If I felt there was a problem, I would open my mouth," says the feisty woman who once stood up to Dr Goh Keng Swee, then Minister of Finance, during a tuberculosis outbreak in the 1960s. She told him that medical treatment should not just be limited to Singaporeans, but extended to immigrants too. Dr Goh listened to her and extended the treatment to immigrants.

The avid cricket fan is happy that her contributions to social work are being recognised.

"I'm proud of many things but I'm proudest of my students, all of whom have done brilliantly. I'm so happy that so many of them are doing wonderful things to help those who need help."





The visionary educationist
By Theresa Tan, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014

The late Dr Ruth Wong, who has been described as a visionary educationist who transformed the training of teachers here, did not set out to be a teacher.

Dr Wong once wrote that "no profession befitted my intellectual capacity better" than medicine. A devout Christian, she also hoped to run free clinics for the poor.

But the eldest of 10 children gave up a scholarship that could have paved the way for her to study medicine. Her father's tailoring business was badly hit during the Great Depression in the 1930s and she became a teacher to support her family.

Her younger sister, retired professor of medicine and cardiologist Wong Hee Ong, 86, said: "Ruth always placed others before herself."

Because of her sacrifice, her siblings were able to continue schooling and many of them became doctors, professors and other professionals.

Dr Wong, who never married and spent 44 years in education, died of colon cancer at the age of 64 in 1982.

She was in her 30s when she won a scholarship to attend Queen's University in Northern Ireland to do an arts degree and she eventually did her Masters' and doctorate degree in education at Harvard University.

She taught for more than 10 years at various schools, headed the Teachers' Training College and when it became the Institute of Education in 1973, she was its first director. The national teacher training institute is now known as the National Institute of Education (NIE).

Professor Tan Oon Seng, NIE's dean of teacher education, said Dr Wong boosted the quality of teacher education and laid the foundation for innovations in teaching in the 1970s. This was a time when Singapore was a developing nation and the focus was on finding enough teachers to teach the growing population.

She saw the need to go beyond training teachers to be proficient in the subjects they teach, to also give them a deeper perspective that would enable them to think critically and understand how children learn so they can teach better, he said.

She reconceptualised the teacher education programme and put in place new ways of teaching, learning and assessment. Dr Wong elevated the status of teachers at a time when teaching was often seen as a job of last resort, her sister Hee Ong said.

She emphasised higher education and sent her staff to obtain post-graduate degrees so they can better train the next generation of teachers.

She also introduced ground-breaking ideas in her time, such as promoting education research, and introduced counselling in schools.

The weakest and most disadvantaged students had a special place in her heart and she would go all out to find ways to help them, he said.

Prof Tan, who knew her as a teenager through church where she taught bible classes, added: "She is the most visionary educator I know of. She was also a very caring and approachable lady.

"She influenced us into thinking that teaching is more than a job, it is a calling that will bring blessings to others."

Dr Wong's sister Hee Ong said she was a caring big sister who taught her siblings subjects such as Latin and Additional Maths.

Last year, Hee Ong wrote a book titled Ruth Wong: Educationist And Teacher Extraordinaire to tell the story of Dr Wong's life.

Dr Wong, who once described herself as "rather introverted" and "frequently tongue-tied", never thought she could teach.

She wrote to the Christian Teachers' Fellowship weeks before her death: "There were dark patches sometimes, but rewarding experiences more than compensated for this. Always the students were loveable and responsive to love. Would I take up a medical course if permitted to live my life again? No."





They helped shape today's Singapore
By Theresa Tan, The Sunday Times, 9 Mar 2014


Shirin Fozdar

Born in 1905 to a wealthy family in India, the social activist came to Singapore in 1950 to spread her Baha'i faith. She and a group of women founded the Singapore Council of Women in 1952 to campaign against polygamy and to improve the lives of women here.

Their lobbying led to the passing of the Women's Charter, a set of laws that protect and advance women's rights, in 1961 and monogamy became the law for all non-Muslims. She died from cancer in 1992.



Dr Lee Choo Neo

Dr Lee became Singapore's first female doctor in 1919 at the age of 24, in an era when women were rarely educated and hardly worked.

The daughter of a well-known merchant, Mr Lee Hoon Leong, she was also a women's rights activist and co-founded the Chinese Ladies' Association of Malaya to promote the education of Chinese girls. She died in 1947.



Mary Quintal

One of the first batch of 10 women to be recruited into the Singapore Police Force in 1949, Mrs Quintal rose through the ranks to become its Assistant Superintendent in 1961, the highest-ranking female officer then.

Mrs Quintal, whose maiden name was Voon, was also among the first women in the civil service to receive the same pay as their male colleagues. She retired in 1974 after 25 years in the force.



Checha Davies

The daughter of a Methodist lay preacher, she was born in 1898 in India and became a lecturer.

In 1925, she moved to Singapore to marry a Singapore teacher and later became a member of the Singapore Council of Women.

Mrs Davies was also president of the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). She sold her house to raise funds to build a YWCA hostel for female workers. She died in 1979, aged 80.



Mother St. Mathilde Raclot

Born as Justine Raclot in 1814, the French nun entered the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Infant Jesus when she was 18 and set up the Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus (CHIJ) for girls in 1854. Today, there are 11 CHIJ schools in Singapore. She died in 1911.



Pat Chan

One of Singapore's Golden Girls, Pat Chan, now 59, won 39 golds at the SEA Games, a feat unrivalled by any Singaporean athlete until 2005.

At the 1966 and 1970 Asian Games, she competed in eight events, winning three silvers and five bronzes. In 1970, she also set a national record in the 200m backstroke which was not broken for 23 years.

Named the Best Sportswoman of Singapore for five consecutive years (1967-1971), she retired from swimming in 1973 and became a professional coach when she was 19. She later made her mark as a photographer and now runs her own media company.



Sarah Mary Josephine Windstedt

Born in 1886 in Ireland, Sarah Mary Josephine Winstedt pioneered modern infant care in rural Malaya. She also headed Singapore's first paediatrics ward at the Singapore General Hospital in 1932.

Sent to Malaya after completing a course at the London School of Tropical Medicine in the mid- 1910s, she treated mostly poor patients who lived in remote locations, sometimes even operating on kitchen tables.

After retiring from SGH in 1933, she wrote a set of primary school textbooks on tropical hygiene. She died in 1972 in England.



Gloria Lim

An expert on fungi, botanist Gloria Lim - born in 1930 - is a trailblazer in more ways than one.

She was the first woman to become Dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of Singapore in 1973, and the first woman to head the Department of Botany at the National University of Singapore in 1985.

The first Foundation Director at the National Institute of Education, she was also the first woman to be appointed to the Public Service Commission which oversees the appointments and promotions of senior civil servants.

Author of nearly 150 papers on fungal biology, she served as a member of, among others, the Singapore Science Council and the National Parks Board.


Will costs erode Singapore's edge?

$
0
0
The city-state remains attractive to investors but needs to plough on with its restructuring journey
By Alvin Foo Economics Correspondent

LAST week, Singapore captured headlines at home and abroad for an unsettling reason: It was named the world's most expensive city by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).

The EIU study aims to help companies calculate how much they should pay expatriates and business travellers, so it may not have been a good reflection of everyday costs for locals, as politicians and academics were quick to point out.

But it still crystallises what Singaporeans have known for a while: This country is becoming increasingly expensive to live and work in. Inflation averaged 3.1 per cent in the last five years, from 2.4 per cent in the five years before that.

The EIU's findings also underscored an intense discussion during the Budget debate in Parliament last week about rising costs for businesses here.

Several MPs rose to plead the cases of local firms, which have been buckling under the weight of soaring labour and rental expenses amid a manpower and space crunch.

Companies had asked for more cost cushions in this year's Budget. But no new aid was forthcoming as the Government had unveiled a three-year package just last year to help firms deal with rising costs through the Wage Credit Scheme, the Productivity and Innovation Credit Bonus and corporate tax rebates.

Local bosses are still struggling, though. A survey by the Singapore Business Federation ahead of the Budget found that three in four companies said their key challenge this year would be high labour costs.

Between the third quarter of 2009 and the first quarter of last year, unit business costs rose 19 per cent for the manufacturing sector and 25 per cent for the service sector, the Trade and Industry Ministry said recently. For the whole of last year, overall unit business costs rose 1.5 per cent across all sectors.

Singapore has long been an attractive destination for companies to set up shop. But as living and business costs head ever higher, is the Republic in danger of losing its economic competitiveness?

Costs on the rise

A NUMBER of factors are driving up costs more rapidly in Singapore than in other cities.

Some are structural. Land is scarce in Singapore, leading to relatively high land and property costs. Cars here are also among the priciest in the world as the Government tries to control traffic on the roads.

With no natural resources of its own, Singapore also relies on energy and water imports, which raise utility costs here compared with other countries, the EIU noted.

A more recent reason is Singapore's strong rebound from the 2008 global financial crisis. The economy has grown steadily in the last few years and is now operating at around maximum capacity.

This has led to strong demand from companies for industrial and commercial space as well as for workers, raising these costs.

Singapore's robust economic fundamentals have also attracted higher investments and capital inflows, pushing up the Singapore dollar.

At the same time, Singapore's central bank has kept the Singdollar on an appreciating path to guard against inflation.

As a result, the Singdollar has hit all-time highs in the past few years against international and regional currencies, making it even more costly for multinationals that want to operate here.

"Over the last decade, a 40 per cent currency appreciation coupled with solid price inflation has consistently pushed Singapore up the ranking," said the EIU.

Some government policies have exacerbated the cost situation. Over the last decade, the Government has sold off a chunk of industrial land to private sector players such as real estate investment trusts (Reits).

Only about 16 per cent of industrial space is leased out by Reits, but some companies complain this has led to rental hikes of up to three-fold when leases are renewed.

Industrial rents have shot up by double digits each year from 2010 to 2012, although growth eased to 5 per cent last year.

Since 2010, the Government has also been tightening the tap on foreign labour, as it restructures the economy towards higher productivity. This has raised unit labour costs by 5.3 per cent in 2012 and 3.1 per cent last year.

Losing our edge?

THERE is little doubt that Singapore's high costs challenge the country's competitive edge. This was flagged in a study by Swiss business school IMD, which showed Singapore's global competitiveness slipping from No. 1 in 2010 to No. 5 last year.

"Sometimes driving up (business) costs is the cost of success," said Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Chua Hak Bin. "Rents go up because companies want to expand their space here."

OCBC Bank economist Selena Ling said companies know Singapore has never been a cheap place.

The key question is whether the value Singapore adds to their business will continue to outweigh the growing costs of operating here - especially now that other regional cities are also steadily modernising.

So far, the signs are still positive. For one thing, Singapore is not the only place where costs have been rising.

Barclays regional economist Leong Wai Ho said: "Singapore has become pricier in recent years especially after the property boom, but we are still noticeably cheaper than London or Switzerland. Fortunately, most Asian cities have also experienced cost increases."

Mr Paul Yeo, group managing director of Fagerdala Singapore, which makes shock protection products like the foam used in electronics packaging, said business costs in regional countries such as China and Malaysia are also fast rising.

It is common to see wages in China jump 15 per cent yearly and industrial rents rise 40 per cent every three years, while Malaysia now has a minimum wage, he said.

Economists also point out that higher costs have not dampened Singapore's high rankings on other global measures including competitiveness, business environment and transport superiority.

Despite awarding Singapore the cost crown this year, the EIU forecast last June that the Republic will be the world's third-most competitive city in 2025, behind New York and London but ahead of regional peers Hong Kong and Tokyo.

The study ranked 120 cities based on their expected ability to attract capital, businesses, talent and tourists.

Singapore has also been ranked by the World Economic Forum (WEF) as the globe's second-most competitive economy behind Switzerland for three years running.

The WEF lauded Singapore for having more efficient markets, stronger institutions, a sounder financial market, and better infrastructure and education.

In addition, the Lion City has been perched on top of the World Bank's league table as the most business-friendly economy for the eighth straight year, and also boasts the world's best airport and its second-busiest container port after Shanghai.

"As long as Singapore remains on or near the top of these positive global indicators, it will still remain attractive to MNCs and keep its position as the key financial and business hub in Asia," said CIMB regional economist Song Seng Wun.

"Singapore still remains a magnet for talent," added Bank of America Merrill Lynch's Dr Chua.

"The rising costs have not deterred MNCs and companies (which) want to come here."

Adding value

ONE major point in its favour is Singapore's persistent positioning of itself as a safe and sophisticated gateway to a rising Asia.

This has encouraged a host of multinational giants to expand operations here recently, despite higher costs.

In the field of energy, ExxonMobil expanded its vast chemical plant on Jurong Island to the tune of an estimated US$5 billion (S$6.34 billion).

Last year, Royal Dutch Shell relocated its global integrated gas business headquarters from Holland to Singapore, and Chevron shifted its Asia-Pacific headquarters from California to Singapore, to be closer to the Asia-Pacific market.

Cheaper is also not always better for business. In industries such as oil rig building and ship repair, Singapore is still thriving despite foreign labour constraints and rising competition from cheaper alternatives such as China and South Korea.

That is because Singapore's yards boast their own competitive edge - on-time delivery and costs that are kept within budget. These translate into substantial cost savings for its clients.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch's Dr Chua believes that there will be a reversal of the strong-Singdollar currency effect in the next few years, as countries like the United States and Britain unwind their massive money- printing regimes, thus raising living and business costs in those developed nations.

Meanwhile, Singapore must continue down its current economic restructuring journey to ensure its value-add keeps up with its rising costs.

"We need to get productivity up as much as possible to create value," said Barclays' Mr Leong.

Ultimately, Singapore's natural constraints mean it cannot avoid being an expensive country.

But the key is to make sure it is not more expensive than necessary.


Parliament Highlights - 10 Mar 2014

$
0
0
Committee of Supply Debate: MOE, MND, MCI







MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT

Deals not decided on COV under new HDB resale rules
By Janice Heng, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

CASH over valuation (COV) will take a back seat in Housing Board resale deals, as buyers and sellers must now agree on a price before seeking an official valuation.

This is in line with the private market, where negotiations are "rightly" based on recent transaction prices, said National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan yesterday.

Previously, HDB resale sellers usually sought a valuation, then negotiated with buyers over how much more - or less - to pay.

These cash premiums or COVs caused unhappiness when they hit record highs, with the median COV peaking at $38,000 in mid 2011. Some units fetched six-figure premiums.

But they have since fallen. The median COV hit zero last month, and more deals have been closing below valuation.

The cooling resale market makes this a good time for change, said Government Parliamentary Committee for National Development chairman Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) yesterday. Mr Khaw agreed.

Now, a price must be agreed upon and the Option To Purchase (OTP) granted, before a buyer can get a valuation from the HDB. This will "restore the original intention of valuation, which is to help buyers get a housing loan", said Mr Khaw.


The change kicked in at 5pm yesterday. Sellers can no longer get valuations from the HDB.

But existing OTPs and valuations will be honoured. Buyers will also get 21 calendar days to exercise the OTP, up from 14 before.

HDB has also started publishing daily figures on resale transactions rather than fortnightly, as was previously the case.

"Negotiating on price rather than COV will take some getting used to," said Mr Khaw. "However, it is a useful move for long-term market stability."

Experts are optimistic that it will achieve this aim. Said PropNex CEO Mohamed Ismail Gafoor: "If people can come to terms with the new norm... I think we can have more sustainable growth and not unrealistic price rises."

The change came on the back of a cooler market, dampened by measures like home loan curbs and a higher supply of new flats.

Views differ on whether cooling measures should stay, noted Mr Khaw, but his take is that the market is not yet at the optimal state. "With prices still rising, though tepidly, in some market segments, it is premature to withdraw these measures."

The ministry will also listen to the people, with engagement exercises this year similar to Our Singapore Conversation.

Said Mr Khaw: "I intend to further engage Singaporeans on the relationships and values we hold dear as a society, and how housing policies can better support them."







Focus on meeting housing needs of seniors, needy folk
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THE Ministry of National Development (MND) is studying a new reverse mortgage scheme to help seniors better convert the flats they own into cash, said its minister Khaw Boon Wan yesterday.

The move is part of a key focus this year on meeting the housing needs of the elderly, the poor and the vulnerable, he told the House when mapping out his ministry's budget and policies for the year.

"Our priority is to help them retire comfortably with security" and so, it is timely to revisit reverse mortgage as an extra option for the elderly, said Mr Khaw.

"MND has begun a serious study of this option. We hope to formulate a practical scheme for our seniors," he added.

A reverse mortgage is a financial scheme in which flat owners can use their home as security for a loan that will be dispensed in regular cash payouts.

Insurer NTUC Income previously offered such a mortgage scheme but it did not take off, Mr Khaw noted. Only 24 households took it up between the time it was introduced in 2006 and when it was scrapped in 2008.

But elderly folk asked for such a scheme last year during Our Singapore Conversation sessions, as they preferred to live in the same home and also retain it as an asset to bequeath to their children, the minister added.

The Government is also reviewing the Enhanced Lease Buyback Scheme, in which elderly households sell part of their flats' leases to HDB and use the net proceeds to top up their Central Provident Fund Retirement Accounts.

Currently, only those living in three-room or smaller flats qualify, but the scheme may be extended to larger flats.

It is also comforting for many elderly folk to have their children and grandchildren living nearby, said Mr Khaw, acknowledging the calls of Ms Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) and Dr Teo Ho Pin (Bukit Panjang) to build more studio and multi-generation flats.

While it is not difficult to do so in non-mature towns where new flats are still being built, it is harder in mature towns with fewer opportunities for new units, Mr Khaw said.

"Nevertheless, I want to push the limits to enable extended families to live near one another," he added, without elaborating on how it will be done.


Another move for the elderly is that individual HDB flats are to be made more comfortable for them under the Enhancement for Active Seniors scheme, which is being reviewed.

The scheme subsidises the retrofitting of individual flats with elder-friendly equipment such as grab bars, ramps and slip-resistant bathrooms.

Its review, to be completed in a few months, looks at lowering the minimum qualifying age and subsidising more items.

Summing up his new focus, Mr Khaw said: "This year, I want to do more for the elderly, the vulnerable groups, and help extended families live near one another."

The new emphasis is possible because the property market is stabilising and the backlog of newlyweds needing their first home has been cleared, he said. As a result, vulnerable groups, such as divorcees with children, single parents and former convicts, can receive more attention, he added.

Ms Lee and Mr Seah Kian Peng (Marine Parade GRC) had shone a spotlight on vulnerable families.

Many are victims of circumstances and deserve society's support, said Mr Seah, who suggested that community development councils' input be sought when an applicant's housing needs are being evaluated. Ms Lee also suggested that the MND remove all forms of waiting periods for divorcees with children.

Both suggestions will be studied, said Mr Khaw: "Meanwhile, we will continue to exercise flexibility and compassion whenever we receive worthy cases."

The MND is on track to reach 60,000 rental flats by 2017.

Applicants now wait seven months for a rental flat, down from 21 months in 2008.








Per-minute parking rates for motorbikes
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

PARKING rates for motorcycles will be charged on a per-minute basis, instead of at a flat rate, to help delivery riders who use multiple carparks in a day.

These will apply to Housing Board (HDB) and Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) carparks with electronic parking systems, said National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan yesterday.

It will be of "practical help to the lower income, particularly those who work hard to better their lives", he said in Parliament.

He was responding to Ms Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC), who had highlighted a problem faced by dispatch and delivery riders who are "generally low income".

Many choose to indiscriminately park their motorcycles at void decks or on the roadside, instead of chalking up high parking fees when they use many different carparks in a day, she noted.

"My residents find them a hassle," she said.

Today, motorcyclists are charged a flat rate of 65 cents for either day or night parking at any one HDB and URA carpark.

"This is inexpensive but those who use multiple carparks in a day, such as dispatch or delivery riders, may still chalk up considerable parking charges. Apparently, they bear such cost, and not their employers," Mr Khaw noted.

This was why he accepted Ms Lee's suggestion to revise electronic parking system rates for motorcyclists and charge them on a per-minute basis instead, he said.

There will also be an enhanced season parking ticket so motorcyclists can park in all HDB and URA carparks for a flat monthly fee. HDB and URA will "work out the details and implement them as soon as possible", he added.







Facelifts for three more HDB towns
By Janice Heng, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THREE more Housing Board towns will get facelifts under a scheme to make new and old estates more vibrant.

The Ministry of National Development is choosing these towns, and will announce them in a few months, said Senior Minister of State Lee Yi Shyan.

The first two phases of the Remaking Our Heartland initiative involved projects in Punggol, Yishun, Dawson, Hougang, East Coast and Jurong Lake.

These included wider pavements and park connectors, upgraded town centres, new community spaces and town plazas, and heritage trails and landmarks.


He also gave updates on other measures to upgrade existing towns. One is the Home Improvement Programme, for works such as repairing spalling concrete and upgrading the electrical supply.

This will be sped up, something Ms Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) had called for.

The programme will be offered to 35,000 homes a year, up from 28,000 previously, said Mr Lee.

This year, there will also be another 14 projects under the Neighbourhood Renewal Programme, for features such as covered linkways and playgrounds.

And even as the Lift Upgrading Programme ends this year, lifts will be installed in more multi-storey carparks.

Works in 73 such carparks will end this year, and will start for another 400 carparks this year and the next.

As for new towns, the first Build-to-Order projects in Tampines North and Bidadari will be launched this year and next year, respectively.

The Tampines North project will have 1,500 flats, including 50 three-generation units for multi-generational families.





Ministry to seek ideas on protecting Pulau Ubin
Consultation exercise will focus on nature, heritage, education aspects
By Melody Zaccheus, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

LOVERS of Pulau Ubin will be asked to give their ideas on how the popular island can be protected and enhanced.

The Government hopes that a wide range of people, from island residents to interest groups and experts, will give their views in an upcoming consultation announced in Parliament yesterday.


The 10.2 sq km island, about the size of Changi Airport, hit the headlines in April last year when a notice by the Housing Board led islanders to believe that 22 households would be evicted so an "adventure park" could be built.

The Government clarified shortly after that the island will be kept in a "rustic state for as long as possible".

Ubin's population has dwindled from 2,000 between the 1950s and early 1970s to just 38 today, but more than 300,000 visitors throng the place every year.

Mr Lee told Parliament yesterday that preserving and enhancing Pulau Ubin's rustic character and natural environment while sensitively providing access for the public require help from all Singaporeans.

He noted how the National Parks Board (NParks) has worked with researchers and nature groups to study its biodiversity.

In 2003, for instance, NParks conducted a survey with the help of butterfly enthusiasts and documented more than 100 species.

The enthusiasts - who call themselves ButterflyCircle - advised NParks to plant Butterfly Hill, a knoll made out of wasteland left over from Ubin's granite quarrying industry. The knoll is home to over 130 species today.

Mr Lee, who will be leading the project and the conversation, said the ministry will build on these efforts, adding that it will "consult and engage widely". More details on the project will be announced later this year.

During the debate, Nominated MP (NMP) Faizah Jamal asked for more to be done to conserve places such as Pulau Ubin and Chek Jawa. She also called for a national nature conservation policy where, among other things, there is a fair distribution of nature areas across the island.

Nature groups and wildlife enthusiasts said the Pulau Ubin initiative is a step in the right direction. For years, it has lacked a central body to coordinate efforts to enhance its green and rustic character, said the Nature Society (Singapore).

"This process will allow the Government to take into consideration the multiple views on what Ubin can grow to become - like a biodiversity hub or an ecotourism site," said society vice-president Leong Kwok Peng.

