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

Four in 10 S'poreans think govt is responsible for taking action on climate change

$
0
0
Channel NewsAsia, 23 Mar 2014

A survey commissioned by the National Climate Change Secretariat (NCCS) has found that 40.1 per cent of Singaporeans think the government is mainly responsible for taking action on climate change.

This is up sharply from the 2011 figure of 26.3 per cent.

39.2 per cent felt that individuals have the main responsibility to tackle climate change, down from 56.3 per cent in 2011.

The survey, conducted in 2013, interviewed 1,000 Singapore residents aged 15 and above.

70.2 per cent of respondents polled said they were concerned about climate change, a 3.6 percentage-point fall from 2011.

In terms of how Singapore would be affected by climate change, the 65.6 per cent cited frequent and severe extreme weather events such as heavy rainfall and dry spells.

54.4 per cent were concerned about the impact on public health, such as increased heat stress and the spread of some infectious diseases.

62.7 per cent were of the view that climate change will affect them personally. Their top concerns were health impact and hotter weather that climate change could bring about. 

One in two respondents thought of climate change as an urgent problem, but 47.5 per cent felt that individuals could make a difference in dealing with climate change.

26.4 per cent said they were not willing to pay more to support products and practices that address climate change, while 41.5 per cent said they are willing to pay up to 10 per cent more.

NCCS said contrary to public perception, there is much that an individual can do in addressing and adapting to climate change.



It launched the 2014 National Climate Change Competition on Sunday with the theme #change4future, which highlights the need for Singaporeans to take action to address climate change and learn to deal with the changing climate that affects them and the environment they live in.

It is calling for the public to submit short videos that could inspire Singaporeans to tackle climate change.

"Scientists have affirmed that human activities are one of the main causes of climate change, and this could lead to extreme weather events, such as more frequent and intense rainfall, heat waves and cold spells becoming more frequent," said Mr Yuen Sai Kuan, director of 3P Network Division from NCCS.

He added: "We hope that the competition will help raise awareness on such issues and produce inspiring videos that will help spread the message on the need to change our habits which affect the environment."

Students and members of the public can register to take part in the competition at www.nccc.gov.sg by April 22.








Dependants' Protection Scheme: Why age cap set at 60

$
0
0
WE THANK Mr Su Kim Teck for his suggestion ("Raise age cap for Dependants' Protection Scheme"; last Friday).

The Dependants' Protection Scheme (DPS) is a term insurance scheme that provides a sum of money to help insured members and their families tide over the initial difficult period in the event of permanent incapacity or death.

Central Provident Fund members aged 21 to 60 will automatically be covered under DPS when they make their CPF contribution.

The age limit for DPS is set at 60 years old because, beyond that, the need for financial protection for the majority of members is likely to reduce as their dependants are likely to be already working or are less financially dependent.

In addition, the annual premiums for coverage beyond 60 years old would be significantly higher due to higher mortality rates. The additional premiums required to continue DPS coverage would be better reserved for the members' retirement.

Setting the age limit at 60 years old strikes a balance between the need for financial protection for the members' dependants and the need for adequate retirement savings.

Members who wish to purchase life insurance beyond 60 years old can still do so from private insurers.

Irene Kang (Ms)
Director, Communications Division
Central Provident Fund Board
ST Forum, 26 Mar 2014









Raise age cap for Dependants' Protection Scheme

I HAVE friends who are cancer patients, with the disease in remission.

Typically, an insurer may consider insuring such "risks" if the cancer has been in remission for at least five years, and regular follow-up test results show "favourable readings" ("Stop treating cancer survivors like insurance pariahs" by Ms Gwen Ling; Tuesday).

Even if an insurer takes on such patients, there may be premium loading and only death coverage.

The Central Provident Fund Board's Dependants' Protection Scheme (DPS) is a good and affordable insurance plan that benefits CPF members' families.

But its main limitation is that it covers the policyholder up to only age 60.

With the enhancements to MediShield and the liberalisation of Medisave use to cover more medical expenses, the CPF Board should consider extending the DPS termination age to 75 or above.

This will certainly help CPF members, especially those who may be uninsurable as a result of illnesses.

Su Kim Teck
ST Forum, 21 Mar 2014





Stop treating cancer survivors like insurance pariahs

LIKE opinion editor Chua Mui Hoong, I am a cancer survivor who identifies with the issue of non-insurability of people like us ("Back to Third World from First in health care? Hardly"; last Thursday).

With more cancer cases being diagnosed in Singapore, this issue will affect a growing number of survivors who are still looking for some insurance against possible relapses.

All cancer survivors work very hard to prevent a relapse, but there is only so much they can do.

Insurers need to review their policy of not insuring cancer survivors. Whether these people have to pay higher premiums is another issue.

The Government, which has regulatory powers over MediShield Life coverage, should set an example for insurers to follow with a more humane approach towards cancer survivors. After all, didn't Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is a cancer survivor himself, talk about building an inclusive society? So why should cancer survivors be treated like pariahs in medical insurance?

There is more to it than just being "kind" to survivors. At a deeper level, when people are underinsured, there is a risk that they may end up being under-treated. This increases the risk of cancer relapse or other problems, thus adding to overall health-care costs.

Gwen Ling (Ms)
ST Forum, 18 Mar 2014


Changi Airport to build two-storey taxi deck

$
0
0
By Olivia Siong, Channel NewsAsia, 25 Mar 2014

Changi Airport will build a new holding area for taxi drivers to queue as they wait to pick up passengers from Terminal 1.

This will make it safer and more comfortable for them.

The S$50 million two-storey deck is set to be completed in the second half of 2015.



It is common to see taxis lining up along Airport Boulevard to pick up passengers from Terminal 1, especially during peak hours or in the wee hours of the morning between 11pm and 1am.

At times, the tailback can reach about one kilometre. This happens when the existing taxi holding area at Terminal 1 runs out of space.

Terminal 1 has the smallest waiting area among all the terminals.

Jaya Mohamed, taxi driver for more than 15 years, said: "Car drivers, they won't know which… queue leads towards the Departure Hall, or towards the Arrival Hall, or even towards the taxi queue. There've been quite a lot of accidents..."

Taxis currently head directly to Terminal 1 or queue along Airport Boulevard to pick up passengers.

With the new deck, those picking up passengers at Terminal 1 will be channelled to the new waiting area away from the main road and other vehicles.

The new deck will be built above Terminal 3’s taxi holding area. A new ramp and road dedicated for the taxis will also be constructed to lead them directly to Terminal 1.

The new waiting area can hold 300 taxis -- three times that of the existing Terminal 1 holding area.

Terminal 2's holding area accommodates 190 taxis while the one at Terminal 3 can take up to 250 taxis.

Ng Chew Song, senior vice president for projects and contracts at Changi Airport Group, said: "This is our ongoing process of investing in our infrastructure to improve our facilities at Changi Airport. At the same time, (we are) looking into the safety, comfort and efficiency of our airport operations."

Mr Ng added the inconvenience to other motorists during construction will be minimal.

He elaborated: "The work is at the Terminal 3 (T3) carpark area, so the disruption to the motorists coming to the airport is practically minimised. It's more at the T3 taxi queueing area, but we're actually mitigating it by having double queueing or triple queueing, so that we actually maximise the queueing area at the space."

There will also be amenities like toilets and a canteen at the new waiting area.

Lee Joon Wan, who has been a taxi driver for 16 years, said: "Usually after driving two, three hours, they (taxi drivers) need a few minutes to relax a bit."

Patrick Teo, who has been driving a taxi for 18 years, said: "It's a good thing; rather than (parking) at the road side, (drivers) can stand (at the waiting area and) chit chat with all the members. It's a good thing.”

But some are concerned about the distance between the new taxi deck and Terminal 1.

Taxi driver Jaya Mohamed said: "If (the queue is) to serve (passengers at) T3, I think it's okay. But if it's… to serve (passengers at) Terminal 1 -- what about the distance (between the two terminals)?"

Changi Airport Group said the new system will allow it to better track the taxi count. Such data is made available on electronic boards and on a mobile app for taxi drivers.

It is also expected to address the heavier traffic in future.


Changi Airport steps up security measures

$
0
0
Stricter checks, monitoring among the actions taken
By Karamjit Kaur, The Straits Times, 25 Mar 2014

CHANGI Airport has stepped up security checks since the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 more than two weeks ago.

The heightened security is a "precautionary measure", the Singapore Police Force and Immigration and Checkpoints Authority of Singapore (ICA) said yesterday.

Airport Police commander Sam Tee, who briefed reporters on the security procedures at Changi Airport, said that measures have been reviewed in the wake of MH370's disappearance.

On March 8, the Malaysia Airlines flight vanished en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

The twin-aisle Boeing 777-200ER plane has yet to be found, but the authorities have confirmed that at least two Iranian passengers boarded the jet with stolen passports.

At Changi, the police have "enhanced some of the checks" and there is also a "stronger ground presence", Mr Tee said. For example, travellers' identities now come under closer scrutiny, he added, without elaborating.

Singapore is one of the few countries that check visitor passports against Interpol's database of lost or stolen travel documents.

If a passport is found to be one of more than 40 million on the global police agency's list, the immigration officer at the counter is automatically alerted and the traveller pulled aside for further checks.

The Straits Times understands that in the last two weeks, selected flights - based on risk assessment - have been subjected to tighter screening. This includes more thorough checks like pat downs for departing passengers.

Several airlines also said that a briefing was held recently to remind everyone to stay vigilant.

On top of the stepped-up measures, the Airport Police conducts daily security checks and monitors the premises using cameras that are installed airport-wide.

The airport's facade has been strengthened in recent years to protect the terminals from outside explosions.

At Changi, all departing bags originating in Singapore and bags transferred from one aircraft to another are put through a five-level screening system.

Mr Paul Yap, who was the head of aviation security at Changi Airport before leaving in 2006 to lead Temasek Polytechnic's aviation department, said risk management is key.

"At the end of the day, there is a cost to everything. You can have all the checks but you also need to look at the impact on Changi's efficiency, for example," he said.

To balance between passenger convenience and the need to ensure security, the Airport Police adopts a "whole-of-government" approach and works closely with relevant agencies, including Changi Airport Group and the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore, Mr Tee said. "Over-security or under-security is equally sinful and we should not go to the end of each spectrum," he said.

"Risk management is about making sure we have good information on what has happened, we have good intelligence and an understanding of some of the facilitation issues that we will face, and then we work together as a team," Mr Tee added.

The ultimate objective is to secure the airport "without causing severe inconvenience or disruptions to airport operations", he said.

With more stringent checks in the wake of MH370's disappearance, Mr Tee said: "The police and ICA are monitoring the security thrust situation closely. We appreciate the understanding and patience from travellers as we conduct the various security checks to ensure safe and secure travel."







Passport checks here tap Interpol database
S'pore is one of 70 nations that cross-check agency's stolen, lost passport data
By Hoe Pei Shan, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE is one of about 70 member states of Interpol that conduct border checks by cross-checking against the global police agency's database of stolen and lost travel documents.

Most of Interpol's 190 member countries do not do so, however, and this has to be improved, an Interpol official told reporters here.

If more countries got onboard with integrated cross-checking of border information, it would be easier to avoid cases such as that of the two Iranians who illegally boarded Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, said Ms Julia Viedma, Interpol director of international partnerships and development unit.

"These kinds of events show the importance of enhancing border security… and the importance of having the technology accessible to all law-enforcement and all immigration officers to be able to cross-check all bio-data," she said at a press conference yesterday.

The database has information on more than 40 million passports in its logs - 167 countries have reported information on stolen or lost travel documents to it.

More than 800 million searches were run on the database last year, resulting in 67,000 positive hits.

"So 67,000 times in 2013, a passport that was not accredited as good, that maybe had been used in a fraudulent way, was detected in the world, thanks to this cross-checking of information," said Ms Viedma, who joined Interpol in 1998 after a decade in the Spanish National Police.

Having managed seven Interpol regional bureaus in Africa, Asia and America, Ms Viedma is well-positioned in her current role leading the transition support office that is setting up the Interpol Global Complex for Innovation in Singapore.

This is being built to complement Interpol's headquarters in Lyon, France, and to enhance its presence in Asia. Singapore was chosen in part because of its solid law enforcement infrastructure, said Ms Viedma.

"We get great support from the Singapore Government," she said, adding that the authorities are providing funds, technology, expertise and staff. These include Singapore Police Force officers, who will be in "all the different areas of expertise in the building".

