Thursday, April 23, 2009

Showdown at AWARE office over lock change by new exco

Showdown at AWARE office over lock change by new exco
By Pearl Forss, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 23 April 2009 2304 hrs

Photos 1 of 1 > " onclick="Next();" src="http://www.channelnewsasia.com/images/butt_next.gif" type="image" width="18" height="15">

Dana Lam
Video
Showdown at AWARE office over lock change ordered by new exco
New exco wants to bring AWARE back to its original cause'

SINGAPORE: It was a tense atmosphere at the AWARE office on Thursday evening as members of the old guard tried to prevent the new executive committee from changing the locks at the office.

The centre's manager, Schutz Lee, said she was not informed of the plans to change locks.

Ms Lee, who has been working there since February, was also fired without reason by the new executive committee at 8pm on Thursday.

Members of the old guard turned up hurriedly at the scene, anxious over the documents kept there.

Dana Lam, former AWARE president, said: "I walked in and there were three burly men sitting at the counter. It's not something we encounter at AWARE because it's a women's centre and we are giving counselling sessions to women who have been abused.

"The men have apparently been instructed by the president to change the lock in the centre. There is a vote of no-confidence going on here. By right, they have no right to make any changes. I am worried for my materials – 25 years of research material, including confidential material."


- CNA/so

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Thio Su Mien comes out

Thio Su Mien is publicly out as part of the new Aware ExCo takeover team now.

Oh–and I hear they’ve fired the center manager tonight (paid staff who was not involved in the elections)

And changed the locks–apparently you’ll need special hi tech pass cards to get in–very different from being a welcoming place for all women to come to help & be helped right?

The press are there, so watch out for statement in papers tomorrow!

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In Singapore, a More Progressive Islamic Education

April 23, 2009
In Singapore, a More Progressive Islamic Education
By NORIMITSU ONISHI

SINGAPORE — After starting the day with prayers and songs in honor of the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday, the students at the Madrasa Al Irsyad Al Islamiah here in Singapore turned to the secular. An all-girls chemistry class grappled with compounds and acids while other students focused on English, math and other subjects from the national curriculum.

Teachers exhorted their students to ask questions. Some, true to the school’s embrace of new technology, gauged their students’ comprehension with individual polling devices.

“It’s like ‘American Idol,’ ” said Razak Mohamed Lazim, the head of Al Irsyad, which means “rightly guided.”

A reference to the reality television program in relation to an Islamic school may come as a surprise. But Singapore’s Muslim leaders see Al Irsyad, with its strict balance between religious and secular studies, as the future of Islamic education, not only in this city-state but elsewhere in Southeast Asia.

Two madrasas in Indonesia have already adopted Al Irsyad’s curriculum and management, attracted to what they say is a progressive model of Islamic education in tune with the modern world. For them, Al Irsyad is the counterpoint to many traditional madrasas that emphasize religious studies at the expense of everything else. Instead of preaching radicalism, the school’s in-house textbooks praise globalization and international organizations like the United Nations.

Leaders in Islamic education here rue the fact that, in much of the West, madrasas everywhere have been broad-brushed as militant hotbeds where students spend days learning the Koran by rote. Still, they were relieved that not one terrorism suspect in the region in recent years was a product of Singapore’s madrasas, though some suspects were linked to madrasas in Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries. That association deepened a long-running debate over the nature of Islamic education.

“The Muslim world in general is struggling with its Islamic education,” Mr. Razak said, explaining that Islamic schools had failed to adapt to the modern world. “In many cases, it’s also the challenge the Muslim world is facing. We are not addressing the needs of Islam as a faith that has to be alive, interacting with other communities and other religions.”

In Indonesia, most Islamic schools still pay little attention to secular subjects, believing that religious studies are enough, said Indri Rini Andriani, a former computer programmer who is the principal of Al Irsyad Satya Islamic School, one of the Indonesian schools that model themselves on the school here.

“They feel that conventional education is best for the children, while some of us feel that we have to adjust with advances in technology and what’s going on in the world,” Ms. Indri said.

Here, the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, a statutory board that advises the government on Muslim affairs, gave Al Irsyad a central spot in its new Islamic center. Long the top academic performer among the country’s six madrasas, Al Irsyad was chosen to be in the center as “a showcase,” said Mr. Razak, who is also an official at the religious council.

The school’s 900 primary- and secondary-level students follow the national curriculum of the country’s public schools while also taking religious instruction. To accommodate both, the school day is three hours longer than at the mainstream schools.

Mohamed Muneer, 32, a chemistry teacher, said most of his former students had gone on to junior colleges or polytechnic schools, while some top students attended the National University of Singapore. “Many became administrators, some are teaching and some joined the civil service,” he said.

At the cafeteria, Ishak Bin Johari, a 17-year-old who wants to become a newspaper reporter, said the balance between the secular and religious would help the school’s graduates “lead normal Singaporean lives compared to other madrasa students.”

That balance resulted, like many things in this country, from pressure by the government. Singapore’s madrasas — historically the schools for ethnic Malays who make up about 14 percent of the country’s population — experienced a surge in popularity in the 1990s along with a renewed interest in Islam.

But that surge, coupled with the madrasas’ poor record in nonreligious subjects, high dropout rates and graduation of young people with few marketable job skills, worried the government. It responded by making primary education at public schools compulsory in 2003, allowing exceptions like the madrasas, provided they met basic standards by 2010. If they fail, they will have to stop educating primary school children.

“That forced the madrasas to shift their curriculum away from being purely religious schools,” said Mukhlis Abu Bakar, an expert on madrasas at the National Institute of Education, a teachers college.

Last year, the first time all six madrasas were required to sit for national exams at the primary level, two failed to meet the minimal standards, though they still had two more years to pass.

Al Irsyad, which was the first to alter its curriculum, outperformed the other madrasas. But neither it nor the others made any of the lists of best performing schools or students compiled by the Education Ministry in Singapore.

Mr. Mukhlis, who also was a member of Al Irsyad’s management committee in the 1990s, said the madrasas still had a long way to go to catch up with mainstream schools. While Singapore’s teachers are among the most highly paid civil servants, the madrasas have had trouble attracting qualified teachers because they rely only on tuition and donations to operate, he said.