Madam Kamariah Abdullah, 54, who opens her 100-year-old Malay kampung on the island a few times a month to visitors, hopes the authorities will also consider conserving the kampung homes. "The kampung vibe and the people living here are integral to the island's identity," she said.







Higher pre-fab requirements
By Rachel Au-Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

DEVELOPERS who bid for government land sale sites from the second half of the year will have to meet a certain level of prefabrication, the Government said yesterday.

In line with the push for higher productivity in this year's Budget speech, those tendering for residential sites must now use only pre-fabricated bathroom units.

And for industrial sites, there will be a minimum "pre-fabrication percentage" requirement, with the quantum to be announced later.

For non-government land sale sites, developers must also raise building standards from September, including more pre-fabricated components and labour-efficient methods.

The Building Construction Authority (BCA) will enforce the rules by issuing stop-work orders, on top of existing measures such as fines.

Encouraging the use of pre-fabrication technology has become an increasing priority, BCA chief executive John Keung said at a briefing last week. "Buildings can be completed faster and with more labour efficiency. As they are assembled off-site in a controlled environment, we can expect less noise and dust, and minimise mistakes," he said.



To aid the change, the Construction Productivity and Capability Fund will get a $30 million top-up, bringing the total to $280 million.

Launched in 2010, the fund has already committed about $160 million to 4,000 companies.

A second five-year tranche of funding is in the works, said Senior Minister of State for National Development Lee Yi Shyan.

To meet the anticipated increased demand for pre-fab-ricated units, BCA will have more land tenders for "pre-fab hubs", he said.

There will be 10 such factories by 2020.

At the same time, the public sector will take the lead in adopting new technologies.

Nanyang Technological University will be the first local developer to adopt two new methods for more complex buildings.

One of them will be used in a new high-rise hostel, where rooms will be built in a factory, and completed units transported to and assembled at the site.







Food waste a big concern: Maliki
By Grace Chua, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE needs to cut food waste, and its food industry should share resources such as procurement and equipment to improve food security.

These were the recommendations of an inter-ministry committee formed in 2012 to tackle Singapore's food security risks and vulnerabilities, Minister of State for National Development Maliki Osman said in Parliament yesterday.

Some companies are already cooperating, he said. For example, the Restaurant Association of Singapore set up an online portal that allows restaurants to automate procurement processes, and so far, 62 restaurants have signed up. But food waste from households, food manufacturing and catering, retail, malls and other sources is still a concern, he said.

"In 2012, about 703,200 tonnes of food waste was generated in Singapore. This is equivalent to, on average, an individual wasting about 650 bowls of rice per year."

So, the National Environment Agency, Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority, and Spring Singapore are developing guidelines for food manufacturers and retailers to manage food waste, while the NEA and AVA are "looking into developing a comprehensive public education outreach programme" on food waste targeted at schools, the community and retailers.

Dr Maliki also said that diversifying Singapore's food sources "will continue to be our core strategy" for food security.

Still, Singapore produces some of its fish, leafy vegetables and eggs locally. So, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority will pay 70 per cent of restocking costs for fish farms which suffered losses during a spate of mass fish deaths last month.

Dr Maliki also said the AVA will review and strengthen the current alert system that warns fish farmers of adverse environmental conditions, and "work with the fish farms to develop a more sustainable sea-based farming system so that they are less susceptible to changes in environmental conditions".

For those keen on small-scale community farming, Dr Maliki said all new multi-storey carparks in HDB estates will get facilities such as planter beds and irrigation systems for community farms.





New online guide on buying foreign property
By Janice Heng, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

SINGAPOREANS looking to buy property overseas can get advice later this month from an online guide drawn up by the Government.

The Council for Estate Agencies will launch the guide to give some general tips to people thinking of doing so, National Development Minister (MND) Khaw Boon Wan said yesterday.

"Do read it, exercise due diligence, caution and good judgment before you invest," he said.

He noted that as Singapore reins in its property market, some Singaporeans have turned to investing in foreign properties.

It is a trend that worries Mr Seah Kian Peng (Marine Parade GRC) and Mr Liang Eng Hwa (Holland-Bukit Timah GRC).

Mr Seah hoped MND could provide more public education on the topic, while Mr Liang asked if measures could be taken to rein in excessive speculation by Singaporeans in overseas property.

Replying, Mr Khaw said: "The Government does not interfere with such investment decisions." But he added that he shared their concerns.

Investing in foreign property comes with added risks and complexities, as the legal and regulatory frameworks in other countries are different, he noted.

"And they may change suddenly when domestic politics push for a change in policies," Mr Khaw added.

The council will also step up efforts to regulate estate agents who are marketing overseas developments to buyers in Singapore.

Mr Khaw urged people to report any marketing by unlicensed foreign estate agents to the council so it can investigate and take appropriate action.

Estate agents themselves will also get guidance, to ensure that they "adopt professional practices when they market foreign properties," said the council's director of licensing and investigation, Ms Purnima Shantilal.

The council will introduce practice guidelines on marketing foreign properties.

These will give details on estate agents' responsibilities, and what they must do in preparation for marketing such projects.







Making all the right turns in housing
By Peh Shing Huei, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

IT IS not often that a Cabinet minister cites the lyrics of a pop song in Parliament.

So, when National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan quoted a line from Stephanie Sun's Mandopop hit To Meet (yu jian) yesterday, a few giggles could be heard in the House. "Turn left, turn right, go forward (xiang zuo, xiang you, xiang qiankan)," he chimed, referring to the need for caution in Singapore's housing policies.

The lightheartedness which Mr Khaw afforded himself was understandable and more importantly, well-deserved.

As he pointed out in his speech, he had to face only 27 "cuts" or questions from MPs this year, compared to the 40 he "suffered" - his words - last year.

Clearly, housing is cooling as a political hot potato. Or, again in Mr Khaw's words, the market is "turning the corner".


The high resale prices and the supply crunch for new flats - the double irritants which had irked so many prior to the 2011 General Election - have eased.

The HDB Resale Price Index turned negative last year, the first time in eight years. Median cash-over-valuation (COV) has hit zero.

More than 77,000 Build-to-Order flats have been launched in the past three years. Some 14,000 units were completed last year, and twice that number will be handed over this year.

Much mileage has been chalked up by the MND in the past three years, and the people behind the policies can be proud of their work.

Many MPs thumped the armrests of their seats at the end of Mr Khaw's speech in approval.

But exercising typical caution, Mr Khaw is not celebrating yet. Hence, cooling measures remain in place.

The road ahead is not straight forward, as he said, and many more turns will arise. For instance, the new reduced role of the COV will be watched closely for its impact on the market.

The job is not done. After all, the title of Mr Khaw's speech was "negotiating the turn".

But the reward at the end may be worth it.

As the words in Sun's song, which come after the line quoted by Mr Khaw, say: "Love will only come after a few turns."





Khaw, Zen and the art of motorcycle parking charges
Change demonstrates not just good government, but also a caring one
By Chua Mui Hoong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

IF THE late Mr Lim Kim San is credited with having "broken the back" of Singapore's housing problem in the 1960s, Mr Khaw Boon Wan can be said to be the man who is whipping today's HDB market back into shape.

The National Development Minister took on the portfolio in May 2011 when there was a shortage of new Housing Board (HDB) flats, forcing buyers into the resale market, and spiking prices. Buyers paid high cash-over-valuation (COV) amounts as sellers would sell only at prices higher than the valuation of their flats.


In one fell swoop, he abolished the COV scheme. Rather than use valuation reports to negotiate prices as now, buyers and sellers of HDB resale flats will get access to daily transacted prices. Only after a price is agreed on and the deal signed can the buyer get a valuation price for the flat.

By so doing, Mr Khaw wants to use market information to influence market behaviour. He is repeating what he did in 2005 when, as Health Minister, he ordered the release of bill sizes of hospitals and, later, average lengths of stay for common procedures. This gave patients immediate access to transparent price information. Over a few years, competition led to hospitals lowering prices.

Presumably, the hope is that access to nearly real-time price data will lead buyer and seller of resale flats to come to a more realistic price equilibrium.

But will it do so?

In a bearish market, this information is likely to lead to more caution. Some property experts say the move creates uncertainty which will lead buyers to bid more conservatively for their flats.

But my fear is that in a rising market, prices can creep up by the day, so there is every possibility that such a system will fuel price spikes in a bull market.

Right now, valuations in a rising market serve as a check on prices. If a flat is valued at $400,000 and sells for $500,000, the buyer knows he is paying a premium. Even though the HDB website does not show each flat's COV, the agents will know and will inform other buyers about prevailing COVs for units sold recently. As few buyers are willing to pay very high COVs, a single high transaction has limited ability to influence prices of other flats, if the COV is transparent.

In the new system, the data will only show a transacted price of $500,000, which could lead other buyers into thinking that is the "reasonable" price, not the "premium" price.

The HDB housing market is a fickle creature that twitches easily to government tweaks. Government policies over the years have had a major impact on its ups and downs. Given the already cooling market, hopefully Mr Khaw's move will kill just COVs and not the entire HDB resale market.

Having tackled the big piece of the housing problem - building new flats for young couples - Mr Khaw said he will focus next on making housing more inclusive, for the elderly, singles and "vulnerable families" such as single parents and divorcees.

Any decision to, say, permit unwed mothers aged below 35 and their children to buy subsidised HDB flats, or give priority for new HDB flats to divorcees with children who are left homeless after the divorcing couple sell the matrimonial home, will be highly controversial.

Here, Mr Khaw demonstrated his consummate politician's skills when he said: "I intend to further engage Singaporeans on the relationships and values we hold dear as a society, and how housing policies can better support them."

Changes to values-driven housing policies need public buy-in.

Not so market-sensitive COV changes, which are best made blitzkrieg style, without public consultation.

Another kind of decision can be made by fiat, and it is one I am glad Mr Khaw made.

MP Lee Bee Wah raised the plight of motorcycle dispatch riders who end up parking their motorbikes haphazardly to avoid having to pay parking fees when they do deliveries.

Ms Lee noted that riders, who are not well-paid, bear the cost of such fees, not their employers. As motorbike riders are charged 65 cents per entry into HDB and Urban Redevelopment Authority carparks, she suggested having per-minute parking fees which would reduce their cost.

One way a minister might deal with such requests is to reiterate the virtues of a flat rate, mention the impractical nature of changing to per-minute charging for all HDB and URA carparks, and add a pious hope that employers will do the right thing and reimburse riders the parking costs.

Instead, Mr Khaw took up Ms Lee's suggestion on per-minute charging for bikes. He went further, saying there will be a season parking ticket for motorbikes which can be used across all HDB carparks. And, he promised, rates will be affordable.

Amid the other announcements yesterday - the Ministry of Communications and Information's new heterogeneous network (HetNet) that will let users move seamlessly from one Wi-Fi or mobile service provider to another; and new HDB flats coming up in Tampines North, and in Bidadari - it was the change in motorbike parking fee that I liked most.

All the above require good government. But the motorbike rule change requires a caring one.

When an MP cares enough to raise an issue in Parliament and has a specific proposal on how to deal with it, and the minister cares enough to make a change, even at some cost and trouble to his ministry, I would chalk it up as one win for responsive government. And, of course, such responsive changes that improve people's lot must not be too few and far between.







MINISTRY OF COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION

Automatic switching of wireless networks mooted
By Irene Tham, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

SWITCHING automatically to another Wi-Fi or mobile network if one telco goes down or is too slow may become a reality here.

This idea of a nationwide heterogeneous network (HetNet) was mooted in Parliament yesterday as one way Singapore could take advantage of the growing IT and media sector convergence.


Singapore could be among the first countries to adopt HetNet, after Holland, which rolled out a system after a 2012 outage of operator Vodafone's mobile services affected about a quarter of its five million users for days.

A 14-member committee headed by Mr Koh Boon Hwee, chairman of private equity fund Credence, is behind a masterplan which will be released later this month for public consultation.

The new "Smart Nation" masterplan will expand on the previous Intelligent Nation 2015 plan - conceived in 2005 - that focused on boosting adoption of IT.

Dr Yaacob said it also includes plans to make home-based health care available more widely through the use of sensors.

"Sensors can help stable chronic disease patients self-monitor their conditions in the comfort of their own homes, and receive health-care services only when necessary," he noted. For example, floor mats embedded with sensors can help patients regularly monitor their weight.

Dr Yaacob said computational thinking is also one of the key ideas proposed in the masterplan. In Britain, for instance, computing will be included in the national curriculum from September for children aged five and above.

Specifically, coding will be introduced in schools here via enrichment programmes, competitions and infocommunications clubs to teach fundamental programming concepts as part of a national Code@SG movement.

The ministry is also looking into revamping infocomm clubs in schools and increasing students' interests in computational learning by playing computer games.

But these ideas are still in the early stages. "Considerable work remains, as the masterplanning process will only conclude next year," said Dr Yaacob.





More protection for pay-TV customers
New rules proposed to address unfair penalties, extra charges in contracts
By Irene Tham, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

CONSUMERS may soon be able to cancel their pay-TV subscriptions without paying a penalty if the service provider changes programming or pricing.

The new rules proposed by the Media Development Authority (MDA) aim to address the problem of one-sided contracts that leave the consumer at a disadvantage.

They will cover instances where pay-TV operators impose higher fees or remove channels or important programmes while contracts are still in force. These are situations the MDA may deem "detrimental" to subscribers.

Communications and Information Minister Yaacob Ibrahim said in Parliament yesterday there are "concerns" over unfair practices.

Pay-TV providers changing the terms of contracts that have already been activated has long been the bane of consumers, an area highlighted by Mr Vikram Nair (Sembawang GRC).


Many irate customers have written to The Straits Times Forum Page in the past three years to complain about being forced to pay more for fewer or unwanted programmes, among other gripes.

Reader Simon Goh complained in a letter published on Nov 10, 2012, that SingTel removed Champions League football from the Ultimate Sports Package he bought in 2011 and then asked him to pay more to watch the games.

Two other rules to tackle complaints are also being considered as part of the MDA's Media Code review, Parliament heard. One is to prohibit telcos from forcing subscribers to upgrade non-pay-TV services when they want to alter only their pay-TV package. "Occasionally, subscribers are required to upgrade their non-pay-TV services, for example, broadband services, when they change their pay-TV services. These upgrades are typically not necessary to support the changes in the pay-TV services," Dr Yaacob said.

Real estate agent Wong Peng Khuen, 61, said he was forced by SingTel in 2012 to pay more to upgrade his fixed broadband plan to qualify for its Champions League pay-TV package.

Mr Wong, who complained in a letter to the ST Forum Page on Jan 22 last year, told The Straits Times yesterday that he applauded the move, saying the rule was "long overdue". "Pay-TV operators should not have been allowed to do this; broadband and pay-TV are two different things."

Operators will also be required to highlight important contractual terms such as the expiry of promotional prices or early termination charges before customers sign up.

The MDA will consult the public on these proposals next month.

A SingTel spokesman said yesterday it tries to minimise customer inconvenience but its contracts with content providers are not always renewed. "(When) our content contracts... are not extended, we always try to find a replacement that is equally appealing."

StarHub said that when it raised the price of its basic pay-TV package to $33.17 from $27.82, customers still in a contract were not affected.

Since 2012, all pay-TV contracts have been capped at two years. Early cancellation charges have also been pro-rated, so the closer a customer is to the end of his contract, the lower the cancellation fee due. Pay-TV contracts were previously not regulated.







Free switch to digital TV for low-income by Sept
By Kenny Chee, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THE gadgets needed to watch MediaCorp's digital television programmes will be installed for free in low-income households, under a scheme to be launched by September.

The Government will pick up the bill for the digital set-top box, indoor antenna as well as the installation of the equipment.


About 160,000 to 170,000 Singaporean households are expected to qualify for it. One group that will qualify automatically is Singaporeans living in one- or two-room rental flats, or on ComCare programmes, including the Public Assistance Scheme.

Broadcaster MediaCorp began its digital transmission of TV programmes last December in several estates, including Bukit Batok, and will extend it to the rest of Singapore in the next two to three years. It is expected to discontinue transmitting in analogue format by 2020.

Meanwhile, homes given the the digital set-top box and antenna, which together cost about $130, will not have any interruption to their TV watching as these can also be used with analogue TV sets.

Families that are not included automatically can apply for the free package if their household monthly income is $1,900 and below, or per capita income is at most $600. Households with no income could qualify as well if the annual value of their home is at most $13,000.

But one mandatory condition for getting the free package is that at least one family member is a Singaporean.

Families with a pay-TV subscription or a TV set that already supports the digital format that MediaCorp is using will not be eligible for the package.

Dr Yaacob said the benefit of digital-TV signals is that they can be sent more efficiently than analogue ones, giving higher-quality images and sound. The move to digital format will also free up radio frequencies for new and better mobile services to be offered.











$10 million fund to boost idea creation, start-ups
IDA initiative includes test labs, programmes for youth and firms
By Kash Cheong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

A $10 MILLION war chest has been set up to give youngsters an opportunity to tinker with the latest technology and help start-ups grow beyond Singapore.


Two facilities will be set up, one at Mapletree Business City in Pasir Panjang, and the other at the National Design Centre in Rochor, over the next two months, Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said yesterday.

The labs will boast 3D printers and laser cutters, allowing budding talent to build prototypes, test new ideas and speed up the development of new products and services.

Enrichment programmes exposing students to new technologies will also be organised to promote a culture of building and experimenting with technology from a young age.

At the Mapletree lab, products from local technology start-ups can be tested to see if they are feasible for a government context.

The 300 sq m lab will also be used for a new accreditation programme to help start-ups establish their credentials and increase their visibility to potential buyers.

The IDA will look at a company's financial status and its product's functionality, among other criteria, before accrediting it. Details of the application process will be announced later.

Meanwhile, the 400 sq m National Design Centre lab is being envisioned as a meeting point for technology and media professionals, as well as designers, to collaborate on new products such as sensors and games.

During the debate on his ministry's budget, Dr Yaacob also said the IDA will work with industry partners to introduce accelerator programmes from this year. The schemes will allow promising companies to secure early funding and grow to excel globally.

Dr Yaacob said the statutory board has already partnered private sector firm Joyful Frog Digital Incubator (JFDI) for mentorship programmes that may connect start-ups to a network of investors for funding, and teach them how to develop customer-centric products.

JFDI and the investment arm of IDA, Infocomm Investments Private Limited (IIPL), could put $25,000 to $50,000 into each start-up, in exchange for a small equity stake, the IDA said.

It added that some start-ups may receive further investment from IIPL, and at least 90 per cent of each cohort from the accelerator programme is expected to set up significant operations here.

Start-ups and technology makers applauded the new initiatives.

Mr Bong Jun Hao, 23, recently learnt to program mini-computers, but is looking for more mentorship. He said: "The IDA Labs is the perfect platform. It connects me with mentors and designers to build well-designed tech products in future."





Groups already promoting local films
By Kenny Chee, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THE roles of a national film centre are already being performed by various organisations, and the Government will focus on strengthening each of these functions, Senior Minister of State for Communications and Information Lawrence Wong said yesterday.

He was responding to Nominated MP Janice Koh's suggestion for an independent centre to facilitate audiences' appreciation of film and promote stories, film culture and heritage.

She cited a lack of awareness of local films among Singaporeans and the need to take local cinema to the next stage of growth as reasons.

The idea was also supported by local film-makers Anthony Chen, Boo Junfeng, Jasmine Ng and Tan Pin Pin, who issued a joint statement yesterday.

Ms Irene Ng (Tampines GRC) had also suggested a centralised film body, which could be an existing agency, during the debate on the Ministry of Communications and Information's budget.

Mr Wong, in his reply, said a national film centre would, among other functions, typically showcase local films and hold a film festival.


The other key function of curation and promotion of local films is undertaken by the MDA's Singapore Film Commission, he said.

Mr Wong acknowledged that there were merits to centralising a film centre's different functions - others include archiving and curating - under one entity. The MDA is open to reviewing this, he added.

But focusing on strengthening each function was "a more important priority than to get bogged down with organisational structures", Mr Wong said.





NLB to open corner for pre-schoolers
By Kash Cheong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014


Speaking at the Committee of Supply debate yesterday, Minister of State for Education and Communications and Information Sim Ann said the corner - dubbed the Early Literacy Library - will feature more than 60,000 curated books and audio-visual items in the four official languages which cater to children aged six and below.

Current libraries have some books that cater to pre-schoolers, but nowhere on a scale as large as the Early Literacy Library. Materials will be further classified into two groups - one for toddlers until the age of three, and the other for those aged four to six.

One parent, Ms Sandy Low, 35, is excited about the new initiative. "Good Chinese books for young kids are hard to come by. I hope to find more Chinese books for my four-year-old so I can teach her the language at a young age," said the teacher.

This is part of NLB's initiatives to reach out to a wider audience.

Two other libraries, the new Library@Orchard and the revamped Sembawang library, will also be opening later this year. The latter will be fitted out with activities and materials to promote parent-child interactions.

Mr Arthur Fong (West Coast GRC) said that while Singapore's library network has expanded, more can be done to reach out to the low-income and disadvantaged.

In response, Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said the NLB will be introducing two new mini mobile libraries to take books to the community. These "Mollies" vans will each have about 1,500 books and will reach out to more than 160 organisations, including special needs schools, orphanages and welfare homes.

NLB has also been reaching out to seniors who find it tough to travel to the library.

Under the Read@Community scheme, the NLB will help community groups such as senior activity centres and community centres set up their own reading corners, close to the people they serve. There are already 22 of these reading corners.

NLB has also partnered the Early Childhood Development Agency to introduce reading activity toolkits for teachers and parents to help them start reading to their children as early as possible.







Committee set up to improve translation
By Kash Cheong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

A NATIONAL committee has been set up to improve the quality of translation in government agencies, in a move to avoid such glaring errors as "Hungary" Ghost Festival (Hungry Ghost Festival) and "Bust" Basah (Bras Basah Road).


The chairman is Ms Sim Ann, Minister of State for Communications and Information, as well as Education.

It was established at the beginning of this month.

In announcing its establishment yesterday, Ms Sim said it will aim, among other things, to help set up a code of practice to ensure public agencies pay attention to translated material before releasing it to the public.

Its formation will "signal professional respect for skilful translators who understand the local context and are able to meet the public sector's requirements for accuracy and speed", she added in her reply to MPs.

Among these MPs were Mr Baey Yam Keng (Tampines GRC) and Mr Low Thia Khiang (Aljunied GRC).

They urged the Government to ensure it could communicate effectively to those who knew only their mother tongue, many of whom are in the pioneer generation.

Replying, Ms Sim said a resource panel will be set up for each of the official languages: Chinese, Malay and Tamil.

These panels will support the national committee's initiatives, standardise translation of terms and advise on the appropriateness of the terms adopted by the media and government agencies.

The committee will, among other things, also look at nurturing the next generation of translators.

This includes giving scholarships to young translators.

Forming the national committee is a critical first step in upgrading the sector and making it professional, said Mr Tan Dan Feng, executive director of translation company Interlexis.

Added Mr A. Palaniappan, Parliament's head specialist of languages, English/Tamil: "For a country that is multi-lingual and which has a bilingual education policy , the setting up of a committee of such a nature is long overdue."





Release of govt papers: Guide is good governance
By Tham Yuen-c, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE should not release government records to encourage transparency for transparency's sake.

Instead, the goal of releasing such information should be to encourage good governance, Senior Minister of State for Communications and Information Lawrence Wong said. This is why only some Cabinet papers, such as those that do not touch on internal security, will be declassified.

He was responding to Workers' Party MP Low Thia Khiang (Aljunied GRC), who called for the first tranche of Cabinet papers to be made available to the public.