For the complex, Interpol is also recruiting national police and law-enforcement officers from member states and hiring from the private sector, primarily in the area of cyber-security, the breaches of which are seen as a growing threat.

The Interpol complex will be at Napier Road and is expected to open in April next year. It will have about 300 staff focusing on cyber-security, capacity building and training, as well as operational and investigative support.

Singapore's cooperation with Interpol will be further strengthened through a new international summit on global security called Interpol World, said Ms Viedma.

The inaugural edition will be held at the Sands Expo & Convention Centre from April 14 to 16 next year, a day after the opening of the global complex.

Supported by Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs, the event will connect governments and national security agencies with private security firms to explore technologies and solutions to address global security needs.


Little India Riot COI: Day 22

$
0
0
1,000 more cops needed to boost force: Police chief
Goal is to raise additional tactical unit, have more patrols in key areas
By Francis Chan, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

TO BEEF up the anti-riot capability of the police while keeping Singapore safe, Commissioner of Police Ng Joo Hee wants to recruit 1,000 more officers.

The police chief made this passionate plea at the end of his testimony yesterday before the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the Dec 8 riot.

The extra manpower will let him raise an additional tactical troop specialised in tackling riots and police hot spots, and increase the number of officers who patrol the streets and neighbourhoods. It would also allow the police to train its front-line officers better.

The COI, led by retired judge G. Pannir Selvam, had over the course of the public hearing, questioned why police patrolmen were not adequately trained to deal with the unrest.

The 47-year-old - who was testifying at the COI for the first time since it was convened - said that a move to train officers to deal with the "initial moments" of a riot more effectively is now being considered. But that will involve "large and persistent investments in manpower and in training".

Already, front-line officers work a four-shift system lasting 12 hours each, leaving them with very little time for training of any sort. That is why Mr Ng feels that training these officers to fight riots under the current shift system is "quite impossible".

"If we were a football team, we would be a team that spends most of our time playing matches and very little time training," he said.

"And in my view, that is quite incredible and not a desirable situation... I think we have to rethink the system and we have to certainly get more resources if we want to do that."

A key reason for the manpower crunch in the force, added Mr Ng, is because its ranks have not kept pace with Singapore's population growth over the years.

In 1994, there were 222 officers for every 100,000 residents here. Now there are 163.

This also affects the size of anti-riot squads, better known as Police Tactical Troops (PTT) under the Special Operations Command.

The first time these specialised units were restructured was in 1983, when 12 troops of 63 men were cut to just eight troops, each with 46 men. In 2004, the number per troop was cut to 35.

As of last December, the Singapore Police Force has just under 8,800 regular officers, supported by about 3,700 full-time national servicemen and 2,000 volunteer policemen.

"If you look at cities of comparable sizes like Hong Kong, Tokyo, New York, London, you will find that they typically operate with two or three times more police officers than we do per resident in Singapore," said Mr Ng.

"So there is some truth in the common refrain that one hardly comes across police officers on the streets of Singapore. But at the same time, we are able to deliver safety from crime that is still the envy of the world."

Mr Ng told the COI that the way to "increase police robustness before the next disturbance comes around is to build up rather than to cut down on our contingency forces.

"My intention, if I have the resources, is to raise an additional PTT to be on standby at any one time. If we are able to do this, we can increase our rioting fighting capability by 50 per cent and create the ability to bring a far larger force to bear to an incident."

In addition to augmenting the PTT, Mr Ng said it is critical to project a stronger police presence in areas where there is a congregation of foreign workers and that "pose a clear and present danger to public order", aside from Little India. "Today, despite the riot in Little India, I worry more for Geylang," he said. "If Singaporeans are irked by the littering, the noise and the jaywalking in Little India, they'll certainly and quickly sense that there exists a hint of lawlessness in Geylang."

A deployment of 300 pairs of boots on the ground should bring noticeable police visibility to both locations, added Mr Ng. But efforts to maintain law and order in Geylang and Little India have "already stretched police resources to near breaking point".

"My planners tell me that police presence is defined as a police patrol passing a point once every 15 to 20 minutes... This is a useful benchmark, but one which we cannot come close to achieving in either Little India or Geylang on present levels of resourcing."






WHAT WENT RIGHT
Police didn't use deadly force to quell riot
Commissioner points out that there were no deaths or serious injuries
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

COMMISSIONER of Police Ng Joo Hee is "proud and gratified" by the restraint his officers showed in the face of violence in Little India on Dec 8, the Committee of Inquiry (COI) heard yesterday.

Defending the actions of front-line officers during the riot, the police chief commended his ground commander, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Lu Yeow Lim, who had come under fire for holding his position when he was greatly outnumbered, and waiting for reinforcements to arrive.

Mr Ng said it was the right and sensible thing to do, as he clarified the reasons behind the police's doctrine on use of force, and addressed the criticisms that had been levelled against police action on the night of the riot.

To the main criticism that they did not act early enough to quell the rising violence, Mr Ng stressed that the men on the front line had neither the right equipment nor training to deal with a riot. "It will, I think, be irresponsible for us to ask them to do so," he said.

While patrol officers can deal with a "gamut of incidents", including violent individuals, a situation such as a riot requires greater police expertise or capability.

Also, the helmets and vests worn by front-line officers were to protect them against bullets in the event of a shootout and were not specifically riot gear, he said.

While they improvised and used their ballistic shields to protect the bus driver and timekeeper in the initial fracas, they correctly assessed that they had to retreat and regroup when the situation intensified, he added.

Mr Ng also drew parallels with a riot that occurred between Korean and Thai workers in 1985, the last time foreign workers had clashed here. Riot police had exercised restraint until they could dominate the ground, a posture adopted by the force both then and now, he said.

But the situation was not escalating then, countered COI member and former police commissioner Tee Tua Ba. "Time was on our side: they had stopped fighting," said Mr Tee, who was then police director of planning. "After the show of force... (the workers) were as tame as rabbits."

Mr Ng agreed a projection of force was necessary to quell a riot, but the reality on Dec 8 was that the police were outnumbered by eight to one, with 54 policemen at best, against 400 rioters.

"The last thing you want to do when you are outnumbered is to advertise the fact that you are outnumbered," he said. "We have to wait for force to come before we can show it."

To another criticism that the police should have fired a warning shot to scare off the rioters, Mr Ng said this would have been done if the cops had judged doing so would end the violence immediately, but it was "highly improbable", given the situation that night. Reiterating a point made by DAC Lu, he said it would have been "outright illegal" if the police had fired upon rioters who torched police cars that night.

"So I'm glad, and I'm also proud and gratified, that our officers that night all decided without exception that they do not have to resort to deadly force," he said.

Wrapping up, he said the silver lining had to be considered: Besides some damaged vehicles, there were no deaths or serious injuries to anybody and the violence was put down within two hours.

"I think many of my counterparts in the other side of the world would have taken this riot any time," he said.





WHAT WENT WRONG
'Too long' to activate squad
By Walter Sim, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

IT TOOK too long for the police to activate their anti-riot squad when the Little India disorder broke out, police chief Ng Joo Hee admitted yesterday.

Addressing the Committee of Inquiry (COI) into the riot, the Police Commissioner said the 18 minutes that it took to give the Special Operations Command (SOC) the green light to respond to Dec 8's mayhem was "unacceptably long".

He also highlighted a second key failing on the night. Police officers could not talk to one another due to jammed airwaves that made walkie-talkies ineffective, while their phones were affected by a lack of mobile signals.

Communications were "totally screwed up", explained Mr Ng, saying they were "non-existent".

In response, the police have made key changes to protocol, including a new command and control system and trimming some "cumbersome" red tape needed to activate SOC troops.

Instead of needing headquarters' permission, the divisional commander can now give the go-ahead.

On Dec 8, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Koh Wei Keong gave the approval for the use of anti-riot troops at 10.03pm, as it was not unusual for a crowd to be present at Race Course Road.

This was 18 minutes after the request was made by Assistant Superintendent of Police Jonathan Tang, who was one of the first officers at the scene, at 9.45pm. Due to traffic conditions that night, it also took 42 minutes for the SOC to reach the scene of the riot from City Hall, where anti-terrorism patrols were being carried out.

The commissioner, who has been in the force's top job since 2010, said the lengthy transit was beyond the troop's control. "This delay was not due to the troopers being deliberately tardy," he said. "In all fairness, the troop did its best to get itself into position as fast as it could."

Still, when pressed by COI chairman G. Pannir Selvam that the 42 minutes could have been cut had the troops been better deployed, Mr Ng said: "I concede that if the troops had come earlier, certainly we would have quelled the disorder earlier."

Mr Selvam also pointed out how the troops spent another 15 to 20 minutes discussing their next move when they arrived. "Unfortunate thing is, during this delay and the discussion, almost all the damage was done," he said.

The COI, which began on Feb 19, has also heard testimony from ground officers that communicating with one another was difficult during the riot.

Mr Ng said a new command and control system - a "large technological enhancement" that has taken years to develop - will be installed by year-end. The system, he promised, will resolve communication issues encountered in the riot.

New camera technology is also being fast- tracked, to be worn by officers and installed on vehicles to enhance surveillance. Over 100,000 cameras with playback capability are being installed around the island, allowing police to monitor live footage from different cameras at different times.

"I would readily admit our failings of that night," said Mr Ng. "Our performance in Little India has not been perfect, but I contend it is far from inadequate."









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, Day 15, Day 16, Day 17Day 18Day 19, Day 20, Day 21

Little India Riot COI: End of public hearing

$
0
0
'No deep-seated worker unhappiness' behind Dec 8 riot
Investigators say alcohol key factor; no widespread worker abuse noted
By Walter Sim, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

ALCOHOL was a major factor in the riot in Little India on Dec 8 last year, said the lead investigator of a public inquiry into the mayhem which closed yesterday.

Contrary to suggestions by some groups, the investigating agency found no "deep-seated unhappiness" among the foreign workers involved who were interviewed afterwards.

These were two key observations made by Central Narcotics Bureau director of investigations Adam Fashe Huddin, 47, who yesterday gave the Committee of Inquiry (COI) a wrap of the evidence he and his team of five officers had gathered in their probe.



The bureau was tasked on Dec 26 with conducting an independent investigation for the COI, which has ended after 24 days of hearings from 93 witnesses.

Mr Adam, a 22-year veteran with the bureau, said 324 interviews were conducted for its investigation, video footage reviewed and 11 site visits made.

The investigating team, together with the COI, also visited dormitories and other foreign worker enclaves such as Geylang.

Mr Adam acknowledged the lack of "direct evidence" pointing to alcohol as a cause of the riot, but officers on the ground had observed rioters "losing their balance and smelling of alcohol".

"Alcohol bottles were literally raining at police officers," he said.

As proof of how much drinking there was, he cited revenue losses among Little India liquor stores now that alcohol sales are restricted. One, he noted, is losing as much as $25,000 every Sunday.

The probe did not uncover any "widespread and systemic abuse" of foreign workers that might have led to them to "take the opportunity... to vent their anger".

There were no complaints of delays in salary payments or poor living conditions from any of the foreign workers interviewed before they were deported in the riot's aftermath, nor among those charged for their roles in the riot.

Rather, the trouble was sparked by a confluence of factors after a fatal traffic accident involving a worker. These included a misconception of inaction by the authorities to rescue the victim, and pent-up frustrations against the timekeeper, and auxiliary police officers, who issue fines that form a large part of their wages.

Mr Adam suggested the Land Transport Authority could regulate the two bus associations that run private buses ferrying workers between their dormitories and Little India, extending the service to Sunday mornings and Saturdays to even out the crowd.

He said: "This will help to reduce the impression that foreign workers were being denied the opportunity to visit Little India, as has been the case after the capacity of buses was reduced and operating hours curtailed from 11pm (previously) to 9pm."

Mr Adam also proposed training for the bus timekeepers and coordinators to minimise friction with foreign workers. Auxiliary officers could also be better educated of their roles, and foreign workers with social norms here.

In conclusion, COI chairman and former Supreme Court judge G. Pannir Selvam said: "While we have received your commentary and findings, you mustn't expect us to rubber stamp everything that you have given us.

"Because some areas are plainly controversial, we have to sit down for some internal debate... We will ask you for further help."

The COI must submit its report to Minister for Home Affairs Teo Chee Hean by June 13.