“I think Al Irsyad has not achieved a level where I would say it is a model for Islamic education,” he said, “but somehow the system it has in place could become one.”

Still, it began drawing students who would not have attended a madrasa otherwise. Noridah Mahad, 44, said she had wanted to send her two older children to madrasas but worried about the quality of education. With Al Irsyad’s adoption of the national curriculum, she felt no qualms in sending her third child. “Here they teach many things other than Islam,” she said. “So Muslim students will have two understandings: the Muslim and the outside world.”

Al Irsyad said it was in talks to export its model to madrasas in the Philippines and Thailand. In Indonesia, Dahlan Iskan, the chairman of Jawa Pos Group, one of the country’s biggest media companies, opened a school modeled on Singapore’s. And a conglomerate, the Lyman Group, backed Al Irsyad Satya.

Poedji Koentarso, a retired diplomat, led the search for Lyman, visiting madrasas all over Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.

“We shopped around,” he said. “It was a difficult search in the sense that often the schools were very religious, too religious.”


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The Chinese are not happy

Apr 23, 2009

The Chinese are not happy
By Antoaneta Bezlova

BEIJING - At first it was nothing out of the ordinary. A book intriguingly titled China Is Not Happy was expected to generate a buzz because it claimed to detail the world's most populous nation and aspiring superpower's resentment of foreign abuses.

The book was the joint effort of five Chinese nationalistic writers (Song Shaojun, Wang Xiaodong, Huang Jisu, Song Qiang and Liu Yang) and was written as a direct response to issues surrounding Tibet, the Olympic Torch upset in Paris and other incidents that angered many in China last year.

But, the book appears to have struck a cord with Chinese readers on a level that it was perhaps not intended to. In a surprising twist, the volume - which set out to arouse national indignation at foreign powers' treatment of China - has burst open the Chinese people's grievances with their own government.

Waves of commentary have filtered out of cyberspace and into the pages of some state-sanctioned media.

"Outwardly, this is a book about patriotism," said commentator Chang Ping in the liberal Southern Weekend newspaper. "The problem is that it does not help China solve its problems by revealing them. On the opposite, it wants China to succeed by hating other countries and by castigating Chinese people that like other countries."

But, "Indeed, how can Chinese people be happy?" asked Chang. "Their children drink poisoned milk and get kidney stones; husbands go underground to dig coal and get buried there; petitioners who line up to complain are sent to mental hospitals. Meanwhile, even the cigarettes smoked by public officials cost a fortune."

Among the book's defendants are some who are perceived as proponents of government views. Veteran journalist Xiong Lei - who after retiring from the official Xinhua News Agency now works as a council member for the China Society for Human Rights Studies - argued that the book could be seen as an expression of China's dissatisfaction with the current unfair world order.

"People certainly have the right to be unhappy with such inequity," she wrote in the official China Daily. "It is understandable too, that some people demand reform of the existing political and economic systems of our global village."

"The book China Is Not Happy is only valuable for its title," contends Song Shinan, a blogger based in Sichuan province where last year a devastating earthquake buried thousands of children in the debris of shoddily built school buildings. "All the 340,000 words in the book should be removed and replaced with only these five characters printed on the cover ... These five characters will inevitably resonate with the absolute majority of the Chinese population."

The list of unhappy people provided by Song reads like an almanac of China's social groups. They include children trafficked for slave labor, prisoners killed in detention from torture, migrant workers deprived of jobs, college students left unemployed, intellectuals accused of crimes because of their speech, and "all those Chinese people who quietly cry at night because they have been humiliated or injured". Yes, China is unhappy, he concludes.
The Communist Party, which has held power since 1949, faces a swell of popular discontent over rampant corruption, income disparity and its failure to prevent children's deaths in last year's Sichuan earthquake, and the scandalous cover up of contaminated infant milk formula that has poisoned over 300,000 babies.

October 1 marks the 60th anniversary of the founding of communist China. June 4 brings the 20th anniversary of pro-democracy students' demonstrations in Tiananmen Square and their violent suppression.

The inward criticism of China's problems generated by the book was perhaps not the foremost result the book's authors had hoped for. Although they do vent their ire at targets at home, the authors' biggest scorn is reserved for the outside world's unfair treatment of China.

A collection of loosely linked essays, China Is Not Happy takes off from where a 1996 runaway nationalist bestseller China Can Say No written and edited by Zhang Zangzang, Zhang Xiaobo, Song Qiang, Tang Zhengyu, Qiao Bian and Gu Qingsheng left off. Both are written by a group of intellectuals and academics that describe themselves as speakers for the emboldened Chinese public - daring to criticize and demand from its government.

The latest book contends that protests that marred Beijing's Olympics last year testify to a continuing foreign disdain for China while the foreign "ghosts" behind the riots in Tibetan capital Lhasa in March 2008 show the extent of the country's "strategic encirclement by the Western world".

Liu Yang, one of the authors, argues that China "must not let the United States kidnap the world" and rebukes Chinese reformers for "blindly following the American model" instead of blazing China's own path.

"These foreign slaves have not only transformed Chinese economy into an American appendage, they have themselves become American dependents," he writes.

Another one of the writers, Song Qiang, advocates that China should "hold up its sword" as this is the only way to build a strong nation. China should bravely protect international security as a way of clearing a path towards becoming a superpower, Song said.

The binding element of the book is a brand of disgruntled nationalism, preaching that Beijing should start wielding its clout abroad more forcefully and reject any kinds of intellectual soul-searching that distracts it from achieving the "big goal" of becoming a superpower.

Unhappy or not, the book's authors are certainly not displeased with its sales record. Already in its eighth edition since release in mid-March, China Is Not Happy is reported to have sold about half a million copies.

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China unveils its new naval clout

Apr 23, 2009

China unveils its new naval clout
By Wu Zhong

HONG KONG - China will show off its nuclear-powered submarines for the first time in history on Thursday during a fleet parade to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the naval arm of the People's Liberation Army (PLAN).