Noting that countries such as Israel and United Kingdom have laws mandating the release of government papers after 30 years, Mr Low said it would be timely for such a law here.

After almost 50 years of independence, there must be some Cabinet papers that are no longer considered sensitive, he said. Releasing them can also encourage historical investigation and writing, which will foster a stronger sense of national identity.

Mr Wong noted that government records are deemed part of the public archives after 25 years. But classified papers relating to national defence, foreign relations and internal security, as well as documents which may be bound by confidentiality obligations, are excluded.

He said some countries had "gone somewhat overboard" with freedom of information laws, and open access had not always led to better governance. In some cases, it had instead led to more opaqueness and avoidance of records.

"Policy papers or Cabinet papers which are written which may not have full information and full details because the civil servants writing them know that these will be made available," he said.





MP suggests having single govt spokesman
By Tham Yuen-c, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

THE question of whether the Government should have just one spok-esman was raised by Mr Baey Yam Keng (Tampines GRC) yesterday.

Mr Baey, a full-time MP who was managing director of public relations firm Hill and Knowlton, said it may be easier for the public and media to deal with one government spokesman instead of having to go to various ministries when their questions cut across many areas.

Citing China and the United States, he said having one spokesman makes their governments more accessible.

Minister of State for Communications and Information Sim Ann said the Government wants the information given to be timely and com-prehensive, so a spokesman has to be very familiar with the subject.

Workers' Party MP Sylvia Lim (Aljunied GRC) later asked about the Government's chief of government communications. The post is held by Mr Janadas Devan.

She wanted to know if there was any conflict of interest as Mr Janadas also heads the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), which does research on governance. "This dual role... is not quite a desirable state of affairs," she said.

Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said it was very clear the two roles were very different. The Government had considered the matter seriously before it hired Mr Janadas, he said, adding that the man had done his job well for the past two years or so. "We don't see any conflict," he said.





MINISTRY OF EDUCATION

Presence of foreign students is beneficial: Heng
By Sandra Davie, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

SINGAPOREANS develop a greater understanding of the wider world by having foreigners studying here, Education Minister Heng Swee Keat said yesterday.

He told Parliament that mixing with foreigners helps local students learn how to work with people of other races and cultures.

Foreign students who go on to work here also augment Singapore's manpower supply and help local companies seeking to expand overseas, he said.

Companies can tap these foreign students who understand the "Singapore way of doing things" and can promote the Singapore brand overseas, he said.

Citing his experience when he was a civil servant at the Trade and Industry Ministry, he noted that when he travelled in the region negotiating trade agreements, he met many people who had studied in Singapore institutions. "There is such a reservoir of goodwill and friendship and trust that allows us to do things together," he said in his reply to Mr Png Eng Huat (Hougang).

The opposition MP had asked about the Ministry of Education (MOE) tightening the process for tracking foreign students to ensure they fulfil their bond obligations after graduating.

His question was among the last before the MOE's budget was passed, after a debate that had started on Friday afternoon and which covered issues such as further help for disabled students.

In his reply to Mr Png, Mr Heng also noted that Singapore was not the only country seeking to draw talented students from abroad.

China has given several Singaporeans scholarships to study in its universities.

Foreign students studying at a polytechnic or university on a MOE grant must work in a Singapore-based company for three years after they graduate.

Mr Heng said 80 per cent either start work immediately or apply to the MOE to start serving their bond at a later date. The rest are not necessarily bond defaulters, he added. For example, some could still be looking for a job.

He also said the Government tracks foreign students once they graduate and will pursue them for liquidated damages if they default on their obligations.


HDB, URA carparks to charge motorcyclists per minute parking fees

$
0
0
By Sumita Sreedharan, TODAY, 10 Mar 2014

Motorcyclists will soon be able to save on their parking expenditure if they park at Housing and Development Board (HDB) and Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) car parks, with motorcycle parking charges set to be revised in the second half of this year.


Motorcyclists are currently given a 10-minute grace period at EPS car parks before they are charged.

The HDB had earlier said that EPS car parks will be rolled out progressively at all suitable car parks within the next few years. Cars are already being charged on a per-minute basis at such car parks.

The move aims to help motorcyclists who use multiple car parks in a day, such as despatch or delivery riders, who may chalk up considerable parking charges. Authorities said that the revised parking charges will not exceed what the motorcyclists currently have to pay.

The Ministry of National Development will also introduce an enhanced Season Parking Ticket (E-SPT) that will allow motorcyclists to park in all HDB and URA car parks for a flat monthly fee. The HDB and URA are working out the details and will implement the changes soon.





Dispatch rider can save more with new pass
By Rachel Au-Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014

DISPATCH rider Sam Lin visits at least 10 public carparks a day, six days a week. This means a monthly expenditure of at least $154 - in excess of a $100 parking allowance his company builds into his $2,400 salary.

"It's actually quite expensive to just drop off a document," the 25-year-old Chinese national said in Mandarin. "It's worse if you park illegally to save money. You might get fined."

A new monthly parking pass and charges on a per minute basis, instead of at a flat rate, will ease his expenses. National Development minister Khaw Boon Wan made the announcements yesterday.

It will benefit mainly dispatch and delivery riders, who currently spend 65 cents per session per carpark, even if they may only park for 10 minutes or shorter.

The new pass and rates are welcome news for Mr Lin: "Cheaper is good. Cheaper means more money to send back to my family."

His employer Xdel, a courier service provider, said the seasonal ticket will help both the company and the rider. "It's a big plus now that they can park anywhere on the island for a standard lower price," said sales director Eddie Lee.



HDB moves to reduce focus on COV

$
0
0
By Sumita Sreedharan , Wong Siew Ying and Olivia Siong, Channel NewsAsia, 10 Mar 2014


National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan, who announced this change in Parliament on Monday, said this will restore the original intention of valuation, which is to help buyers obtain a housing loan. This change took effect from 5pm on March 10.



Mr Khaw said: "HDB will rationalise the process of price negotiations and restore the original intention of valuation, which is to help buyers get a housing loan.

"Negotiating based on price rather than COV will take some getting used to. However, it is a useful move for long-term market stability."

The HDB will also publish daily prices of resale transactions as soon as they are registered, aimed at getting negotiations to focus on recent transaction prices and reduce the focus on COVs. Currently, resale prices are published twice a month.



The change is timely, with many HDB resale flats being sold at or below valuation, said the government.

More than a third (36%) of resale transactions last month were priced below valuation.

Prices in the public housing resale market have seen a period of high growth in recent years.

But prices declined in the third quarter of last year, a first in four years, after a slew of property-cooling measures were introduced.

Some property analysts say changes in the behaviour of buyers and sellers will take time.

PropNex CEO, Mohamed Ismail, said: "This immediate implementation of such a rule will likely create a more conscious effort in the minds of buyers in particular - 'Am I paying the right price? Will I be affected by any of these valuation that did not match up to the price that I've agreed?'

"And in that instance, probably we will also see many of the options being not exercised when there is a gap in the expectation of the buyer's valuation and the actual valuation."

If the buyer does not exercise his option, he will lose his deposit of up to a thousand dollars.

So buyers have to plan ahead.

ERA Realty Network's key executive officer, Eugene Lim, said: "Before the buyer goes house hunting, he should actually clear the part about how much loan he is able to get - applying for the HLE (Loan Eligibility) letter from HDB, if you're taking a loan from HDB. Or, if you're taking a bank loan, you should speak to a banker to have an in-principle approval on an approximate loan amount you can get.

"So with the approved amount, it basically gives you an idea of the price of the property that you are looking at."

Mr Mohd Ismail also noted that COV could continue to be a point of reference in estates where resale flats are still being transacted with a cash premium.

"Even though we say you can't do a valuation, that doesn't stop sellers from taking reference from the COVs of the neighbouring flats. And I'm sure that the private organisations and portals are still feeding this information. As I said, old habits die hard and it will take some time," he said.

On the government's property-cooling measures, Mr Khaw said it would still be premature to withdraw them as prices are still rising albeit at a slower rate.

He added the government will continue to monitor the market closely.

To further protect property buyers, the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA) will launch an online guide to provide general tips to consumers who are thinking of buying a foreign property.

The CEA will also step up its effort to regulate estate agents marketing overseas property developments in Singapore. Mr Khaw advised members of the public to report to the CEA any marketing activities by unlicensed foreign estate agents so that the CEA can investigate and take appropriate actions.

Addressing some MPs' concerns about more Singaporeans turning to property investments overseas, Mr Khaw said the government does not interfere with such investment decisions. But he warned that it is a case of buyer beware.

Mr Khaw said: "But I share the concerns of Mr Seah Kian Peng and Mr Liang Eng Hwa. I echo their words of caution. Property markets move in cycles. For foreign properties, there are added risks and complexities, because their legal and regulatory frameworks governing the purchase and financing agreements are different from ours. 

"And they may change suddenly when domestic politics pushes for a change in policies. Do go in with your eyes open."




Good to move focus away from COV, say experts
By Janice Heng, Rachel Au-Yong, Maryam Mokhtar and Melissa Tan, The Straits Times, 11 Mar 2014


The reason is that these cash over valuation (COV) prices are now very low, with median COV hitting zero last month.

Sellers are thus less likely to protest, said SLP International Property Consultants director Nicholas Mak. Also, few buyers are likely to be caught out by low valuations, said Chesterton Suntec International director of research and consultancy Colin Tan.

Previously, a resale flat's valuation was obtained first, and buyers and sellers then negotiated on the premium or COV to pay.

In the new system that took effect yesterday, buyers and sellers agree on a price before getting a valuation from the HDB.

In a strong market, the risk is that the valuation may be much lower than the price, limiting the loan a buyer can get. But, in today's weak market, buyers know this is unlikely, said Mr Tan. "There will be less anxiety."

The exception is when buyers seek units in prime locations, which still fetch high COVs. The median COV for five-room flats in Queenstown, for instance, was $37,000 last month.

"(Such) buyers will become more cautious in their offer price as they enter into a purchase without an indication of how much the property is worth," said PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail Gafoor.

Such caution from buyers is what worries sales manager Joe Ng, 45, who is trying to sell his four-room flat in Serangoon.

"If (a buyer) proposes a price, he won't propose a market price, it's likely to be lower," he said.

And deals might not close if buyers are caught out, said ERA property agent J. A. Goh. "I foresee more cases of buyers backing out with this new system."

To avoid this risk, buyers may simply continue to rely on private valuations, such as from property firms, said Mr Ismail.

That is what sales executive Lee Choon Han, 37, plans to do as he searches for a flat in Alexandra, Redhill or Tiong Bahru. "I'll try to observe what the market trends are for valuation," he said.

Still, experts think the move will generally succeed in shifting the focus away from COVs.

"It's a good system. It gets the buyers and sellers back to talking about price," said ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim.

The move could also make for a more stable market, said Mr Mak. In the old system, high COVs could cause buyers and sellers to expect continued high premiums, even as valuations rise.

This reinforces the upward trend and vice versa for low COVs. The new system "could help to stabilise the market away from self-reinforcing upswings or downswings", Mr Mak said.

But experts are divided over whether HDB resale prices themselves will be affected.

While Mr Ismail thinks buyers' caution could depress prices, others believe the current low COVs mean little will change. Prices may well fall in the private resale market instead, said GPS Alliance chief executive Jeffrey Hong.

"If HDB upgraders find it harder to offload their flats, they may be unable to upgrade at all," he said. Lower demand for mass-market private properties would then mean lower prices.





Rise and fall of COV – the property mover
It had a humble start in 1993 but later developed a power of its own
By Janice Heng, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

DEALS were once forged or broken over it. Headlines roared its record-setting highs. Loved by sellers and loathed by buyers, the concept of cash over valuation dominated the Housing Board resale market for years – but perhaps no longer.

In the new resale process, this cash premium or COV is not the focus of negotiations. Buyers and sellers agree on a price and get a valuation; the COV is a mere arithmetic outcome.

Yet that is what COV has always been: the difference between price and valuation.

Only when the property market was booming did it take on a life of its own – and, in turn, the power to move the market.

But its beginnings were much humbler. At the very start, there wasn’t even a name for it.

This was in April 1993, when the HDB relaxed its loan policy to let resale buyers borrow up to 80 per cent of the flat’s market value or declared sale price, whichever was lower. Previously, the loan was up to 80 per cent of the “posted price” – the 1984 HDB sale price – which was much lower.

The new rule meant a need to find out what a flat’s market value was. Enter valuation, and hence the possibility of a gap between price and valuation: that is, COV.

By 1995, worries had surfaced, but only about the dodgy relative of COV – “paying cash upfront”.

Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings could be used to pay for a resale flat up to the purchase price or valuation, whichever was lower.

If valuation was lower than the price, the difference had to be paid in cash. But to save on the sale price levy, some sellers would under-declare the sale price and ask for more cash upfront.

Though the HDB cracked down accordingly, 1996 still saw reports of buyers paying “a premium of $100,000 to $150,000... above valuation”, as in one Straits Times article.

But then, with prices easing by 1997 with the Asian financial crisis, the focus shifted to flats going below valuation. Property ads blared “low cash!” instead.

And this familiar pattern played out again and again. As experts note, COV’s significance rose and fell with the market.

Why wasn’t it a household term in the early 2000s, for instance? Because “the property market wasn’t very hot at the time”, said OrangeTee head of research Christine Li. “(COV) always is a very touchy issue during an upturn in the market,” said Century21 chief executive officer Ku Swee Yong.

He reckoned it was the 2006 to 2007 property cycle in which COV gained major prominence. “Up till around late 2004, prices were generally around valuation – not a huge difference, perhaps within $10,000 or so.”

But by 2007, high COVs were making headlines, such as “some HDB sellers asking for up to $150k above valuation”. When COV sums were so large, they became important in their own right, said experts: to sellers as sources of liquidity, and to buyers as a potential stumbling block.

It was also in 2007 that “cash over valuation” became a standard phrase, recurring in newspaper report after newspaper report.

Before then, references were simply to sums paid above or below valuation.

Perhaps gaining a fixed name was a sign of COV’s growing significance. In July 2007, the Housing Board released COV data for the first time, in recognition that buyers were focusing on such information.

But the prominence of COV could itself have been encouraged by the profusion of media coverage.

Whatever the case, the idea of COV stuck. And experts think it developed a power of its own.

“When it was high, COV was often felt to be a controversial mechanism as sellers tended to compare the COV they got, instead of the actual price,” said R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng.

Buyers felt a need to chase high COVs, not simply high prices. But when deals closed above valuation, this put pressure on valuations themselves to rise.

And in a declining market, the reverse was true: buyers pushed for prices below valuation, which in turn drove valuations down.

Now, COVs have been taken out of negotiations. That could mean an end to their amplifying effect, and hence a more stable property market, said SLP International Property Consultants’ head of research Nicholas Mak.

Sellers in particular could take a while to adjust, and might still seek private valuations to get a sense of COV, he added.

But PropNex Realty chief executive officer Mohamed Ismail Gafoor saw a way in which COVs might fade altogether.

The HDB’s appointed valuers could follow the practice in the private market, and largely match their valuations to the reported sale price, he said.

Little India Riot COI: Day 13

$
0
0
COI chairman clarifies remarks on property and life
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE chairman of the ongoing Committee of Inquiry into the Dec 8 riot yesterday clarified remarks he made last week that might have been taken by some to imply that he valued property over life.

Mr G. Pannir Selvam and committee member Tee Tua Ba had disagreed with a senior police officer's comments last Tuesday that police actions during the unrest be judged on the outcome of the incident in Little India that night.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Lu Yeow Lim said during the public hearing last Tuesday: "Nobody died, we didn't have to use our firearms, no shot was fired, there was no serious injury... the outcome speaks for itself."

But Mr Tee disagreed and pointed to the burning of the police patrol cars by the mob that night.


That, however, drew a stern rebuke from Mr Selvam, who said to the Tanglin Police Division chief: "No, no. That is not the philosophy of riot control."

To which DAC Lu replied: "I said this earlier, and I'll repeat it; I think it is morally wrong to prioritise property over human life. The preservation of human life must be paramount."

But Mr Selvam said: "The loss of human life was not the priority issue at that stage, not on that day, in the circumstances of everything that happened."

Yesterday, Mr Selvam raised the matter again, this time asking migrant workers group TWC2 president Russell Heng - who was appearing before the inquiry - if he was under the impression that the retired judge had indeed valued property more than life.

"A lot of people (have) asked me that. I never said that. What I said in the proceedings was, on that day, it was not a life-threatening situation. That means these rioters weren't after the lives of anybody," said Mr Selvam.

"So what the responders were faced with was a simple rioting situation, where rioters were burning property, overturning cars. They never threatened the life of anybody, so there was no justification to pull out the gun and fire."

The retired judge agreed that if the police had pulled out the guns, it could have changed the situation. "(But it was) not a life threatening situation, so no point in saying: 'I handled the situation without a loss of life'," he said yesterday. "The situation you have was purely confined to property damage, not life damage. Fact of the matter is, there is no evidence of them wanting to kill anybody.

"It's not a situation of someone trying to kill somebody, and you were trying to prevent it. They were even quite conscious of the fact that they were targeting police vehicles."

Mr Selvam said what he meant by his remarks last Tuesday was that "the priority of life was not the situation they were facing on that day... What they were facing was not a threat to the life of anybody, but the property... So it should be handled in the sense that property damage should have been prevented... None of us, I think, would be bold enough to say, or stupid enough to say, property is more important than life."





'You don't know, you don't live here'
Little India resident tells of problems faced every weekend
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

YOU don't live here and don't know what we have had to put up with.

That was one Little India resident's response yesterday to non-government organisations (NGO) that have been calling for people who live and work in Little India to be more tolerant of foreign workers who congregate in the area on Sundays.

"To put it very bluntly, I understand where the NGOs are coming from but it's very hard for me to sympathise with their cause because they don't stay here," said Mr Martin Pereira, a long-time resident of Klang Lane, just a stone's throw from the epicentre of the Dec 8 riot.

The 44-year-old air traffic controller was testifying at yesterday's Committee of Inquiry (COI) as chairman of the Tekka Residents' Committee. He told the inquiry that while he appreciates the efforts of NGOs in integrating foreign workers, they too need to recognise that residents just want to feel safe and not have their neighbourhood intruded by "hordes of men in a drunken stupor" every weekend.

There are "uncomfortable activities" happening right under residents' noses, Mr Pereira added. "We do have ladies who come and accost them (and) Indian community members tell us that these Indian ladies are not normal ladies," he said, referring to transsexuals soliciting for sexual services.

Besides vice activities, Mr Pereira said he has also received feedback from residents of fortune-telling and illegal moneylending activities at the void decks on Sundays.

"When you don't face the problems on a weekly basis, I don't think you will understand the true feelings of residents who live there," he said.

Other NGOs have told the COI earlier that many foreign workers were unfairly chased away from void decks by auxiliary police officers even though they were "just sitting there... and not really doing anything", said COI member and West Coast Citizens' Consultative Committee chairman Andrew Chua.

But Mr Pereira, who has lived in the estate for more than a decade, said workers heavily utilised the HDB void decks on Sundays to have a picnic, consume alcohol and sleep.

"To a person who doesn't stay in this area, it will seem an inconvenience and a disamenity," said Mr Pereira, when asked by the committee if he had "anything more serious" than complaints of loitering and drunken workers.

"But if you were living here... it wouldn't be something that you would feel is a disamenity or an inconvenience - you would feel it's an invasion of privacy."

Mr Pereira said he hopes more enforcement powers would be given to the auxiliary police, who he felt were not strict enough in dealing with the workers because their "hands are tied".

For instance, current laws do not make it illegal for workers to crowd around in common areas under Housing Board flats, he noted.

But shouldn't Little India residents already know what they are in for when they moved into the ethnic enclave, asked Mr Chua?

Mr Pereira agreed, particularly for those who moved into the area since about 12 years ago, as the problem started some 15 years ago. "But this is still Singapore, sir," he added. "My point is this... When in Rome, you should do as the Romans do, not expect the Romans to adjust to you."





On India street culture and 'law of underdog'
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

CROWDS in India have a tendency of ganging up to take on bullies and a "law of the underdog" may have escalated the violence during the Dec 8 riot.

This was according to a projects director who was born in India and said he often witnessed such altercations in his homeland.

Mr Rintu Chakravarthy, who is now a Singapore citizen, told the Committee of Inquiry yesterday that he had experienced several riots when he was growing up.

There was usually a "hierarchy" of reaction where passers-by would gather and gang up on the perceived bully, he added.

"In street culture in India, a pedestrian crossing the road wrongly, if hit by a scooter, the mob would attack the scooter," he said.

"If the scooter is... hit by a car, the mob would attack the car. If the car is hit by a bus, the mob would attack the bus."

This meant the riot was neither pre-meditated nor a result of any pent-up frustration among foreign workers here, but rather an expression of what Mr Chakravarthy calls "the law of the underdog".

The 47-year-old projects director at Lum Chang Building Contractors said such incidents were common in India - where most of the workers in the riot here were from - and could be explained by the mob mentality that night.

"There is this huge wave of sympathy towards a fellow brother or a comrade, and whether the other people know him... it becomes immaterial," he added, stressing that his views were a "personal feeling".

Touching on other matters, Mr Chakravarthy suggested that regulations on noise pollution here could be relaxed to allow for "minimal work" to be done on Sundays and public holidays. This will keep workers occupied as his experience showed many workers were keen to do overtime.

"My general impression is, those workers who come for the first two to three years, they are very keen to make money," he added.

Committee chairman G. Pannir Selvam asked Mr Chakravarthy if Lum Chang retained its workers' passports - a common practice among employers of foreign workers here but one that angers the workers, according to the evidence given by a union representative to the inquiry last week.

Mr Chakravarthy said his company does so to prevent workers from absconding, noting that besides forfeiting a security bond, the firm would suffer a "bad impact" on work permit allocations if an employee was found moonlighting.

But none of the workers from Lum Chang have raised any objections to the practice so far, he said, adding that a worker's passport is promptly returned when the man informs the company of an emergency, a policy that remains even though seven workers have lied in the past and did not return.

"That should not make us pessimistic in depriving the eighth worker of not handing him a passport in an emergency, because his may be a real case," he added.





'Do more to help workers fit in'
Migrant workers group chief calls for empathy from S'poreans
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

MAKE an effort and we can all get along - that was the message migrant workers group Transient Workers Count Too (TWC2) president Russell Heng had for locals who deal with foreign workers in Little India.

Addressing the Committee of Inquiry (COI) looking into the Dec8 riot, Dr Heng yesterday said workers in general are respectful of authority, but more can be done to make them feel at home here.

That involves recognising the importance of Little India to them - as a place where "they feel they fit in", unlike other areas of Singapore where "they feel out of place", he added in a report submitted to the COI.

"One should not underestimate what it means to somebody leading a hard life in unfamiliar surroundings far from home."

Pointing to how bus services for these workers now end at 9pm, he explained that instead of restricting access to Little India and erring "on the side of caution... we should just tweak here and there... to improve things for everybody".

Shopkeepers, auxiliary police officers and bus drivers in Little India, for instance, can be trained to better communicate with the foreign workers.

This did not mean learning Bengali or Tamil, but picking up a few key words. Even "learning how to smile and empathise" could go a long way, he said, and can help prevent a repeat of the violence that erupted three months ago.

Committee chairman G. Pannir Selvam said such education could also be done "the other way round", suggesting that Dr Heng consider helping foreign workers to set up an organisation to teach them local languages.

While Dr Heng agreed this could be done, he maintained that Singaporeans who deal with workers should also "fulfil their share of the equation".