10 key findings of investigators
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

THESE are the 10 key findings made by Central Narcotics Bureau director of investigations Adam Fashe Huddin, the lead investigator into the Little India riot.

1 Alcohol was "the main contributory factor" in causing the riot to escalate and the violence which took place.

2 There was no evidence of widespread abuse of foreign workers in Singapore, or that such problems were behind the riot. Workers interviewed did not complain of salary issues or poor living conditions.

3 Workers at the scene may have been riled by what they saw as the late arrival of rescue personnel, and that some of the civil defence officers first approached the bus timekeeper instead of the accident victim.

4 By holding back the crowd and shielding the driver and timekeeper, the police created the impression they were "protecting their own (Singaporeans)".

5 Given the "forceful" way the timekeeper carried out her work, there was already resentment from workers. The "ill-fated turn of events" made her a focal point of the rioters' anger.

6 Roads in Little India could be closed on Sundays to give the crowds more space, with more barricades installed to prevent jaywalking.

7 Little India ferry services could be extended to Sunday mornings and Saturdays to spread out the crowd of workers visiting the area.

8 Bus drivers and timekeepers may be trained to communicate better with workers, who themselves could be taught what is unacceptable behaviour here.

9 Auxiliary officers could be better trained so they do not cause resentment and tension while carrying out their duties.

10 More police resources should be invested in areas where foreign workers congregate, especially in Geylang.

The Committee of Inquiry - appointed on Dec 13, five days after the riot - has until June 13 to submit a report and recommendations to the Minister for Home Affairs.




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, Day 15, Day 16, Day 17Day 18Day 19, Day 20Day 21, Day 22

Multi-pronged approach in curbing online piracy: Ministry

$
0
0
IN THEIR respective letters, Dr Edmund Lam ("Tune in to copyright protection"; Tuesday) and Mr Chen Yongjie ("Lax enforcement of music copyright laws"; last Saturday) raised valid concerns.

Online piracy is an international issue. It is a continual challenge to strike a balance between curbing online piracy and ensuring that content remains accessible on the Internet, not least to spur greater creativity.

Singapore adopts a multi-pronged approach in curbing piracy. Public education remains the primary and most important approach. It has to be a sustained effort.

The Intellectual Property Office of Singapore runs the Honour Intellectual Property programme, which comprises a series of outreach initiatives such as the World IP Day celebrations, to raise awareness and promote respect for intellectual property among youth and the public.

Encouraging legitimate avenues for online content delivery is another prong in our approach to curb online piracy.

Spotify, iTunes, SingTel's AMPed Music Service and others have introduced their services in Singapore over the past two years.

We will continue to work with the industry to make more of such services available for Singaporeans.

We have also taken note of the industry's concerns that prevalent online piracy is adversely affecting Singapore's creative industries, and are exploring how to enable rights holders to protect their rights more effectively against pirate websites that blatantly infringe copyright.

We will be undertaking a public consultation soon on the proposed approach.

We remain committed to building an environment where the hard work of creators will continue to be respected, while not stifling the flow of content.

Praveen Randhawa (Ms)
Deputy Director (Corporate Communications)
Ministry of Law
ST Forum, 27 Mar 2014





ILLEGAL MUSIC DOWNLOADS
Clarify law and enforce it

AS A musician, I fully understand Mr Chen Yongjie's frustration at the lack of strict enforcement of music copyright laws ("Lax enforcement of music copyright laws"; last Saturday).

The State has to implement more stringent checks on non-payment of music copyright dues.

Addressing the widespread illegal downloading of music, however, is much more onerous.

First, the problem is prevalent because of the low risk of individual prosecution.

Since 2005, it has been a criminal offence to download music illegally for personal use, but only if the infringement is "significant".

The result of allowing this ambiguity to persist is that many have got away with it.

Second, illegal downloading of music has become a social norm. Being in the majority engenders the "safety net" mentality ("They can't possibly jail all of us, right?").

This could also explain why the law is not being strictly enforced. Throwing a lot of people into jail or fining them would be an administrative nightmare.

Various solutions have been mooted, such as site-banning and public education - both of which are ineffectual.

Site-banning is analogous to banning knives to prevent murders; if murderers can find other weapons, illegal downloaders can find other sites.

Similarly, the effectiveness of public education is limited; it will never provide a sufficiently strong deterrent.

Prosecution is key, since the fear of it is incontrovertibly effective in Singapore.

However, the law should first be clarified. The keyword "significant" should be clearly defined or even removed.

Thereafter, enforcement should be stepped up. A transition period could be implemented to give individuals time to remove their illegal music collections.

Only when individuals are prosecuted can the "safety net" mindset be changed, and Singapore be seen as an intellectual property hub.

Tan Yu Song
ST Forum, 27 Mar 2014





Tune in to copyright protection

MR CHEN Yongjie suggested that music copyright organisations are not effective in enforcing the rights of their members, especially in licensing commercial retailers and eateries ("Lax enforcement of music copyright laws"; last Saturday).

The Composers and Authors Society of Singapore (Compass) has been largely successful in the promotion and protection of the copyright interest of its members, who are composers, lyricists and music publishers.

Through education and dialogue with various industry bodies, nearly all commercial retailers and restaurants have taken up an annual licence from Compass to broadcast background music or perform music live.

For a minority of outlets infringing copyright law, we take a calibrated approach - preferring to use legal action only as a last resort if counselling and warnings fail.

However, under the existing Copyright Act, sound recordings of musical works are not accorded any public performance or broadcast rights. For example, when a commercial shop plays a CD for background music, its only legal obligation is to obtain the consent of the composers, through Compass, of the musical works embedded within the CD. These outlets do not need a licence from the Recording Industry Performance Singapore, as claimed by Mr Chen.

Unfortunately, the same respect for copyright by these commercial outlets has not been extended to the online world. Rampant illegal downloading of music, movies and books remains a serious threat to the creative industries.

Creators of original works need to be fairly remunerated.

The music industry has been urging the introduction of public performance and broadcast rights for sound recordings. This would compensate the significant effort expended to produce a music recording.

We also need to amend the Copyright Law to allow copyright owners to legally apply to a relevant authority to block illegal sites flouting copyright, which I had advocated previously ("Be global leader in fighting piracy"; Oct 23, 2013).

The music industry has already ensured that an array of legal music services are affordable and easily accessible to the public. YouTube, AMPed, Spotify, KKBOX and iTunes are such services, and more are expected to be launched soon.

Educating our young to respect intellectual property is still the way forward. The Intellectual Property Office of Singapore, in collaboration with the creative communities, has embarked on various public education initiatives, especially in schools.

Ultimately, we have to impress upon society that respect for intellectual property is essential for the progress of science and useful arts.

Edmund Lam (Dr)
Chief Executive Officer & Director
Composers and Authors Society of Singapore
ST Forum, 25 Mar 2014





Lax enforcement of music copyright laws

I HAVE read reports and heard people talk about illegal music downloads ("1 in 2 S'poreans downloads illegal music, videos: Poll"; Wednesday).

Musicians put in much time and effort to create works from scratch, especially independent music creators who spend money on recording studios and other equipment just to produce a single track.

Too many people take them for granted and do not understand their pain. To them, music is free and it is easy to compose a song.

As a music director, I know how easy it is to find out if people are downloading music illegally and if commercial organisations are paying their music copyright dues.

But no government body is tackling this problem despite Singapore being a "top intellectual property hub" in the region.

In Malaysia, music copyright organisations do thorough checks on commercial retailers and eateries.

Another article ("Music royalties - 7 in 10 shops not paying up: Study"; June 8, 2013) said seven out of 10 commercial entities infringe the Copyright Act by playing background music without paying for the appropriate licence.

It is not just the Composers and Authors Society of Singapore licensing fee that they need to pay; most also need to pay a fee to the Recording Industry Performance Singapore.

But nothing much is being done. I wonder what type of mindset we are cultivating with respect to copyrights.

Chen Yongjie
ST Forum, 22 Mar 2014





1 in 2 S'poreans download illegal music, videos: Poll
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 19 Mar 2014

MORE than half of Singaporeans download music and videos illegally, even while they condemn piracy as a form of theft.

A survey of 900 people last year by Singapore-based research consultancy Sycamore Research and Marketing showed that 61 per cent of people here aged 16 to 64 download movies and videos illegally over the Internet. And 17 per cent do so at least once a week.

This is even though 66 per cent conceded what they were doing was stealing.

Over 180 people from the media and creative industries were told of the findings yesterday at an event at GV Grand cinema.

Mr Ang Kwee Tiang, regional director of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, said the local music recording industry was in dire straits and urged responsible online behaviour. What was an almost $90 million industry in 1997 made just $20 million in 2012, Mr Ang said.

This despite the availability of "legal and reasonably priced alternatives in Singapore" like Amped, a streaming service, and Rdio, an Internet radio service, he added.

He called for quick steps to make illegal content less available - a challenge when most illegal content is easily accessible and hosted overseas.

Piracy is rampant among youth in particular, with seven out of 10 between the ages of 16 and 24 downloading illegal content.

Some said piracy has become such a social norm that they do not think twice about it.

"Everybody does it and everybody is used to it, so it doesn't feel like a crime," said a 29-year-old marketing manager, who visits piracy site The Pirate Bay to download United States TV shows at least twice a week.


Cina or Tionghoa? The politics behind Indonesia's word choice

$
0
0
By Leo Suryadinata, Published The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

ON MARCH 12 this year, 47 years after the implementation of a decree obliging government agencies to use a derogatory term for China and Chinese, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono issued a presidential decree (No.12/2014) nullifying it.

The move reflects the improved status of the ethnic Chinese in the country and the more cordial relations between Jakarta and Beijing in recent years. It may also help the ruling Democrat Party win support in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

Following a wave of anti-Chinese hysteria in 1967 in the wake of an attempted coup in 1965, Indonesia's military-led government mandated in June 1967 that the pejorative word Tjina (old spelling) or Cina (new spelling after 1972) be used to refer to both ethnic Chinese and China. The previous Indonesian terms for China and the Chinese were Tiongkok and Tionghoa respectively.

Anti-Chinese sentiments were fuelled by allegations that the coup was supported by the People's Republic of China. The local Chinese Indonesian organisation Baperki was also seen to be close to a discredited President Sukarno and the banned Indonesian Communist Party.

The decision to change the terms for China and the Chinese was taken at an army seminar held in Bandung in August 1966.

The reason for the focus on nomenclature is not known. According to a rumour, however, a group of anti-Chinese generals wanted to introduce strong measures against the local Chinese population. But they were outnumbered by the Suharto group (including many economists), who feared that any extreme policy would endanger the efforts of the new Cabinet to stabilise the economy. If the rumour was true, the resolution can be seen as a compromise.

In fact, the term Tjina was used to refer to both the state of China and the Chinese people in Indonesia before and even during the turn of the 20th century without any derogatory meaning. The first use of the term Tjina in Indonesia can be found in the Sejarah Melayu (Malay Annals), written in the 17th century. The Chinese in the Malay world also used the term themselves.

However, with the rise of Chinese cultural nationalism in the turn of the 20th century and the formation of the Republic of China (Republik Tiongkok) in 1912, the term Cina was considered by many Chinese in colonial Indonesia to be old-fashioned. They therefore began to use the new term Tionghoa to refer to the Chinese and Tiongkok to refer to China. The first modern Chinese association in Jakarta was called Tiong Hoa Hwe Koan (1900).

Initially, both terms Tionghoa and Tjina were used together and gradually both Peranakan ((local-born and Indonesian/Malay-speaking Chinese) and indigenous newspapers adopted the terms Tionghoa for the Chinese.

After the nationalist Kuomintang gained control of the whole of China in 1928, the Dutch colonial government also officially used Tionghoa and Tiongkok in their local official documents.

Tjina, on the other hand, became a negative stereotype of the Chinese, implying that they were greedy, unclean, weak and immoral. It was used only when indigenous Indonesians wanted to belittle or humiliate their Chinese counterparts. The Indonesian name of the Republic of China was Republik Tiongkok, and after 1949, the Indonesian name of People's Republic of China was Republik Rakjat Tiongkok.

There was therefore some debate in 1967 when Jakarta officially adopted the term Tjina. Many Chinese and Indonesian intellectuals disagreed with name-calling and did not think the term could be used for PRC citizens alone.