The display of the country's most advanced submarines, as well as the parade itself which will feature 21 ships from 14 foreign countries including the United States and Russia, shows China's growing confidence in the rapid modernization of its navy.

The largest naval parade in the PLA's history is also a sign that Beijing is attaching increasing importance to the role of the navy, once considered the weakest of the three branches of the PLA. China's deployment of ships to the coast of Somalia to fight pirates at the end of last year is regarded as a strategic change of the PLAN from a near-shore defensive force to a blue-water combat armada.

In an interview with the state-run Xinhua news agency, Vice Admiral Ding Yiping, PLAN's deputy commander, said the nuclear-powered submarines would appear at Thursday's fleet review in the northern port city of Qingdao.

"It is not a secret that China has nuclear submarines, which are key to safeguarding our country's national security," Ding said, adding that the number of China's nuclear submarines was far less than those of the US and Russia.

The 225,000-member PLAN operates up to 10 nuclear-powered submarines and as many as 60 diesel-electric vessels, more than any other Asian country. China's second-generation, nuclear-powered Jin- and Shang-class submarines are considered just a notch below cutting-edge US and Russian crafts.

Speculation has been rife as to whether President Hu Jintao, who will review the fleet parade in his capacity as chairman of the Central Military Commission, will take the opportunity to announce China's plan to build one or more aircraft carriers. A senior PLA official in Beijing said it was unlikely Hu would make the announcement. "It is no longer a secret that China wants to build aircraft carriers. There is no need to make a formal announcement on such things," said the official who declined to be named.

United States chief of naval operations Admiral Gary Roughead downplayed concerns over China's plans for an aircraft carrier but said the US would like to have a better idea about the intentions behind China's naval modernization.

"The advancement and the growth of the PLA Navy is consistent with China's economic advancement and its role in a globalized world. I think it is important, however, that as we create a naval capability, indeed any military capability, that there should be clear communications with regard to what the intentions of that capability are. That's why visits like mine are important," said Roughead during a news conference on Sunday in Beijing.

The high-profile naval display is also a sign of China's confidence in the overall modernization of its military. China has for a long time kept a low profile in regard to its naval buildup, the PLA source said.

Not so long ago, the navy was the weakest branch of the PLA. Ships and weapons were so outdated the Chinese military was reluctant to show them in public, preferring to keep any development top secret. Moreover, China has been concerned that flexing its naval clout could arouse suspicion from neighboring countries, some of which have territorial disputes with China.

But as China's interests spread globally, Beijing needed a strong naval force to protect its "blue water" interests, as exemplified by the need to protect Chinese commercial ships off Somalia, the source said. "So now it's better for China to increase the transparency of its naval development than to continue keeping it a top secret. Anyway, it is hard to keep it secret given modern reconnaissance means," the source said.

Ding Yiping said in his interview with Xinhua that suspicion arises because of misunderstanding, adding that the fleet parade on Thursday was aimed at promoting understanding about China's military rise.

"Suspicions about China being a 'threat' to world security are mostly because of misunderstandings and lack of understandings about China," said Ding. "The suspicions would disappear if foreign counterparts could visit the Chinese navy and know about the true situation."

Ding also said the review would be a platform for foreign navies to enhance mutual understanding. High-level delegations from 29 countries and 21 vessels from 14 countries will attend the review.

Exchanges between naval forces of different countries would enhance trust and cooperation, PLAN Commander Admiral Wu Shengli said on Tuesday in Qingdao at a seminar to mark the four-day celebrations.

Wu said maritime disputes should be resolved in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and that all countries should avoid military competition or conflict. Governments should respect each other's sovereignty and territorial integrity on an equal and mutually beneficial basis, and should not use, or threaten to use, military force in international relations, Wu said.

Wu also urged the world's navies to work together to combat threats such as terrorism and piracy. "It is the obligation of all countries' naval forces to work together to ensure safety on the oceans, and crack down on such unconventional threats," Wu said.

It is interesting that Qingdao has been chosen as the place for the fleet parade. Qingdao is the headquarters of the Beihai Fleet, one of China's three naval fleets. It was in Qingdao that the PLAN set up its first naval aviation school in early 1950s. China's first submarine fleet was also formed in this northern city in 1954.

But just 150 kilometers northeast of Qingdao is Liugong Island at the mouth of Weihai Bay, a well-known historical site often considered as the home of China's "national humiliation".

During the reign of the Guangxu Emperor from 1875 to 1908, the Qing Dynasty founded the Beiyang Fleet as China's first modern navy, considered the best in Asia at that time. A telegraph center, a naval academy and the headquarters of the Beiyang Naval Units were set up on Liugong Island.

But during the First Sino-Japanese War, the Beiyang Fleet suffered a crushing defeat. In the spring of 1895, Liugong Island was occupied by Japanese forces. Ding Ruchang, commander of the Beiyang Fleet, committed suicide. The Japanese occupation lasted for roughly three years before the British bought the territory from the Japanese.

The principal result of the first Sino-Japanese War was a shift in regional dominance from China to Japan. It came as a fatal blow to the Qing Dynasty and Chinese classical tradition.

Military exchange between China and Japan remains a sensitive issue. Hong Kong media reported that China turned down Japan's offer to send ships to participate in the Qingdao fleet review, though the report is not officially confirmed.

One hundred and fourteen years after the defeat of 1895, China's ships will sail with those from other naval powers in the Qingdao fleet review. "This delivers a message that China will never allow its navy to be defeated so easily again," the PLA source said, adding that the Chinese navy will now sail into the world's oceans with a new posture.

The PLAN was formed on April 23, 1949, in Taizhou city in Jiangsu province. It originally consisted of nine warships and 17 boats obtained when a unit of the Kuomintang's second coastal defense fleet defected to the PLA. Coincidentally, Taizhou is the birthplace of Hu Jintao.

Qingdao will be China's fourth naval review since 1949. The first was held in Dalian in 1957. The second was held in 1995 in the Yellow Sea and attended by Jiang Zemin, Hu's predecessor. The third was held in 2005, after a Sino-Russian joint military exercise in the sea off Shandong province.

Wu Zhong is the China Editor of Asia Times Online.

