Monday, April 6, 2009
Sentosa (Singapore) dream gets hazy
It was supposed to be Asia’s answer to glitzy Monaco, but plans to remake Sentosa into an island playground where rich foreigners and locals live and play are going to take longer than expected to materialise.
While key hotel projects and the Resorts World at Sentosa integrated resort are largely on schedule, things are not going as well at Sentosa Cove, the stretch of land on the island set aside for mainly residential use.
The plan was for some 2,500 oceanfront villas, waterway bungalows, hillside mansions and upscale condominiums to be built on the 117-hectare site. Earlier projections were that the bulk of the new homes would be ready by 2010.
But industry sources now say fewer than 1,000 homes are likely to be completed by the end of this year, and several developers are expected to delay their projects further.
City Developments, for example, has postponed its $580 million project comprising luxury apartments, shops and a five-star, 320-room Westin Hotel, originally slated to open this year.
One problem is that sales and prices of new homes on the island have dropped sharply in the last two quarters, exacerbated by the number of foreigners leaving Singapore.
Sentosa Cove was popular with foreigners as they could get permission to own land there with relative ease.
“The bulk of purchasers of luxury homes, both on the mainland and on Sentosa, were foreigners,” said Tay Huey Ying, director for research and advisory at Colliers International.
Colliers’ data, based on caveats lodged, shows that only one non-landed residential unit in Sentosa was sold in Q4 2008. In the first three months of this year, the number rose slightly to eight.
This is a far cry from transaction volumes at the height of the property boom in 2007. In Q1 2007, some 279 non-landed homes were sold in Sentosa. In Q2 that year, the transaction volume was 243.
Prices have also come down. Colliers’ data shows that the transacted price of non-landed properties at Sentosa Cove averaged $1,318 per square foot (psf) in Q1 2009 – down 45.8 per cent from the peak average of $2,431 psf recorded exactly one year ago in Q1 2008.
It should be noted, however, that these averages are based on small transaction volumes of eight units for Q1 2009, and 33 units for Q1 2008.
Occupancy levels are low too. Even for properties that are completed and fully sold, not every unit is occupied, said Nicholas Mak, director of research and consultancy at Knight Frank. At the fully sold The Berth by the Cove, which obtained its temporary occupation permit in 2006, occupancy is at 93-94 per cent, but market watchers say islandwide, the occupancy levels are much lower.
The picture is, however, somewhat brighter for other new and upcoming developments on the island.
Luxury hotel Capella Singapore, which opened its doors last week, is seeing strong demand – despite the fact that room rates start at $750.
“Response in our first week has been very positive, with an average of about 70 rooms per night,” revealed general manager Michael Luible. The hotel has 111 rooms.
Luible acknowledged that the hotel would not escape the effects of the economic slowdown, but pointed out that its guests are high net worth individuals who will continue to travel.
“We will, of course, monitor the economic situation carefully and plan our strategies accordingly,” he added.
Resorts World at Sentosa remains on-track for its soft opening, which will see Universal Studios, four of its six hotels as well as the casino ready in Q1 2010.
The four hotels – Hotel Michael, Maxims Tower, Festive Hotel and Hard Rock Hotel – will add about 1,350 rooms to Singapore’s inventory. The rest of the resort, which includes a spa and Maritime Museum, will open progressively thereafter.
Indeed, hopes are now pinned on the integrated resort which is designed to draw in visitors.
According to Suzanne Ho, deputy director of communications for Sentosa, foreign visitor arrivals have dipped since last September, in line with the downward trend of tourist arrivals into Singapore.
The lower visitor numbers are affecting food and beverage operators adversely. Ken Hasegawa, manager of Japanese restaurant Si Bon, reckoned that revenue has fallen by about 20 per cent recently.
Similarly, at Cool Deck, a bar along Siloso Beach, business is slow. Selina Huang, Cool Deck’s assistant manager, attributed the decrease to falling tourist arrivals. Just three months ago, close to 90 per cent of the bar’s clientele were tourists, most of whom stayed at the Rasa Sentosa Hotel. Now, only 40 per cent of patrons are tourists, she noted.
The decrease in demand is prompting some outlets to modify their pricing. Even il Lido Italian Restaurant has cut prices by about 20 per cent on average in response to a 40 to 50 per cent decrease in revenue over the past three months. Its seven-course meal now costs $120 instead of $180, and it has removed some expensive items – such as truffles and caviar – from the menu. – Business Times Singapore
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The panda that trampled on the true orchids
Monday, 6 April 2009
Ravi Philemon
“Earth Hour Singapore is taking place this Saturday March 28 at 8.30 pm…(and) official celebrations will be taking place at the Botanic Gardens…”, announced World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Singapore recently.
The Online Citizen was invited to the press conference which was to be held at the Botany Centre in the Singapore Botanic Gardens (SBG). But the press conference was not to be. If there was a proper media conference as announced, a question was begging to be asked, “Why was Singapore Botanical Gardens chosen as the venue for the press conference and the multimedia presentation for the Earth Hour?”
This question begs the asking because SBG recently hosted an orchid naming ceremony for Thein Sein, the Prime Minister and the fourth-highest ranking general of the junta which rules Myanmar. The junta is well known for its atrocities against its own people and for the curbing of social and political rights.
A brutal indictment
In 2005, former Czech Republic President Vaclav Havel and South Africa’s retired Bishop Desmond M Tutu, wrote a report on Burma for the United Nations Security Council. The 2005 Havel/Tutu report was a complete indictment of the most brutal military dictatorship in the world today. The report indicated that the military kidnaps male children at an early age and trains them in the use of weapons by age eleven. It is estimated that nearly 70,000 children have been forced to join the military in this manner. The country is also the world’s leading producer of heroin and is heavily involved in drug trafficking.