Nevertheless, the military view prevailed, and on June 28, 1967, the Cabinet Presidium issued Circular No.SE-06 (1967), which asked all Indonesian publications to use the term Tjina to replace Tiongkok and Tionghoa.

The PRC refused to accept the term given by the new Indonesian regime. At the same time, there were mutually hostile exchanges between Beijing and Jakarta on other issues. The two countries suspended ties on Oct 31, 1967.

During the negotiations in 1990 to restore diplomatic ties, the Indonesian name of China was raised, but Mr Suharto's Indonesia insisted that Cina (the new spelling of Tjina) had to be used. Both sides eventually agreed to use the English term "China" to replace Cina. Hence, the official Indonesian name of the PRC became Republik Rakyat China. Nevertheless, most of the Indonesian newspapers and publications continued to use Cina to refer to both China and Chinese Indonesians.

The reaction of ethnic Chinese in Indonesia has varied. The older generation and those who understand Chinese and Indonesian contemporary history continued to use the term Tionghoa. When Chinese Indonesian organisations emerged after the fall of Suharto, they also used Tionghoa to name their organisations.

However, many young Chinese Indonesians born and brought up during the Suharto era remain unaware of this historical baggage. Some have insisted on using the term Cina. They have also been supported by Indonesians who employ historic and linguistic arguments in favour of the continued use of the derogatory term.

But why did President Yudhoyono decide to act now, issuing presidential decree No.12/2014?

Removing the unpopular legacy achieves several objectives. Domestically, with the removal of the notorious circular, he would be able to win the support of the Chinese Indonesians. This is particularly important as the April parliamentary elections approach and his ailing Democrat Party is in need of an electoral boost.

Removing the decree should also improve Jakarta-Beijing relations. China has always been unhappy with the term.

Equally important is the President's desire for a place in history. This is Dr Yudhoyono's last term as the President of Indonesia, and he will want to be remembered favourably by as many groups as possible. After all, President Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur) is remembered for his nullification of the decree on restriction on Chinese customs and religions in 2000, and President Megawati Sukarnoputri is remembered for her decision in 2002 to make Chinese New Year a public holiday.

The latest presidential decree will remove the pejorative term from official use, although it will not prevent its daily use by the people. The move will, however, be welcomed by both Chinese Indonesians and China.


The author is Visiting Senior Fellow of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.



Westerners can level playing field by learning Mandarin

$
0
0
By Jane Peterson, Published The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

AS I watched Mrs Michelle Obama struggle to paint a single Chinese character, I am grateful my Anglo-American daughter already knows thousands of them. At 23, Sarah is proficient in Mandarin. And that opens doors. In three years, if all exams go well, she will qualify as a full-fledged solicitor in Hong Kong. With a Western mindset, she will meet the Chinese on their turf, using their mother tongue.

Sarah's China dream started with a Disney movie - Mulan. At age 10, she started spending summers at Sen Lin Hu, a Chinese immersion camp in Minnesota, eventually reading Chinese and Japanese at Cambridge and working summers in China.

Sarah is not the only one. A growing number of 20-something Westerners - with functional Mandarin - already work in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong. Thousands more will follow in their footsteps, including some of the 20,000 Americans studying in China this year alone. American Jim Rogers made headlines when he moved to Singapore and enrolled his Mandarin-speaking daughters in local schools. But he was not exceptional either. Even in Minneapolis, Minnesota - in the middle of America - my young niece and nephew attend a Minnesota-funded Chinese immersion school that begins in kindergarten.

While the world anxiously waits for these Mandarin speakers to mature - to become the West's diplomatic leaders of tomorrow - what about today? Actually, the only Mandarin-speaking Western head of state was forced out of office last year: Mr Kevin Rudd, Australia's former prime minister.

Mr Rudd's defeat was a much bigger loss for East-West relations than most people realise. He's now absent from high-power summits, including this week's Nuclear Security Summit in The Hague, where Presidents Obama and Xi "conversed" with each other through interpreters.

Despite his loss of power, Mr Rudd remains a superstar in China. He counts some 800,000 followers in his two social media accounts. The former prime minister is currently a visiting scholar at Harvard, pondering the East-West diplomatic relationship, but he also travels extensively.

His appeal among Chinese students is obvious. He peppers speeches with Mandarin, waxing eloquent about the China dream of prosperity and national rejuvenation, and chastising the West for not giving China enough respect. When answering questions at the LKY School of Public Policy, he eagerly launches into seemingly flawless Mandarin.

LKY School administrator Wang Tong, who supervises Chinese students through a special Mandarin programme, follows Mr Rudd with enthusiasm on Weibo.com. She tells me his Mandarin is better than that of Singaporean or Hong Kong Chinese. She applauds him for introducing himself as Laolu, which is rather like saying, "Hi, I'm Uncle Rudd."

"He knows all about China and our way to communicate - zhong guo tong," Ms Wang says.

Mr Zheng Wei, a 30-year-old master's student from Beijing, agrees. He says Mr Rudd is known by all middle-class Chinese, thanks to massive exposure on Chinese television. Other known leaders - Mr Barack Obama, Mr Vladimir Putin, Mr George W. Bush and Mr Tony Blair - don't have the same affinity with China, according to Mr Zheng.

"When Mr Rudd speaks Chinese, we feel respected and listened to," he says. "China is more comfortable with him and he is more comfortable with China."

Mr Rudd believes that knowing Mandarin will be "extremely important" in the future. "To say English will be the universal language forever is questionable," he warns.

And he's right. The world moves fast. Just 100 years ago, he reminds me, French was the reigning diplomatic language, and before that, Latin. LKY dean Kishore Mahbubani seconds that. He is well known for pushing the West to ramp up their China skills. "The big trouble in the West," he says, "is that knowledge of Asia is amazingly bad."

Certainly Western foreign offices already have some competent Mandarin speakers in their ranks. Still, in my homeland, the current US ambassador does not speak Mandarin, nor did his predecessor. Behind them, US ambassador to China Jon Huntsman spoke conversational Mandarin, but left the post to run in the last presidential election. He has been quoted as saying he is "ready, willing and prepared" to run again.

Mr Huntsman and Mr Rudd are Western politicians to watch. Even out of office, both can still put some soft diplomacy points on the board for the West. So too can a growing number of Western professionals who are adept at Mandarin.

Westerners in China who cannot speak Mandarin are being squeezed out. Sarah tells me it's very difficult to land a job in Hong Kong if you don't speak Chinese, and virtually impossible when looking in law or finance.

"I would not have received a training contract from a UK law firm in Hong Kong without Mandarin," she tells me, adding that the oral and written assessments demand a knowledge of complex commercial terms.

In Sarah's mind, Westerners can only succeed in Mandarin if they have what it takes: first, persistence to practise characters over and over and over; and second, a good ear to imitate tones accurately.

"I loved my Chinese studies course at Cambridge - 20 of us began, 17 finished," she says. "With so many Chinese speaking good English, Westerners who know Chinese will level the playing field and keep power balanced. We will see things from a different perspective. It will mean more opportunity for cooperation."


The writer is a freelance journalist and communications consultant in Singapore


Coping with high industrial rents

$
0
0
Space is a scarce resource in Singapore, and small and medium-sized enterprises need creative solutions to cope with rising industrial rents
By Chia Yan Min, The Straits Times, 25 Mar 2014

IN 2011, the factory occupied by local fragrance maker Senses International was sold by government agency JTC to a private sector firm. Soon after, rent for the company's 7,000 sq ft space at Tai Seng was bumped up by a hefty 70 per cent.

Senses' founder Fredrik Cheng considered buying his own strata-titled factory space, but said the units the company could afford were relatively inaccessible.

"We would also have had to spend a lot of time and money shifting there," he added.

Mr Cheng's woes are common among bosses of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs), most of whom have resigned themselves to steep labour costs as Singapore tightens the tap on foreign workers.

But that leaves them with less room to manoeuvre when it comes to another costly resource: land. According to a pre-Budget survey by the Singapore Business Federation (SBF), rents are the second most worrying cost issue for SMEs after wages. Industrial rents in particular - for instance, for warehouses and factories - have risen more steeply than office and shop rents.

In the recent Budget debate this month, costly industrial space was a hot topic. At least eight Members of Parliament rose to plead for more aid for companies.

Many blamed recent steep rental hikes on real estate investment trusts (Reits), which now own land previously sold by state agencies JTC and the Housing Board.

Reits borrow money and issue equity to buy properties to lease out, then use that rental income to pay their unit holders and lenders. They may raise rents, but they justify the increases by saying that they invest in renovation and upgrading.

"With Reits taking over most industrial and commercial premises, the cushioning effort provided by JTC in the past is totally removed," said Nominated MP R. Dhinakaran.

MP Inderjit Singh added that JTC's sale of its properties was "a huge shift, and the Government lost the ability to influence rental prices, resulting in developers and investors making the money".

Are Reits really to blame for high industrial rents? And should more be done to help SMEs cope?

Tough lease terms

THE MPs are fingering Reits because the recent jump in industrial rents coincided with JTC selling off chunks of its industrial properties in 2008 and 2011.

The move was meant to create a more vibrant market and allow the statutory board to focus on strategic industrial developments.

But it also led to rents rising. Between 2010 and 2013, industrial rents surged 51.5 per cent, compared with 22 per cent for office space and 4 per cent for shops.

JTC now directly leases out only 8 per cent of industrial space in Singapore. It owns another 45 per cent of industrial land, but leases the sites to private landlords, who build properties on the land and set rents for individual tenants.

Another 5 per cent of industrial space is owned by other state agencies such as the Housing Board.

Other private players own 26 per cent, leaving Reits with just 16 per cent of the market - hardly enough to be a price-setter.

Minister of State for Trade and Industry Teo Ser Luck said in the Budget debate that Reits must "compete in the rental market to attract tenants" - such as with attractive pricing - like any other landlord.

Still, having to deal with private landlords, including Reits, appears to have made life more difficult for SMEs.

In addition to rising rents, SMEs often have to contend with lease agreements that favour landlords, said Colliers research head Chia Siew Chuin. For instance, it is typically more difficult for tenants to terminate a lease agreement early than it is for landlords.

If their contracts do allow early termination, tenants might be required to search for another company to take over the space.

While larger manufacturers have more bargaining power because they rent more space, SMEs are typically at a disadvantage, she added.

Meanwhile, property insiders have offered other reasons for the sharp rise in industrial rents.

Rents could have been catching up to market rates, as JTC had previously subsidised rentals, said Associate Professor Sing Tien Foo of the National University of Singapore's Department of Real Estate.

Tight land supply could have been another reason for the increase in rents, said Ms Chia.

Since 2006, the occupancy rate of industrial spaces islandwide has been above 90 per cent.

JTC told The Straits Times that it has released more land to meet demand. From 2010 to 2013, it sold an average of 28ha of indus-trial land per year - more than double the annual average sold between 2005 and 2009. But land sales do not translate instantly into more industrial space because properties take time to build.

Another problem is that some land was used to build "shoebox" industrial units - some as small as 500 sq ft - to cater to property speculators. These buyers shifted their focus to industrial properties after curbs were imposed on speculation in the housing market.

But these are not usable spaces for "true blue industrialists", who typically need more space for their operations, said Savills Singapore research head Alan Cheong. Non-manufacturers may rent them instead as offices since they are cheaper.

Industrialists - mostly manufacturers - usually find suitable space mainly in properties owned by Reits, he added.

Easing the crunch

TO ITS credit, the Government has ramped up measures to rein in industrial rents. It has bumped up supply and is requiring developers of industrial land to build bigger units and more of them.

To curb short-term speculative activity in the market, a seller stamp duty of between 5 per cent and 15 per cent of the sale price has been imposed on industrial properties sold after January last year.

In addition, industrial sites with shorter tenures and smaller sizes have been released to allow more affordable developments.

Lastly, the Government has tightened rules on the use of industrial space to squeeze out tenants with non-industrial needs. As industrial premises tend to be cheaper than office and shop space, furniture makers and warehouse operators might find themselves edged out by tuition centres or travel agencies that are willing to pay higher rentals.

But now, firms taking up industrial spaces must use at least 60 per cent of the floor area of each industrial unit for "core" industrial activities such as manufacturing, assembly and repair workshops or storage facilities.

Balancing needs

WITH the help of these moves, industrial rent rises are expected to moderate this year, said property consultants.