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Old Guards of AWARE are BUYING VOTES?

Old Guards of AWARE are BUYING VOTES?

I am sick seeing the old guards of AWARE who are too eager in forcing a "wayang" after they faced the exit door of AWARE without "sayang".

Some advices for the old guards, if you respect the system and believed that AWARE was built with clean hands, do respect the AGM vote result and respect the authority.

Some of the dishonorable methods that you are using and are planning to use will just prove to the public that you aren’t fit to remain in AWARE. Please keep AWARE clean and free of dishonors. The more you, the old guards tried to work your ways to overturn the new team, the
more the public feel disgusted.

How would the public be convinced by you people who use dishonorable methods and plots to gain back those lost chairs for your derrière to be planted? Some of your dishonorable methods like boycotting DBS, canceling your DBS credit cards and also encouraging your supporters
to the same is not fighting the battle with righteous. I hope DBS is not fooled by your lame plot, even with your secret letter of protest to them complaining against Josie's position. If DBS is a good bank and is confident of their robust service, they will be able to distinguish that losing a few customers out of this matter is not due to their poor service or staff member's involvement in AWARE, but merely a lame tool you used to fight your bitter battle. Thus the bank is still sound.

Your action to blanket collect new members in order to build your vote numbers is against the mission of AWARE to help women with volunteered service. You are using the new members as digits to build your numbers. These members, joining AWARE without intention to contribute to the organization, might just jeopardize the organization's orderliness and objectives. They have joined only for 1 reason, to achieve only 1 purpose; they are like disposable material, good for 1 use only. After the EOGM, what are these members going to contribute to AWARE? Some of you, the old guards, have even offered to help fund the $40 membership fee for new members, in this case are you BUYING VOTES?

Old guards, you have gone over burn too much, working too hard just to win.

Who is the one having some hidden personal agenda? The public is not blind.

Regards
Jaunty Jabber

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Can America Fail?

Can America Fail?

by Kishore Mahbubani

A sympathetic critic issues a wake-up call for an America mired in groupthink and blind to its own shortcomings.

In 1981, Singapore’s ­long-­ruling People’s Action Party was shocked when it suffered its first defeat at the polls in many years, even though the contest was in a single constituency. I asked Dr. Goh Keng Swee, one of Singapore’s three founding fathers and the architect of its economic miracle, why the PAP lost. He replied, “Kishore, we failed because we did not even conceive of the possibility of failure.”

The simple thesis of this essay is that American society could also fail if it does not force itself to conceive of failure. The massive crises that American society is experiencing now are partly the product of just such a blindness to potential catastrophe. That is not a diagnosis I deliver with rancor. Nations, like individuals, languish when they only have uncritical lovers or unloving critics. I consider myself a loving critic of the United States, a critic who wants American society to succeed. America, I wrote in 2005 in Beyond the Age of Innocence: Rebuilding Trust Between America and the World, “has done more good for the rest of the world than any other society.” If the United States fails, the world will suffer ­too.

The first systemic failure America has suffered is groupthink. Looking back at the origins of the current financial crisis, it is amazing that American society accepted the incredible assumptions of economic gurus such as Alan Greenspan and Robert Rubin that unregulated financial markets would naturally deliver economic growth and serve the public good. In 2003, Greenspan posed this question: “The vast increase in the size of the ­over-­the-­counter derivatives markets is the result of the market finding them a very useful vehicle. And the question is, should these be regulated?” His own answer was that the state should not go beyond regular banking regulation because “these derivative transactions are transactions among professionals.” In short, the financial players would regulate ­themselves.

This is manifest nonsense. The goal of these financial professionals was always to enhance their personal wealth, not to serve the public interest. So why was Greenspan’s nonsense accepted by American society? The simple and amazing answer is that most Americans assumed that their country has a rich and vibrant “marketplace of ideas” in which all ideas are challenged. Certainly, America has the freest media in the world. No subject is taboo. No sacred cow is immune from criticism. But the paradox here is that the belief that American society allows every idea to be challenged has led Americans to assume that every idea is challenged. They have failed to notice when their minds have been enveloped in groupthink. Again, failure occurs when you do not conceive of ­failure.

The second systemic failure has been the erosion of the notion of individual responsibility. Here, too, an illusion is at work. Because they so firmly believe that their society rests on a culture of individual ­respon­sibility—­rather than a culture of entitlement, like the social welfare states of ­Europe—­Americans cannot see how their individual actions have undermined, rather than strengthened, their society. In their heart of hearts, many Americans believe that they are living up to the famous challenge of President John F. Kennedy, “Ask not what your country can do for ­you—­ask what you can do for your country.” They believe that they give more than they take back from their own ­society.

There is a simple empirical test to see whether this is true: Do Americans pay more in taxes to the government than they receive in government services? The answer is clear. Apart from a few years during the Clinton administration, the United States has had many more federal budget deficits than ­surpluses—­and the ostensibly more fiscally responsible Republicans are even guiltier of deficit financing than the ­Democrats.

The recently departed Bush administration left America with a national debt of more than $10 trillion, compared with the $5.7 trillion left by the Clinton administration. Because of this large debt burden, President Barack Obama has fewer bullets to fire as he faces the biggest national economic crisis in almost a century. The American population has taken away the ammunition he could have used, and left its leaders to pray that China and Japan will continue to buy U.S. Treasury ­bonds.

How did this happen? Americans have justified the erosion of individual responsibility by demonizing taxes. Every candidate for political office in America runs against taxes. No American politician—including President Obama—dares to tell the truth: that no modern society can function without significant taxes. In some cases, taxes do a lot of good. If Americans were to impose a $1 per gallon tax on gasoline (which they could easily afford), they would begin to solve many of their problems, reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, dependence on Middle East oil, and the production of fuel-inefficient cars and ­trucks.

The way Americans have dealt with the tax question shows that there is a sharp contradiction between their belief that their society rests on a culture of individual responsibility and the reality that it has been engulfed by a culture of individual irresponsibility. But beliefs are hard to change. Many American myths come from the Wild West era, when lone cowboys struggled and survived supposedly through individual ingenuity alone, without the help of the state. Americans continue to believe that they do not benefit from state support. The reality is that many ­do.