In addition to the drugs and rampant child abuse, thousands of Burma villages have been systematically destroyed by the military Junta. Over 200,000 refugees have fled the country to escape the brutality of the regime. In Burma, there are no basic human rights, healthcare, education, political rights, or free speech. Atrocities like murder, rape, and forced labor are quite common.
In addition, HIV and AIDS are a major problem in the country as well. In effect, the military’s corrupt ruling Junta has succeeded in making Burma one of the poorest countries in the world.
More recently, Amnesty International reported on the Rohingyas, a Muslim ethnic minority in Burma who are subjected to multiple restrictions and human rights violations by the ruling junta - among them, restriction of movement, forced labour, forced eviction and land confiscation and various forms of extortion and arbitrary taxation.
A virus amongst the bona fide
SBG has tarnished and dishonored the true VIPs after whom orchid hybrids have been named in the VIP Orchid Garden of SBG. The orchid hybrids of bona-fide world leaders like Dendrobium Margaret Thatcher and Renantanda Akihito must have bowed their heads in shame to be placed alongside Dendrobium Thein Sein. Dendrobium Memoria Princess Diana and Vandaenopsis Nelson Mandela, the orchid hybrids of real social and human-rights activists, must have surely felt that Dendrobium Thein Sein was actually a virus among them.
Even if the WWF does not concern itself primarily with issues of human rights abuses of any regime, should not WWF havreconsidered using SBG as one of its main venue for its Earth Hour activities in Singapore to show its displeasure at the Botanical Gardens’ hosting of the orchid naming ceremony for Thein Sein; considering the fact that wildlife and natural resources are being abused by the ruling junta of Burma?
WWF itself has named Burma as a hot-spot for ivory and elephant trading and it had also cited that tiger and wildcats parts are often sold openly in Burma. London-based environmental group Global Witness estimates that 1.5 million tonnes of illegally logged timber; worth at least $350 million was shipped illegally into China in 2005.
WWF Singapore has no response
The Online Citizen queried WWF International with this very same question and they replied, “Thanks for your email and interest in WWF’s Earth Hour. Unfortunately, do the huge number of events happening around the world covering Earth Hour, we are not in a position to know the specific details of the event you mention. This would have been organized by the WWF-Singapore office…” after which they indicated the contact details for WWF Singapore.
Upon querying WWF Singapore, they replied, “I understand that you had some concerns regarding the use of the Botanical Gardens? I was interested to hear about your concerns from my colleagues but unfortunately on this occasion the issue you raise re: Myanmar is not really something the WWF has a response on.”
How could WWF Singapore not have a response to such a pertinent query? By refusing to answer a question that has a logical and precise relevance to the matter at hand, has WWF Singapore reneged on being the well-renowned environmental activist organisation that it is reputed to be? Did Weber Shandwick, the public relations firm which touts itself as “one of the world’s leading public relations firms with an unprecedented and award-winning network across Asia Pacific, reaching from China to Australia and India to Japan”, and hired by WWF Singapore to help organise the Earth Hour events, fail to advise the latter properly on the implications of using SBG by WWF Singapore for its events?
For over four decades the Panda logo has been a recognizable symbol of WWF and its efforts in wildlife and habitat conservation. But the Earth Hour celebration by the Panda in SBG is indeed a sad day; for it was a day when the Panda trampled on the true Orchids.
Organisations like WWF Singapore are in best position to exercise their corporate citizenry, to pressure SBG over the orchid naming issue. Having said that, should every organisation which professes to support human rights and green issues, now avoid using SBG since Dendrobium Thein Sein in all probability may not be removed from the SBG’s VIP Orchid Gardens? It is a decision best left to the organisations themselves. But such decisions should be done only after careful consideration of all options. And when queried on their right in exercising these options, such organisations should not reply “we have no response”, which actually means that they have not thought through the implications.
This year SBG celebrates its 150th anniversary. In conjunction with the celebrations SBG has organised a month long exhibition titled, “The seed that changed the world”. Should concerned Singaporeans boycott this exhibition because of the “Orchid that tainted the Gardens?”
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This Week is Kindness Week in Singapore
This week is designated Kindness Week and the Kindness Movement in Singapore has decided to extend the Kindness Week to 1 month....so it is going to be Kindness Month 2009 in Singapore. I tried very hard to find our PM's Kindness Week speech but it looks like he did not give a speech this year. All speeches by PM, MM and SMs are found here : [Link]. I was looking for a followup to the kind satay man story which he told in 2007.....but no luck. Just to recap:
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"Mr Lee shared how he and his wife were touched by the thoughtfulness of a satay man in Malacca. They had ordered 40 sticks of satay but the experienced hawker only served them 25 sticks, as he knew that would be enough." - Channel News Asia [Link] Kindness Week 2007
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It may be just a story to you but for public servants this story has an important moral and will followed as if it is govt policy. I was eager this year to find out what kindness means to our PM in this time of deep recession but he didn't give a speech so we are left guessing what is on his mind.
After some searching, I found out that this year's speech to launch Kindness Week was given by Lim Boon Heng. This former union leader, a representative of the common worker, should know what kindness is about. Given we are in a severe recession, I thought he would talk about how employers should treat employees with kindness and try not to retrench ....but he didn't. He spent most of his speech explaining why people should not say unkind things to executives who receive high bonuses. [Link] and that bonus is should not be a dirty word. Of course bonus is not a dirty word....we all know the dirty word in Singapore is welfare. Our former union leader feels that people should not mistake a bonus as "somebody getting something extra and undeserved and out of line with the current economic situation". Sure....I think Lim Boon Heng is only being fair - when a lowly worker gets retrenched, he deserves it....so it is only fair when a CEO gets $20M, he too is getting what he deserves. Basically, Lim Boon Heng is saying people get what they deserve - no more no less under the system the PAP govt has created and embraced. Let us not have our emotions get the better of us and think with a clear head. It is time for people to be kind and considerate towards those with high bonuses and not be resentful......