Mr Kurt Wee, president of the Association of Small and Medium Enterprises, pointed out that the diversity of industrial landlords has contributed to a more vibrant landscape and more competition.

"It is important to maintain that diversity and not have only huge institutional landlords... Smaller private landlords tend to be more flexible and put less pressure on rents to increase. The only issue is that space is still scarce," he said.

In the meantime, it is worth noting that rental costs make up only about 6 per cent of manufacturing SMEs' costs on average, compared with 30 per cent for retailers, according to the latest Economic Survey of Singapore.

Company bosses say that while rents add to rising costs, high wages are still a bigger worry. Mr Paul Lim, managing director of Craftech Printing Services, said rent makes up 10 per cent to 15 per cent of his company's costs, while labour costs are a more significant 60 per cent to 70 per cent.

Still, the Government should continue to keep a close eye on the market. One issue is that what qualifies as "industrial use" is more fraught with ambiguity.

"A lot of our manufacturing firms are moving up the value chain, and much of their activities might no longer be in manufacturing, so they may drop below the percentage required for industrial space occupation," said Mr Victor Tay, SBF's chief operating officer.

For instance, firms might diversify their businesses to carry out research and development.

Clamping down on users that fall into this regulatory grey area raises the question of where they should go, as normal offices may be unsuitable or too pricey.

The median cost of industrial space was $23 per sq m monthly at the end of last year, compared with $101 for central area offices, $44 for fringe area offices and $80 to $95 for shops, according to government statistics.

To address this, the Government can consider forming clusters in some industrial estates, where relevant firms can rent space even if they do not meet minimum industrial use rules.

The Government can also play a bigger role in helping SMEs obtain more equitable rental terms from landlords. The SBF has called on the public and private sectors to develop a standard tenancy agreement to be used across the board. This would help level the playing field for tenants.

Another possible avenue is to encourage land intensification among SMEs, through the use of rental rebates, grants or tax allowances. While productivity boosting measures such as automation and training come with a slew of rewards, schemes that reward SMEs for efficient use of space are sorely lacking in comparison.

The Land Intensification Allowance is one of the few such schemes. It allows companies to claim for spending incurred when they build properties that meet a certain land use intensity. Any company that builds or modifies its properties can qualify.

Implemented in 2010, the scheme was extended for another five years in this year's Budget, and expanded to cover the logistics sector as well as businesses carrying out qualifying activities on airport and port land.

While the scheme is a move in the right direction, it covers only selected sectors, such as pharmaceuticals and petrochemicals. A broader scheme that covers more sectors, and offers cash payouts or rental rebates rather than tax incentives that favour larger firms, is likely to make SMEs more enthusiastic about looking for creative space solutions.

But the fact remains that space in Singapore will remain scarce and expensive, and bosses such as Mr Cheng will have to adjust to elevated rents.

"It is very difficult for small companies now, not to mention new entrepreneurs," said Mr Cheng, who has been travelling in Malaysia, Thailand and Taiwan in search of possible alternative factory locations. "In the long term, we have to think really hard about whether our factory should be located here or elsewhere."


Halimah Yacob reiterates call to legislate eldercare leave for workers

$
0
0
By Janice Tai, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

THE elderly may have their healthcare worries addressed by the Pioneer Generation package, but it is equally crucial to look into the needs of their caregivers, Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob said yesterday.

One way would be for the Government to "seriously consider" legislating eldercare leave.

"Even if it's only for a few days, it will provide great relief and is a strong signal that the Government supports families in their effort to care for their elderly at home," she said.

This would help especially those "sandwiched" between looking after young children and frail elderly parents, said Madam Halimah at the Ageless in Singapore conference at Pan Pacific Singapore attended by 260 people.

She first called for compulsory eldercare leave last year on the back of feedback from caregivers who did not have enough leave to care for their aged parents.

The need for eldercare leave is "a lot more urgent than we realise", with some having to quit their jobs to care for their loved ones full-time, she told reporters yesterday.

An NTUC survey released last year showed that 77 per cent of working caregivers do not have eldercare leave. Among the caregivers who quit work, 21 per cent did so to take care of an elderly family member full-time.

Singapore's largest employer, the civil service, has led the way in formalising eldercare leave. Since 2012, employees can use two out of 14 days of unrecorded leave, which includes marriage and exam leave, for eldercare.

But SIM University's head of gerontology Kalyani Mehta said eldercare leave applies only to those caring for parents and should be extended to other caregivers: "It should be made more flexible because in some families, the daughters-in-law or spouses are the ones doing the caring."

To encourage more private firms to offer eldercare leave, Madam Halimah suggested having both the Government and employers share the costs.

"It can be similar to childcare leave where the Government bears part of the costs so that it is more manageable for the employers," she said.

Besides eldercare leave, Madam Halimah said caregivers can be supported with an allowance or home-based respite care services. Both options, she noted, will enable the elderly to age at home rather than be in institutions.

Caregivers who need time out usually leave their seniors at respite care centres for a few hours.

"I honestly don't think this is going to work," said Madam Halimah. Some old folk, especially those with dementia, may be unsettled when they move from their home to a centre where they do not know anyone.

She also proposed an allowance, either through cash handouts or Central Provident Fund contributions, to support and recognise caregivers who may have to sacrifice their careers to look after their elderly parents.

"Otherwise the caregiver may think that 'I might as well continue to work to build up my savings for retirement' and then there is no choice but to put the parent in a nursing home," she said.

Mr Gerard Ee, chair of Council for Third Age, a government-funded group that promotes active ageing, agreed it is important to invest in support for caregivers.
"Often, we count the costs of what all these additional measures may chalk up, but we don't count the costs that arise if these measures aren't in place," he said.
"Down the road, if the health of the caregivers deteriorates, it will be more costly for the Government and the people."


Wanted: More home care staff

$
0
0
Rising demand for such services sees scramble to find quality manpower
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

DEMAND for home care services is booming, causing a scramble among care operators to attract more quality manpower.

One of the largest players is NTUC Eldercare, which saw a 50 per cent increase in client numbers last year. It has about 100 care officers and is planning to nearly double this number in six years' time.

Another voluntary welfare group, Touch Community Services, wants to add 20 care staff to its current 76 by the end of the year. It had about 1,600 clients last year, a 20 per cent increase from 2012.

Home care patients are typically wheelchair-bound or bedridden and need help for daily tasks such as changing, bathing, or eating. Caregivers also conduct simple exercise sessions and in many cases lend a listening ear.

"It is not always easy or pleasant to do the job of caregiving to the elderly," said Ms Pang Sze Yunn of NTUC Eldercare, which began offering home care services in 2007. "So the sector as a whole may not attract as many workers as we need."

About 65 per cent of its care staff are part-timers who go through an in-house training programme which teaches them basic care techniques.

Many are housewives who are attracted by the flexible working hours.

"It allows them to meet the needs of their families while doing something meaningful for the community in their spare time," Ms Pang noted. "In addition, we try to match them with clients whose homes are located close to where they live."

Touch Home Care"taps into community resources" when it needs that little bit of extra manpower, such as by enlisting the help of neighbourhood GPs or locum nurses.

Its personal carers go through on-the-job training programmes to "better manage issues faced on the ground".

The organisation meets the home care needs of Toa Payoh, Jurong, and the outlying neighbourhoods, and is "reaching maximum capacity".

"We expect to see a waiting list for our services if new bases are not available soon," said Mr Kavin Seow, director of home care and caregiver services at Touch Community Services.

His conservative estimate is that demand will increase by 20 per cent each year.

Plans to expand into two other heartland areas by the middle of next year will allow the organisation to expand its manpower base, he said.

The Health Ministry (MOH) is looking to attract new faces to join the eldercare sector, especially mid-career professionals, retirees and housewives.

"As MOH expands the aged care sector... there will be ample new jobs that offer flexible work hours close to home," an MOH spokesman said.

Meanwhile, some private operators, like Active Global Specialised Caregivers, have managed to circumvent the manpower crunch by recruiting extensively from countries such as India, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka.

Its caregivers live with their clients, providing round-the-clock care. About 50 are deployed at any one time.

Founder Yorelle Kalika said the company is also looking into hiring foreign manpower for respite care, which allows family members or full-time caregivers to take a break for a short period.

"Right now, all our respite care givers are local nurses who do freelance caregiving assignments for our clients," she said. "We are often very short-handed on this front."





She's a Vitally Important Person to four elderly people
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

WITH her two children grown up and more spare time, Ms Polly Tan decided to lavish her attention on people she felt really needed it.

That seemingly simple decision about two years ago has evolved to the point where Ms Tan, 52, is now a vitally important person in the lives of four elderly people.

It's an undertaking that brings enormous gratification but also enormous demands. The job can be "very tough", noted Ms Tan, who has had to move patients more than 20kg heavier than herself.

"If you don't handle it properly, both parties can get injured, but we are trained."

There have been other testing times, too. Some of her clients have died within a few weeks of their meeting, often after long bouts with cancer.

"During the time of our stay we just give them our very best."

Apart from tending to physical needs like bathing or exercise, she also tries to forge an emotional connection during her home visits.

"I talk to them, sing songs, or play games with them. A lot of them are lonely and need companionship."

One is blind and unable to walk, while most have family members who are working and cannot care for them during the day. Ms Tan, who works for NTUC Eldercare, visits each of her clients once or twice a week for two hours at a time.

The Straits Times understands that part-time caregivers are usually paid between $10 and $20 an hour.

But Ms Tan is not in it for the money. Instead, she likes the flexible working hours.

"I have time to do other things, like cook for my family or spend time with my children."

And her job as a caregiver allows her to spend time with those who need a listening ear.

"All of them at that age struggle," she said, "they need people to shower more care on them."





Live-in caregiver feels emotional pull
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 26 Mar 2014

FORMER nurse Jil Manikandan spent 10 years working in a hospital but that experience still did not prepare her for the emotional challenges of being a live-in caregiver.

"It's totally different," she said. "In the hospital, patients come and go. You have no mental attachment to the patient."

The emotional difficulties hit home last year when a patient she was looking after died. The Indian national, who first came here in June last year, returned home but came back to Singapore in January to care for dementia patient Susan Ong, 90.

She lives in Madam Ong's flat in the Mountbatten area, helping with her client's daily personal needs, such as bathing, and helping her deal with daily life.

The thing to remember as a caregiver, Mrs Manikandan, 30, said is that the elderly "have their own moods".

"If they are in a bad mood, you cannot stress them or force them. They get very distressed. Just wait for 10 to 15 minutes, and they will be fine."

Ms Manikandan earns about $700 a month, which is paid directly to her by her employer.

Active Global Specialised Caregivers recruited her directly from India. She did not have to pay agents' fees, which could amount to as much as six months of her salary.

Despite her nursing background in India, Singapore law mandates that Ms Manikandan cannot provide home nursing services. Only nurses registered with the Singapore Nursing Board can practise here.

Yet her experience in the field means she is able to provide much more specialised care than an ordinary maid.

And even though housework is not within her job scope, she does it anyway.

"I treat this house as my house," she said.


Govt 'faces challenge to keep up public trust'

$
0
0
Tharman: More competing interests and people's expectations are rising
By Robin Chan, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

IN THE face of a more competitive economic and political scene, the Government's challenge is to keep up people's high levels of trust in it, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam told civil servants yesterday.

Doing so is increasingly difficult as there are more competing interests and people's expectations are rising, he said.

Speaking to about 300 civil servants at a promotion ceremony for its elite officers at the Marina Mandarin Hotel, Mr Tharman said the Government has to respond with confidence and consider alternative ideas with an open mind, but keep a "sense of balance and direction".

It has to meet rising expectations by improving public services and innovating where possible, he said, while explaining clearly to the public why some expectations cannot realistically be met.

He outlined three things policymakers must do to retain public trust and govern well.

These are: implement policies well and make sure they work on the ground; include the public in working out solutions; and invest in community life and the intangibles that matter to people's sense of well-being.

To implement well, policymakers must consult widely when crafting a policy, and put themselves in the shoes of the ordinary citizen - a point also made by the Head of Civil Service Peter Ong.

They must also pay attention to details, correct mistakes quickly when they happen, and explain policies in ways that help people understand them, he said.

The Pioneer Generation Package for citizens is a "live case in point", said Mr Tharman, who is also Finance Minister.

Calling it a "major and complex exercise" to implement, he said it involves reaching out to 450,000 beneficiaries, training health-care workers, and designing and integrating IT systems.