The third systemic failure of American society is its failure to see how the abuse of American power has created many of the problems the United States now confronts abroad. The best example is 9/11. Americans believe they were innocent victims of an evil attack by Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda. And there can be no doubt that the victims of 9/11 were innocent. Yet Americans tend to forget the fact that Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda were essentially created by U.S. policies. In short, a force launched by the United States came back to bite ­it.

During the Cold War, the United States was looking for a powerful weapon to destabilize the Soviet Union. It found it when it created a ­pan-­Islamic force of mujahideen fighters, drawn from countries as diverse as Algeria and Indonesia, to roll back the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan after 1979. For a time, American interests and the interests of the Islamic world converged, and the fighters drove the Soviets out and contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union. At the same time, however, America also awakened the sleeping dragon of Islamic ­solidarity.

Yet when the Cold War end­ed, America thoughtlessly disengaged from Af­ghan­istan and the powerful Islamic forces it had supported there. To make matters worse, it switched its Middle East policy from a relatively ­even­handed one on the ­Israel-­Pales­tine issue to one heavily weighted to­ward the Is­raelis. Aaron Da­vid Mil­ler, a longtime U.S. Middle East negotiator who served under both the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations (and is now a public-policy scholar at the Wood­row Wilson Center), wrote recently that both administrations “scrupulously” road-tested every idea and proposal with Israel before bringing it to the Palestinians.

Americans seem only barely aware of the pain and suffering of the Palestinian people, and the sympathy their plight stirs in the world’s 1.2 billion Muslims, who hold America responsible for the Palestinians’ condition. And tragically, in the long run, a conflict between six million Israelis and 1.2 billion Muslims would bring grief to Israel. Hence, Americans should seriously review their Middle East ­policies.

The Middle East is only one of many areas in which American policies have harmed the world. From U.S. cotton subsidies, which have hurt poor African farmers, to the invasion of Iraq; from Washington’s double stan­dard on nuclear ­prolifer­ation—­calling on non­nuclear states to abide by the Nuclear ­Non-­Prolif­eration Treaty while ignoring its own ­obli­gations—­to its decision to walk away from the Kyoto Protocol without providing an alternate approach to global warming, many American policies have injured the 6.5 billion other people who inhabit the ­world.

Why aren’t Americans aware of this? The reason is that virtually all analysis by American intellectuals rests on the assumption that problems come from outside America and America provides only solutions. Yet the rest of the world can see clearly that American power has created many of the world’s major problems. American thinkers and policymakers cannot see this because they are engaged in an incestuous, ­self-­referential, and ­self-­congratulatory discourse. They have lost the ability to listen to other voices on the planet because they cannot conceive of the possibility that they are not already listening. But until they begin to open their ears, America’s problems with the world will ­con­tinue.

It will not be easy for America to change course, because many of its problems have deep structural causes. To an outsider, it is plain to see that structural failures have developed in America’s governance, in its social contract, and in its response to globalization. Many Americans still cannot see ­this.

When Americans are asked to identify what makes them proudest of their society, they inevitably point to its democratic character. And there can be no doubt that America has the most successful democracy in the world. Yet it may also have some of the most corrupt governance in the world. The reason more Americans are not aware of this is that most of the corruption is ­legal.

In democracies, the role of government is to serve the public interest. Americans believe that they have a government “of the people, by the people, and for the people.” The reality is more complex. It looks more like a government “of the people, by special-interest groups, and for special-interest groups.” In the theory of democracy, corrupt and ineffective politicians are thrown out by elections. Yet the fact that more than 90 percent of incumbents who seek reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives are ­re­elected provides a clear warning that all is not well. In The Audacity of Hope (2006), Barack Obama himself describes the corruption of the political system and the public’s low regard for politicians. “All of which leads to the conclusion that if we want anything to change in Washington, we’ll need to throw the rascals out. And yet year after year we keep the rascals right where they are, with the reelection rate for House members hovering at around 96 percent,” Obama writes. Why? “These days, almost every congressional district is drawn by the ruling party with ­computer-­driven precision to ensure that a clear majority of Democrats or Republicans reside within its borders. Indeed, it’s not a stretch to say that most voters no longer choose their representatives; instead, representatives choose their voters.”

The net effect of this corruption is that American governmental institutions and processes are now designed to protect special interests rather than public interests. As the financial crisis has revealed with startling clarity, regulatory agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have been captured by the industries they are supposed to regulate. And when Congress opens the government’s purse, the benefits flow to special interests rather than the public interest. Few Americans are aware how severely special interests undermine their own national interests, both at home and abroad. The latest two world trade negotiating rounds (including the present Doha Round), for example, have been held hostage by the American agricultural lobbies. To protect 25,000 rich American cotton farmers, the United States has jeopardized the interests of the rest of the 6.8 billion people in the world.

Normally, a crisis provides a great opportunity to change course. Yet the current crisis has elicited tremendous delay, obfuscation, and pandering to special interests. From afar, America’s myopia is astounding and incomprehensible. When the stimulus packages of the Chinese and U.S. governments emerged at about the same time, I scanned American publications in search of attempts to compare the two measures. I could not find any. This confirmed my suspicion that American intellectuals and policymakers could not even conceive of the possibility that the Chinese effort may be smarter or better designed than the American ­one.

An even bigger structural failure that American society may face is the collapse of its social contract. The general assumption in the United States is that American society remains strong and cohesive because every citizen has an equal chance to succeed. Because most Americans believe they have had the same opportunity, there is little resentment when a Bill Gates or a Sergey Brin amasses a great ­fortune.

This ideal of equal opportunity is a useful national myth. But when the gap between myth and reality becomes too wide, the myth cannot be sustained. Today, research shows that social mobility in the United States has declined significantly. In the 2008 report The Measure of America, a research group, the American Hu­m­an Development Project, notes that “the average income of the top fifth of U.S. households in 2006 was almost 15 times that of those in the lowest ­fifth—­or $168,170 versus $11,352.” The researchers also observe that “social mobility is now less fluid in the United States than in other affluent nations. Indeed, a poor child born in Germany, France, Canada, or one of the Nordic countries has a better chance to join the middle class in adulthood than an American child born into similar circumstances.”