He told the COI that he and TWC2 volunteers have seen instances of foreign workers being roughly handled as they wait to board private buses taking them back to their dormitory.

"Drivers and conductors behave in ways that could be improved," said the 63-year-old, who has a PhD in political science from the Australian National University.

Mr Karuppaiah Sankar, one of the two foreign workers to testify yesterday, said he had heard his friends talk about how time keepers on buses used Hokkien vulgarities when dealing with workers.

But the Indian, who has been working here for the past 14 years, added that he has not experienced this himself.

Dr Heng also noted how patrolling officers in Little India can at times seem intimidating, when they, for instance, crowd around a single worker. He called for more sensitivity.

The report was put together by TWC2 based on information gathered from its staff and volunteers, who interact with more than 300 foreign workers a day. The report has been handed over to the COI.

While Dr Heng called the riot an "aberration", he also suggested that tougher enforcement against errant employers, who for instance are involved in salary disputes, can help keep similar unrest at bay.

"Foreign workers generally like Singapore... They are not disrespectful of our laws nor defiant of authority," he wrote in the report, adding that the country should cherish this and build on it.


Related
Little India Riot COI: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 11, Day 12

Ministry takes issue with don's study on affordability

$
0
0
It disagrees with use of imputed rentals as measure of housing expenditure
By Goh Chin Lian, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

A STUDY by an economist, which found that Singapore's bottom 30 per cent of households spend more than they earn, has been disputed by the Ministry of Finance (MOF) and a veteran statistician.

The study by National University of Singapore (NUS) economist Tilak Abeysinghe compared households' expenditure against their incomes from work. Professor Tilak said that according to his research, the bottom 30 per cent of households spent 105 per cent to 151 per cent of their income last year and the main cause of rising expenditure was housing.

But MOF took issue with Prof Tilak's methodology as he used imputed rentals as a measure of expenditure on housing.

Prof Tilak said he did so as most households were unlikely to have fully paid up their mortgages, so imputed rent captured some of these outstanding payments.

He also cited an earlier study he did which compared housing price to lifetime income. He said that too showed a long-term deterioration of housing affordability.

Imputed rentals measure how much a household would have to spend on rent if they did not own the house they live in.

MOF said it disagreed with the use of imputed rentals as a proxy for mortgage payments on three grounds.

First, mortgage payments have been lower than imputed rentals for lower-income households because of government grants.

Second, mortgage payments and imputed rentals have diverged significantly in recent years, with imputed rentals rising much faster in line with the property market, while mortgage interest rates have fallen.

Statisticians internationally also remove the principal component of mortgage payments as it reflects an investment. They only count as expenditure the interest payment portion, which is much lower.

MOF released figures to show how imputed rentals over-estimate how much lower-income households spend on housing.

The figures showed that for a family on a monthly household income of $2,000 who buy a three-room flat, their actual expenditure on housing is $134 a month, far lower than the average imputed rental of $700.

In his study, Prof Tilak also found that while the higher-income groups spent more on education, the bottom 20 per cent spent steadily less on education. He warned that "the inability of low-income groups to spend on education beyond the public school system will sustain their disadvantage".

MOF, however, said that the lower spending on education by the lower-income group reflected a drop in its share of families with children.

Among households in the bottom 10 per cent, the share of those with at least one person aged 21 and below, and not working, fell to 12.7 per cent last year, down from 18.9 per cent in 2003. Education subsidies had also increased for lower-income households, the ministry added.

On subsidies lowering expenditure, Prof Tilak agreed that it was something to be studied. He also said that he did not have data on government transfers and subsidies.

In his study, Prof Tilak compared resident households' average monthly expenditure and income, excluding government transfers. He did so for the years 1998 to last year.

Based on the data, he derived a ratio known as the expenditure-income, as a measure of living affordability.

Veteran statistician Paul Cheung questioned if the expenditure-income ratio was a fair measurement for affordability, which he said should be measured against some degree of utility and well-being that has to be determined.

"He needs to look at how the typical household budget is allocated and spent," Prof Cheung said, suggesting that for some poor families, the flow of income might be more of a concern.

He also noted that academic papers usually go through a peer review before they are published, but it was not the case with this study, which he described as "half-baked" and "not ready yet" for publication.

Prof Tilak said his ratio takes into account the relative standard of living, a measure of well-being, where people increase their spending because others have increased theirs. He added that his study also looks at expenditure in different categories, such as food and transport, and reflects how a household's budget is allocated.

As for the lack of peer review, he said a group of faculty had discussed the findings. "Now that this is out, there will be comments coming forward," he added.

Still, MOF said it welcomed studies aimed at identifying the needs of different segments of society, "which the present study seeks to do".

Its comments on the study's methodology "in no way detract from the importance of the issue of affordability of lower-income households", it added.

It said the Government was actively focused on needs of this group, and has significantly expanded schemes to help them in education, work, housing, health care and retirement.

"For most of those in the bottom third, government transfers in the form of cash and savings top-ups (not including other subsidies) provide significant supplement to their incomes," the ministry said.

Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said in his Budget speech last month that the Government's initiatives of the last five years, plus the measures in this year's Budget, mean that the support for lower- and middle-income Singaporeans is now about 2.5 times what it was 10 years ago.





Imputed rentals overstate interest payments

THE Finance Ministry gave this example to show how imputed rentals overstate mortgage interest payments: A household with $2,000 monthly income buys a three-room Build-To-Order flat in a non-mature estate.

It gets Additional Housing Grant ($35,000), Special Housing Grant ($20,000) and NS Recognition Award ($4,000).

Monthly mortgage (25-year loan): $506. This includes both the principal repayment, which statisticians internationally remove as it reflects an investment; and the interest payment.

The interest payment is about $134, lower than the average imputed rental of about $700.





Not all in bottom 10% are poor, says MOF
By Goh Chin Lian, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE Ministry of Finance (MOF) has come out to explain why many households in the bottom 10 per cent by work income are not all that poor.

It did so in the light of a new study on households' income and expenditure patterns by an academic.

Resident households in the bottom 10 per cent earned on average $1,711 a month from work last year. Those in the next 10 per cent earned $3,372, and the next 10 per cent, $4,993.

But 30 per cent of households in the bottom 10 per cent live in private homes or larger flats.

Some 9 per cent employ domestic helpers, and 15 per cent have cars.

They also receive more non-work income, such as rental income, investment returns and dividends, than households earning more from work.

The main reason for this is that an increasing share of households in the bottom 10 per cent comprise retirees who have assets and savings.

Among these households, those with at least one person aged 65 and over rose to 67 per cent last year, up from 57 per cent a decade ago.

In his speech rounding up the Budget debate last week, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said he excluded the bottom 10 per cent from a chart that showed government transfers to the less well-off because "a fair number of them are in fact not poor".

Yesterday, MOF said that in studying whether households can afford their expenditures, researchers must consider that those who are poor are "co-mingled within the lower income deciles with retirees with savings and other assets".

It said: "Higher expenditures than incomes are in part shaped by this reality, as in other societies as they age."


Fukushima Disaster 3 Years On

$
0
0






Challenges dog victims
Life in disaster hit areas is still a far cry from what it used to be, yet Japan has to plan ahead for 2020 Olympics.
By Narushige Michishita, Published The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

WHEN Yuzuru Hanyu became the first Japanese man to win an Olympic figure skating gold medal in Sochi last month, people in Japan’s northeastern Tohoku region burst into cheers and tears. The 19-year-old is from the Tohoku region, which suffered the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11, 2011. The young athlete’s performance sent a beam of hope to the region still in the process of reconstruction.

With the waves of earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown, the “3.11” disaster left 18,524 dead and missing, 470,000 dislocated, 400,000 houses and buildings destroyed or seriously damaged, and 27 million tonnes of debris. Cumulative economic damage is calculated to have been 17 trillion yen (S$209 billion), or three per cent of Japan’s GDP.

Important progress has been made in the past three years. The number of the dislocated has dropped to 270,000, and no one is sleeping in schools or community centres. Ninety per cent of the debris has been incinerated or disposed of. More than 90 per cent of hospitals and schools have been restored.

Approximately 40 per cent of fishing ports and 80 per cent of aquacultural facilities hit by tsunami have been rehabilitated.

The hardest hit towns are being rebuilt in safer areas to avoid future tsunamis. Residents will be relocated collectively in order to preserve the sense of community.

Some refugees have developed strong personal bonds by helping each other in difficult times. In some cases, they will be allowed to move into newly built apartments together. Having lost old friends, they have new ones now.

Arduous march continues

THE situation is still far from perfect, however. More than 100,000 men and women still live in temporary houses. Constructed immediately after the disaster, these houses sometimes stand on soft ground and have become lopsided over time. This is making some inhabitants “house sick”.

Only two per cent of planned public housing construction has been completed due to the difficulties in securing real estate and contractors. Some landowners are waiting for land prices to rise. Massive construction needs have resulted in the shortage of contractors and pushed up the cost of materials. Having waited for too long for public housing which never came, some of the refugees have made the difficult decision to leave their hometowns.

Hospitals have been rebuilt, but not all doctors have returned. Some of the local authorities have provided subsidies to woo them back on a part-time basis.

Agricultural, fishing and business activities are returning, but their products still suffer from reputational damage.

It was recently discovered that approximately 100 tonnes of highly radioactive cooling water had overflowed from a storage tank at the damaged nuclear power plant in Fukushima. The incident was the latest in a series of leaks that the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power has struggled to control at the stricken nuclear power plant since the disaster.

Fortunately, the unemployment rate in the affected areas remains lower than the national average due largely to the surge in reconstruction- related activities. But the relatively high wages offered in construction and nuclear decontamination works mean that traditional service and manufacturing sectors suffer from a shortage of labour.

Construction of anti-tsunami sea walls is another point of contention. Huge sea walls can resist big tsunamis, but they might have negative consequences on oyster farming and fishing. Moreover, ugly sea walls along otherwise beautiful coastlines will not help tourism. Some governors are more flexible than others in lowering the height of walls in some areas, but there is no solid consensus on this. Behind the controversy lies a philosophical question of how to strike a balance between safety in future emergencies and the need to ensure current livelihoods.

Roads or seawalls?

SOME specialists contend that the money would be better spent on roads designed for quick evacuation rather than sea walls. But bureaucratic red tape has prevented this.

Reconstruction funds can be used to replace things destroyed by the tsunami, but they cannot be used to build something new.

Sea walls existed before the March 11 disaster, evacuation roads did not. In fact, the existence of sea walls made some people complacent and, in some cases, discouraged them from moving to higher ground.

For now, however, the solution is to build even higher sea walls.

Some of the children who experienced the quake and tsunami still suffer post-traumatic stress disorder. Some have stopped expressing their feelings, others have flashbacks. Some respond nervously to loud sounds and small aftershocks. Truancy has become widespread. The Miyazaki prefecture had the largest number of truants per capita in 2012.

Earthquake in Tokyo

TOKYO is expected to host the Olympic Games in 2020, but it is not immune from earthquakes either.

Experts have warned that Tokyo has a 70 per cent probability of being hit by a big earthquake of magnitude 7.3 within 30 years. In December last year, the Japanese government released a new estimate that in the worst-case scenario, 23,000 people would be killed and 610,000 buildings destroyed. Aggregate damage would amount to 95 trillion yen.

Several measures are being taken to minimise the possible damage. The most important element is prevention of fire. There is an area with a large number of wooden houses lying around the centre of Tokyo. Installing high-tech circuit breakers, which automatically shut down electricity in response to a big earthquake, in wooden houses is therefore a high priority.

Making buildings and houses earthquake-resistant is another priority. However, it is hard to undertake this venture since it costs a lot of money. Elderly citizens living in wooden houses do not have many incentives to invest in this because they don’t think a major earthquake will happen in their lifetime.

Providing warning information quickly and effectively in multiple foreign languages would also be critical. It took five days after the March 11 earthquake for the Prime Minister’s Office to start disseminating situational assessment and evacuation guidance in English through Twitter. The latter was an indispensable communication tool during the crisis.

Finally, in the period leading up to the Olympic Games, training and educating some 400,000 expatriates living in Tokyo on disaster response will be another key challenge.

If these expatriates can help foreign visitors in case of emergency, they will become one of the most important assets in bolstering resilience of Tokyo.

The Japanese government contends that death toll could be cut by 90 per cent and damage could be halved if preventive measures and disaster-relief preparations are aggressively pursued.

Let’s hope the world does not have to see how well Tokyo does the job. Japan should be prepared, nonetheless.


The writer is associate professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo, where he is director of the Security and International Studies Programme. He is the author of North Korea's Military-Diplomatic Campaigns, 1966-2008.













Life goes on in Japan, but some things have changed
By Kwan Weng Kin, Japan Correspondent, In Tokyo, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THREE years ago on March 11, 2011, an earthquake and massive tsunami crippled Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant. The closest towns to the stricken plant remain deserted for fear of further radiation leaks.

Is the Fukushima nuclear crisis under control? Is the food in Japan safe to eat?

Living and working in Tokyo, where life hums along, it is easy to forget that the problems spawned by the massive disaster that struck the northern Tohoku region three years ago have mostly yet to be resolved.

While the government plans to decommission the stricken power reactors at the Fukushima No. 1 plant, located just over 200km north of Tokyo, exactly how and when that will be achieved remains largely unknown.

Sceptics think that the government and Tokyo Electric, which runs the Fukushima plant, are trying to hide the truth even though Prime Minister Shinzo Abe tells us that things "are under control", as he did last year when Tokyo made a successful bid to host the 2020 Olympics.

But even if the Japanese suspect Mr Abe does not have a grip on things, can they believe the other side?

Reports of contamination of fish caught near the plant, for instance, may well have been engineered by anti-nuclear groups in Japan and overseas, as the occasional Western expert has come out to say that the dangers at Fukushima are exaggerated.

The Japanese media is often criticised for not carrying much news of the crisis, save perhaps the odd report of a spike in radiation readings. But in special reports last week marking the third anniversary of the disaster, the dailies pulled no punches.

The influential Asahi Shimbun reported that even now, opinion is divided as to whether it was the tremors or the tsunami waves that destroyed the Fukushima reactors.

A detailed analysis that would yield the answer could take years, the Asahi said.

It is depressing to hear that Tokyo Electric still does not know the extent of the damage and whether it is feasible to remove all the fuel rods from the radioactive wreck, an operation for which there is no precedent.

It is unnerving to see Mr Abe pushing for the restarting of nuclear reactors and to peddle his nation's nuclear technology to other countries, even when Fukushima remains a smouldering, radioactive wreck.

So three years on, shutting out negative news about Fukushima seems the only option for the Japanese if they are to live in this country, which is now paying the price for choosing nuclear power without fully considering the deadly consequences.

But for food, which is the concern of both residents and visitors, there should be few worries.

In the months immediately after the disaster, many parents took great pains to avoid feeding small children food grown in Fukushima prefecture, which hosts the damaged plant, and even neighbouring prefectures.

Asked if she still had qualms about the food sold in this country, a Japanese acquaintance, who wished to be known only as Chieko, confided that she still checks the labelling on vegetables and shuns produce from the Fukushima area when shopping for her two young children.

For rice, she chooses a variety grown in Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost island.

But there is no reason to doubt the government's repeated assurances that all foodstuffs are checked and only those with radiation levels within official safety limits are allowed to go to market.

Ms Chieko concedes that her continued misgivings may be unwarranted. "We go out to eat as a family occasionally, and in such circumstances, we implicitly trust the restaurant. So I guess it's largely a matter of feeling," she said.

But at the nursery where the office worker drops off her children every morning, the notice board routinely displays information about the food served to the children, including where it comes from. It never used to do that prior to the Fukushima disaster.

While life goes on in Japan, some things, it seems, have changed.


How to keep the taps running

$
0
0
Although Singapore is in a better position than many other drought-hit countries, it is time to come up with a drought response plan.
By Cecilia Tortajada And Asit K. Biswas, Published The Straits Times, 10 Mar 2014

MANY parts of the world are now facing droughts. These include cities in Australia, the United States and many in South-east Asia. Last week, 15 provinces in north, north-east and central Thailand were officially declared to be under drought and receive emergency funding. Around mid-February, 37 out of 58 provinces of Vietnam were warned of higher risks due to forest fires because of dry conditions. Malaysia and Indonesia are facing serious dry spells as well. Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, Johor and Negri Sembilan have started water rationing for 3.6 million residents. Forest fires in Indonesia and Malaysia have also led to hazy skies in the region, including Singapore.

While Singapore is also facing droughts like in many other places, it is at present comparatively in a much better situation. This is because it has developed over the years an exemplary urban water and wastewater management system, and unlike Australia and California, the city-state has very little agricultural activities. It is the agricultural sector that accounts for nearly 70 per cent of global water consumption.

Furthermore, Singapore has only one level of government and ministries and agencies have one common development goal. This, compared to other countries which have to deal with three levels of governments: central, state and municipal, make institutional coordination much easier in Singapore.

Floods versus droughts

IN LATE 2011, when floods attracted protracted social, political and media attention, we expressed our views in these pages that Singapore should give more attention to droughts than floods. This is because Singapore already has a world-class flood management system. An average flood lasts less than 30 minutes, but a prolonged drought can continue for months, and even years.

Droughts are slow-building threats. Floods occur only in some specific flood-prone areas of a region but the effects of droughts can be felt across the entire country and often other countries. Floods usually inflict short-term pain whereas a prolonged drought, like the millennium drought in Australia from 1995 to 2012, has long-term economic and social implications.

While the present drought in Singapore has received much social, political and media attention, it cannot be compared to earlier similar historical events because its exact duration, severity and extent are still unknown. Also, each drought has different characteristics which makes inter-comparison very difficult.

One factor is now well-established. With the 24/7 continuous global news cycle, droughts attract considerable media attention. This often gives the public the erroneous perception that conditions are worsening over the long term.

While the frequency and severity of droughts are expected to increase in the future because of climate change, reported increases in the occurrence of global droughts has been over-hyped. A recent authoritative study concluded that there has been little change in drought frequency over the past 60 years.

In any case, what can Singapore do to prepare for prolonged periods of dry weather? We endorse the current policy of using reserves and promoting conservation measures. National water agency PUB is currently pumping 35 million gallons of Newater every day to compensate for falling reservoir levels. It has also requested heavy water consumers (both industry and individuals) to reduce their consumption. While this policy will ensure Singaporeans will not face any serious water crisis for the next several weeks, it should be noted that technological options can only go so far.

Recycling requires an assured supply of fresh water to start with. If the current drought is prolonged, and reduces the fresh water supply in the region, the production of Newater will suffer as well. Imagine what would happen if the drought lasts for six to 24 months, or even longer?

The current drought reinforces the importance of water security for Singapore, which does not have any hinterland to provide it with an assured supply. The only long-term option is supply augmentation as well as demand reduction. New technological innovations and improvements in urban water management will unquestionably boost resilience further but cannot eliminate risks completely, especially if Singapore is faced with more than a decade-long mega-drought similar to that in Australia recently.

Individuals can play a role

THE current drought should be used as an opportunity to have a societal dialogue on Singapore's water future. It is also an opportunity for the public to become engaged with long-term water conservation practices. The public must realise that all policy interventions will require a mixture of collective and individual actions and responsibilities.

For example, the present per capita daily water consumption at 151 litres is quite high, especially for a country with no hinterland. The targets are to reduce it to 147 litres by 2020 and 140 litres by 2030. Are these targets good enough? Many European cities like Amsterdam, Berlin, Copenhagen or Munich had already reduced their per capita consumption to well below 140 litres by 2000.

Cities like Hamburg and Barcelona are likely to break through the 100 litres barrier by 2020. Singapore could consider a more ambitious target.

Singapore's water tariff was last revised in 2000. It was then justified on the basis of cost recovery only.

Many European cities are using water price as an instrument for water conservation. A societal dialogue may be warranted in Singapore on using this instrument to reduce demand for water and thus enhance water security.

Interestingly, bottled water consumption in Singapore was estimated at $149 million in 2013 and is expected to go up to $270 million by 2020. This is in spite of the fact that the quality of water supplied by PUB is often as good as, if not better than, many brands of bottled water, and that water from our taps has significantly more regular quality checks. Yet, consumption of bottled water is likely, in monetary terms, to increase by 83 per cent only in the next seven years. Can the money be better spent elsewhere?

Even though industries which are heavy users of water are actively encouraged to increase their water reuse and recycling practices, more efforts are necessary to reduce their water demand.

More discussion on drought

DURING our research for the Singapore Water Story book, one of our surprising findings was that even though water security is an important goal, and droughts are facts of life, universities and research institutions in Singapore are not engaged in sustained research as to how to manage a prolonged drought. This is a void that needs to be filled.

For a small country like Singapore without a hinterland, protracted drought may have disproportionately large impacts on a densely populated urban society.

Thus, this country, its government and the members of the society need to draw up the necessary risk management and drought response plans and policies. This is where academics, research scientists, and government experts need to work together to keep the taps running.


Cecilia Tortajada is the co-founder and president of the Third World Centre for Water Management, Mexico. Asit K. Biswas is the distinguished visiting professor of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, and co-founder of the Third World Centre for Water Management. One of their recent books is Singapore Water Story (Routledge, 2013), which is now being translated into Chinese and Japanese.

PSI to include PM2.5 levels from May

$
0
0
New index reflects air toxicity better as tiny particles are most harmful
By Feng Zengkun, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

FROM May, Singapore will have a new Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) that includes tiny, hazardous particles referred to as PM2.5.

The move is timely as it gives a better picture of the toxicity of the air as the PM2.5 can enter people's lungs and blood to cause harm, said experts interviewed.



Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan said as much when he announced the change in Parliament yesterday.

"This revised single index will reflect whichever of six pollutant parameters is the worst.


Many people had called for more data on PM2.5 last year, during Singapore's worst haze episode, owing to its health impact.

Nanyang Technological University's Professor Ang Peng Hwa, who created the Haze Elimination Action Team Facebook campaign in 2007, said the new PSI "reports more accurately the situation, that PM2.5 is bad for health".



The National Environment Agency (NEA) said yesterday that based on the present PSI, each of the past five years had between 91 and 96 per cent of "good" air quality days, and just 4 to 9 per cent of "moderate" days.

But with the revised PSI, the figures would be 1 to 4 per cent of "good" days each year and 92 to 98 per cent of "moderate" days.

NEA said: "There will be no change to normal routines on the ground as people can carry on normal activity if air quality is in the 'good' or 'moderate' range."

The current PSI is calculated from the worst of five other pollutants: sulphur dioxide, ozone, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide and particles called PM10.

Another change taking place in May is that the Government will give hourly updates that are more current on PM2.5 levels in the air.

Now, the updates are given hourly too but are averaged from readings in the previous 24 hours.

With the new hourly and more current PM2.5 updates, NEA will publish a lot more raw data that is useful for academics and scientists, Dr Balakrishnan said.

Last night, the three-hour PSI also crept up to 84 at 8pm, close to the unhealthy range. NEA said it was because of hot spots in southern Johor. The number of hot spots detected in Peninsular Malaysia rose to 149 yesterday from 86 on Monday, while those in Sumatra numbered 259, up from 228, the agency said.





PM2.5 pollutants hit unhealthy level
Yesterday's reading triggers warnings for some to limit outdoor exercise
By Grace Chua, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

LEVELS of fine particles in the air - known as "PM2.5" - spiked to the unhealthy range yesterday, triggering warnings for some people to limit outdoor exercise.

This is even as the main Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) stayed in the moderate range. At 9pm last night, the 24-hour PSI in various parts of the island ranged from 48 to 70.