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I'm so glad this ex-union leader gave us his frank views on bonuses - be it 8 months or $20M...the system we have today allocate all these fairly and equitably....so the is no point getting angry and trying to change things. There is nothing to change and the system is fine.
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Gary Tan Yeong Hong has been charged
Sometime ago, I was introduced to Gary Tan Yeong Hong a blogger who goes by the moniker PoThePanda.
On Wednesday 1st April 2009, Gary called me from court regarding some charges he was facing and asking for my possible attendance on 8th April 2009, Wednesday. As I could not make it on Wednesday bearing in mind a Court of Appeal hearing on that day, I requested for another date. This was then fixed as 6th April 2009 today.
This morning i appeared in Court No. 3 before District Judge Ng Peng Hong to represent Gary Tan Yeong Hong. The AGC was on Justice Online.
The AGC did not have its papers / file ready on Gary Tan’s case. The case was therefore adjourned till 915am tomorrow morning.
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Singapore to keep unemployment below 5.2%
Singapore aims to keep its unemployment rate below 5.2 percent this year, Xinhua reported yesterday. That means the unemployment rate could more than double this year.
Singapore's overall unemployment rate averaged 2.3 percent in 2008, up from 2.1 percent in 2007.
Singapore experienced 5.2 percent unemployment in March 2003 when it rose to that level from 4.2 percent in December 2002, according to another Xinhua report in 2003.
Australia is currently experiencing 5.2 percent unemployment, a four-year high, according to a Reuters report published by the Straits Times.
Singapore Manpower Minister Gan Kim Yong said yesterday the unemployment rate for the first quarter of 2009 is likely to be higher than for the fourth quarter of 2008 and detailed statistics will be released shortly. He said his ministry is seeing more retrenchment notices being issued.
But jobs are still available in several sectors, he added.
Not enough job ads to fill a newspaper pullout
However, job ads are reaching vanishing point in Singapore’s leading newspaper.
The Straits Times no longer publishes a regular separate pullout advertising jobs. Recruit, the job ads section, was tacked on to the Classified pullout on Saturday for a simple reason – the job ads did not fill enough pages to be run as a separate pullout. And even the few pages that were there included display ads for job training and not just job openings. The jobs available seemed to be mostly for technicians and retail workers. There were few openings for professionals.
The Manpower Minister is putting on a brave face.
Government schemes like the Skills Programme for Upgrading and Resilience (Spur) are helping companies cut costs to save jobs, he said, reports Channel NewsAsia.
But how quickly the Singapore economy recovers depends much on external factors like the global economy’s performance, it added.
The minister was quoted as saying: “"We must prepare ourselves for another few quarters of downturn.”
In other words, the downturn is not likely to end soon and the Singapore economy has become like the global climate – dependent on the rest of the world.
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Engaging netizens – time to come out of comfort zones, politicians
Engaging netizens – time to come out of comfort zones, politicians
Andrew Loh
If discussions on issues of importance are to progress, both parties have to accept that perhaps it is time to stop staying on their respective sides of the fence.
We have come some ways from the anonymous and sinister-sounding “counter-insurgents” which the government was reported to be sending into cyberspace to counter its online critics in January 2007.
Now, the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) is adopting a different approach. Its “embrace of the diversity of views”, mentioned by its newly-appointed president of its Youth Wing, Mr Teo Ser Luck, includes those in cyberspace. It wants to engage netizens upfront, it seems. And it has delegated the task to its youth branch, the Young PAP (YP). Mr Teo has made this his priority, apparently. “When I took over YP, I wanted to make sure there’s an embrace of diversity of views. So, you will see more diversity and more participation,” Mr Teo is reported to have told the Today newspaper.
While there will be cynics who will pooh-pooh this cyber outreach by the PAP, the move is to be applauded, nevertheless. Political parties in Singapore have, all this while, seemed unsure and hesitant about engaging netizens, including those from the opposition parties. So far, such engagements do not include what I would call “close quarter contacts”. Parties would put up articles or postings on their sites – and that’s about it. There are no replies from party elders to the comments from readers.
However, this seems to have changed in recent times, especially with the PAP. On Facebook, for example, Minister for Foreign Affairs George Yeo has been more willing to explain his position on certain issues. This writer had an exchange with the minister over the recent Thein Sein orchid-naming controversy. It was cordial and civil. However, Mr Yeo has yet to emerge from his own corner in Facebook or blog to respond to postings on other people’s sites. But he did, to the surprise of quite a few people, invite his Facebook friends to join him for a morning jog recently.
Dr Lim Wee Kiak, PAP MP for Sembawang GRC, has also been posting comments on other people’s Facebook accounts - commenting on Abdul Salim Harun’s Facebook, for example. Mr Salim, up till recently, was a Workers’ Party member. Dr Lim too had an exchange with this writer over the issue of foreign workers on this writer’s Facebook page. Most of the so-called P65 MPs have Facebook accounts.
The YP set up its Youngpap blog some time back but the postings there have been roundly castigated by netizens each time they appear. The blog was more for defending its parent party, at times rather illogically, and not for a true and sincere exchange of views with readers. Its YoungPAP Facebook is more lively, and has more than 600 friends. Its Facebook looks to be more engaging too. Its latest posting, titled “Opposition redundant?” has had a decent discussion, with most disagreeing with the suggestion, including YP members.