The Government has set up a task force led by Senior Ministers of State Josephine Teo and Amy Khor to coordinate the efforts.

"We must ensure that our pioneers and their families understand the benefits and are assured of the Government's special support for them, so that they never fear going for treatment."

Mr Tharman said there is scope to get more of the public involved in providing solutions, by involving people in giving feedback on local issues, delivering social services and crowd-sourcing for new solutions.

SPRING Singapore will pilot an appeals panel comprising business people for several of its assistance schemes, which could be extended to other agencies if successful.

A one-stop portal will bring together various agencies' crowd- sourcing competitions.

The final aspect of retaining the public's trust lies in the intangibles of well-being, he said. Besides good jobs and higher incomes, the Government must also pay more attention to shared green and blue spaces in the neighbourhood and a sense of community.

"These are things that do not have market prices, but they are no less important to the quality of life. We have to focus on the intangibles as we go forward," he said.





'Vital to listen to silent majority's views...'
... or very loud minority will shape policy, says top civil servant
By Maryam Mokhtar, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

WEEKS after Dr Beh Swan Gin became the Law Ministry's permanent secretary, he was tasked to oversee the reform of a law on Singapore's mandatory death sentence.

The experience in 2012 left an indelible mark on the 47-year-old.

He learnt how vital it was "to find ways to understand what the silent majority is talking about".

"Otherwise, your policies and laws may well be shaped by a very loud and noisy minority," he told The Straits Times earlier this week.

The change in the death penalty law since January last year gives judges discretion to impose a life sentence, instead of death, in certain instances of murder and drug trafficking.

But feedback showed a silent conservative part of society felt it "signalled a reduced commitment to law and order", he said.

Mr Beh and PUB chief executive Chew Men Leong were among 66 public sector officers whose promotions were celebrated yesterday at the Administrative Service annual dinner and promotion ceremony.

Mr Chew, 46, said understanding the needs and views of the public has been a "very big lesson" for him. Since taking up his present post in 2011, the former navy chief has had to tackle a series of severe flash floods in Singapore as well as the recent, worst-ever dry spell.

Underlying the important role of engaging the public, he highlighted two crucial measures.

One, having a central point of collecting information - where the public can also send details about what is happening where they are - is key in helping PUB decide how "to prioritise our response".

Two, the need to be transparent when engaging the public. "We need to lay out whatever information we have. And if the public is telling us (something), we better recognise it as something we don't know and pick up on it."

Dr Beh said there is a need to seek views in an in-depth manner as people get more involved and social media gets more popular. "You have to engage in deep conversations... you have to invest effort in doing that.

"Is it about having more presence on social media, more presence on the Web? To a certain extent yes but that's just superficial," he added.

A medical doctor by training, Dr Beh held various posts while working in the public sector.

These include being managing director of the Economic Development Board and executive director of the Biomedical Research Council in the Agency for Science, Technology and Research.

At the dinner, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam paid tribute to two recently retired permanent secretaries.

They are Mr Chiang Chie Foo and Mr Bilahari Kausikan.

Mr Chiang, who is now chairman of the CPF Board, was in the Administrative Service for 32 years.

Mr Tharman, in noting his "outstanding" career, listed several key positions he has held and his achievements while leading them.

These include being director of the Internal Security Department, where he strengthened its capabilities and operational effectiveness.

Mr Kausikan had a "distinguished" career at the Foreign Affairs Ministry for 31 years, said Mr Tharman, as he described his achievements.

Among them is the groundwork he laid for Singapore's historic election as a non-permanent member of the Security Council of the United Nations.





Policy, implementation both vital: Civil Service chief
By Robin Chan, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

THE Head of the Civil Service wants elite members of the service to be close to the ground so they will not only craft but also execute policies well.

Mr Peter Ong used the occasion of this year's Administrative Service dinner to highlight the importance of policy implementation, as the Government prepares to roll out new policies in the second half of its five-year term.

He said good implementation is needed especially as the environment is changing rapidly in Singapore, with more diverse needs and many different voices.

Policies have also become more complex, with a "constant surge" in transactions and feedback volumes. The time to roll them out has also shortened.

The annual dinner is also a promotion ceremony and this year, 66 administrative service officers (AOs) were promoted.

At the end of last year, there were 324 AOs, an increase of 4.5 per cent, the Public Service Division said. Last year, 24 officers joined the service while 10 either retired, resigned or transferred out.

Mr Ong said that to execute policy well, three things are needed.

The first is to pay attention to details by being close to the ground. The second is to work with non-government partners such as voluntary welfare organisations, restructured hospitals and vendors.

The third is to tap the wisdom of public sector specialists with deep knowledge.

Elaborating on the first, he said keeping one's ear to the ground is important to understand the moods and sentiments of Singaporeans and how policies impact them. Being closer to where public services are delivered also allows officers to put the right features in policies more credibly.

Mr Ong praised the implementation of the Enhancement for Active Seniors (EASE) programme, which aims to improve the safety and comfort of seniors living in HDB flats.

Officers from the Ministry of National Development, HDB and Ministry of Health worked with occupational therapists to pilot the project and found that the height that grab bars are installed at is key.

So HDB trained the contractors to ensure each installation of a grab bar is customised to each senior living there.

"About 24,000 residents have signed up for the programme since its 2012 launch, demonstrating how attention to detail leads to practical benefits for our seniors," he said.

Mr Ong also highlighted the importance of exposing the AOs to operational jobs, such as putting more buses on the road.

There are now 27 AOs working in such jobs, and the aim is to have all AOs have at least one such posting in their careers.

Another initiative - the six- month Community Attachment Programme - has seen its participants quadruple from 10 in the 1980s to 40 this year, he said.

By year's end, 70 per cent of AOs are expected to have undergone this in their first 15 years.

Despite the more challenging environment, Mr Ong said that Singapore's civil service is starting from a strong base in policy implementation and is internationally recognised for this strength.

"We are a public service that can get things done. This can-do spirit must spur us on as we tackle new problems that confront us," he said.


S'pore 'must have what it takes to defend itself'

$
0
0
PM Lee says situation in Ukraine is important reminder for small states
By Zuraidah Ibrahim, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

A SMALL state like Singapore must have the wherewithal to defend itself against acts of invasion that Ukraine has found itself subjected to, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong yesterday.

The situation in Ukraine has reminded Singapore of this very important lesson, he said at a press conference during his visit to Luxembourg, another small state.

Crimea, a peninsula in the south of Ukraine, was annexed by Russia last week, a move that provoked a firestorm of reaction and reignited old tensions between the West and the former Soviet empire.

Russia has shrugged off retaliatory sanctions, fuelling fears that it may have designs deeper into eastern Ukraine.

Mr Lee and his Luxembourg counterpart Xavier Bettel were asked about the situation and how they felt as leaders of small states surrounded by more powerful neighbours.

The Singapore PM noted that Ukraine had entered into a treaty in 1994 in which Russia agreed to respect its borders in exchange for it giving up its nuclear arsenal. But the treaty is clearly in tatters.

As a small country, Mr Lee said, "we believe that international laws have to be upheld and that countries should not be making unprovoked invasions of other countries. We believe that international treaties are sacrosanct".

But on top of that, Singapore takes a multi-layered approach to security.

The first level, he said, is for the country to have economic development.

The second is to have a very effective foreign policy and diplomacy, and the third is international agreements which partners are held to.

"When somebody enters into agreement with us, we have to take it very seriously. The only thing small states have is words and treaties," he said.

Finally, besides depending on the goodwill and good faith of others, a small state like Singapore must ensure deterrence and defence.

This is why it is important to have a strong Home Team and the Singapore Armed Forces.

He said: “You must have development. The country grows, you must have diplomacy, be friends with others. You must have deterrence, so that people take you seriously, and finally you must have defence.

"In extremis, you must be prepared to stand up to defend your position, if necessary, with your lives."

"That's a long, old lesson but is one which is worth repeating and which the Crimea situation reminds us is still very important."

Mr Bettel said: "We cannot, in 2014, have countries unilaterally decide to move borders. But we want a pacifist solution. War or any escalation won't help anyone."





Singapore keen on open skies pact with EU
PM says it will soon work on getting mandate from the EU to start talks
By Zuraidah Ibrahim, The Straits Times, 27 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE is keen on an open skies agreement with the European Union to foster greater connectivity and will canvass its member countries once the EU Parliament has undergone elections in May.

Disclosing the proposal yesterday at the start of his visit to Luxembourg, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said it will work soon on getting a mandate from the EU side to start negotiations.

It may take years but such a pact will bring the two regions closer together, he added.

A Singapore-EU Comprehensive Air Traffic Agreement (CATA) can also pave the way for the EU-Asean CATA, on which both regions agreed in February to start negotiations.

The pact was a key idea PM Lee brought to the table during his talks with his Luxembourg counterpart, Mr Xavier Bettel.

It was his first meeting on a day-long visit to the small state nestled between Belgium, Germany and France.

The two leaders later told a press conference that they had excellent discussions and were keen to deepen ties.

Mr Lee noted that both countries cooperate well at international forums, such as the United Nations, the Forum of Small States, and Global Governance Group.

Like Singapore, Luxembourg is tiny with even fewer people - over half a million.

Bilateral trade is also robust, growing more than 60 per cent last year and helping to retain Luxembourg's status as Singapore's third largest European Union investor.

"Europe is starting to recover from several difficult years," said Mr Lee. "Asia is making good progress and countries are integrating more closely with one another.

"We should expand our cooperation, not just bilaterally but with our wider regions."

He thanked Mr Bettel for Luxembourg's support for the early ratification of the EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

Aside from removing tariffs for firms, it will give its financial institutions access to Singapore's financial services market.

Also, its corporate giants like the world's largest cargo airline Cargolux and the largest steel maker ArcelorMittal, both with a presence in Singapore, can tap more suppliers in the region and benefit.

But Mr Lee said the most important benefit of the FTA is that it shows Europe's "strategic commitment to stay open and engage Asia, and both countries want to work together to foster closer cooperation".

On the two air agreements on the table, he said it would open up more opportunities for tourism, business and cooperation.

Mr Bettel supported the idea but said it would take time.

The pacts have immense potential, given that half the world's traffic growth over the next two decades will be focused on Asia-Pacific, as it is projected to become the global leader in air traffic, with a market share of 38 per cent.

However, links between Europe and Asia have been slow to grow, lagging behind economic linkages.

Before leaving for London at day's end, Mr Lee called on the Grand Duke Henri at the palace. He also met former prime minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who is running for the presidency of the European Commission.

Mr Lee also invited Mr Bettel to Singapore.

The Premier, who was elected last December, said he looked forward to visiting. Underlining the close ties, he added that he was most pleased that "your visit is the first visit from Asia".

He said: "On the map we are so far away, but we have so much in common."


Occupying Taiwan’s parliament

$
0
0
Goodwill among student protesters a contrast to legislators’ rowdy fights
By Li Xueying, The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

''IF YOU cannot tell where the rubbish should go, I will stuff your head inside!''

The cheerful threat on the hand-scrawled notice, perched above a collection point for carefully sorted trash, is probably the most outwardly autocratic sign in Taiwan's parliament.



But there are no rowdy fights that Taiwanese legislators are notorious for. Instead, there is a display of camaraderie and goodwill, with the occupiers holding small-group discussions in the day and sing-a-longs at night before bedding down amid the pews where lawmakers usually sit.

Near the podium under founding father Sun Yat-sen's giant portrait where the Speaker sits, daily necessities are neatly arranged for whoever needs them. To show solidarity, most wear the same luridly green or red plastic slippers that came from the same donor.

As the occupation moves into its 11th day and as the initial euphoria from capturing the parliament begins to flag, the students are also learning to grapple with all the messiness of the democracy they say they are championing.

It is just one of the reasons a meeting with President Ma Ying-jeou, an invitation he extended on Tuesday, is unlikely to happen in the next few days. Neither does the stand-off look like it is going to end any time soon.

In fact, the students kicked things up a notch yesterday by calling for a protest march on Sunday, which will end in a rally in front of the Presidential Office.

They also escalated their demands for both meeting Mr Ma as well as leaving the legislature.

To vacate it, they have two conditions: One is to withdraw the trade agreement to open up service sectors on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, which they say was the product of ''black box politics'' - inked with China in secret and approved by a legislature committee early last week without the clause-by-clause review that was promised. The other condition is for all legislators to support a new law to establish a mechanism that monitors future negotiations with Beijing. The ruling Kuomintang has rejected this.