Behind these statistics are some harsh realities. Nearly one in five American children lives in poverty, and more than one in 13 lives in extreme poverty. African-American babies are more than twice as likely as white or Latino babies to die before reaching their first birthday. People in more than half a million households experience hunger, data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture indicate. The education system is both inegalitarian and ineffective. In a recent international assessment of subject-matter literacy in 57 countries, America’s 15-year-olds ranked 24th in mathematics and 17th in science. It should come as no surprise that though the United States ranks second among 177 countries in per capita income, it ranks only 12th in terms of human development.

More dangerously, many of those who have grown wealthy in the past few decades have added little of real economic value to society. Instead, they have created “financial weapons of mass destruction,” and now they continue to expect rich bonuses even after they delivered staggering losses. Their behavior demonstrates a remarkable decline of American values and, more important, the deterioration of the implicit social contract between the wealthy and the rest of society. It would be fatal for America if the wealthy classes were to lose the trust and confidence of the broader American body politic. But many of America’s wealthy cannot even conceive of this possibility. This explains why so few of the Richard Fulds and John Thains have apologized with any sincerity for the damage they have ­done.

America’s latest re­sponses to globalization also reveal symptoms of a structural failure. Hitherto, Americans have been champions of globalization because they have believed that their own economy, the most competitive in the world, would naturally triumph as countries lowered their trade and tariff barriers. This belief has been an important force driving the world trading system toward greater ­openness.

Today, in a sign of great danger for the United States and for the world, the American people are losing confidence in their ability to compete with Chinese and Indian workers. More and more American politicians are jumping on the protectionist bandwagon (al­though almost all of them dishonestly claim they are not protectionists). Even the American intelligentsia is retreating from its once stout defense of free trade. Paul Krugman of Princeton and The New York Times, who won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2008, showed which way the wind was blowing when he wrote, “It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that growing U.S. trade with Third World countries reduces the real wages of many and perhaps most workers in this country. And that reality makes the politics of trade very difficult.”

At the moment of their country’s greatest economic vulnerability in many decades, few Americans dare to speak the truth and say that the United States cannot retreat from globalization. Both the American people and the world would be worse off. However, as globalization and global capitalism create new forces of “creative destruction,” America will have to restructure its economy and society in order to compete. It will need to confront its enormously wasteful and inefficient health care policies and the deteriorating standards of its public education system. It must finally confront its economic failures as well, and stop rewarding them. If General Motors, Chrysler, and Ford cannot compete, it will be futile to protect them. They, too, have failed because they could not conceive of ­failure.

Every problem has a solution. This has always been the optimistic American view. It is just as true in bad times as in good times. But painful problems do not often have painless solutions. This is equally true of the current economic crisis. To deal with it, American leaders must add an important word when they speak the truth to the American people. The word is sacrifice. There can be no solution to America’s problems without ­sacrifice.

One paradox of the human condition is that the most logical point at which to undertake painful reform is in good times. The pain will be less then. But virtually no society, and especially no democratic society, can administer significant pain in good times. It takes a crisis to make change possible. Hence, there is a lot of wisdom in the principle, “never waste a ­crisis.”

Let me suggest for purely illustrative purposes three painful reforms the United States should consider now. The goal of these suggestions is to trigger a serious discussion of reform in American ­discourse.

First, there is a silver bullet that can dispel some of the doom and gloom enveloping the world and admit a little hope. And hope is what we need to get the economic wheels turning in the right direction. As Amartya Sen, another Nobel laureate in economics, said recently, “Once an economy is in the grip of pessimism, you cannot change it just by changing the objective circumstance, because the lack of confidence in people makes the economy almost unrescuable. You have to address the confidence thing, and that requires a different type of agenda than we have.” The completion of the Doha Round of world trade talks would go a long way toward restoring that confidence. The good news is that the deal is almost 95 percent cooked. But the last five percent is the most ­difficult.

One of the key obstacles to the completion of the Doha Round is the resistance of those 25,000 rich American cotton farmers. Millions of their poor West African counterparts will not accept a Doha Round agreement without a removal of the U.S. cotton subsidies that unfairly render their own crops uncompetitive. In both moral and rational terms, the decision should be obvious. The interests of the 6.8 billion people who will benefit from a successful Doha Round are more important than the interests of 25,000 American farmers. This handful of individuals should not be allowed to veto a global trade ­deal.

America’s rich cotton farmers are also in the best position to make a sacrifice. Collectively, they have received more than $3 billion a year in subsidies over the last eight years, a total of about $1 million each. If they cannot make a sacrifice, who in America can? Where is the American politician with the courage say ­this?

America has a second silver bullet it can use: a $1 per gallon tax on gasoline. To prevent the diversion of the resulting revenues into pork barrel projects, the money should be firewalled and used only to promote energy efficiency and address the challenge of climate change. Last year, the United States consumed more than 142 billion gallons of gas. Hence, even allowing for a change in consumption, a gas tax could easily raise more than $100 billion per year to address energy ­challenges.

This sounds like a painful sacrifice, one that America’s leaders can hardly conceive of asking, yet it is surprising that Americans did not complain when they effectively paid a tax of well over $1 per gallon to Saudi Arabia and other oil producers when oil prices surged last year. Then, the price at the pump was more than $4 a gallon. Today, with world oil prices hovering around only $40 a barrel, the price per gallon is around half its peak price. A $1 tax would still leave gas relatively cheap.

This brings me to the third silver bullet: Every American politician should declare that the ­long-­term interests of the country are more important than his or her personal political career. As leaders, they should be prepared to make the ultimate political sacrifice in order to speak the truth: The time has come for Americans to spend less and work ­harder. This would be an extraordinary commitment for politicians anywhere in the world, but it is precisely politics as usual that led the United States to today’s debacle.