A blog, which seems to have been created by either pro-PAP or pro-government supporters, was set up in 2008 to specifically counter the SDP’s views. Called Not My SDP, a reference to the SDP’s website which is named “http://yoursdp.org”, it is unknown who the people behind the blog are, though some suspect that it may have been set up by PAP grassroots members. Notmysdp perhaps is the clearest manifestation of the so-called “counter-insurgents” from the government. (TOC has written to the blog and is awaiting a reply.)
What about the opposition?
The Workers’ Party secretary general, Mr Low Thia Khiang, does not have a presence in cyberspace beyond his own party’s official website – save for a fan page created by supporters. The same for its chairman, Ms Sylvia Lim. On its official website, the postings consist mainly of Parliamentary speeches and press releases. The WP, however, has members and supporters who are quite active in blogs and in social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter but there has been very limited engagement on current affairs. On the blogs, members do share their views on some current and national issues from time to time, most notably its Organising Secretary, Mr Yaw Shin Leong and former CEC member and GE2006 candidate, Mr Tan Kian Hwee.
The WP’s youth wing has an official website which is best described as a ghost town, really, and thoroughly uninteresting. Its latest posting is an entry about the then newly-elected Youth Wing Executive Council – in August 2008. Party supporters previously set up The Hammersphere blog, but it has since also become inactive. The party’s youth wing got into the Facebook bandwagon recently. Besides the party’s official websites, the party has given no official endorsements to the other sites or blogs.
The Singapore Democratic Party is perhaps the most active on the Internet with its daily website updates. However, on closer look, its party leaders too are not as actively engaged as perhaps its supporters and members, in terms of close-quarter contacts.
Party leaders write articles and post them on their official website. Dr Chee Soon Juan and assistant secretary general, Mr John Tan, would then highlight such postings on their Facebooks. Close-quarter dialogues between the leaders and readers are not very frequent. The SDP had, however, engaged forummers in 2007 on a forum for a one-week period, with party leaders discussing various issues with forummers. The party made a slight revamp to its website on April 6 to make it “more user friendly and easy on the eye.”
The Young Democrats, the SDP’s youth branch, has a Facebook “closed group” account. One has to request to join or be invited to join before one can have access.
The relatively new Reform Party’s chairman, Mr Ng Teck Siong, recently set up a Facebook account and has been noticed posting an occasional note on others’ pages.
The SPP’s Youth Impact too seems to be dormant on the Internet. The NSP and the RP have no youth wings.
It can thus be seen that there is much room for improvement for the political parties, if they want to engage the Internet generation. Engagement would and should go beyond the postings of reports or articles or pictures. The key is dialogue – and sadly, not many politicians are doing this.
The fear, perhaps, is that getting into discussions opens one up to attacks and turns such dialogues into a rowdy and meaningless farce. While there is always a possibility of this happening, there are ways to minimize these. One way is to require commenters to register, as the SDP website does, before any person is allowed to post replies. Another way is to moderate comments, as many sites do. Those who are serious about engaging the issues will find this acceptable, while those who are bent on attacking the other parties may not find it so appealing. But at the end of the day, everyone should respect and accept that it is the site owners who set the rules for their sites – and that they have the right to.
Internet engagement by politicians is a new phenomena in Singapore – and parties on both sides of the fence are adopting tentative stances towards it. The politicians do not want to get into something they are not familiar with; while netizens are wary of politicians usurping Net space for their political agenda.
But if discussions on issues of importance are to progress, both parties have to accept that perhaps it is time to stop staying on their respective sides of the fence.
As of now no party leader has a presence on the Internet whose presence is of any consequence. Most seem to prefer to stay in their comfort zones. However, with a virtually 100 per cent broadband penetration rate in Singapore (as reported recently by the Straits Times), politicians cannot afford to ignore cyberspace much longer – and sooner or later, the fence will have to come down.
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Lee Wei Ling's choice for Singlehood
Writing another eye opening contribution that provides a peek into the life and times of a super talented family in Singapore, she revealed that as late as 10 years ago “there was a slim chance I might have got married.” Meaning, at age 44, Lee Wei Ling was still trying to stave off a lonely conclusion to a physical existence. Her rationalization that “better one person feeling lonely than two people miserable because they cannot adapt to each other” is as good a self denial as any. Probably never heard of couples who kiss and make up, in bed, under satin sheets. Dad didn’t exactly help by saying that “Your mother and I could be selfish and feel happy that you remain single and can look after us in our old age.” Especially when dad had earlier told the world she couldn’t cook to save her own life. Her repartee to that was, as the eldest son in a typical Peranakan family, father “cannot even crack a soft-boiled egg.”
All that material may make a great soap opera, but definitely not healthy ingredients for nationhood building. At least not for a nation of happy, well-adjusted, family orientated citizens.
You puzzle at her logic when she told of a first date at 21, when she dropped her doctor suitor (”like a hot potato”) because he brought her to a dinner party of rich socialites. Is she blind to the crowd that her father and brother rub shoulders with? The types that probably makes Obama a pariah because their take home pay is several times over that of the President of the USA?
Thankfully she was honest about her mistake telling a young single woman to spend 8 years pursuing a neurology course overseas. Poor dear returned to Singapore at her late 30s, and worries she may have missed her chance to get married. Perhaps her brain could not multi-task swotting and canoodling while on campus.
Once a senior management consultant, married and in her late 20s, confided that if she was still single, she wouldn’t have the confidence to rejoin the dating game. She was a pleasant and attractive lady, maybe not in physical attributes, spoke and dressed well, and it was tempting to tell her that should her ungrateful spouse dump her, she needn’t look far for another life partner. It boils down to a matter of choice. And freewill. Elements that separates civilised humans from the lower animals. And damn all those that try to take it from us.