But PM2.5 levels hit 60 micrograms per cubic m at several points in the afternoon, the highest reading this year. A reading above 55 mcg would be considered unhealthy under a new way of calculating the PSI from May.

At these levels, the elderly, children and those with heart or lung disease should reduce prolonged or heavy outdoor exertion, while everyone else should limit it, said an advisory on the National Environment Agency (NEA) website.


PM2.5 are fine particles in the air smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter. Currently, the PSI value is based on the worst of five pollutants, including larger PM10 particles up to 10 microns in diameter.

From May, after PM2.5 becomes a PSI component, yesterday's levels of PM2.5 would translate to a PSI value of 105, in the "unhealthy" range, the NEA said.

Meanwhile, the short-term PSI tends to rise in the evenings and some think the smell gets worse. Without the sun's heat, experts explained, air in the boundary layer of the sky contracts and pollutants within it become more concentrated. The atmospheric boundary layer is the stratum of air closest to the earth's surface, and it expands and contracts as it gains or loses heat.

Some fluctuations in the PSI at night might be seen if the wind changes direction, speed or strength, said Assistant Professor Jason Blake Cohen of the National University of Singapore's (NUS) civil and environmental engineering department.

But while the haze might smell bad, its odour cannot be used to judge how harmful it might be, said Dr Erik Velasco, a research scientist who studies air pollution at the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology. "The acrid smell is due to the chemical composition of the pollutants, which depends on the soil, biomass and fire characteristics."

He added: "The intensity of smell cannot be used to quantify the concentration of pollutants in the air. Both visibility and smell are just qualitative indicators."

On Tuesday, the NEA had said the current hazy conditions were due to southern Johor hot spots. The NUS Centre for Remote Imaging, Sensing and Processing also captured images of smoke plumes at plantations near Kota Tinggi in Johor, and its senior research scientist Santo Salinas said: "Because it's extremely dry nowadays, this is something that could have happened accidentally."

There are also hot spots in other parts of peninsular Malaysia and northern Asean, and smoke haze over central Sumatra.





Short-term exposure to PM2.5 is harmful too
High levels of tiny particles damaging to elderly and children, say experts
By Feng Zengkun and David Ee, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

WHILE studies have established that prolonged exposure to the pollutant PM2.5 can be highly hazardous, some experts have warned that even short-term exposure can be damaging.

For the elderly, being exposed to high levels of the tiny particles for just an hour can lead to higher risks of heart attacks, a recent study suggested.

One in five children here has asthma and the symptoms may worsen if exposed to high PM2.5 levels for even a few minutes, said research scientist Erik Velasco of the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology's Centre for Environmental Sensing and Modelling.

Experts said this is why the Government's decision to revise its air quality reporting system is timely. From May 1, the National Environment Agency (NEA) will add PM2.5 to its five other pollutants for calculating the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI). This means that if PM2.5 is the most significant pollutant in the air, the PSI figure will be based on it.

The NEA will also begin giving new, hourly PM2.5 updates based on the previous hour's readings. It gives hourly updates now but these figures are based on data in the previous 24 hours and may not reflect the air quality as well at any given time.

PM2.5 particles, which can enter people's lungs, make up the majority of haze particles - as much as 80 per cent during last year's record-busting pollution. They must be watched closely.

The existing PSI is usually based on PM10, which are particles 10 microns or smaller. The Government had said PM10 includes the smaller subset of PM2.5, so an increase in the tiny particles will be reflected in the PSI.

However, experts said PM10 is measured by the weight of the particles per cubic metre of air. This means two pockets of air could both have 100 micrograms of particles - and thus create the same PM10 and PSI values.

But one pocket of air could have fewer but larger particles, while the other could have more of the smaller, more toxic PM2.5 particles.

The NEA reckoned, based on existing PSI calculations, that each of the past five years had between 91 per cent and 96 per cent of "good" air quality days, and just 4 per cent to 9 per cent of "moderate" days.

Under the new reporting system, the figures would have been flipped, with just 1 per cent to 4 per cent of good days in each year, and 92 per cent to 98 per cent of moderate days.

"NEA will have to acknowledge that it was a bit conservative on quantifying the risk posed by the smoke," said senior research scientist Santo Salinas at the National University of Singapore's (NUS) Centre for Remote Imaging, Sensing and Processing.

The NEA's PSI health advisories for moderate and good air are the same. They state that all people, even the vulnerable, can carry on normal activities unless they feel unwell. However, scientists said the vulnerable should take extra care when air quality is moderate.

Dr Salinas welcomed the new, more current hourly PM2.5 updates, which will be provided alongside the 24-hour averages. "A 24-hour average smooths out pollution spikes," he said. "It is not a good indicator for rapid reaction, for example, for people who work outdoors."

Dr Christopher Frey, chair of the United States Environmental Protection Agency's clean air scientific advisory committee, explained that the first generation of PM2.5 monitors needed to accumulate almost a full day's worth of particles to be useful.

Instruments that can measure PM2.5 over shorter time frames are a "relatively recent introduction" so there have not been enough health studies to reach a firm conclusion on the short-term exposure impact, he said.

Dr Velasco stressed: "There is no evidence of a safe level of exposure or threshold, below which no adverse health effects occur."

Some complained during last year's haze that NEA figures - averaged over periods longer than an hour - did not seem to match what was outside their windows.

Dr Frey said the new one-hour index will "change more quickly and be more consistent with people's observations of visibility reduction".

Nanyang Technological University Professor Ang Peng Hwa, who created the Haze Elimination Action Team Facebook campaign in 2007, said the new changes "were made in response to science". He added that the new system may highlight pollution generated here, which could signal the Government to take action.

Assistant Professor Harvey Neo of the NUS Department of Geography said: "Some people will get a sense that this was a long time coming, or feel they have been cheated for the past few years.

"But most would welcome the changes... I would see this as (the Government) trying to match reality better."


Parliament Highlights - 11 Mar 2014

$
0
0
Committee of Supply Debate: MOT, MEWR, MCCY







Govt to double number of additional buses
By Christopher Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE Government will nearly double the number of public buses it is financing under its Bus Service Enhancement Programme (BSEP) to 1,000 by 2017.


These come on top of 550 state-funded buses to be rolled out by the end of this year, bringing the total BSEP fleet to 1,000.



Singapore's bus fleet will grow by 35 per cent to about 5,400 by 2017, a total that includes new buses added by the two public transport firms as well as City Direct Services and short services run by private operators to ease peak-period crowding.

The expanded BSEP will mean the number of new routes will double from 40 to 80, Mr Lui said. Many will serve expanding towns in the north-east, several will bolster feeder services and about 20 will be City Direct services. The result will be less crowding and shorter waiting times, including for feeders.

Mr Lui said the Government will continue to draw on a $1.1 billion fund committed in 2012 to start and run the original BSEP for 10 years. But a fresh injection of funds is likely.

"Clearly, the ($1.1 billion) fund will now no longer be sufficient to last for the originally envisaged duration of 10 years," he noted, adding that "we will carry out a review" of the fund "at the appropriate time". He said the cost of the enhanced BSEP will be "proportionate" to funds set aside for the original programme.

If terms of the enhanced programme are similar to the original, observers reckon the eventual fund will exceed $2 billion.

Nominated MP R. Dhinakaran echoed concerns raised when the BSEP was first mooted two years ago, warning that "infusion of public funds into a private operator" can lead to misconception.

"It appears that the transport companies can continue to work on their profitability motive with a fallback that eventually the Government will step into areas where the marginal returns on investment are less than adequate to their shareholders," he said yesterday.

Mr Dhinakaran proposed that the transport industry adopt a non-profit operating model. Mr Lui said while this may seem "tempting", it would lead to operators having "less incentive to be efficient and productive". He reiterated that the BSEP was "a subsidy to commuters, not operators, who will make no additional profit" from the fleet boost.





'Morning MRT faults must be reduced'
Operators must make it a priority as they cause most inconvenience: Lui
By Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

TACKLING disruptions during the morning peak hour should be a priority for the two train operators, said Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew yesterday.

He said incidents during peak hours need to be reduced, as these cause the greatest inconvenience to the most commuters.

To do that, both SMRT and SBS Transit need to ramp up maintenance works at night and conduct more stringent checks on the condition of trains before launching them into service, said the minister.

But he also acknowledged that both firms have invested more money in maintenance, and are adopting a more predictive approach to detect and prevent problems from occurring.

Mr Lui was responding to five MPs who raised the issue of reliability, after a spate of delays that hit the rail network this year, several of which happened during the morning rush hour.

Government Parliamentary Committee for Transport chair Cedric Foo (Pioneer) said there were 10 incidents in the first three months of this year on various lines.

"Although nowhere as severe as the two major service disruptions in December 2011, the increased frequency of train disruptions has further diminished the commuter's confidence in the public transport system," he said.



Mr Lui said this year's incidents are a stark reminder that improving reliability is "a lengthy and painstaking journey".

Still, he noted that withdrawal rates have fallen by at least 25 per cent for the North-South, East- West, North East and Circle lines.

The overall trend of fewer trains being pulled out of service shows a move in the right direction, he said, adding that the goal is to bring the withdrawal rate below that of 2008 by 2016.

With tighter operating performance standards in effect since January, operators are also now accountable for short delays even if they do not lead to service disruptions, he said.

Mr Lui also took issue with a Straits Times report which alleged that the MRT system was less reliable than the New York City subway. This was inaccurate, he said, as train reliability in the American city was measured in car-kilometres whereas Singapore uses train-kilometres.



As for capacity, new trains due this year and next year will allow the operators to improve frequency so commuters need not wait more than five minutes for a train, said Mr Lui.

Meanwhile, the Punggol West LRT loop will open in the middle of this year, with more rail lines to open in the coming years.

Mr Lui said: "As these new lines open, I think... crowdedness on certain existing stretches of the network should improve."





Satisfaction in buses closes in on trains: Poll
By Christopher Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

DESPITE multi-pronged efforts in recent years to improve the lot of public transport users, commuters are not happier than before.

The latest of an annual poll conducted last year revealed that the percentage of commuters satisfied with the public transport system remained hardly changed from 2012's 88.8 per cent.

At 88.5 per cent, it was in fact, the lowest score since 2007.


The proportion who were satisfied with buses went up to 88.3 per cent, from 86.4 per cent in 2012. The percentage satisfied with the MRT slipped from 92.1 to 88.9 per cent - its lowest since the first poll in 2006.

The Land Transport Authority (LTA), which commissioned the surveys, noted that MRT satisfaction was pulled down by "waiting time, reliability, travel time and customer service".

Satisfaction in buses, at a three-year high, was attributed to over 300 buses rolled out so far under the $1.1 billion Bus Service Enhancement Programme (BSEP).

"Waiting time saw the biggest jump in satisfaction from 54.2 per cent to 61.5 per cent," said LTA. "This is the first break in downward trend in satisfaction with bus services since 2010."

Transport economist Anthony Chin at National University of Singapore said the bus satisfaction figure was not entirely surprising.

"People value waiting time about 1.5 times more than in-vehicle time," he said, explaining that delays to bus arrivals will be felt more than delays to journey time.

But despite an expanded rail network, a reduction in total delays, and incremental additions to train trips, MRT commuters reported a 7.1 percentage point drop in satisfaction from 2009's high of 96 per cent.

The overall dip in satisfaction notwithstanding, the poll revealed that 61.4 per cent of commuters felt that public transport had improved from a year ago. But this was slightly lower than the 63.6 per cent who felt that 2012 was an improvement over 2011.

Public transport users rated their satisfaction level at seven out of 10 - unchanged from 2006.

LTA said it will continue to work with operators to improve rail service, but Professor Chin said it will take 15 years or so before the MRT network is mature. In the meantime, he said the BSEP "will continue to be there".







Availability of taxis improves as more operate in two shifts
By Fang Zhiwen Joy, TODAY, 12 Mar 2014

The standards of taxi availability have seen some improvement due to measures implemented last year, with the most significant progress seen in the number of taxis operating in two shifts, said Senior Minister of State (Finance and Transport) Josephine Teo yesterday.

The percentage of two-shift taxis had steadily declined over a six-year period, dropping from 60 per cent in 2006 to 52.5 per cent in 2012. However, the figure climbed to 58.9 per cent last year, signalling the reversal of a longtime downward trend.

Mrs Teo said this reversal was noteworthy as the average daily mileage for a two-shift taxi was 450km, which was one-and-a-half times that of a single-shift taxi. “In other words, taxi availability can be improved without expanding fleet size if more taxis operate on two shifts,” she said.

However, this did not mean taxi drivers had to drive unreasonably long hours, she said.

When Ang Mo Kio GRC Member of Parliament Ang Hin Kee asked if taxi drivers were cruising empty to cover the mileage requirements of the taxi availability framework, Mrs Teo said the monthly gross earnings for two-shift taxis were “generally one-and-a-half times that of one-shift taxis”, suggesting that was not the case.

The Land Transport Authority (LTA) also commissioned a Taxi Customer Satisfaction Survey last year and found that 95.6 per cent of respondents were satisfied with taxi services, but customer expectations were “exceptionally high”, said Mrs Teo.

Only 82.8 per cent and 66.3 per cent of respondents indicated they had been satisfied with waiting times and taxi booking success, respectively. More than half of about 1,200 respondents, or 54 per cent, did not feel that taxi services had improved from a year ago.

Mrs Teo said: “We recognise and appreciate that some drivers have made adjustments, and will monitor the situation before raising standards further.”

On the ongoing review of the differing taxi fare structures, Mrs Teo admitted they were indeed confusing and frustrating to commuters, but said a simplified fare structure may lead to a levelling up of rentals and fares. Surcharges, on the other hand, played a part in matching demand and supply, and could be retained with some refinements.

Any transition would be “tricky” and would need to be “thought through carefully”. The LTA will engage taxi commuters to get a sense of their preference and share the findings with taxi companies and the National Taxi Association before considering any further steps, she said.





Soil at third runway site 'poor'
Significant amount of time will be needed to prepare it for development
By Karamjit Kaur, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE plan to add a third runway to Changi Airport, announced a year ago to handle a growing number of flights, is proving more challenging than expected.

Engineers have found after extensive tests that the quality of the soil at the site was "very much poorer than expected", Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew told Parliament yesterday.

It will take "a significant amount of time" to prepare the land for the development, he said. But the target is still for Changi to have a three runway system around the early 2020s.

It currently has two, which serve the three terminals there. An existing third runway near Changi Airport is currently used for military flights.

It sits on a piece of reclaimed land which is separated from the existing airport by Changi Coast Road.

To convert it for commercial flights, this third runway will have to be linked to the existing two runways.

There are also plans to build Changi's next mega terminal, T5, next to this third runway. Final plans for the new passenger terminal will be unveiled later this year, Mr Lui said.

When completed in the middle of the next decade, T5 will be able to handle up to 50 million passengers a year, boosting Changi's total capacity to 135 million passengers annually.

While Changi has done well so far, at least two MPs - Mr Cedric Foo (Pioneer) and Mr Charles Chong (Joo Chiat) - expressed concerns that neighbouring airports in Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Dubai were growing at a much faster rate.

Changi's emphasis is sustainable and quality growth, Mr Lui said.

"If we grow at 18 per cent each year like Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, we will need to double our airport capacity every four to five years, and I think that is certainly not sustainable given our land and manpower constraints," he said.

For the rest of the decade, passenger traffic at Changi Airport is expected to grow by about 4 per cent to 6 per cent annually, he said.

To ensure that Changi remains the region's premier air hub, Singapore will continue to pursue a liberal air policy, Mr Lui said.

For example, Singapore and Indonesia agreed to allow more flights between the two countries last year.

This has led to a 40 per cent jump in the number of weekly flights, Mr Lui said.








KEEPING THE ELDERLY SAFE ON ROADS
LTA to roll out safety zones for the elderly
By Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE Land Transport Authority (LTA) will introduce safety zones in five housing estates, in a bid to make the roads safer for elderly pedestrians.

Named "silver zones", these areas will be fitted with safety measures such as speed humps to slow vehicles down, centre dividers with railings to deter jaywalking and signs to alert motorists.

Parliamentary Secretary for Transport Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim announced yesterday that the zones will be tested in five towns with a high elderly population and relatively high accident rates involving the aged.

The estates to get the silver zones by year's end are Yishun, Jurong West, Bukit Merah, Marine Parade and Bedok.

Dr Faishal said in Parliament: "We are particularly focused on improving road safety for the elderly, who are over-represented in pedestrian accidents."

He noted that although elderly pedestrians make up only 16 per cent of the total, they account for 40 per cent of all pedestrian fatalities.

The elderly population is also growing on average by 32,000 each year, he said.

His ministry will look at adding these zones in other estates if the safety measures prove useful.

Yishun resident K. Rajandra, 83, welcomed the news. He noted that traffic is heavy in the estate, and called for roads to be better lit at night so motorists can spot pedestrians more easily.

On road safety, Dr Faishal said the LTA will tighten the criteria for a nine-year programme for accident-prone areas.

From this year, an area with 12 accidents over three years will be marked as a "black spot", down from 15 accidents. The LTA treats these accident-prone spots with measures such as controlled right-turn arrows.

The stricter criteria will increase the locations under the programme by 11 per cent, from 90 today to about 100.

Cycling and the safety of cyclists also featured prominently in yesterday's budget debate for the Ministry of Transport, with six MPs raising the issue.

Ms Irene Ng (Tampines GRC) called for urgent action to make the roads safer for cyclists, and for "an integrated and coordinated" strategy for cycling as a mode of transport.

Non-Constituency MP Yee Jenn Jong urged that cycling be made safer and more comfortable, while Dr Janil Puthucheary (Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC) asked if a target could be set for cycling as a primary mode of commuting.

Replying, Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew said he does not see the rationale in setting a target, and questioned if "people really want it that way".

He added that cyclists are safest when segregated from motorists, and also from pedestrians.

Dr Faishal said cycling paths will be built in Bishan, Bukit Panjang and Woodlands, to bring the number of cycling towns to 15.

On cycling safety, he said the Singapore Road Safety Council is leading an initiative to design and implement a voluntary cyclist education programme, which will have customised lessons for different groups of cyclists, such as students and commuting cyclists.







Govt moving to replace ERP system by 2020
By Joy Fang, TODAY, 12 Mar 2014

The development of the next-generation Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system will soon be underway: The Government plans to call a tender over the next few months to build the system, which should be completed by around 2020, Senior Minister of State (Finance and Transport) Josephine Teo said yesterday.

It is necessary to look into a new system as the current one is coming to the end of its shelf life, she said. “If we do not replace it, it will become more expensive and difficult to maintain and repair.”

The new system will allow the Government to calibrate the charging of motorists in proportion to the congested road segments that they use — “a fairer approach”, as Mrs Teo put it. It can also provide value-added services, such as navigation, payment for roadside parking in lieu of parking coupons and real-time traffic information.

While some Members of Parliament (MPs) raised concerns over the loss of privacy due to the new system, Mrs Teo said there would be appropriate safeguards to minimise privacy concerns.

There will also not be any change in the pricing policy and ERP gantries will not be set up at additional roads while transiting to the new technology, she said.

Mrs Teo also announced that the Government is planning to ramp up support for car-sharing services by making available more lots in Housing and Development Board (HDB) estates for shared vehicles at car parks with sufficient capacity.

She pointed out that if 60 per cent of households here owned a car — or 15 percentage points more than today — the Government will need to find parking space for another 150,000 cars, by building more than 500 additional multi-storey car parks in HDB estates. While car-sharing has not caught on widely here, Mrs Teo said she was optimistic about its prospects.

On commercial vehicles, Mrs Teo announced that the one-year-old Early Turnover Scheme would be enhanced. The scheme seeks to encourage vehicle owners to replace their old and polluting diesel commercial vehicles. The Ministry of Transport is “sharply increasing” the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) bonus offered under the scheme if the owners switch to models that comply with at least the Euro 5 emission standards, she said.

From today, owners of light commercial vehicles registered before 2001 will get a 20 per cent COE bonus, up from 10 per cent. The bonus for heavy commercial vehicles will increase to 100 per cent, up from 30 per cent. This is on top of being able to transfer the unused portion of a commercial vehicle’s COE to the new vehicle. The scheme will be effective until the end of April 2016.

Jurong GRC MP Ang Wei Neng suggested that under the COE system, Category C (for commercial vehicles) should be split into two. “In this way, SMEs (small and medium enterprise) that need to buy light commercial vehicles do not have to compete with the big boys who are buying the heavy commercial vehicles,” he said.

Mrs Teo replied that this could result in more volatile prices as the number of bids in the new categories becomes smaller.

She noted that the COE system had undergone several tweaks in the past year. “It is probably best to let things be for a while before introducing further changes.”



Enhanced Early Turnover Scheme
The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE Early Turnover Scheme, which reduces vehicle emissions by encouraging older vehicles to be replaced with cleaner models, will be enhanced as of today.


This means that under the enhanced scheme, if an old vehicle has five years left of life, all five years will be subtracted from the 10 years of COE renewal an owner has to pay for the new vehicle.

Heavy vehicle owners will therefore have to pay less to renew the COE for a cleaner model.

This could lead to the early turnover of the oldest and most pollutive diesel commercial vehicles, which form 20 per cent of all Category C vehicles, Senior Minister of State for Transport Josephine Teo said.

The scheme will also be effective until end-April 2016, instead of 2015.





More HDB parking for shared cars
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

MORE carpark lots in Housing Board (HDB) estates will be set aside for shared cars, Senior Minister of State for Transport Josephine Teo said yesterday.

"We will give more support to car-sharing schemes so that more households can have this as part of their mobility options," she said in Parliament.

This would mean more choices for car sharer John Sih, 53, as more cars can be stationed across the island.

The training consultant has two carparks near his home in Punggol where he can pick up a pre-booked shared car.

"It is very convenient. Everybody who needs a car can share, rather than pay HDB to park your car when it is unused 40 to 50 per cent of the time. The car utilisation is much better," he said.

But if he wants more options, or if others have already booked a nearby car the same time he wants it, Mr Sih may have to take a bus to carparks farther away.

Mr Sih is one of about 9,000 members of car clubs here, which have 300 cars. He used to own a car until last year, when its certificate of entitlement was up. "It was so expensive and not worth it to get another car. I was exploring options and gave car-sharing a try," he said.

Now, he spends around $200 a month to book a car 10 to 15 times. Typically, these are for grocery trips, work or to take his daughter to Nanyang Technological University, where she studies.

The concept's emphasis on car access over car ownership makes sense for Singapore, said Ms Teo.

This is especially so, given estimates that every car added to a well-organised car sharing scheme takes the place of 15 private vehicles, she said.

A bicycle-sharing scheme will also be piloted in the Jurong Lake District and Marina Bay by next year.

The authorities may also look at similar schemes in other towns with completed cycling path networks such as Tampines and Sembawang.








MINISTRY OF THE ENVIRONMENT AND WATER RESOURCES

New PSI reporting system to see more days with "moderate" air quality
Channel NewsAsia, 11 Mar 2014

From May 1, Singapore will see more days with the air quality being classified as in the “moderate” range, as concentrations of smaller polluting particles of PM2.5 will be included in the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) readings.

"As a result of PM2.5 being incorporated into the PSI, more days will be classified as 'moderate' compared to before, even though the actual concentration of pollutants has not changed.

"This is purely due to the integration of the PM2.5 concentrations into the PSI scale," the National Environment Agency (NEA) said in a statement on Tuesday.

NEA added that people can carry on normal activity if air quality is in the “good” or “moderate” range and there will be no change to normal routines on the ground.

PM2.5 are tiny particles that can travel deep into the respiratory tract, and get embedded in lung tissue.