Meanwhile, the proposed meeting with Mr Ma - which initially got a favourable response from the students - now has more roadblocks. They want him to agree to discuss their demands. They also want him to lift the party whip on KMT legislators.

The students believe that they are engaging in ''a more genuine exercise in democracy'' than its elected occupants.

Taking a break from her organic chemistry textbook, undergraduate Duan Shun-hsing, 18, said: ''Mr Ma is the President, while also controlling the legislature as chairman of the ruling party. He has too much power and is trying to ride roughshod over us.

''So we are representing people's power here instead.''

And indeed, in living out their democratic ideals, the 100-plus students split into groups of 10 to 20, earnestly discussing various issues such as the Ma meeting. Suggestions are collated, then passed on to a higher council of leaders.

Differences and dissenters do exist. Some want to know if they are being too hardline. Others wonder whether the call for a supervisory mechanism is ''too idealistic'', as geology undergraduate Henry Hsu, 21, put it.

Activist Linda Chuang, 32, who left the chamber after spending a night there, wants more accountability from student leaders in explaining further the ultimate decisions. Student leader Lin Fei-fan tells The Straits Times that the council strives to seek consensus via communication: ''It is key that all views are considered.''

And as some exit, they are replaced by some of the thousands of supporters sitting outside. The unceasing flow of fresh blood is key to keeping the occupation going.

Other factors include Mr Ma's unpopularity, with his approval rating now at 9 per cent. Already, both opposition and KMT politicians are carefully positioning themselves for elections this year and in 2016.

Beyond that, the looming so-called China factor - and the anxieties engendered about its growing influence in Taiwan - has brought many to the protest.

Delivery driver Lon Long, 45, who made the long drive from southern Taiwan to volunteer at the protest, said: ''If we sign this, Taiwan is finished.''

Whatever the reasons that propel them to stay on, what seems clear is that many are in it for the long haul.

''How long will I be here? For as long as it takes,'' says Mr Hsu.



Workplace health problems cost $3.5b a year

$
0
0
Council launches guidelines to prevent ergonomic-linked woes like stiff necks
By Janice Heng, The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

THEY may not be as dramatic as falls from heights or collapsing scaffolding. But ergonomic-related workplace health problems such as stiff necks, strained backs and numb wrists cost Singapore a whopping $3.5 billion a year, said the Workplace Safety and Health (WSH) Council.

These "work-related musculoskeletal disorders" can result from bad practices such as poor posture, repetitive action or incorrect handling of heavy loads.

In most developed countries, they are the most common type of occupational disease, noted Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Manpower Hawazi Daipi.

"Being a developed country, we can expect Singapore to show and experience a similar trend," he added at yesterday's Workplace Ergonomics Forum, hosted at SIM University.

These problems are already the third most common source of occupational disease here, after deafness and skin disease.

To help firms, the council yesterday launched a set of guidelines on improving workplace ergonomics - that is, how workers interact with equipment and the environment.

These include tips on how to lift heavy objects safely and good office workstation design.

From this year, back injuries due to ergonomic risks - such as carrying heavy loads - will be classified under "work-related musculoskeletal disorders" in the annual WSH statistics. Previously, they were classified as minor injuries.

The change "will give us a more complete picture of the injuries caused by poor ergonomic practices and increase awareness on the ground as well", said Mr Hawazi.

The council's approach towards ergonomic safety is one of raising awareness and building capabilities, rather than punishment and enforcement, he added.

It is therefore developing an e-learning module on awareness of ergonomic problems.

Firms redesigning their workplaces for better ergonomics can apply for funding from the Government's WorkPro scheme, which supports firms in adopting good work-life practices. Workers can use the free ergo@WSH mobile application to snap photos and analyse their posture.

As an ergonomics specialist at manufacturer 3M, Ms Norsuriati Mohd Nor has met many workers who are unaware of this area of workplace health.

"But when we explain to them that it's about back pain and backaches, then they understand, 'Oh, that's ergonomics'."




Only 8.3% women on listed firm boards

$
0
0
57% of boards are all male, says latest poll of 300 firms in S'pore
By Chia Yan Min, The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

WOMEN are still woefully under-represented on the boards of Singapore listed companies, according to findings by a task force set up to address the issue.

As of April last year, only 8.3 per cent of listed company directorships were held by women, a survey by the recently formed Diversity Task Force found.

This was far fewer than in some other advanced economies such as Australia at 17.3 per cent, and Britain at 19 per cent.

It was also fewer than in Asian economies such as Malaysia at 8.7 per cent, China at 9 per cent and Hong Kong at 9.4 per cent.

Other studies in recent years had also found female representation rates in Singapore languishing at around the current level.

The latest survey, which polled 300 Singapore listed companies, also found that 57 per cent of boards here were all male.

The Diversity Task Force was set up in 2012 in response to concerns about female under-representation in top corporate positions. It was initiated by Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob when she was minister of state for the Ministry of Social and Family Development.

The task force, comprising private sector and women's groups members, is expected to release a report and recommendations for businesses and the Government by the end of next month.

Mrs Mildred Tan, chairman of the task force, said companies can benefit from having a more diverse board. "With the manpower shortage and an ageing population, tapping the under-utilised pool of talented women in Singapore could give companies a competitive edge," said Mrs Tan, who is also managing director of Ernst & Young Advisory.

Making board gender diversity a business imperative will also help to build shareholder confidence, she added.

Without regulatory intervention, the task force estimates that the percentage of women directors will grow to a mere 12 per cent in 2020 and 17 per cent in 2030, it said yesterday.

The survey findings showed companies are not yet convinced of the benefits of a diverse board, and that few have taken measures to tip the gender imbalance.

Only a third of companies polled agreed that gender diversity at board level is important, and a mere 4 per cent said shortlisted candidates for the board have to include at least one woman.

Factors contributing to the lack of board gender diversity include a perceived lack of qualified female candidates, with 43 per cent of firms polled citing that as a stumbling block to appointing more female board members.

Firms also rely excessively on personal networks to recruit directors - 89 per cent of companies said they have used this method, with 42 per cent recruiting only from their personal networks.

"The reality is that boards recruit based on their network of acquaintances, and many board members tend to move in circles that don't include professional women," said Mr Adrian Chan, vice-chairman of the Singapore Institute of Directors.

Women also tend to be more reluctant than men to take up board positions, the task force said.

"Women are less likely to put themselves forward or are more likely to feel that they may not be adequately qualified for a director or senior management role. Men are seen to be more assertive in putting themselves forward, even if they do not meet all the requirements of a role," it said.

The majority - 73 per cent - of companies surveyed said there should not be a quota imposed on the number of female board members, as directors should be hired based on merit.

Respondents preferred putting in place measures to broaden the search and nomination process for potential board candidates, and implementing initiatives to identify potential directors.

Companies should cast the net wider and hire the best person for the job regardless of gender, said Mr Chan.

"There are definitely enough women candidates out there - it is a matter of getting boards to be open-minded enough to consider them," he said.





FEW WOMEN AT THE TOP

Percentage of women holding directorship in listed firms in April 2013

19% - Britain

17.3% - Australia

9.4% - Hong Kong

9% - China

8.7% - Malaysia

8.3% - Singapore


Changi Airport is named the World's Best Airport 2014

$
0
0
Changi Airport soars high in global survey
By Royston Sim, The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

CHANGI Airport has kept its top spot in an annual global airport ranking survey.

London-based firm Skytrax yesterday named it the world's best airport for the second year in a row.

Changi beat South Korea's Incheon International, which also finished second last year. Munich Airport came third.

In addition, Changi was also named Best Airport for Leisure Amenities, for the array of facilities it offers passengers with time on their hands.

Changi Airport Group chief executive Lee Seow Hiang said the award provides great motivation for his staff to continue to aim higher. "At Changi Airport, we remain steadfast in anticipating the needs of our customers, which is the cornerstone of the Changi experience," he said.

Mr Lee also credited the award to the Changi airport community, "for their unyielding commitment to service excellence".

The Skytrax World Airport Awards survey ranked 410 airports worldwide based on a poll of 12.85 million air travellers.

The survey evaluates customer satisfaction across 39 areas of airport service and offerings, including check-in, arrivals, transfers, shopping, departure at the gate, and security and immigration.

Skytrax chief executive Edward Plaisted said Changi offers "a travel experience in itself", and noted that it continues to develop its standards.

He added: "Changi Airport is a well-known leader and innovator for the airport industry, and genuinely delights and surprises travellers who are lucky enough to enjoy the airport facilities."

Changi also fared well in other areas. It was voted second best airport for transit passengers, for airport shopping and for airport immigration. Travellers ranked it third in terms of cleanliness and baggage delivery.


Indranee Rajah: Life lessons from my mother

$
0
0
Senior Minister of State for Education and Law Indranee Rajah, who stood up for a constituent who was heckled online for wearing a shirt with holes, opens up to Susan Long about the Singapore she wants and the life education she hopes to impart to today's youth.
The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

AS A former school netball player, Ms Indranee Rajah knows this: "You cannot stand flatfooted in court, you have to be on the balls of your feet." And she hopes to take this fleet-footedness to education today.

The Senior Minister of State for Education and Law, who is leading a national review of polytechnics and the Institute of Technical Education (ITE), wants to help "future-proof" the next generation's education in an increasingly volatile world, where change lurks around every corner.

Paraphrasing American futurist Alvin Toffler's book Future Shock, the 51-year-old notes that "we teach our kids to prepare for their careers, but one of the things we don't really do is prepare them for future change and how to handle it".

The best way to do this, she feels, is to ensure that students get real depth and substantive knowledge, along with portable skills to prepare them for the future, like communication, leadership, resilience and adaptability.

Back from a recent study trip to Switzerland and Germany, the chairman of the Applied Study in Polytechnics and ITE Review (ASPIRE), which has 98 members on various committees charting future directions for polytechnic and ITE education, is expected to present its recommendations in the second half of the year.

One of the early directions she is looking at is introducing more apprenticeships to deepen students' practical knowledge. That means industry taking on an educational role, as in Europe, instead of placing the onus on educational institutions to produce graduates "all ready to be plugged into work".

She cites how 10-year-olds in Germany choose either the academic or vocational path. If they choose the vocational path, leading to a wide variety of occupations from IT to banking and engineering, they join a company, not a school.

It is the company that pays them as an apprentice, then helps them find their school. From age 15, they spend three days a week at the company and two days in vocational school.

Sixty per cent to 70 per cent of every cohort in Germany and Switzerland chooses the vocational route, and Ms Rajah notes that most people view it as being on par with the academic route.

"To them, it is choose one or the other, it doesn't really matter because they are both equally good routes in their eyes," she says.

What struck her afresh is that an economy needs - and has room for - all sorts.

"You need academically strong people who like research and the theoretical part. But we also have a need for people more comfortable in a hands-on environment," she says.

She is also looking into how to improve the prospects of those with skills and leadership potential - but limited education - to move up.

"Just because somebody does not have a degree does not mean that the person cannot be a good supervisor or manager, or climb up the organisation. The question is what opportunities are there for the person to do so through alternative means, such as professional exams or certifications recognised by the industry," she says.

Another big push she is likely to make is for more career guidance, starting in secondary school.

In Switzerland, career guidance sessions are mandatory from age 13. They are geared towards not just burnishing university applications, but helping students discover their area of interest through a whole suite of personality tests and career coaching, which enables them to take full advantage of industry demand.

Life education

MS RAJAH says her goal is for students to emerge from the system with a sound knowledge of their subject area, self-knowledge about where their strengths lie as well as values such as integrity. Most importantly, she wants students to pursue the course that is right for them, not feel they must chase what others want, and be happy with their choice.

To her, what constitutes education is perhaps best captured in the programmes she has rolled out for disadvantaged children in her Tanjong Pagar GRC constituency over the past 13 years, as well as the Singapore Indian Development Association (SINDA), of which she has been president for the past four years.

She has dedicated herself to increasing the opportunities and exposure of these children, mostly living in rental blocks with their single mums. Apart from tuition, she tries to make up for what is lacking in their home environment through enrichment activities and outings.

She has paid out of pocket and roped in sponsors to take them to see musicals such as Merchants Of Bollywood and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

She has organised sex education camps, targeting those who, out of ignorance, might otherwise become single mothers at 14.