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PAP has not learnt the lessons from AIG
At the launch of this year’s Singapore Kindness Month on Saturday, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Lim Boon Heng said that the word “bonus” has become a dirty word, with its meaning highly misunderstood. He said that “companies’ bonuses are part and parcel of the overall wage package“, that “we now operate differently from the past“, and hence we should not “get overexcited whenever we see the word ‘bonus’ being used“. (ST, “Bonus need not be a dirty word”, 05 April 2009)
It is surprising that Mr Lim Boon Heng should use Kindness Month as an opportunity to speak about executive compensation and the uproar that it has engendered in recent days. At first glance I simply cannot see any connection between the two, unless Mr Lim is trying to hint to us that we should be kind to CEOs who get paid fat bonuses, as well as politicians and Ministers who get paid multi-million dollar salaries.
Mr Lim said the uproar over bonuses paid by troubled firms like AIG was because the American public perceived these to have come from Government bailouts, but that “people should not mistake a bonus as somebody getting something extra and undeserved and out of line with the current economic situation“.
Mr Lim Boon Heng has gotten his case wrong. The outcry over the mega bonuses paid by AIG was not simply due to the fact that AIG had been bailed out by American taxpayers’ money, but also due to the fact that managers and executives at AIG had, for the past several years, indulged in highly speculative and risky activity that brought down the whole company and threatened the entire financial system when the US housing market collapsed. The traders and executives at AIG essentially turned the company into an enormous hedge fund that placed highly leveraged bets on exotic instruments connected to subprime mortgages, credit default swaps, and other highly risky instruments that imploded when the US housing bubble burst. The immense anger and frustration over the fat bonuses paid to AIG executives, which run into the hundreds of millions of dollars, is due to the perception that these executives simply don’t deserve to be enriched for causing such extensive damage to the financial system and yet get compensated using taxpayers’ dollars.
In this case, it was sheer greed that brought down AIG, and there is a very strong case to be made that AIG’s executives did indeed obtain compensation that was undeserved and out of line. Interestingly, this is the exact same criticism that has been leveled at Ministerial salaries in Singapore.
We do not need Mr Lim Boon Heng to remind us that bonuses are part and parcel of the overall wage package, and neither will I begrudge anyone getting adequately paid for outstanding work or service rendered. However, the issue here is whether the compensation paid is just, especially when taxpayers’ dollars are involved, and it should not be swept under the carpet merely by appealing to the notion that “we now operate differently from the past”. It would be abhorrent to cover up wrongdoing or unjust compensation merely by proclaiming that times are different now.
The issue of fair compensation has cropped up recently in Singapore as well, with an outcry over two CDC officers allegedly receiving up to 8 months worth of bonuses at a time when the local economy is spiraling downwards and job losses are mounting. To add salt to injury, the People’s Association (PA), which manages the staff at all 5 CDCs, as well as Northwest District Mayor Dr Teo Ho Pin, who is in charge of the CDC where those two officers allegedly came from, refused to provide any concrete information on the case. Dr Teo even said that it was “not unreasonable for CDC staff to receive 8 months of bonuses“. (See here.)
Sheer greed and the lack of transparency and accountability to stakeholders was what brought down the insurance giant AIG. From the remarks made by Mr Lim Boon Heng and Dr Teo Ho Pin, it seems that the ruling party has not learnt the lessons from AIG, but seems ever intent on perpetuating those conditions that resulted in AIG’s collapse, for their own selfish ends.
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A good and competent government is no longer enough for Singaporeans
When asked by the media if he felt that younger Singaporeans could want change in political leadership like in the United States, newly anointed Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean replied that what voters young or old want is good and competent government. (read article here)
Singaporeans do want a good and competent government, but to many of them, especially the younger generation, it is no longer enough just to be “good” and “competent”.
Singapore is fortunate to have such a government in the early years of independence which laid down the foundations of our nation, transforming us from a third world outpost of the British colonial empire to an affluent developed country in the span of two generations.
After 44 years of nationhood, it is no longer good enough for Singapore just to have a good and competent government.
Nazi Germany was a good and competent government too. Under the Third Reich, crime was almost non-existent, the economy grew at a frantic pace and Germany managed to repay its foreign debts incurred during World War I to become a major European power again under the leadership of Adolf Hitler.
The Republic of Korea under the President Park Chung-hee was considered a good and competent government as well. Park oversaw the modernization of the Korean economy and transformed a rural, backward country to one of the wealthiest country in the world today.
Yet, these good and competent governments do not last long because they lack accountability, transparency and responsibility to the people. They may prosper for a period of time, but will never leave a long-lasting legacy behind to future generations as the real power behind their reign does not lie with the people, but dictators.
On the whole, the PAP government has been a relatively good and competent government, but it fails miserably in other critical attributes such as accountability and transparency.
A responsible government is one which dares to admit its mistakes to the public, learn from them and rectify them immediately to prevent a recurrence.
The Minister of Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng should have at least offered a public apology to the people for the escape of JI terrorist Mas Selamat Kasteri last year.
We have lost quite a substantial amounts of our reserves in ill-timed investments in ailing U.S. and European banks which would have called for an inquiry in other countries, but nobody has stepped forward to accept responsbility for the error.
What’s so difficult of saying “I am sorry, but I screw up”? Even United States President Barack Obama, the most powerful man in the world has the humility and decency to admit and apologize for his mistake over the appointment of his Treasury Secretary.
To err is only human. No man is infallible. An culture permitting deficiencies to be aired openly in public is important in any governments so that inadvertent mistakes made can be revealed and rectified instead of being swept under the carpet.
Accountability in governance means to give an explanation to the people for every single action, major or minor, taken by the government and the explanation must be as complete, detailed and truthful as possible.
While it may appear harsh to criticize the Singapore government for a lack of accountability, there are many areas in which its response has been found pretty wanting.