It is currently reported separately from the PSI. 

Minister for Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan on Tuesday told Parliament that Singapore will move to an integrated air quality reporting index, where PM2.5 will be incorporated into the current PSI as its sixth pollutant parameter.

In explaining the change, Dr Balakrishnan said as far as public health is concerned, PM2.5 concentrations are more often a cause for concern.

He said the move would also simplify the air quality reporting system.

Going forward, he said PM2.5 levels are expected to determine the PSI "almost all the time".

Dr Philip Koh, chairman of the medical board at Healthway Medical Group, said: "Previously, when we had both the PSI and PM2.5 indices, there was some confusion. Air quality is reflected in such a way that people are only concerned about how does the air quality affect their health.

"If the more hazardous element is incorporated into the PSI, then they will be able to see that 'oh the higher PSI, now actually gives a better reflection of the hazard it has on my health'."

Since August 24, 2012, NEA has been reporting 24-hour PM2.5 concentrations alongside the PSI, which was done as the first step in the transition to the new air quality reporting system.

NEA will now complete the transition by incorporating the 24-hour PM2.5 concentrations into the PSI.

From May 1, the PSI will reflect a total of six pollutants -- sulphur dioxide (SO2), particulate matter (PM10) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and ozone (O3).

The 3-hour PSI will also take into account PM2.5 concentrations.

NEA will also publish the 1-hour PM2.5 concentrations every hour.

Previously, health advisories issued by the government were based on 24-hour PSI and 24-hour PM2.5, whichever was worse.

Under the new air quality reporting system, the health advisory will be based on the new 24-hour PSI as it now directly takes into account PM2.5.

NEA said air quality information will be reported every hour from 7am to 11pm during non-haze periods, and around the clock during haze periods.

The information will be made available on the NEA website, the haze microsite, NEA Facebook, NEA Twitter and smart phone app, MyENV.

NEA will continue to regularly review Singapore's air quality reporting index to ensure that it remains a relevant and useful guide for the public to help plan their daily activities.

Dr Balakrishnan also announced the setting up of an International Advisory Panel on transboundary pollution, which will be co-chaired by Professor S Jayakumar and Professor Tommy Koh. 

The panel would advise the government on trends and developments in international law on transboundary pollution, as well as solutions and practical steps Singapore can adopt.

Dr Balakrishnan said that beyond a bilateral and multilateral approach, effective enforcement is also needed on the ground.





New panel on transboundary pollution
By Audrey Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THE Government will appoint an international panel to advise it on issues related to transboundary pollution.

The body will be co-chaired by Professor S. Jayakumar and Ambassador-at-large Tommy Koh, and will include legal experts from Singapore and overseas.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Vivian Balakrishnan told Parliament yesterday that it will provide insights on trends and developments in international law related to transboundary pollution, as well as legal issues arising from its impact.

The International Advisory Panel on Transboundary Pollution, as it will be known, will also advise the Government on solutions that Singapore can adopt.

Dr Balakrishnan urged Indonesia to ratify the Asean Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution, adding that it was the "last member of Asean who has signed, but not ratified, the agreement".

The pact, which was signed by all 10 members in 2002, commits countries to prevent open burning, monitor prevention efforts, share information and help one another in tackling the haze.

But "ratifying an agreement on its own will also be insufficient if ground measures remain weak", Dr Balakrishnan acknowledged. He added: "Most importantly, we need effective investigation and enforcement on the ground at the source of these fires."

His remarks come at a time when air quality here - as measured by the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) - is gradually worsening as the haze returns.

Dr Balakrishnan also noted that the situation "is worse this year (compared with) last year", when Singapore experienced the worst bout of haze, with PSI readings hitting a record of 401 last June.

An unusual dry spell in Riau province in Sumatra, Indonesia, since late December has seen farmers taking the opportunity to clear land by starting fires, which are causing the haze.

But as the Indonesian authorities have yet to disclose the concession maps, the Asean Sub-Regional Haze Monitoring System "will not be able to achieve its intended purpose" of pinpointing companies that practise illegal land clearing activities, Dr Balakrishnan said.

He said the Transboundary Haze Pollution Bill now up for public consultation sends a signal that "irresponsible commercial actions that put the health of Singaporeans at risk" would not be condoned. The proposed legislation would hold companies or other entities liable for causing haze affecting Singapore.

Responding to a supplementary question raised by Mr Vikram Nair (Sembawang GRC) on whether Singapore might consider taking action, such as international arbitration, against Indonesia, Dr Balakrishnan said that was a reason the international panel was appointed.

"We will await their deliberations and their recommendations. We will keep our options open."








Big users must submit plans on water efficiency
By Grace Chua, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

AS SINGAPORE grapples with a prolonged dry spell, the Government is toughening measures to get large water users to save water.

Those who consume 5,000 cubic m of water a month or more - two Olympic swimming pools' worth - will have to submit water efficiency management plans to national water agency PUB by June next year. And they have to give updates yearly.

They also have to install private meters to measure water consumption in each part of their premises.

The measures were announced in Parliament yesterday by Environment and Water Resources Minister Vivian Balakrishnan.

They will affect about 600 users, such as semiconductor manufacturers, power generation companies and hotels.

Dr Balakrishnan said the measures will be extended progressively to include more users.

The move to rein in water usage among the big boys is because the non-domestic sector is expected to account for about 70 per cent of water consumption in Singapore in 2060, a rise from about 55 per cent now.

Already, some 35 per cent of them have voluntarily submitted water efficiency management plans. For example, power generation firm Senoko Energy, which uses about 700,000 cubic m of water a year, or 58,300 cubic m a month, has such plans.

"As water is a significant cost in our operations, we already monitor our water usage closely as a matter of course," a spokesman told The Straits Times.

She said that by installing more water-efficient power generation units, Senoko has cut water consumption by about 45 per cent since 2008.

It also has its own desalination facility to cut dependence on PUB-supplied water, she added.

At Hilton Singapore hotel on Orchard Road, about 7,500 cubic m of water is used a month, mostly in its 421 guest rooms. To help save water, it urges guests to leave towels on the floor if they want them washed.

The requirements of the new water plan mirror those of large energy users.

Under the Energy Conservation Act, which went into force last year, large energy users must monitor and report to the National Environment Agency their energy use and greenhouse gas emissions, appoint energy managers and submit energy efficiency improvement plans.

For households, Dr Balakrishnan said the minimum water efficiency standards for washing machines would be tightened from April 1, when only those with one "tick" or more (a measure of efficiency) can be sold.

From next year, the minimum standard will be two "ticks" or more.

In his reply to Ms Lee Bee Wah's (Nee Soon GRC) question on why Newater was pumped into reservoirs and treated again if it could be pumped directly to homes, Dr Balakrishnan said only one water authority in the world does it: Windhoek in Namibia.

"As a doctor, I know Newater is safe to drink. But to dispense with the environmental buffer, to make it routine, is a big step," he said.

"My paramount consideration will always be safety and health."





Sparring over Big Brother, cabs and cycling
Robust, transparent rules needed on storage, access and use of CCTV info
By Chua Mui Hoong, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

THERE was a moment when yesterday's lively Parliament session would have pleased Big Brother.

Second Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Grace Fu showed footage of a man caught on film tossing a cigarette butt at a roadside. As the licence plate of his motorbike was visible, he was duly identified and fined.

Taken with this idea, MP Lim Biow Chuan asked if the National Environment Agency "would be relying on CCTVs installed along lamp posts in the private estates to take enforcement action against litterbugs".

Ms Fu's reply: NEA already taps CCTV footage from government agencies for a range of purposes. It uses Land Transport Authority (LTA) footage to monitor flooding.

In fact, it wants to do more: "We are very keen to leverage on all existing resources within the government agencies. We are particularly interested in what MHA has announced about the CCTVs that it is going to install at our void decks. That is a lot of CCTVs for us to consider. And also all existing and future technology that will help us put in place a more effective enforcement regime."

On March 6, the Ministry of Home Affairs said it would put up CCTVs in all 10,000 Housing Board blocks and multi-storey carparks by 2016.

But since raw footage is not very helpful, Ms Fu said good analytics is needed to make use of it. Even if CCTVs caught someone littering in public, the person would be hard to identify, she noted.

MP Heng Chee How chimed in, suggesting that NEA tap in-car cameras that can capture littering from moving vehicles - complete with the cars' licence plates.

Listening to the exchange, I quailed at the thought of all that invasion of personal privacy. What if facial recognition technology is used, mapped against identity card records and photos?

Clearly, the time is ripe for a serious discussion on the protection of personal data - not just from merchants, which is the main subject of the recent Personal Data Protection Act, but also from the claws of an overzealous State.

Since an Act to protect citizens' data from the State will take a long while to be enacted, in the interim, there must be transparent and robust guidelines on storage of all that CCTV footage, and strict rules on access and use of that information.

Vague assurances of safeguards from the Government are not enough. When footage of citizens are being snapped as they go about their daily lives by State CCTVs, they have a right to be involved in creating the rules on what can and cannot be done with all that information by the State. Some exceptions might be made in matters of life and death or national security; but the threshold for release of personal information must be high.

To be fair to the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, the use of surveillance technology to tackle, say, high-rise littering which can kill, may be justified. But using mass CCTV footage to catch a few folk who forget to bin their disposable cups sounds like overkill.

While MPs and ministers joined forces on this, there were other moments when they seemed to be talking at cross purposes.

MP Ang Hin Kee pressed LTA to review its taxi availability standards. The executive adviser of the National Taxi Association (NTA) said cabbies had complained about having to cruise empty just to chalk up daily minimum mileage requirements. He said: "I would urge that LTA officials may want to go down to the ground and understand the implementation on the ground, because it deviates fairly much from the intended objective of what the MOT (Ministry of Transport) has put in place."

Mr Ang clearly knows the issue inside out, and could recite figures showing that the new standards have not caused an increase in taxi ridership. In other words, what is the point of insisting on taxis chalking up mileage - and cruising empty - when it does not result in more commuters managing to get cabs?

Without conceding the point, Senior Minister of State for Transport Josephine Teo nevertheless replied in good grace at the end of the exchange: "It is good that the NTA has continued to raise this issue with the taxi companies, and we certainly agree with Mr Ang that it is useful to find out what more is happening on the ground, and we will do so."

On cycling, too, there was no easy meeting of minds. Parliamentary Secretary for Transport Muhamad Faishal Ibrahim said Bishan, Bukit Panjang and Woodlands would become cycling towns, and that Marina Bay would pilot a bike-sharing scheme.

MP Irene Ng, an ardent cycling advocate, acknowledged progress in cycling infrastructure, but thought the approach was too "piecemeal". She pushed for a national plan, with a target to be set for cycling as a mode of transport.

But is that what people really want, Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew asked. Most cyclists in Singapore are recreational ones. Some bike to get to nearby areas. Only a small group use it as their primary mode of transport.

Given this profile of cyclists, he said, "our priority is to have off-road segregated cycling paths" that let cyclists get to their destinations without over-exposure to speeding cars, and on paths where they will not endanger pedestrians.

The issue of cyclists on the roads is at risk of becoming polarised between motorists and cyclists, with some incidents of conflict caught on camera.

While some want a concerted effort to promote on-road cycling, Mr Lui is right to be cautious.

It is easy to say all road users must share the road - which of course they must - but it is a different thing altogether to get more cyclists using fast-flowing roads when other road users are not ready to give way.





MINISTRY OF CULTURE, COMMUNITY AND YOUTH

Malay/Muslim organisations to improve outreach
Move to ensure needy do not fall through the cracks
By Maryam Mokhtar, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

MALAY/MUSLIM organisations are making a concerted push to improve their outreach and make services easier to tap, to ensure that the needy do not fall through the cracks.

For instance, the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) and self-help group Mendaki are partnering six mosques so that families on Muis' social assistance can also tap on Mendaki's educational and employment schemes.

Help can also be sought from more locations - including Mendaki satellite centres in Pasir Ris and Woodlands - with the change.

The programme, Nadi Khidmat, will be launched this year, Minister in Charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim said yesterday.

He acknowledged that there were some who needed help but were not aware of assistance schemes, and where they could turn to.

Speaking during the debate on the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth's budget, Dr Yaacob listed another example of an effort to improve the delivery of services - a new framework to improve Malay/Muslim organisations' efficiency.

It will be led by the Community Leaders' Forum (CLF) - a platform that brings together organisations such as mosques and schools - and will help Malay/Muslim bodies tap on a $2.6 million development fund to meet training needs.

Together with the National Council of Social Service and the Social Services Institute, the CLF will also identify programmes for Malay/Muslim bodies to improve their organisational development.

"These measures will help ensure that the Malay/Muslim organisations, who are our key partners in providing welfare services, are efficient, well-organised and have good governance," said Dr Yaacob, who is also Minister for Communications and Information.

In his speech, he also urged the Malay/Muslim community to guard against extreme religious views and misinformation online.

"Some members of our community may be easily influenced by the extreme stances of the vocal few from other parts of the Muslim world," he said.

Earlier, Dr Intan Azura Mokhtar (Ang Mo Kio GRC) voiced concern about the differing opinions that have surfaced.

Some see themselves as "true Muslims", while others call themselves "liberal Muslims", she said.

Mr Zainal Sapari (Pasir Ris- Punggol GRC) also warned of potential polarisation within the community due to social media.

Dr Yaacob said "enlightened guidance" and continuous learning must be the basis of the community's defence against such forces.

"The sheer accessibility and spread of misinformation on social media will continue to pose a threat to our harmonious religious life," he said. "It is therefore imperative that we strengthen our religious knowledge.

"We should work together to ensure that our children receive proper guidance, appreciate Islamic values like peace and harmony, and are receptive to diversity."

Muis has several initiatives planned, he added, including one where seven more mosques will offer religious classes to adults.

This brings the total number of centres offering such classes to 13 this year.

Where there is contention, said Dr Yaacob, the Office of the Mufti, Singapore's highest Islamic authority, should have the final say.








A GENERATION TO REMEMBER
Pioneer Malay/Muslim leaders to be honoured
By Maryam Mokhtar, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

A COMMEMORATIVE publication, an appreciation ceremony and a series of fireside chats are among the initiatives being lined up to pay tribute to Malay/Muslim members of the pioneer generation.

The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) and self-help group Mendaki will set up a joint committee to launch these initiatives.

They will also think of additional ways to honour the work done by pioneers, Minister in Charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim said in Parliament yesterday.

Speaker of the House Halimah Yacob will lead the committee.

In announcing these plans, Dr Yaacob said the community's pioneer leaders had "stood together with national leaders to build a cohesive and progressive multiracial nation".

He listed Singapore's first president, the late Yusof Ishak, and the late attorney-general Ahmad Ibrahim as notable pioneers.

Dr Yaacob also held up the work done by the late former Jamiyah president Haji Abu Bakar Maidin and former deputy librarian of the National University of Singapore Manijeh Namazie.

"These and many other Malay/Muslim personalities are role models for our young," he said. "They are passionate, driven individuals whose successes have helped Singapore grow as one nation. We must honour and celebrate them."

Muis and Mendaki will use platforms like mosques to reach out to pioneers in the community so that they are aware of and understand the details of the Pioneer Generation Package.

The package offers health-care assistance for life to about 450,000 Singaporeans who are aged 65 and older this year and who became Singapore citizens before 1987.








$1.5b to be pumped into sports facilities for all
By Wang Meng Meng, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

TO GIVE Singaporeans a venue for play and exercise within 10 minutes of their homes, the Government is committing $1.5 billion to build new sports facilities or spruce up existing ones.

The changes to the sporting landscape will come into effect by 2030 and are part of Phase One of the Sports Facilities Master Plan (SFMP), Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said yesterday.

Speaking during the debate on his ministry's budget, Mr Wong said: "We are building sporting facilities all over Singapore, for all Singaporeans to enjoy." The minister added that the community in Singapore is diverse, and so are its sporting needs.

Punggol will be among the first neighbourhoods to benefit.

A regional sports centre (RSC), complete with football field and swimming pool, will be integrated with Punggol's waterways and sharing the same location with a Safra clubhouse.

It will be the second of five RSCs planned. These facilities are larger than existing sports and recreation centres, with larger seating capacities and LED screens to bring the community together for a better spectator experience.

The first is being built in Tampines. The locations of the other three have not been announced.

Sembawang residents can also look forward to a new town sports and recreation centre, which could feature facilities for rock climbing and BMX cycling.

While there are no plans yet for new facilities to be introduced in Ang Mo Kio under Phase One, the existing Ang Mo Kio Swimming Complex will be redeveloped into the Ang Mo Kio Wet Play Field.

Plans are in place to introduce an adventure sports pool with a floating playground in the facility.

Such community initiatives will complement the crown jewel of the Singapore sports scene, the new Singapore Sports Hub.

It will be fully opened in June, and host the SEA Games and Asean Para Games next year.

"We want to meet sporting needs at all levels - national, regional, town and community," said Mr Wong.





$65m plan to beef up cultural institutions
More room for precious artefacts at museums, plus more facilities
By Corrie Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

TWO top museums will get more room for precious artefacts and new exhibits as part of a $65 million effort to rejuvenate Singapore's cultural institutions.

Some $10 million has been set aside for the National Museum of Singapore and $25 million for the Asian Civilisations Museum (ACM), Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said yesterday.

The ACM at Empress Place will get a redesigned lobby, new shops and dining options.

Its permanent galleries will be expanded, adding a total of about 1,500 sq m to the building. This will give the museum more space to house artefacts such as the Tang Cargo, a selection of more than 50,000 objects salvaged from the Java Sea.

Mr Wong said his ministry is also exploring a new entrance for the museum - one which opens onto the Singapore River. He added: "We may combine this with a new gallery space that will breathe more light into the museum.

"This needs a bit more study, but it is a potential game-changer."

The revamp comes on the heels of a record year for museum visitorship, with more than three million visitors to national museums after free entry for Singapore citizens and permanent residents was implemented.

Meanwhile, a new 344 sq m wing dedicated to children and young families will be introduced at the National Museum.

Called Play@NMS, it will open in May and will emphasise interactivity and hands-on learning.

Teacher Ong Xin Yi, 29, is hoping the new venue will mean that her 21/2-year-old daughter Hannah has an opportunity to go to more museum exhibitions.

Many shows are currently not accessible to youngsters, and the family ends up not going.

Ms Ong said: "We are always looking out for things we can do together as a family, and we are firm believers of how children can learn through art and experiential learning."

In his speech, Mr Wong also said the National Museum will capture more "everyday heritage" by gathering stories and artefacts from Singaporeans from all walks of life to incorporate into the museum experience.

Some $21 million will go to sprucing up the Esplanade and developing a children's theatre within the performing arts centre, and about $9 million to the Heritage Conservation Centre.








ENGAGING IN ART THAT HEALS
VWOs can tap $1.5m fund for art programmes
By Priscilla Goy, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

VOLUNTARY welfare organisations (VWOs) that use the arts in their programmes can soon tap on a new fund.

Some $1.5 million will be set aside over three years for this fund under ArtReach, a National Arts Council (NAC) initiative to take the arts to the less privileged.

Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Culture, Community and Youth Sam Tan said in Parliament yesterday: "We believe that the arts and sports have the potential to uplift our society - including the underserved and vulnerable."

NAC will administer the fund and match interested VWOs to artists to develop the programmes.

These could include those where the arts are used to improve the well-being of the elderly, or as a rehabilitative tool to help people cope with grief, for instance.

NAC will work with community development councils to ensure that the projects are "coordinated and have maximum impact in the community", said Mr Tan.

He cited Hua Mei's Elder-centred Programme of Integrated Comprehensive Care as a good example. Run by the Tsao Foundation's Hua Mei Centre for Successful Ageing, it offers a range of quality art activities, from painting and sewing to drumming.

A regular participant, Madam Maligah Arumugan Ramasamy, 79, shows "great talent" and forgets her chronic pains when she is engaged in pottery, said Mr Tan.

Centre director Peh Kim Choo welcomed the new funding support and agreed that the arts benefit the elderly.

"Old people are usually reminded of their weaknesses, how frail they are," she said.

"But when they create something beautiful and people enjoy their work, they discover their strengths."

Some of their works were exhibited at venues such as a Tiong Bahru cafe and Tan Tock Seng Hospital last year.

Madam Loke Swee Heong, 84, who paints or sews at the centre thrice a week, said: "It relieves me of boredom. I am happy to be able to paint and sew with my friends here."

More details of the fund will be given next month.





$20m to promote S'pore art abroad
By Corrie Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

ARTISTS hoping to make the leap to the global stage will get some help from the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY), which is setting aside $20 million over the next five years to raise the profile of Singaporeans abroad.

To build on successes such as home-grown film-maker Anthony Chen's award-winning movie Ilo Ilo, MCCY will work with the Foreign Affairs Ministry to identify new opportunities for artists and arts groups to participate in programmes such as overseas festivals and arts residencies.

Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said: "When our artists perform overseas, they are also flying the Singapore flag. They represent an important part of our efforts in cultural diplomacy."

Multidisciplinary artist Sarah Choo, 23, who is currently completing a master's in Fine Arts in London, feels that showing her work at international events can be enriching, as she is exposed to different reactions and gets to meet renowned artists.

Ms Choo, who has exhibited her work in countries such as Germany and the United States, said it pushes her to think beyond just a direct representation of Singapore.

"It is a challenge to apply my experiences and draw relationships and parallels to situations overseas, and bring that out through my artwork."





New $10m fund for public artwork
It will give local artists opportunities to integrate art into the environment
By Corrie Tan, The Straits Times, 12 Mar 2014

FROM housing estates to Changi Airport, more public art will transform Singapore's cityscape as a result of the setting up of the Public Art Trust.

It will commission, display, promote and maintain new public artworks, Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said yesterday when he announced the initiative at the debate on his ministry's budget.

To start the ball rolling, his ministry will give it $10 million in seed funding.

"The trust will give more opportunities for artists, especially Singaporean artists, to integrate their work into the built environment," Mr Wong said.

Private donations given to the trust will be matched by the Government dollar-for-dollar under the $200 million Cultural Matching Fund.

The trust will not fund the maintenance of existing artwork. But it will pay for the maintenance of the artwork it commissions.

Detailed plans and budgets for maintenance must be submitted when applying to the trust.

Singaporean sculptor Yeo Chee Kiong, 44, who has created several pieces of public artwork, feels the trust is a step in the right direction.

"For sculptures, especially if you want something that is more long-lasting, the choice of material and method of production is very important," he said. "If you choose the right material to deliver an idea, there might be fewer problems with maintenance.

"But you might be limited by the materials that you can use outdoors. It is something we need to think about, especially for artists who never deal with public art."

The National Arts Council will consult the public on the features of the trust before finalising the scheme by year's end.



Little India Riot COI: Day 14

$
0
0
Soul-searching needed on first reactions: NGO chief
Foreign workers here to stay, so S'poreans must develop healthy approach to situation
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

SINGAPOREANS should do some soul-searching on whether some of the initial responses to the riots showed latent prejudice against guest workers here, said the president of human rights group Maruah, Ms Braema Mathi.

Ms Mathi was sharing her views yesterday with the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the Dec 8 riot in Little India.

Foreign workers are here to stay, she added, and a healthy and open approach must be developed to deal with this reality, including at the level of schools.



Taking the committee back to the immediate days following the violence, Ms Mathi said reactions to the violence ranged from "being bigoted to being compassionate", with some labelling groups of foreign workers as a mob.

"We cannot fluctuate from a moment of dehumanising them, and then suddenly... we humanise the person," she told the inquiry. "It has to be consistently borne from a value system."