The latest budget presented to Congress by President Obama offers a great opportunity for change. Instead of tearing the budget apart in pursuit of narrow interests and larding it with provisions for special interests, Congress has the opportunity to help craft a rational plan to help people at the bottom, promote universal health care, and create incentives to enhance American competitiveness.
I know that such a rational budget is almost totally inconceivable to the American body politic. The American political system has become so badly clogged with special interests that it resembles a diseased heart. When an individual develops coronary blockages, he or she knows that the choices are massive surgery or a massive heart attack. The fact that the American body politic cannot conceive of the possibility that its clogged political arteries could lead to a catastrophic heart attack is an indication that American society cannot conceive of failure. And if you cannot conceive of failure, failure ­comes.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27695.1

Yaacob still daydreaming about his “sound” & “robust” system

Yaacob still daydreaming about his “sound” & “robust” system

Despite the fact that Singapore’s worst food poisoning outbreak occurred during his tenure as Minister of Environment, Mr Yaacob Ibrahim was adamant that his “system” was “sound”.

Speaking to reporters at the launch of NEA’s $8 million recycling fund on Wednesday morning, Environment Minister Yaacob Ibrahim said penalising stallowners with a ‘C’ grading or below would be ‘too harsh’.

‘There are about 5,000 hawkers of variant qualities and backgrounds. We must not run away from the fact that the grading system already in place is robust and sound,’ he said. (read article here)

As far as I can remember, the markets and hawker centers 20 years ago are dirtier than the present ones and there was never an incident of somebody dying from food poisoning after consuming food sold there.

There was no grading system and the environment minister then was probably paid only 10% of Minister Yaacob’s present salary.

If the grading system is “robust” and “sound” as alluded by Mr Yaacob, how did this tragedy happen?

Is Mr Yaacob suggesting that there might be external migitating factors contributing to the incident?

Mr Yaacob said a food poisoning outbreak, such as the one which broke out earlier this month at a temporary market in Geylang Serai, could occur as long as there were lapses.

I concur that there were indeed grave lapses in the supervision and maintenance of the temporary market which lies under the purview of the management committee.

No matter how “perfect” the grading system may be, it will not work if the management committee does not perform its duties to ensure regular spring-cleaning and eradication of vermins at the market’s premises.

The verdict is still out on the exact cause of the two victims’ deaths. Though NEA found “lapses of food hygiene” at the Indian rojak stall, they were unable to establish a link to the mass food poisoning.

Could the rats and the chemicals used in to eradicate them a probable cause? So far the the authorities have been surprisingly mute on this possibility.

Assuming that all stalls at the market were graded a “A”, but the premises are poorly maintained and infested with rats, is this acceptable to Mr Yaacob?

What is Mr Yaacob doing to ensure that these management committees do their jobs?

Are there any legislation in place to punish committees which have been negligent and shoddy in their work?

Shouldn’t these temporary markets be graded too so that consumers can make an informed choice whether to patronize them.

The present hygiene grading system is obviously obsolete and ineffective. What exactly does “A”, “B” and “C” mean? Are stalls with a “C” grading of higher risk of food poisoning?

In my humble opinion, Mr Yaacob should replace the grading now with a simple “pass” or “fail”.

Stalls given the “pass” grade by NEA are considered hygienic, clean and safe enough for its food to be consumed.

At the same time, all hawker centers and temporary markets should be graded too to give their respective management committees a greater sense of ownership and responsibility.

They will be held accountable for any lapses in the maintenance of the premises. Fines can be imposed on errant officers and repeated offenders will have their centers closed down.

Everybody has the role to play in ensuring public hygiene to make Singapore a clean, safe and gracious place to live in.

While the public has a duty to practise personal hygiene in public places, the roles supervising and enforcement authorities must not be negated too.

Even after a major crisis of such castastrophic proportion, Mr Yaacob still hasn’t woken up from his deep slumber.

To put it bluntly, if your “system” is so “sound” and “robust”, 2 innocent lives would not be lost!

It’s time to wake up, Mr Yaacob! You have screwed up big time! Stop the “wayang” to pull the wool over Singaporeans, we are not idiots!

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27686.1

Questions for Justice Choo Han Teck in the sentencing of Shin Min editor Lim Hong Eng

Questions for Justice Choo Han Teck in the sentencing of Shin Min editor Lim Hong Eng

By Joe Seck

A strange series of events unfolded in the courtroom of Justice Choo, just the other day. Justice Choo was hearing the appeal of the hit and run killer driver Ms. Lim Hong Eng.

For those of us who are unaware, Ms. Lim is the Executive Editor of the Shin Ming Daily News. As with all mass media publications in Singapore, Editor positions are only given to politically connected and pliant supporters of the PAP.

Ms Lim had been sentenced to a jail term of 1 1/2 years by a lower court for negligently driving while using her hand phone, and subsequently running a red light and striking a motorcyclist and his passenger. The passenger died, while the motorcyclist suffered serious injuries.

Justice Choo decided to uphold the lower court’s conviction, but reduce the sentence. Ms. Lim’s lawyer, the brilliant Subhas Anandan of Khattar Wong Law Firm suggested a “high fine”, instead of jail time. Justice Choo apparently agreed and change the sentence to 1 day’s jail and a fine totalling $12,000 over the 2 charges.

It was only discovered later by Mr. Anandan and the prosecutor that on the second charge of which a $10,000 fine had been levied, the statute in that particular law had no provisions for a fine, it only had provisions for a jail term.

Justice Choo had no choice but to remove the $10,000 fine. However, he did not subtitute that with any added jail time, claiming that “in the circumstances, it will not be right to increase the custodial sentence to the detriment of the accused.” And he added that this was a one off case and not to be used as a sentencing precedent.

The end result is that Ms. Lim was jailed for 1 day and fined $2,000, an absurdly light sentence for taking the life of someone through negligence.

Well, my questions are quite simple:

- Why does a High Court Justice not know the law? Surely, he must have sentenced under this statute before? Does he not review all his court cases before hand to see what is allowed under the sentencing guidelines?

-Why is this a one off case? Are not the actions in a Singapore Court of Law applicable to all Singaporeans? How can this be a one off case applicable only to a privileged person like Ms. Lim? Aren’t the courts supposed to be impartial? Is this a one off because he made a mistake?