Why did GIC decide to invest billion of dollars in Citibank last year in the midst of the financial crisis? Who made the decision and what was the rationale behind?
Why do Singapore need to have two Senior Ministers and two Deputy Prime Ministers in the cabinet? What does the Minister Mentor do to deserve his high salary?
Till today, we have no idea about what happened.
The PAP government has always defended the need to peg their salaries to the private sector in order to attract the best talents to join them. It is both disingenuous and unreasonable for them to demand private sector salaries and not adhere to good standards of corporate governance at the same time.
Public-listed companies release the salaries, bonuses and perks receive by its top honchos. As SMRT CEO Saw Phaik Hwa puts it succinctly, ‘I think disclosure is very important . . . deliberate omission is as sinful as telling a lie sometimes.’ (read report here)
The Singapore government is often described as Singapore INC to reflect the corporate style in which it is run. The people of Singapore are the stakeholders in Singapore INC. We should hold it to higher standards of transparency than a public-listed company.
Transparency demands a timely release of information. We have been kept in the dark on so many issues of national importance for far too long.
How much money did GIC lose exactly? What is the size of our reserves now? How many months of bonuses did the ministers receive last year? What are the salaries and bonuses of the CDC staff? What is the cost price of one HDB flat?
The list goes on. Just because there is no opposition MP to ask these relevant questions in Parliament doesn’t mean the government can conveniently ignore our concerns and turn a blind eye to them.
A good, honest and competent government has nothing to hide from the people. It is always forthcoming in the release of information and responsive to queries from the people.
DPM Teo Chee Hean should know better himself if the PAP government is a responsible, accountable and transparent government.
To cosmopolitan Singaporeans who are widely traveled, even possessing all these three qualities may no longer be enough.
When I was in Xiamen in 2007 on a business trip, I found myself in the midst of a protest march by residents to protest against a chemical plant which is planned in the vicinity.
The protestors were allowed to march peacefully to the municipal office to shout slogans and invectives at the city’s mayor before dispersing on their own accord. There was a sizable police force outside the building, but no arrests were made. I was flabbergasted and wondered if I was indeed in a communist country.
In March last year, 18 activists of the Tak Boleh Tahan campaign were stopped and arrested by the police for holding an “illegal procession”. And just recently, I read a law will be passed soon to forbid the assembly of even one person in public. Are we living in Stalin’s Soviet Union or a first world country?
At that particular moment, I feel ashamed to be a Singaporean citizen. I have never voted in my entire life. This is not the type of government I want and I did not even vote for it.
In his first speech as Prime Minister of Singapore, Mr Lee Hsien Loong pledged to build an “inclusive” society for all Singaporeans. He did not live up to his promise at all.
An inclusive society is one which embraces diversity and tolerates dissenting voices, not one which makes use of the law to clamp down on the opposition in order to preserve the ruling party’s political hegemony and interests.
Competence and democracy are not mutually exclusive. In fact, they cannot do without each other. Democracy holds political leaders accountable to the people which ensures they exercise due diligence and competence in the discharge of their duties.
Without democracy as the whip to check on the government, it will be like a wild horse which can gallop at dazzling speeds, but is unwilling to be brought to a halt at will.
In his parting shot, Mr Teo said “‘Any political party, any government who wishes to stay in power, has to continue to be able to meet those challenges, the needs, the requirements of the population, young or old.”
I cannot agree with him more. The PAP has failed to meet the needs and aspirations of the population so far. Without the GRC system, a weak opposition and a compliant media under its thumb, it would have been booted out of office a long time ago.
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26054.1
Lee Wei Ling: The day Michael Fay saved me from jail
Even in the US, some believe that giving up a bit of freedom can serve the greater good
By Lee Wei Ling
Someone e-mailed me an article from the San Francisco Chronicle titled 'Singapore blooms as lush as Eden itself', by Linda Watanabe McFerrin, about our city in a garden.
'Unfortunately, what most Westerners know about Singapore,' she notes, 'is limited to the restrictions imposed on its citizens by a repressive government that dictates the mix of races; regulates reproductive matters, public housing and other seemingly personal matters; bans chewing gum, canes kids and keeps a stranglehold on the media.'
I read the article with amusement and recalled the day Michael Fay saved me from being thrown into jail in New Hampshire. For those too young to remember Fay, let me relate his story.
In 1993, the then 18-year-old and his friends damaged 18 cars in a 10-day spree of vandalism and mischief.
Stolen road signs and Singapore flags were also found in his home. Fay was caught, charged and pleaded guilty.
The judge sentenced him to six strokes of the cane and four months in jail.
The American media went berserk; then US President Bill Clinton appealed to then President Ong Teng Cheong to pardon the teenager; the Singapore Government agreed to reduce the sentence to four strokes of the rotan; the
US media was not satisfied.
At the time of his arrest in Singapore, Fay was living with his mother and stepfather. On his release from prison in June 1994, he returned to the US to live with his father.
A few months later, the US press reported that he had come home intoxicated late one night and had charged at his father. A month later, he was badly burnt sniffing butane when a friend struck a match.
He admitted that he had been a butane addict while in Singapore.
Fay was far from my mind when I spent three wonderful days hiking in the White Mountains of New Hampshire in October 1995.
It was fall and the mountains were covered with red, yellow, rust and gold foliage with tiny flecks of green - a work of art which no human painter can ever equal either in magnitude or splendour.
Just before heading back to Boston, I stopped at a tiny souvenir shop. I bought a sweatshirt with a moose printed on it for my mother.
I then saw a T-shirt with the New Hampshire state emblem, the head of an eagle, and the words 'Live Free or Die' printed around the emblem.
I have always avoided wearing anything which makes a statement. But I could not resist buying this T-shirt.