The law to enforce public order that was subsequently implemented in Little India, was also a case of "too fast, too quick, to quickly put it all on alcohol", said Ms Mathi, who asked what this signalled to migrant workers.

Instead, she recommended that frontline officers who deal with foreign workers regularly be given soft-skills training, such as an understanding of South Asian cultural norms, language and behaviour.

She cited the example of an incident that happened in January at Rex Cinema, which is located near Little India.

She said police officers responding to a case then had used the word "dey" (Hey, in Tamil) to address the crowd of South Asian foreign workers, rather than "thambi" (younger brother) or "annai" (older brother).

Some 150 angry Indian movie-goers had refused to leave the compound that night, after a Tamil movie's premiere was postponed.

Some had been workers who had taken the day off specially to catch the movie.

"I think the guys in uniform will be the most important folks, the most neutral folks, to help us in bridging (communities) because they are walking the streets every day."

More work also needs to be done in schools to inculcate a value system from a young age, added Ms Mathi.

"(Education) Minister Heng Swee Keat, when he first came to Parliament, said values are the most important thing," she noted. "Are we doing enough value training on how we treat guest workers? I think this is the biggest area we have to work on."

Maruah is one of the non-government groups invited by the COI to share their views on what led to the riot, and what more can be done to help prevent another outbreak of violence. Wedding planner K. Vataramathi, who had volunteered to appear before the inquiry to share her thoughts on the issue, also suggested that there should be better integration of foreign workers.

This could be done, for instance, by having a more racially diverse mix of shops in Little India, she added.

Interacting with Malay and Chinese merchants in the Indian enclave could help migrant workers pick up local languages and "would be more representative of Singapore society", added Ms Vataramathi, who used to have an office in Little India.

She also cited the example of successful prata shops opened by Chinese entrepreneurs in places like Australia.

"In Singapore, our multiracialism is much appreciated," said the 53-year-old. "I think in these foreign workers, we have to instill that too."





Resident misses area's charm and vibrancy, others say it's peaceful
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

WHEN Ms Tan Huilinn moved into her Buffalo Road flat seven years ago, the area was already a bustling enclave for workers from India, Bangladesh and other parts of South Asia.

Noisy chatter from the crowds gathered at the void decks of Housing Board blocks and open fields in Little India on Sundays added, rather than detracted from, the area's charm.

The housewife - who testified yesterday before the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the Dec 8 riot - gave a markedly different take from many long-time residents of the estate who appeared before and after she took the stand at the hearings.

On Tuesday, Mr Martin Pereira, a resident of Klang Lane which is just a stone's throw from the epicentre of the riot, told the committee that foreign workers would have a picnic, consume alcohol and sleep at void decks and other public places.

The chairman of the Tekka Residents' Committee said residents want to feel safe and not have their neighbourhood intruded by "hordes of men in a drunken stupor".

Ms Tan, however, said that an "unnatural" calm has now settled in Little India after the authorities clamped down on public intoxication and increased enforcement patrols in the wake of the riot.

"I feel that Little India has lost its charm and vibrancy," she told the inquiry.

For instance, foreign workers used to be seen and heard cheering and whistling during the Tamil harvest festival of Pongal, said Ms Tan, who is in her 30s.

But this year's celebrations were significantly muted.

The droves of foreign workers who make their way to Little India on their days off each weekend gave the area its liveliness and distinctive atmosphere.

These workers, she said, are usually polite and would only cause minor inconveniences, such as chatting loudly or falling asleep in public places after a few drinks.

The alcohol ban - a move she does not support - has driven some of them away.

Ms Tan told the COI that while it is all nice and quiet at night now, it is also "kind of strange at the same time" because it is "unnatural" for Little India.

"It's a forced kind of silence," added Ms Tan, who has an arts degree from a university in Australia. "It's nice to see the workers being able to relax and just sit on the fields, catching up with one another. But now, you don't see any of that, which is kind of sad in my view."

But residents who moved into the area before the influx of foreign workers - which many say started about 12 to 15 years ago - welcomed the new restrictions on alcohol sales and the increased patrols by both the auxiliary and regular police.

They said the clampdown on public consumption of alcohol has helped reduce the size of crowds that congregate in the public areas around their neighbourhood, finally bringing them some peace and quiet. Foreign workers, they told the committee, would vomit, urinate and litter at their void decks.

Mr Lim Choon Kiang, who has lived in Buffalo Road for 32 years, usually meets his 25-year-old daughter at the Little India MRT station when she returns home late at night to walk her home. This started after she was harassed by workers who would whistle at her or ask her for money.

The 54-year-old wants the restriction on alcohol sales and consumption to be made permanent so workers will stop congregating in the estate.

Mr Ho Kin Hong, who has also lived in the area for 32 years, noted that more shops in the area now sell alcohol, which add to the chaos on weekends. But things have been looking up since the authorities stepped in after the riot last year.

"Before the riot, the condition here was very chaotic. There would be cars blaring their horns, noise pollution," said the retiree. "By 9 o'clock these days, it feels very peaceful, not much noise there now."





Thai workers have help fitting in here, thanks to group
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

THE Thais were here first, making up the bulk of workers during Singapore's construction boom in the 80s and early 90s, years ahead of workers from India and Bangladesh.

Like them, the Thais also had an enclave of their own - Golden Mile Complex.

But unlike their South Indian counterparts, they could count on a body that acts as an intermediary with the Thai government and helps them integrate into Singapore society.

The Friends of Thai Workers Association operates under Thailand's Office of Labour Affairs but is run by volunteers. It organises courses, such as English lessons and computer classes, as well as recreational activities, to help keep Thai workers here occupied and out of trouble.

Committee of Inquiry chairman G. Pannir Selvam mentioned this group on a few occasions - most recently on Tuesday when he told Transient Workers Count Too president Russell Heng of its efforts to help ease Thai workers into life here by teaching them local languages.

The committee had also gone down to Golden Mile Complex in the course of their investigation to speak to migrant workers from Thailand.

Yesterday, three representatives from the association appeared before the panel to share its experience.

Language, said Ms Rungnapa Kitiarsa, is crucial in helping Thai workers fit in. Her late husband, one of the association's earliest volunteers, started English classes for workers who were usually skilled but struggled with the language barrier.

The association, she said, is also a "second home" for Thai nationals here, and a platform for them to learn new skills.

"It's people living there instead of going to hang out drinking or spending time doing something else... They can upgrade themselves to get a better job as well," she said.


Related
Little India Riot COI: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 11, Day 12, Day 13

First group of Filipino construction workers arrives in Singapore

$
0
0
By Saifulbahri Ismail, Channel NewsAsia, 13 Mar 2014

The first group of nine construction workers from the Philippines has arrived in Singapore.

The Philippines is a country which Singapore hopes can be its new source of skilled manpower for infrastructure projects.

The workers have acquired the necessary skills, having completed training and tests in the Philippines.

They are expected to start work on March 17 and are all raring to go.



Filipino construction workers recruited by Yang Seng Engineering come from different cities across the Philippines. They aspire to do well and make their families proud.

Jonathan Boado, a Filipino construction worker, said: "I want to work here together with all these other people, to my best ability. I will (bear) in... mind (that) I want to help my parents because we are poor people in my country."

Construction workers from the Philippines are considered better skilled, many with experience in working overseas.

In addition, their ability to speak better English is something that companies consider an asset.

Koh Kwong Quee, assistant general manager at Yang Seng Engineering, said: "Language proficiency wise, I think they are better -- they can understand well because they speak English well...

"The other non-traditional source workers, they are not really well educated, so sometimes when communicating with them, we found some difficulty."

Singapore is expected to recruit some 200 Filipino construction workers a month when all the overseas training centres in the Philippines are fully operational.

When more of them are in Singapore, as part of their employment conditions, the Philippine government will require the workers to be housed in a separate building from workers of other nationalities.

Vincent Cabe, labour attache at the Embassy of the Philippines in Singapore, said: "We have encountered cases where there are conflicts between... foreign workers because of cultural differences, and perhaps sometimes because of language differences.

"They don't seem to understand each other, and Filipinos also have some different cultural dimensions that are different from other nationals of other labour-sending countries.

"So it is best that we base it on this experience with other countries... (and) try to avoid it rather than wait for something to go wrong."

So far, the workers are happy with the accommodation at the dormitory.

Filipino construction worker Froilan Rodriguez said: "(It) is systematic (here). We have different rooms and different kitchens. So, it's good here."

Besides the condition on accommodation, the Philippine government has also requested that the workers are provided with meals.

Mr Cabe explained: "The reason being that if these workers are on the job from morning to sunset, or even take overtime, sometimes we presume then they wouldn't have time to cook their own meals.

“The company should… provide free food so that when they go home, they only have to eat and then rest because we believe the job of the construction workers is a little bit heavy."

Yang Seng Engineering has agreed to give the Filipino workers a food allowance of S$100. This is on top of their salary of about S$800 per month, or S$30 a day.

The Filipinos will complement the construction manpower in Singapore -- who are mainly from China, India and Bangladesh.


Parliament Highlights - 12 Mar 2014

$
0
0
Committee of Supply Debate: MOH, MCCY





Subsidies for all to pay MediShield Life premiums
Help for low- and middle-income Singaporeans will be permanent: Gan
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014


The pioneer generation who are 65 years and older will have hefty 40-60 per cent subsidies.

There will also be transitional premium subsidies for everyone, regardless of income. This is part of the Government's decision "to support most of the initial costs of universal coverage", he said.

As a result, the Government's direct spending on health care is projected to increase to $7.5 billion in the coming financial year - almost double the $4 billion it spent just three years ago.

That goes up to $8 billion if Medisave top-ups are included.



As promised, the Government will take on a larger share of national health-care expenditure, from 33 per cent in FY2012 to 40 per cent or more.

Premiums for MediShield Life are expected to be substantially higher than current MediShield premiums, causing people to worry that it could wipe out their Medisave funds.

Mr Gan told Parliament yesterday that with the top-ups and subsidies, most people will not use more than half their annual Medisave contributions for premiums.

He said that for a typical low- to medium-income household with working age parents and two children, "we aim to keep their net premiums to the current level or lower, after taking into account the permanent government subsidies, additional Medisave contributions and top-ups".

Similarly, Singaporeans aged 55 to 64 whose income is at or below the median will see no premium increase. Again, this is after taking into account higher Medisave contributions and various top-ups.

If, in spite of all the government help, there are still people who cannot afford the premiums, Medifund will step in.

But help has to go to those who need it, said Mr Gan. "Those who have the means should still pay their own share. In this way, we look after one another."

The minister also gave an update of Healthcare 2020. Singapore is on track in its goal to build more hospitals, nursing homes and day-care centres that will add 11,000 more beds, he said.

But while this remains important, the Health Ministry will shift its focus this year to providing more and better home-care services, so that more seniors can continue to live at home, rather than be institutionalised.

The help will be comprehensive, with medical, personal and rehabilitation care. The Health Ministry will fund or subsidise these services. By 2020, up to 10,000 people can get home medical and nursing care and 7,500, home personal care.

Caregivers will also be taken care of, with respite services for seven to 30 days a year so that they do not burn out. Those who need a break over the weekend will welcome a move that will let them leave the patient at an elder-care centre for a few hours.

This will "allow our elders to age in place and live their golden years with or close to their families", Mr Gan said.









Medisave use expanded to cut outpatient costs
Changes mean lower out-of-pocket payments and more funds can be withdrawn for chronic care, scans
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

MEDISAVE purse strings will be loosened further to help people cope with the cost of their outpatient treatments.

Currently, people can use only up to $400 per Medisave account a year for chronic diseases, and up to $600 for outpatient scans, but only if the scans are for cancer.

From July 1, the Government is scrapping the $30 deductible amount patients must pay each time they use Medisave for chronic outpatient treatments.

This move means people will have less out-of-pocket payments to make, and can draw more from the $400 annual maximum to defray their bills for chronic care.

However, the 15 per cent co-payment remains.

And from early next year, people can use up to $300 a year for non-cancer-related scans needed for outpatient diagnosis and treatment. These include magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography scans, X-rays and ultrasound scans.

Medisave currently pays for such scans for patients who are hospitalised and this has led some to ask to be warded so that they can make a claim from Medisave.

However, this $300 cannot be used to increase the payment for cancer scans beyond the $600 cap.



The other change for outpatient treatment is that, from next year, older people can withdraw up to $200 more a year from Medisave for outpatient treatment.

Details of who qualifies and what it can be used for are still being worked out and will be announced in the next few months.

But Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said this Flexi-Medisave scheme can be used for coughs and colds at a private clinic that is on the Community Health Assist Scheme. It can also be used to pay for chronic care if a person has used up all the $400 a year allowed for this.

The call to let people draw more from their Medisave was made in Parliament yesterday by MPs such as Non-Constituency MP Gerald Giam.

He said: "Patients above age 75 should be allowed to use their Medisave without being subject to annual limits. This will ensure that they are not deterred from seeking treatment because of high out-of-pocket payments."

In his response, Mr Gan said many elderly Singaporeans want to be self-reliant and not be a burden to their children, and have asked to be allowed to tap their Medisave more easily.


Medisave contributions will go up by one percentage point next year.






Helping more seniors 'age in place' at home
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

MORE seniors will get an opportunity to be tended to in their own homes rather than in an institution, after the Ministry of Health announced plans to increase capacity and roll out more subsidies for home care.


It would also give hospitals more breathing space in the tight hospital bed situation.

The Government is committing funds to help home care providers expand and the target is to allow 10,000 people to be on home medical and nursing care by 2020, and 7,500 on home personal care, Senior Minister of State for Health Amy Khor said yesterday.

The corresponding numbers of people who can get such help currently are 5,400 and 1,100.

Home health care refers to visits by medical professionals like doctors, nurses and physiotherapists, while home personal care typically refers to help with daily activities like bathing.

The need for more home care services in the light of the ageing population was raised in Parliament by several MPs, including Associate Professor Fatimah Lateef (Marine Parade GRC) and Workers' Party secretary-general Low Thia Khiang (Aljunied GRC).

In her reply, Dr Khor also said seniors who cannot access rehabilitation services will be able to get up to four months of therapy at home from next month.

Those undergoing home care can also get their homes assessed for potential hazards, to help them transition safely from their hospital stay.

Subsidies for both the rehabilitation and home assessment services will be based on means-testing, and can be as much as $97 per visit.

The ministry is also looking at funding home care providers on a per-client, rather than per-visit basis. Currently, funding is provided based on the number of care hours or home visits needed.

The change means the Government will provide a fixed amount of funding per month for each senior under a provider's care.

The new funding model is likely to be implemented in the third quarter of this year.

"It gives service providers more certainty of longer-term financial support for our clients," said Mr Kavin Seow, director of home care and caregiver services at Touch Community Services, welcoming the move.

Home care providers will also have to come up with more comprehensive care offerings, so clients can get their medical and personal care needs - like bathing - tended to all at one go.

"Today, some seniors may find that home care services are delivered in a fragmented manner with lack of coordination between separate health and personal care providers," Dr Khor said.

"This creates barriers to home care and is not ideal as an individual's health and personal care needs are closely intertwined."





MAKING LIFE POSSIBLE WITH HOME CARE
Hassle of daily polyclinic visits avoided
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

AFTER an operation last July, Ms Masayang Abdul Samad was left with an open wound in her left arm which needed cleaning daily.

She could have gone to a polyclinic to get the job done. But this would have been a hassle, as the 41-year-old is blind and would have had to find someone to accompany her.

Instead, she engaged a nurse from the Home Nursing Foundation, who went to her home for the next three months to help her with the cleaning. "Without home care I would most probably also have stayed in hospital longer to have the wound settled," she said.

She also gets weekly help for basic housework, like mopping and sweeping the floor.

"I can do housework myself, but I'm not able to see, so it might not be very clean," said Ms Masayang, who is unemployed and who was left blind in 2007 after complications following a kidney infection.

She is set to benefit from the Ministry of Health's plans to provide more subsidised options and raise standards in the home-care sector.

The wound in Ms Masayang's arm has since healed, but the nurse still stops by fortnightly to help organise her medicines into daily dosages.

She takes more than 10 different medicines for her high blood pressure, kidney problems, and diabetes.

"On my own, I would have to feel the shape and size of every tablet," she said. "It's very troublesome."





Easier for patients and family members
The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

BEFORE

Typical care options after leaving hospital:
- Making weekly trips to the hospital to see doctors, nurses and therapists
- Employing a maid to look after patient. Family members have to take time off from work until maid arrives
- Taking on role of full-time caregiver by family member
- Admitting the person to a nursing home fitted with elderly-friendly features that provide a safe environment

NOW

Additional care options after being discharged:
- Doctors, nurses and therapists go to the patient's home
- Interim caregiver service provides up to 12 hours of care a day while longer-term arrangements are being worked out
- Day-care centres give the elderly a place to go for rehabilitation and recreation while family members are at work
- Subsidies for installing grab-bars and ramps at home to allow independent living




Robust home care can plug gap
By Salma Khalik, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

IN ASIAN societies, filial piety is highly valued. But in modern Singapore, people sometimes find it difficult to carry out their duty as children or grandchildren.

For them, the announcement that the Ministry of Health will give greater priority to developing home-based care this year is welcome news.


No senior wants to end his or her days in an institution, as just another patient in a row of beds. But many do, because their families, while willing, are not able provide the care they need at home.

A robust home-care service can help plug this glaring gap.

At the same time, affordable and accessible home care may also help to solve some of Singapore's health-care woes.

It could free up hospital beds if patients are more willing to go home, with the promise that they will receive 12 hours of care at home for 12 out of the first 14 days of their being discharged.

Such help would allay fears that the patient may take a turn for the worse after going home.

It would also give carers time to gain confidence in caring for the patient.

The home rehabilitation service, where a therapist or therapy aide provides rehabilitative care - for up to four months - for patients who have difficulty going to a centre for treatment, is also a laudable move.

Again, it means that the person can live at home, instead of in a nursing home or community hospital, in order to receive the care.

For those with a long-term illness requiring either medical or personal care, having such care delivered at home would be a great relief for the family.

But while these at-home services will be warmly welcomed by most people, they are not easy to implement.

A doctor, nurse or therapist can attend to many more patients at a centre than if he were to make house visits.

So for the same number of patients, many more health-care professionals will be needed - a problem that cannot be overstated amid the continuing struggle to find enough health-care manpower.

On the other hand, the move could be a new option in providing part-time work for retired health-care professionals who may be willing to care for someone in their neighbourhood.

As with almost everything, the devil is in the details. Much thought and planning will have to go into it if home care is to take off on a large scale.

And, of course, there will still be patients who require institutionalised care. Hence the need to keep building up capacity.







TARGETED PROGRAMMES FOR OLDER WORKERS
Health programmes for taxi drivers and cashiers
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

THE Health Ministry is taking a jobs-based approach to help older workers stay healthy and continue working.

This year, it will start health programmes aimed at taxi drivers and supermarket cashiers, said Senior Minister of State (Prime Minister's Office) Heng Chee How yesterday.

These are sectors with a large proportion of mature workers: 80 per cent of taxi drivers are aged 50 and older.

Programmes will be tailored to the health issues unique to each particular job. For example, ergonomic programmes can be designed for retail assistants, who tend to develop musculoskeletal disorders.


"To stay healthy is necessary. Our hope is that senior workers in Singapore can live well, long and free of worries and troubles," he added.

Several Members of Parliament also spoke about the importance of active ageing programmes.

Mr Yeo Guat Kwang (Ang Mo Kio GRC) said seniors should be encouraged to take part in active ageing programmes "so that they do not feel disempowered when they grow old".

Mr Chen Show Mao (Aljunied GRC) suggested a seniors' development account to pay for approved products and services associated with active ageing and learning.

Others, such as Mr Seng Han Thong (Ang Mo Kio GRC) and Dr Lam Pin Min (Sengkang West), noted that seniors are treasures.

Said Dr Lam: "Many people have often taken a pessimistic perspective of ageing as a 'silver tsunami', adding burden to the society.

"But I beg to differ as I see ageing as a beauty and a treasure."






Excluded from integrated plans? Benefits of MediShield Life assured
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

PEOPLE who are excluded from integrated shield plans (IPs) today will still get the basic benefits of MediShield Life, said Health Minister Gan Kim Yong.

He was responding to concerns by MPs yesterday on how the new national insurance scheme to cover all Singaporeans for life will affect IPs, which are offered by private insurers.

Nearly two-thirds of MediShield policyholders are on such plans, which made the news recently when the Health Ministry took two IP insurers to task for reducing dialysis payouts.



Yesterday, in his round-up speech on his ministry's budget, Mr Gan said IPs are different from MediShield as they provide options for better benefits "over and above" the national scheme's basic coverage.

However, the Government requires IP providers to guarantee renewals to protect policyholders.


The chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Health, Dr Lam Pin Min, later asked whether the private IP providers are allowed to reject or exclude pre-existing conditions, given the universal coverage of MediShield Life.

Dr Lam (Sengkang West) said he had come across cases where IP underwriters excluded certain conditions even after doctors certified that these conditions had been treated and would not cause long-term problems.

Replying, Mr Gan said all Singaporeans will be covered when MediShield Life kicks in next year.

All IPs will then ride on top of the basic MediShield Life coverage.

"Even those who are excluded today under the IP plans will be covered under MediShield Life, but only for the basic benefits that Medishield Life will provide," he said.

Extra benefits given by IPs, like additional coverage and payouts for higher ward classes, "may still be subject to exclusion depending on the commercial terms that IP providers will work out".

Non-Constituency MP Gerald Giam then sought to clarify whether IPs can drop the coverage of specific illnesses when the plans are renewed, such as refusing to cover prostate cancer if the policyholder has a relapse in the future.

Mr Gan said: "If you're covered today by an IP and if you develop a new disease, the IP must continue to cover you.

"If you already have an exclusion, you will still be covered by MediShield Life."

The MediShield Life review committee and his ministry have received feedback on the affordability of IPs, said Mr Gan.

They will look into appropriate options for upgrading coverage beyond MediShield Life, he added.

However, he urged Singaporeans to plan wisely and purchase an appropriate plan "that is affordable not just when we are young but also in old age", as premiums for private plans rise significantly as they grow older.

"If we plan to seek treatment at public hospitals, a more expensive insurance plan covering the cost of care in private hospitals may not be necessary," he said.

Mr Gan also welcomed preliminary recommendations on MediShield Life by the review committee.

These include removing the lifetime claim limit and enhancing payouts by raising claim limits and lowering co-insurance.





Pay rise for docs and dentists in public sector
More than 4,000 senior staff to get 9per cent hike in their basic pay
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

ABOUT 4,150 senior doctors and dentists in the public sector will get a 9 per cent increase in their basic pay next month.

This comprises 4,000 senior doctors - namely specialists, family and resident physicians, and specialist trainees - and 140 dentists of similar seniority.

The move is part of the Health Ministry's larger push to retain staff in public health care, said Senior Minister of State for Health Amy Khor yesterday.

At the same time, the ministry will seek to augment the pool by reaching out to new sources.

Examples include mid-career professionals and former nurses who want to return to full-time work.

"The ability to attract talent and manpower into the health-care sector will be key to our success in upscaling our health-care capacity," said Dr Khor in Parliament.

Singapore is projected to need 20,000 more health-care professionals by 2020.

The workforce has grown by 6,000 between 2011 and last year.

But Ms Sylvia Lim (Aljunied GRC) said that many Singaporean doctors leave for the private sector due to heavier case loads and stressful residency programmes in the public sector.

"Failure to stem the tide of attrition means that Singaporean patients at public health institutions are dealing more often with foreign staff, and experience some language barriers," Ms Lim added.