She has linked up with the United States Embassy to run basketball camps to give these heartland children a chance to mix with foreigners.

She has taken them to the Singapore Polo Club to learn how to behave around animals. She has even enlisted a chef to do a cookery programme, which teaches the children about dinner table settings and culminates in them serving their parents a sit-down dinner they prepared themselves.

Her ultimate goal: "We don't want these children, later on when they grow up and go to social settings, to be at a disadvantage and have people look down on them.

"It is not the grades I am looking for, but life experience. What does it do, you may ask, to see a play? It just broadens your horizons, sparks your imagination, makes you think of things beyond yourself."

Growing up without dad

THE youngest of three children, Ms Rajah says she was a late, "unexpected present from the stork".

She was toddling around when her father, A.T. Rajah, retired as deputy commissioner of police at age 51.

He died at 54 of liver disease when she was five, her elder sister 13 and elder brother 15. She remembers the "sad, grave occasion", the Hindu open fire cremation and lighting of the pyre.

Afterwards, her mother, Madam Ng Yew Keng, sold off their Braddell Heights bungalow "because of expenses" and moved the family first to a rented home, then to the nurses' quarters at Woodbridge Hospital, where she was the principal nursing officer.

"My mum never mollycoddled us. She made sure that she provided for us and made time for us. But we were expected to do our part, like clean up after ourselves, make our beds, wash our own dishes," she remembers.

She attended Marymount Convent Primary and Secondary, took the bus home, let herself in, helped herself to lunch, did her homework and played with her dog, all unsupervised, in her conscientious, self-regulating way.

At the National University of Singapore, she found herself drawn to law because it was about people, regulation, order and resolution - all of which appealed - and she graduated with a second upper honours degree.

The first day she reported to work with law firm Drew & Napier LLC in 1988, she stayed till midnight. Later, she found out that was an "early" day. As she remembers it, there was crying, out of sheer exhaustion, and many moments of "Am I good enough?" self-doubt when she lost cases.

But as her former boss Davinder Singh, 56, CEO of Drew & Napier, remembers it, she was one of the best lawyers he ever worked with, who put her heart and soul into every case.

"Indranee is completely straightforward, has an innate and strong sense of right and wrong, speaks her mind, sees through those with guile, and has no time for poseurs," he says.

He credits her for revamping the firm's graduate recruitment methods and helping it get the best talent, setting up precedent databases and introducing knowledge management way before it became fashionable.

She made partner within five years, and was appointed senior counsel in 2003. But more than any systemic change, Ms Rajah takes most pride in the young lawyers she helped "change" along the way as the partner in charge of recruitment and pupillage.

From ingraining basic courtesies to showing them how to handle difficult clients, she relished helping young no-fight lawyers transform into full-fledged ones. Memorably, she sent a young man who needed polishing on the social front for salsa lessons and bade him watch the movie Strictly Ballroom.

Her door was literally always open, says Ms Angeline Tan, 29, a Drew & Napier senior associate who worked under her. "She cared not just how good we were in our work as lawyers. She took an interest in our personal growth," she says.

A time for everything

MS RAJAH made time for all of this by sleeping less, about four to five hours a day. After she entered politics in 2001 "to give back", the late nights became early mornings. Her twice-weekly meet-the-people sessions typically end after 1am because she gives every resident the option to see her personally.

It all culminated in her most sleep-deprived year, 2010, when she was juggling her legal work, her own Tanglin-Cairnhill ward, assisting former minister mentor Lee Kuan Yew with his adjoining Tanjong Pagar-Tiong Bahru ward as well as becoming Sinda president.

In the aftermath of the 2011 General Election, where the People's Action Party garnered its lowest vote share since independence, she left Drew & Napier, her "home" of 23 years, as its deputy managing director, for full-time office.

"It was not an easy time to be a politician," she says. But for precisely that reason, she felt it was important to take the next step. "If there was ever a time I could contribute, this was the time," she says.

Ms Anita Fam, 50, a full-time community volunteer and her best friend since kindergarten, testifies to Ms Rajah's steely resolve.

"She doesn't do these things because she sees them as noble. She does them because she feels that they are the right things to do. Tenacity is her second name," she says.

What the elfin single woman also makes time for is exercising, doing intense gym workouts with a trainer up to thrice a week. She also cooks, making her own salads drizzled with her signature chilli balsamic vinegar dressing.

One reason she does both is to keep her energy up for her long, overscheduled workdays. The other is that her two siblings died young, compelling her to pay attention to her health.

In 1996, her sister Kumarie, a translator in France, died of breast cancer at the age of 42. Nine years later, her brother Ananda, a university lecturer, then 54, succumbed to a heart attack. Both deaths were dreadful shocks, which hit her and her mother, both Anglicans, hard.

Finally, a passage from the Bible's book of Ecclesiastes provided the closure she needed.

Thumbing through her King James Bible in her office at Treasury Building, she recites: "To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. A time to be born, and a time to die..."

She reflects: "It settled me a lot that there is an appointed time for everything. At the end of it, I took the view that everybody has a set number of years on this earth. The most important thing is how we carry on from there."




Indranee Rajah on...


HER 91-YEAR-OLD MOTHER

"She is a major influence on my life. Seeing how she struggled, working and bringing up three children after my dad passed away was, in retrospect, a lifetime's worth of lessons on being strong in the face of adversity, maintaining dignity and principle in all circumstances, and love and sacrifice for family. The biggest life lessons she taught me were the importance of being independent, and that strength and compassion go hand in hand."



HER STRESS BUSTERS

"Exercise and reading. And in cases of extreme and dire distress, I reach for the chocolate."



STAYING SVELTE IN ONE'S 50s

"This is a word of encouragement for all women out there - despite the fact that it gets harder when you get older, it can be done."



HER WORRIES FOR SINGAPORE

"Over the past few years, there has been increased stridency in public debate, where comments made can be quite harsh. The question is how can we live peaceably together, and that means a certain amount of compromise, mutual respect and finding a balance. Otherwise, we end up with people pulling away from each other and an increased sense of 'my way or the highway'. The sense of agreeing to disagree is something that marked our early years as a country, when things were volatile, but along the way with progress and affluence, we have forgotten some of that. It is something we have to learn all over again."



HER IDEAL SCENARIO FOR SINGAPORE

"That will be when people can have a discussion on the Internet without it deteriorating into name-calling or nasty remarks. And finding a consensus that people can live with without anyone walking away feeling that they have been brutalised in the course of the conversation."



PM Lee receives Freedom of the City of London and dedicates award to Singaporeans

$
0
0
PM's 'very good day' in London
By Zuraidah Ibrahim, The Straits Times, 29 Mar 2014

IT WAS a city Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong first visited at age 17, and 45 years later, the city of London made him one of its own, presenting him with the honour of being a "freeman" with its Freedom of the City award.

At an elegant ceremony comprising top business leaders, financiers and academics, Mr Lee was given a scroll of the award by the Lord Mayor Fiona Woolf.

She called on him to see Mansion House, the official office of the city of London, as his "home away from home" where he would always be welcomed as a friend.

The occasion was especially meaningful because it was in the same room 32 years ago that then-PM Lee Kuan Yew was accorded the same honour.

Ms Woolf harked to the historical and close ties between Singapore and Britain. Just as in the speech honouring the elder Mr Lee then, Ms Woolf recalled the special relationship Mr Lee had in having studied at Cambridge, where some of the city's freemen were from, and some of Britain's brightest minds hailed from.

She also reminded the audience, which included Mr Lee's former tutors from Cambridge, that he was a Cambridge "wrangler" - someone with first-class honours in mathematics in two, instead of the usual three years.

When the elder Mr Lee received the award, then lord mayor Sir Christopher Leaver, remarked that "as a young man, you chose as your theme and slogan, one word "Merdeka", which can be interpreted in English as "Freedom". He spoke of Mr Lee's efforts to transform a young nation.


He also said London held many happy memories for him. Mr Lee brought smiles all round during his speech when he said that when he first visited, the city "was the capital of cool" in the swinging sixties, but he stayed "sober" nonetheless and enjoyed the plays and concerts, and visiting museums and the "greatest bookshop in the world - Foyles".

Indeed, on Thursday, despite a packed schedule of a luncheon with businessmen and talks at 10 Downing Street with his counterpart David Cameron, he squeezed in a visit to the British Museum to catch a special Vikings exhibition. As he said in his Facebook post: "All in all, a very good day."

Yesterday was another packed day as he toured London on a Routemaster, a bus with a "hop-on, hop-off" rear open platform. It is owned by Metroline, a ComfortDelgro subsidiary. During the ride, he quizzed Metroline chief executive Jaspal Singh on the revenue model and the fleet.

The former Singapore government official said Metroline has thrived partly because of certainty in the regulatory framework where operators are paid to run routes while the regulator collects fares. "We work closely with the regulator and there is trust, mutual respect and fairness," he said.

After the bus tour, Mr Lee had a dialogue at think-tank Chatham House, and opened Temasek Holdings' European office in London.




DEDICATING AWARD TO PEOPLE

I am deeply honoured and yet humbled. I would like to dedicate this award to the people of Singapore who have worked so hard to build our nation. Special credit must go to our pioneer generation, who dreamt of a far better Singapore when we became independent, and took us a long way along the journey there. This award also reflects the long and close friendship between London and Singapore and between our peoples.





PM: S'pore must balance identity and openness
He also stresses need for solidarity amid drive to become global city
By Zuraidah Ibrahim, The Straits Times, 28 Mar 2014

SINGAPORE has learnt from London in its drive to become a global city, but as a city state with no hinterland, it also has to be sensitive to national identity and social solidarity, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said yesterday.

In a speech comparing the two cities, he noted that, like the British capital, the Republic is striving to be a global city, offering a high-quality living and cultural environment at the crossroads of the East and West.

"Like London, we too must manage the stresses and strains of being a global city," he said.

"But unlike London, we have no larger country which is our hinterland. Our city is our country. Hence, we must get the balance just right - between national identity and cosmopolitan openness, between free market competition and social solidarity," he said.

These remarks were in a speech he was due to deliver here last evening (early this morning in Singapore) at a ceremony in which he received the Freedom of the City award from London's Lord Mayor, Ms Fiona Woolf.

PM Lee was given the honour for his contributions to Singapore. His father, former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, received the award in 1982.

The title of his speech - A Tale Of Two Cities - was a nod to the book of the same name by Charles Dickens, one of London's greatest literary icons. Mr Lee paid tribute to the city's cultural heritage, which he first experienced in 1969 at the age of 17. "It was the swinging sixties and London was the capital of cool," he said.

He had a more "sober time" enjoying its plays, concerts, museums and art galleries and "spending hours browsing in the greatest bookshop in the world - Foyles".

While studying at Cambridge, he visited the city regularly as his late first wife Ming Yang was then a medical student at Middlesex Hospital. "Hence, London in the early 1970s held many happy memories for me," he said, while acknowledging that those were difficult years for Britain as it adjusted to its post-empire status.

He noted that with Britain's revival under prime minister Margaret Thatcher and her successors, London did especially well, attracting talent and capital from many countries. "London was cool again," said Mr Lee.

It responded faster than others to deregulate and liberalise its financial services to become a centre for world finance.

Singapore emulated its role in Europe, starting the Asian dollar market to service the region. As that strategy reached its limits by the late 1990s, it opened up its markets and accepted more risks, again using London as its model. But, he said: "We did not go as far as London did in letting go, which in hindsight was just as well."

Today, London is not just a financial hub, but also a global city for talent, innovation and culture. But both cities are at a crossroads, he said. London is trying to put things right after the global financial crisis and must find a new model "to remain a financial hub while avoiding the excesses of the past". Singapore too is making its way forward, pursuing economic growth based on productivity and innovation to uplift its people's lives, he said.

"We are sparing no effort to educate Singaporeans, both the young and those already working. We are addressing growing social needs, while maintaining our drive and elan," he said. "We strive to stay cohesive and united as we continue pursuing excellence, so that we can stay up there with London and other top cities in the world."

Mr Lee dedicated his Freedom award to Singaporeans who "have worked so hard to build our nation", giving special credit to the pioneer generation. The dinner was to be attended by London's senior business leaders, and Mr Lee's former Cambridge tutors. Earlier in the day, Mr Lee met Prime Minister David Cameron at 10 Downing Street. He is to give a talk at Chatham House today.


Viewing all 7504 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>