Then I hit the highway again, heading for Boston.
The highways in America are wonderful. They are multiple-lane affairs, with a physical separation between the traffic going in opposite directions. This makes speeding on them safer than in Singapore.
Soon, I was cruising at 195kmh with Scottish music playing at full blast in the background.
Because of the loud music, it took me some time before I noticed a police siren and slowed down.
With its red, white and blue lights flashing, the police car overtook my vehicle and signalled for me to pull over. I did so and the police car stopped ahead of me.
The policeman walked over to my car, demanded to see my driving licence, then yanked me out, saying: 'I am bringing you to the police station to be locked up.'
I protested: 'I was only speeding. I will pay the fine and you should let me off.'
He shot back: 'You were not only speeding. You disobeyed the law by not stopping immediately when I flashed the light to signal you to stop.'
He shoved me into his car and drove off, leaving my rental car by the roadside with all my belongings, including my newly purchased T-shirts, in it and the car door still open.
He radioed back to the police station, saying he was bringing someone in to the lock-up.
'What do you work as?' he asked me.
I replied: 'I am a doctor.'
'I hope you are a better doctor than a driver. Are you on drugs?'
'No. Do I look as though I am on drugs?'
'No, you look as though you were concentrating on overtaking every car ahead of you.'
That was indeed what I was doing. How often in Singapore can one drive at 195kmh? But I chose not to voice that thought.
Suddenly he asked: 'What do Singaporeans think of Americans?'
I replied quite sincerely: 'We like Americans. Hewlett-Packard, IBM and other multinational companies create jobs for us. But you probably don't like Singaporeans because we caned Michael Fay.'
His whole demeanour changed when I mentioned Fay.
'Michael Fay deserved to be caned,' he said firmly. 'He has been causing trouble since he returned to the US.'
He told me how his best friend, also a policeman, had been shot point-blank and died that morning when he stopped a speeding car. That was why he was in such a foul mood.
From that point on, our conversation got friendlier. We talked about hiking in New Hampshire, how we drove on the left in Singapore and so on.
Without my realising it, he had turned around and had driven back to where my rental car was. A tow truck had just arrived, but my policeman shooed it away.
He walked me to my car, told me to 'drive safely' and walked off. He did not fine me, nor did he charge me for activating the tow truck.
I drove back to Boston hardly believing my good luck.
American journalists may flog Singapore because of its perceived limitations on personal freedom, but there are some Americans - even in 'Live Free or Die' New Hampshire - who feel that a compromise in personal freedom to prevent anti-social behaviour is necessary for the welfare of society.
Most Singaporeans and many Americans would agree with that sentiment.
The writer is director of the National Neuroscience Institute. Send your comments to suntimes@sph.com.sg
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunk
opitiam/messages?msg=26052.1Judge informs that Iskander Tang has been placed under detention!
Monday, April 06, 2009
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[OFFICIAL]Judge informs that Iskander Tang has been placed under detention!
Statement on Court Appearance 01/04/09I was required to attend court on the 01/04/09 for Pre-Trial Conference,it was scheduled at Court 3 for 10am.
The hearing was conducted in chambers.The judge and i had a close discussion about the alleged shoplifting case,the police death threats case and my video interview.
During this discussion,the judge,the Honorable Mr Ng Peng Hong had this to say about my video interview,"You were supposed to ignite a bomb,but you defused it instead."
After i stated that my instructions from my lawyer was to claim trial and see the evidence the police have against me,the Judge had this to say,"Maybe you should just plead guilty.What your lawyer want may not be what you want."
After i made repeated requests for SSGT Iskander Tang of CID Bomb Investigation Squad to appear as a witness,the Judge had this to say,"I cannot allow you to call on Iskander Tang as a witness because he has been placed under detention.Since he's under detention,how to get him out as a witness?"
At this point,i made a request of the Judge,i requested that the Deputy Public Prosecutor(DPP)was NOT allowed to withdraw the charges and that this case must go to trial and that i would be calling upon Mr Iskander Tang as a witness.The DPP's face turned ashen,he mumbled something and the Judge granted me the request.
The Judge also announced that the case was adjourned for me to get my lawyer to attend court together with me,next court appearance was to be on the 07/04/09 for PTC.
As i walked out of chambers,i noticed that there were 2 other persons in addition to the 2 court clerks.The 2 new persons were a male and female,both dress in white/light peach coloured attire.
The minute i stepped out of the door,the female went,"Great,now we've got him.Prepare the documents and hand him over to us."
I was thinking,"Huh?WTF?!"
The female court clerk went,"Didn't you hear?The case has been adjourned."
The male court clerk went,"He has a lawyer,the case has been adjourned.You guys are not going to get him."
I wonder who and where these 2 persons are from,and how they know the "verdict" before the Judge made any ruling.
As i left the court room,IO Makmur,who is in charge of the shoplifting case,beckoned me over.He had a chinese colleage with him,i do not know his name.They asked me various questions about the cases.
When we reached the outside of the Sub Courts,i enquired the chinese officer as to whether Iskander Tang was really under detention,he affirmed that it was so.IO Makmur asked me what i was going to do,and i said the same thing as i did to the Judge & the DPP,that i wanted to go to trial & that i wanted to call upon Iskander Tang as a witness.
The chinese officer seemed overcome with emotion at this,as he closed his eyes tightly and visibly shook.
IO Makmur turned and looked me in the face,"You think you can get him out of detention?"
I said to him,"I don't know what the current culture in the SPF is,but where i come from,we don't leave our people behind."
IO Makmur,"Oh,so he's your people ah?"