Dr Khor replied: "While we may not be able to fulfil all these aspirations in the public health-care sector, we can do more to recognise the important roles that our health-care professionals play by paying them competitively."

The pay rise is part of a remuneration framework that recognises excellence in education, research, administration and clinical care.

Under the same framework, 45,000 public health-care workers got a pay rise in 2012.

Nurses may soon get their turn too.

The national task force which charts the future direction of nursing is expected to complete its review and submit its recommendations in the second half of this year, said Dr Khor.

The task force is looking at improving nurses' education and career progression, as well as increasing recognition and rewards for them.

Former nurses keen on returning are being helped to do so.

Refresher courses and training allowances are being given to help them ease back into the job.

Last year, following an outreach exercise, more than 600 said they were keen on returning to nursing.

A first group of 27 has since rejoined, she said.

Nevertheless, Singapore needs to top up its health-care workforce by recruiting foreign professionals.

They will be given language courses, orientation and immersion programmes to "help them adapt to the local working environment", Dr Khor added.





Steps to curb childhood obesity, smoking
By Goh Chin Lian, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

RESTRICTIONS on advertising of food and drinks that are high in fat, sugar and salt to children will take effect from January next year, to curb childhood obesity.

And to protect youth, a ban on shops from displaying cigarettes will be in place by the end of next year, said Parliamentary Secretary for Health Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim yesterday.

His ministry later said nutrient criteria are being developed to decide which food and beverage products can be advertised to children.

The guidelines will be incorporated into the Singapore Code of Advertising Practice.

As for the ban on displaying cigarettes, retailers will get 12 months' grace after the law is gazetted.

Separately, a national weight-management programme will be launched on Saturday.

The 1 Million Kg Challenge aims to have at least 300,000 people shed one million kg over the next three years.

Marketing head Joanna Ong-Ash hopes to shed 8kg from her 81kg frame with exercise and a low-sugar diet.

The 44-year-old wants to do this so that she can be taken off her pills to control hypertension.




Focus of care model has to shift
By Andrea Ong, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

EVEN as hospitals ramp up capacity to meet rising demand, Singapore's health-care model must transform to rely less on acute care and focus more on community and home care.

Health Minister Gan Kim Yong emphasised this new direction several times in Parliament yesterday, in response to questions on the recent hospital bed crunch.

He was replying to Workers' Party chief Low Thia Khiang, who rose thrice to ask if the crunch was the result of poor planning, and if housing patients in hospital corridors and tents was going to be the "new normal".

Mr Low (Aljunied GRC) said he had raised the issue as far back as in 2005, when then Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan said foreign workers were crowding out others needing emergency care at hospitals.

He also cited Mr Khaw saying in 2007 that he preferred to under-supply than to over-supply in public hospitals to minimise over-consumption.

Pointing to the bed crunch as a Third World problem, Mr Low added: "One certainly hopes that Singapore does not make history by going from Third World to First, and back to Third within one generation."

However, Mr Gan stressed that building health-care capacity has been a "key focus". Beds in public hospitals and nursing homes increased by over 30 per cent from 2003 to 2013.The Ng Teng Fong General Hospital and integrated building at Changi General Hospital will open at the end of this year, while Sengkang General Hospital will be ready in 2018.

Hospital bed projections are also reviewed regularly, taking into account factors such as population growth. But Mr Gan said it is important to "move beyond acute beds and provide appropriate care to patients in the right setting".

Acute care is expensive and intense, he said. It was better for patients to recover in step-down facilities like community hospitals.

Mr Low noted that many restructured hospitals are accredited by America's Joint Commission International for certain standards, like having minimum distances between beds. He asked if housing patients in corridors or tents was acceptable to the JCI. Mr Gan gave the assurance that hospitals are "actively managing" short-term demand.

Mr Low, however, pressed the minister to give a gauge of a reasonable waiting time for a bed.

Mr Gan said the key priority is to look after the interests and safety of patients. "For a normal day, we should not expect patients to wait more than a few hours."






More power to tackle nuisances
Govt looking at legislative changes to handle inconsiderate residents
By Priscilla Goy, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

THE POLICE may soon get more teeth to deal with rowdy residents or those who burn joss paper indiscriminately.
The Government is looking at changes to legislation, such as the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act, to deal with such public nuisances, Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said in Parliament yesterday.

He was responding to Mr Vikram Nair (Sembawang GRC), who had asked if the authorities were considering changing the legal framework to deal with residents who, for instance, make excessive noise at void decks.



Mr Wong said: "Our key thrust is on public education and mediation, but we recognise that there are cases which do require rules and penalties."

Mr Nair had pointed out that the authorities are now unable to do much about inconsiderate residents, as there are no clear rules on what are acceptable levels for various public nuisances, and what penalties may be meted out.

Every year, government agencies receive more than 70,000 complaints about noise - residents' top peeve. Other common grouses include verbal abuse and how common corridors are used.

Mr Nair, a lawyer, said the rules could be developed as part of the public consultation exercise on a new community dispute resolution framework.

This framework could see the setting up of a new tribunal in the second half of the year. Under the tribunal, a judge will hear the cases and have the power to issue orders. Those who refuse to abide by the orders may be prosecuted.

The move, announced by Mr Wong last Saturday, will give bite to the current dispute resolution system, which is voluntary.

Currently, those who cannot resolve disputes on their own or with the help of grassroots leaders can take matters to the Community Mediation Centre. But in 60 per cent of its 1,500 applications a year, one party refuses to turn up.

While the grouses often appear to be minor at first, it would usually be "too late" and some residents would refuse mediation by the time the disputes are taken to grassroots leaders, said Ms Irene Ng (Tampines GRC).

"For many, their relationship with their neighbours have become so toxic, having festered for so long, that they just want their neighbours to suffer," she said.

But the tribunal should be the last resort for handling difficult cases, Mr Wong stressed, supported by Ms Ng and Mr Alex Yam (Chua Chu Kang GRC). Mr Wong added: "We want to promote community ownership and collective responsibility, and mediation should remain the first priority."

On bringing disputes to the tribunal, Ms Ng said: "While it would restore a semblance of peace in the neighbourhood, it would probably destroy the possibility of neighbours having any kind of relationship after that."

The public consultation paper can be viewed at www.mccy.gov.sg/communitydispute.





Artists, art groups to be consulted on $20m fund
By Corrie Tan, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

ARTISTS and arts groups will be consulted on the details, including the selection process and criteria, of a new $20 million government fund to promote Singapore artists abroad, said Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong.

Mr Wong gave the assurance yesterday when replying to Mr Baey Yam Keng (Tampines GRC) and Nominated MP Janice Koh.

Both had asked how the fund would be administered, with Mr Baey citing a Straits Times report that said the ministry would select the fund's recipients.

Elaborating, a spokesman for the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) said in an e-mailed statement to The Straits Times: "As the nature of these exchanges will vary and may include festivals, fairs, collaborative work or travelling exhibitions, there is no one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to identifying suitable artists or institutions to participate."

There are existing grants under the National Arts Council for which artists can apply to showcase their work or undergo training abroad. This new fund, however, is not a grant and so will work differently. Its selection process will vary from case to case, and is likely to be done with international partners, such as co-commissioners or curators.

Said Mr Wong: "When we want to showcase our artists overseas we have to think about what markets to go to, which audiences we want to target, if at all, what events, what platforms.

"These are international events which may have their own curators, their own organisers. We will also have to take their views into consideration."

He confirmed the fund, to be disbursed over five years, would support genres such as film, design and contemporary music.

It will also develop artists, audiences and institutions through international exchanges.

In some cases, the partnerships could take the form of residencies, where Singaporean artists could be invited to express interest in participating, the MCCY spokesman said.

Mr Baey had also asked about giving better support to traditional arts groups, such as the Hokkien opera troupe Sin Sai Hong, which is closing down.

Mr Sam Tan, the ministry's senior parliamentary secretary, said government support would continue. The traditional arts are getting more funds, with $17 million to be spent by the year's end.

The five-year National Traditional Arts plan, launched in 2011, includes grants to help groups stage shows and to support new companies. There are plans to extend the initiative. Mr Tan said in Mandarin: "What we hope to do is to improve their management and help them be more professional so that they can be more effective in improving their performance. Then the audience will also come and support them even more.





Training for new volunteer youth corps begins in June
By Janice Tai, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

THE first intake of the new volunteer youth corps will start training in June, after recruitment began last month.

Under the one-year programme, called Youth Corps Singapore (YCS), the volunteers will go through a structured residential training programme to equip them with knowledge and leadership skills, Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong said in Parliament yesterday.

They will also embark on both a local and an overseas volunteering stint, lasting three to six months each.

The youth corps is the first national-level programme of its kind, and also "a first in many steps towards more impactful youth development and engagement", Mr Wong added.

The Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) is also looking at how it can better engage young people through having more youth-oriented spaces such as *Scape.

More details will be given later.

The first cohort will comprise 200 young people aged 15 to 35 years, mainly nominated by youth organisations and institutes of higher learning. The target is to have 6,000 volunteers each year.

The initiative, first announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at last year's National Day Rally, is meant to spur young Singaporeans to take up community work and continue to do so beyond their school years.

Young adults tend to volunteer less after they start working. Statistics from the National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre showed that only 28 per cent of those aged between 25 and 34 volunteered in 2012, compared to 43 per cent for those aged 15 to 24.

The YCS will be funded by the $100 million National Youth Fund, created last year to pay for youth-led social initiatives.

The volunteers will receive allowances if they want to take time out from their studies to join the YCS full time.

They will also receive training and mentoring, government funding for projects and networking opportunities.

Working in teams, they will either develop their own projects - to care for the elderly with dementia or fight global warming, for instance - after doing research on the ground, or be matched to projects based on critical local needs.

To enable social mixing, team members will come from different schools and organisations.

"We want our youth to appreciate different perspectives, develop strong social consciousness and the sense that everyone can be of service to society," said a spokesman for MCCY.

At the end of their time in the YCS, participants can also get a "pay-it-forward" grant to use to mentor new volunteers.

Calling for those passionate about the community to apply, Mr Wong said: "There is a rigorous selection process, but we don't want that to be a deterrent to the youth from stepping forward. We are not looking at academic qualifications. We are looking for youth with strong leadership qualities, commitment to serve the community and a desire to learn."

Polytechnic student Samuel Do, 19, who has been nominated for the YCS, used to volunteer on an ad hoc basis, organising a campfire for autistic children, for instance. "I was busy with school and there wasn't quite a platform for longer-term volunteerism," he said. "I hope joining this will make it easier for me to continue serving even after things get hectic when I start work."


Back to Third World from First in health care? Hardly

$
0
0
Unfair not to acknowledge earnest efforts to ramp up infrastructure but...
By Chua Mui Hoong, The Straits Times, 13 Mar 2014

TRUE to form, Mr Low Thia Khiang went for the jugular.

The Workers' Party secretary-general and Aljunied GRC MP, a veteran of Budget debates since 1992, aimed straight for the weak spot in the Ministry of Health: the shortage of public hospital beds and long waiting times at emergency wards.

He referred to a front-page report in this newspaper in January which recounted how one hospital put up an air-conditioned tent for patients waiting for a hospital bed, and said: "The hospital bed crunch, together with the public transport crunch and the riot in Little India is a star example of Third World problems in First World Singapore."

He could not resist another dig: "One certainly hopes that Singapore does not make history by going from Third World to First, and back to Third within one generation."



Mr Low's acerbic comment will resonate with Singaporeans who feel Singapore is overcrowded. But he is also being a tad unfair in not acknowledging the earnest effort by the Government to ramp up infrastructure in all areas including hospitals.

In Parliament yesterday, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said there will be another 11,000 more hospital and nursing home beds by 2020. After that, another four new acute hospitals are being planned.

Mr Gan also explained MOH's approach for the long term: to shift the emphasis away from acute hospital care to preventive care to keep patients healthy; and to community and home care so patients can be discharged faster from acute hospitals and have follow-up care done at their home or in community clinics and hospitals. Home-based care will be ramped up with more subsidies.

This failed to satisfy Mr Low who came back twice to the shortage of hospital beds. Noting that this was an issue even in 2005, he asked pointedly what had been done since then.

He added: "What would be the waiting time that the patient can expect when he needs a hospital bed for admission? We have feedback that there are patients who waited for eight hours or some as long as 23 hours. I think that's too long, it's not something which we would expect in a First World country, right?"

Mr Gan refused to be baited, choosing instead to respond calmly that in normal times, patients should not wait for "more than a few hours". He stressed that patients are cared for during the wait and medically assessed, so those who need urgent care are warded immediately.

No other People's Action Party MP rebutted Mr Low when they rose to speak.

And so Mr Low's fiery riposte that might have sparked a lively debate on the hospital bed crunch fizzled into a damp squib.

I thought it was a pity.

Yes, Mr Low was clearly playing to the gallery with his First World to Third juxtaposition, and asking if queueing for a hospital bed will "become an activity of active ageing for the seniors".

But he did raise an important issue that merits fuller discussion.

If MOH is playing catch-up in hospital bed supply now, he asked, "what can Singaporeans expect in health care 2020 in respect of hospital bed availability?"

Nominated MP R. Dhinakaran also described the bed shortage and long waiting times at emergency departments as "worrying".

Singaporeans can see the efforts being made to build more hospitals/homes/MRT lines/ hawker centres/ childcare centres and a whole list of other services.

Fair-minded citizens understand that it takes time for these to be ready and that service providers are managing as best they can meanwhile.

But the fact remains that past projections failed to anticipate demand. So how can Singaporeans have confidence that what's being done now will be enough to meet the needs of the future?

It is interesting that several MPs during this year's debate asked the Government about its planning norms; or went straight out to suggest that it speed up the building of services like community hospitals (Dr Teo Ho Pin); polyclinics (Mr Liang Eng Hwa); and hawker centres (Ms Lee Li Lian). This suggests that MPs too are wondering if ministries' planning is in sync with residents' needs, or if it is behind the curve again, risking an under-supply in future.

To be sure, the Government did pledge during the debate on the White Paper on population last year that it would build ahead of demand. The test will come in a few years' time, when residents can see if long queues for a flat/hospital bed/MRT train are over.

Yesterday's debate also reminded me of how far the country has come in health-care policy - and how far more it needs to go.

Progress has been made on many fronts. Universal health coverage will finally be attained with MediShield Life. A tsunami of increased subsidies have made long-term care and outpatient care more affordable. Preventive and community care are now desirable alternatives to hospital-focused care, years after MPs like Lily Neo championed them. With the new Agency for Integrated Care, there's a more holistic approach to nursing homes, elder care and caregiving. These are hardly Third World plans.

But some things - like long waiting times for hospital beds - have not improved.

Workers' Party MP Png Eng Huat raised another issue: insurance for those with pre-existing illnesses. He noted that cancer survivors, for example, are considered "cured" after five years but suffer a "life sentence" of being uninsurable after the illness.

I can vouch for this, as a cancer survivor myself. Sure, we will be covered under MediShield Life. But private insurers that offer upgraded MediShield plans can still cherry-pick and reject those with pre-existing illnesses.

This means that even those who can afford Class A unsubsidised hospital beds, if they were insured, will end up filling subsidised hospital beds because of their insurance plan limitations. This will lead to increased pressure for subsidised beds.

Some health regulators elsewhere forbid exclusions for pre-existing illnesses after a certain number of years, not for life.

MOH can do better in this area.



Little India Riot COI: Day 15

$
0
0
Little India businesses suffer since alcohol rules implemented, COI told
By Vimita Mohandas, Channel NewsAsia, 13 Mar 2014

Some shops in Little India said their businesses have been affected after the Little India riot, due to the alcohol restrictions in the area.

This was revealed on Thursday as some shopkeepers took the stand at the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into last December's riot.



The director of one provision shop, which sells liquor and beer, said he suffered losses of about $25,000 for the last two Sundays.

Another owner of a store selling vegetables said business has dipped by almost 50 per cent.

Shopkeepers told the COI this is because Indian foreign workers are afraid to go to Little India now.

Also taking the stand was a resident in Little India, Ms Gwee Nyuk Lian, who said that measures should be implemented to prevent congregation of foreign workers in Little India.

She added that there were many occasions when foreign workers, who were drunk, caused inconvenience to residents.

Earlier Thursday, Dr Vincent Wijeysingha of Workfair Singapore spoke of some of the challenges foreign workers in Singapore face.

He said these included limited amenities and facilities as well as their pay.





'Re-examine role of alcohol in Little India riot'
Civil society activist says lack of amenities, treatment of workers may be factors
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 14 Mar 2014

THE Government may have jumped the gun in pinning the cause of the riot in Little India on Dec 8 on alcohol, Workfair Singapore representative Vincent Wijeysingha told the Committee of Inquiry (COI) yesterday.

Instead, the civil society activist asked the committee to consider a slew of other factors, ranging from the treatment of migrant workers by the authorities to a lack of social amenities, that may have led to the riot.

"The Prime Minister (in his) eagerness to make this point (on alcohol) less than 24 hours after it occurred, to me suggests there has been a great scramble to find a cause, a reason, that exonerated the Government's policies on migrant workers," said Dr Wijeysingha, who was a member of the opposition Singapore Democratic Party until last year.

He added that the state's decision to deport the suspected rioters before they could go to trial meant they had "wasted a great opportunity to examine the alcohol thesis adequately".

The remarks Dr Wijeysingha referred to were made by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong while on an official visit to Seoul last December.

He was asked by reporters what interim arrangements could be put in place to calm the ground the first weekend after the riot.

"First of all, it is a question of alcohol. This weekend we have said no alcohol, after that we have to see what arrangements we make," Mr Lee had replied.

But he also noted that a public consultation on liquor sale and consumption was already under way prior to the riot.


Dr Wijeysingha also testified that while he could not make a "definitive diagnosis", there was evidence of rude behaviour on the part of bus drivers and timekeepers who interacted with the foreign workers.

The workers could also have resented the first responders for refusing to move the bus that pinned down their countryman, he added.

Other "longstanding" issues such as the unequal relationship between guest workers and employers, fear of repatriation and the lack of social outlets for migrant workers could have been "among the precipitating factors" brought to a boil by the fatal accident, he noted.

Dr Wijeysingha also produced quotes from Mr Lee and Member of Parliament Yeo Guat Kwang that he claimed indicated a "general government attitude" that foreign workers stood apart from citizens and were here on an as-needed basis.

"I think if we continue with... that attitude to migrant workers, we are not only not addressing the real causes, in my view, of the riot, we are almost guaranteeing a repeat of this some time in the future," he said.

But when State Counsel Sharmila Sripathy told him it was "a matter of public record" that a number of witnesses who were at the scene that night had given evidence that rioters had behaved under the influence of alcohol, Dr Wijeysingha disagreed, saying it was so far merely "a matter of public assertion".

"My concern is that we have already fallen into the alcohol thesis so firmly," said Dr Wijeysingha.

Members of the COI, however, disagreed with his argument that drinking in Little India started being viewed as a problem only after the riot.

Committee chairman G. Pannir Selvam noted that many of the perennial issues raised by residents who live in Little India - such as foreign workers sleeping at the void decks, urinating and vomiting - stemmed from too much drinking.

The activist countered that such behaviour was not caused only by alcohol, and that having auxiliary police disperse the foreign workers was racist.

"The only people who are moved on from those residential areas, the void decks, are South Asian people - not just migrant workers, but local Singaporean South Asians," he said, addressing Mr Selvam. "If you happened to be there, sir, you would be moved on unless they knew who you were."

But committee member Andrew Chua, who is also chairman of the West Coast Citizens Consultative Committee, replied: "Do you seriously believe that Indians that vomit in Little India are not drinking and they just vomit? You should go and do some check-up because they are there, you know."





Minister decides AGC's role, says COI chief
By Francis Chan, The Straits Times, 14 Mar 2014

WHETHER the Attorney-General should lead evidence at an inquiry is a matter for the minister who appointed the Committee of Inquiry (COI) to decide and not its members.

That was a point COI chairman G. Pannir Selvam was trying to put across to activist Vincent Wijeysingha at yesterday's inquiry into the cause of the Dec 8 riot.

Dr Wijeysingha, who was testifying at the hearing, had earlier written to the COI arguing that there was a conflict of interest with the Attorney- General's Chambers (AGC) leading the evidence during proceedings as it represents the Government. That same letter was also published by freesheet Today on Feb 17, two days before the COI was convened.

"The point I was making then - I hold it even now - is that there must be at least a semblance of fairness and justice," Dr Wijeysingha said.

He added that the AGC was the authority that decided to charge the suspects allegedly involved in the riot and was also behind the decision not to take action against the bus driver involved in the fatal accident that sparked the violence.

"I suppose the point I'm making is that the Attorney-General cannot do both things at once; represent the Government and then charge the people and then also be independent here," he said.

The issue of who should present the evidence was raised after Mr Selvam asked Dr Wijeysingha if he still felt the COI had powers to appoint "somebody else" other than the AGC to do so.

"So the point is that you are not prevented from appointing someone other than the Attorney-General... you are entitled to do so," said Dr Wijeysingha.

Mr Selvam, however, said he "disagreed completely", adding that under the Inquiries Act, only the minister is empowered to do so and "I cannot override him against that section".

COI member Andrew Chua yesterday commended the AGC team, saying they have been doing a "fantastic job". But he added that the State Counsel are just "a facilitating machinery" that ensures the process of the inquiry goes on smoothly.

"There's no way that these people can actually do anything to slant the whole process because we are the ones who are responsible for making the final decision," said Mr Chua.

Dr Wijeysingha also said he was not questioning the personal integrity of the committee members or that of the State Counsel present. But when asked if he had any issues with how the inquiry had been handled so far, he replied: "Sir, you have put me on the spot here. Can I not answer that?"





Cops just had to assert themselves, says manager
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 14 Mar 2014

FOREIGN workers who frequent Little India are usually "scared" of the police.

So if the officers had stood by their vehicles and asserted themselves on the night of Dec 8, they could have stopped the violence from escalating, said a restaurant manager who works in the area.

Mr T. Richerd Leo yesterday told the Committee of Inquiry (COI) of how rioters would dash away after pelting police vehicles, seemingly wary of being caught.

The issues of whether the police did enough to control the riot has become a recurring question during the inquiry. And yesterday, committee member Tee Tua Ba again alluded to this when he asked if the police would have served as a deterrent.

Mr Leo, a Chennai native who is now a permanent resident, agreed. "Obviously people are scared of police and the siren. People are scared to attack them."

Mr Leo added that while most workers are not trouble-makers, there are problems when alcohol enters the equation.

This observation was repeated by shopkeepers and residents who gave evidence yesterday.

Mr Leo said that on most Monday mornings before his restaurant opens, staff have to clear litter and scrub vomit from the walkway in front, where workers would drink and eat packed food the night before. And with a lack of public toilets to cater to the Sunday crowd, workers usually stream into his restaurant for its facilities - making it inconvenient for customers.

Mr Lim Herh Kim, chairman of the Residents' Committee at Rowell Court, recommended a total ban on alcohol sales. He has lived in the ethnic enclave for 30 years and said that since limits on alcohol sales and public drinking were put in place after the riot, the estate has seen a huge improvement.

But a director of a provision shop, where 80 per cent of sales come from beer and liquor, told the COI that his monthly takings have dropped from $135,000 to just $35,000.

The employment pass holder, who did not want to be named, said workers had been consuming alcohol in the area for years, and wondered whether the clampdown on alcohol sales would prevent a repeat of the riot. "What happened was a one-off (incident) due to the traffic accident," he added.



Related
Little India Riot COI: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 11, Day 12, Day 13, Day 14
Viewing all 7504 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>