I said,"Whoa,don't get me wrong.We are not together in some conspiracy against the state of Singapore.What i am trying to say is,metaphorically speaking,Iskander took a bullet for me and for the thousands of netizens out there.So it is not right for us to leave him behind.Maybe you feel that Iskander has betrayed the SPF and deserve to be punished,but i feel that maybe he feels he is doing his duty,which is protecting innocent citizens of Singapore."
We parted ways.
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26158.1
A flexible national service policy to allow our male graduates to enter the workforce early
Writer’s forward: National Service is an issue that is close to the heart of every male Singaporeans. Thus, any change in National Service policies will affect those whom are currently doing their National Service and those who have yet to fulfill their obligation.
SINGAPORE– One of the main grouses of National Service (NS) is that the latter takes up two years of our lives, which could be spent doing more productive things. Compared with our female peers from the same batch, we typically enter the work force two years later.
The reduction of NS term for full-time NS (NSF) men from two and a half years to two years was seen as a welcome change. However, more can be done to give NSFs the flexibility to disrupt their full-time NS in order to pursue their studies.
If the disruption policy was made more flexible, NS men can save up to one year, entering the workforce one year behind their female peers from the same batch. Consider this example of a male and female peer both graduating from their pre-university course at the end of december 2009.* The female peer will commence the first year of her university studies in August 2010. The male will typically enlist for his national service in January 2010. By July 2011, the female would have completed her first year of studies while her male peer would have completed one and a half years of his NS.
If allowed to disrupt after one and a half years of NS, the male peer will commence his university studies in August 2011, exactly one year behind his female peer. A typical undergraduate program lasts from three to four years. The male peer will use his long semester break after the second semester to serve his remaining NS term. He will typically require up to two long semester breaks, each about three months long, to complete his NS obligations. By his third year in university, he would have completed his mandatory two years term of NS.
Whilst it is understandable that some students will still want to enjoy their semester breaks without the hassle of serving the rest of their NS term, this flexibility in disruption policy is meant to cater to those who want to make the best use of their time and enter the workforce early. They stand to gain from an extra year’s salary from their profession and necessary working experience compared to their same peers who did not take the same route as them. They will also not lack that far behind their females peers.
Ultimately, NS is a form of sacrifice that Singaporean males must make. However, the lawmakers in charge of planning NS policies should provide more choices to NS men so that the latter can chart their career path to their best advantage.
*EDITS: Polytechnic students typically finish their diplomas during the month of march, and not at the end of the year as mentioned earlier. “A” levels are completed by the end of the year.
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26134.1
What happened to Orchard Road?
Orchard Road is one of the premier shopping streets in the world and it is know to some Singaporeans as the heart of Singapore. In an effort to make Orchard Road a better place, the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) has announced its plan of a $40 million makeover for Orchard Road. However, I feel that the money pumped into this expensive project has not been put into good use because this project has a minimal impact on tourists and may even backfire. I will show that there are more important priorities for Singapore instead of a lavish Orchard Road facelift, and that the project will have a minute impact and what it achieves will eventually contradict its aims.
In these tumultuous years, where unemployment cases are rising due to the economic recession, it is very essential that the government should budget more funds for improving the welfare of the community, and also to secure jobs and stimulate the economy. According to the minister mentor and previous Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, GDP could fall 10 per cent this year. The father of modern Singapore is so concerned about this issue, that he issued a warning this month for people to ready themselves for tough times ahead, which suggests the scale of the recession is gigantic and it can impact many people lives very enormously and negatively. Furthermore, this seems to be a bigger priority than to lavishly spend to beautify the already largely decorated Orchard Road, creating no need to further spend on another makeup of Orchard Road. Hence, the money put into the $40 million makeover has not been put to good use and should be instead allocated to more pertinent issues like securing jobs for those breadmakers and improving the economic situation.
This makeover also has minimal impact. This is seen as very few people notice the changes in Orchard Road despite the extreme makeover. For example, some comments made were that there was "no big difference" and this minute change can only be noticed if you"looked closely". Furthermore, many people were shocked that such a huge amount of money was allocated for the makeover. Some even thought that the changes only amonted to a cost of about "1 million dollars". Instead, many people agreed that "they should have left Orchard Road as it was" and the STB should have focused more into maintaining the area and cleaning up the area. A concern was that although there were some changes, the "pavement still looks so dirty", like it was floored "three decades ago". Such comments made by Singaporeans show us that this change did not achieve the great impact it was supposed to have, and hence and was no worth the effort put into this makeover, and all these effort established for this ridiculous caused can be diverted to neglected first priorities.
However, one may argue that these changes help to beautify and improve the place, making it more appealing for tourists to come to Singapore. For instance, there are the widening of pavements, the glass panels and there are also new street lamps, coordinated street furniture and potted flower totems. An important incentive is that there will be more new malls to shop in te future, and this would lure tourists. However, the Orchard makeover may backfire. Tourists have been complaining about the construction sites at Orchard Road. For example, a certain tourist expected Orhard Road to be prettier and nicer", and yet what they see is just "noise and construction". This has also impeded many Singaporeans to go to Orchard Road, as they complain that these construction sites "block their way". This results in a less crowded Orchard Road which is opposite of the tourists' expectations of Orchard Road to be a bustling place in the centre of Singapore. Hence, instead of attracting tourists, this makeover may cause tourists to cancel their plans after learning that Orchard Road is "nothing like what [they] see in [their] travel books", and we can conclude that the makeover will achieve in a result contradictory to its aims.
Therefore, I will conclude that the Orchard Road makeover and facelift is not a smart decision made by the authorities. This is because it is completely wasteful as such a plan would have a small impact and would not achieve its aim, especially when the country is going through difficult times as it is experiencing an economic recession. Maybe the government needs to be prodded to rethink on its priorities and decisions, and spend more time caring about its citizens than daydreaming on how to attract tourists in vain.
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26224.1