- If a fine was not applicable on the second charge, could he not increase the fine or jail time on the first charge, instead of leaving it at $2,000.

- Why did the prosecutor not point out in court at that time that a fine was inappropriate for this statute? After all, is his job not to oppose the appeal of Ms. Lim?

- Finally, why is Justice Choo referring to Ms. Lim as the “accused”? Has she not been convicted already? Did he not already uphold the conviction? Since she is convicted, she cannot be an “accused” anymore. She is the “guilty party”. How come Justice Choo cannot differentiate between “accused” and “convicted”. This is totally unacceptable.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27694.1

Student activism - what’s next?

Student activism - what’s next?

Thursday, 23 April 2009

Darren Boon

It has been three weeks since the reduction of public transportation fares in Singapore, including a reduction in concession passes for tertiary students. Indeed, this move had been welcomed by the students group National Petition for Fairer Transportation Fares for Polytechnic/Tertiary Students. Although the petition’s aim to achieve equitable pricing in concession passes with JC/ITE students may have fallen short, one should not be too quick to dismiss the group’s efforts as fruitless and worthless.

Dr Kevin Tan, Adjunct Professor in Law, National University of Singapore analyses that online petitions are usually ignored by the state and the corollary players as they lack the mass mobilisation of people. The adequate mobilisation of the student group and their taking the issue to the streets to canvass for physical signatures might have help get their cause noticed by the authorities.

Dr Tan further adds that it is also likely that the PTC and government do not want to be seen as being too hostile towards a cause which seems fair to avoid an-government sentiment and backlash.

Dr Tan believes that the current economic crisis and the government’s efforts to get citizens to tighten their purses might have contributed to the price reduction. In good times however, petitions by students “don’t count for anything” as “there will be less public sympathy for the cause”

While these individuals could have spent their time relaxing weekends or working part time, they chose instead to spend them under the scorching heat and stifling humidity to collect signatures. Their efforts offer a beacon of hope that students are not all apathetic and nonchalant and that student movements are not dead and buried.

Yet this is far cry from the what is described by Dr Huang Jianli, Associate Professor in History, National University of Singapore as the pinnacle of student political activism between 1974–1975 in a 2006 paper: Positioning the student political of Singapore: articulation, contestation and omission.

That era in student activism has been noted by Dr Huang as being characterised by the duo of Tan Wah Piow (picture, right) and Juliet Chin who were then the leaders of the University of Singapore Student Union. In February 1974, they managed to rally students from the four tertiary institutions in a widespread protest against a proposed ten-cent bus fare hike. August that same year also saw a partnership with the Singapore Polytechnic Student Union to manage a ‘Bangladesh Flood Relief Campaign’.

There was more. Dr Huang chronicles that Tan had successfully managed to shore up support amongst students to take action over the enforced relocation of the Tasek Utara squatters in Malaysia and the predicaments of the retrenched American Marine workers in Singapore.

Tan was later arrested on allegations of initiating a riot in a PAP-affiliated union office whilst demanding a better deal for the workers. Five of the student co-leaders were taken into custody and deported.

The arrests incited a tremendous response by the students. It sparked off student demonstrations on and off campus, a mass rally attended by 4000, and a two-day boycott of classes. After serving his jail term, Tan escaped to England before his military service and has remained there since.

Dr Huang informs The Online Citizen that the “full story of Tan Wah Piow is not out yet” with “many issues not fully disclosed and explored”, and whatever knowledge he has about Tan has been recounted in the paper. However, Dr Huang acknowledges the key role Tan played in student activism and in the 1987 Marxist Conspiracy.

It is no doubt that Tan has left his imprint in student activism or the lack of it in Singapore. In A History of Singapore 1819–1988, Mary Turnbull a historian denotes 1975 as the demise of student activism. Dr Tan explains that the government “effectively killed student activism” with Tan and Tan’s co-leaders of the University of Singapore Student Union. This had been achieved through what Dr Huang describes as “depoliticising the student community and confining students to their studies” by amending the university constitutions, changing the structure and funding of all student bodies and the extent of their activities.

Dr Tan tells The Online Citizen: “There is a very high price for student activism and if students knew what was good for them and what was expected of them, they should sit down, buckle down to their studies and leave politics to the politicians. This set the tone for the demise of activism for the next three decades.”

Yet on the other hand, Dr Huang notes in his study that the deep impression of Tan’s activism inspired some of the ruling party’s members such as Dr Balaji Sadasivan and Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam to serve Singapore.

The death of student activism meanwhile led to an increase in youth political apathy. An article in The Straits Times on 16 June 2001 highlighted that young voters felt that this was a result of being “perpetuated by the Government arguing that citizens should join political parties if they want to be involved in politics, and an environment that is still heavy on permit requirements for all things remotely political”.

Meanwhile student activism continued to flourish in other Western democracies and even in countries such as Indonesia and Iran. Student groups in Indonesia were key engineers in the fall of the Suharto regime. A May 2008 article in Business Week highlights the efforts of Tom Kalil to energise and empower students at the University of California, Berkeley to engage in challenging social problems of pollution, healthcare and sustainability.

Dr Huang points out that the Government is aware of the political indifference of Singapore youths, and is committed to raising political awareness amongst the youth. Yet youths are still restricted to non-political, socio-community involvement. There is no relaxation of the rules put in place post-Tan Wah Piow era. In the various discourses and exchanges between students and the authorities, there have been no critical examination of the history of student activism in Singapore.

Will student activism in Singapore remain entombed forever? “Whether student activism will ever flourish again depends on whether the state is prepared to review and liberalise their policy on political participation by the general public beyond the narrow platform of party electoral politics,” Dr Huang said. “And whether the student community is able to harness the new media to circumvent hurdles and get their issues and opinions across to the larger society.”

By firstly acknowledging our history of student activism and conducting a thorough unbiased examination and critical analysis of its causes and consequences would society be then able to correct the political apathy amongst the youths.

Having a heightened interest in community and political affairs is just as important as knowing where the latest fashion is, the newest movies, the top 20 charts, or the hottest hangouts in town.

Singapore has come a long way from violent protests and demonstrations, and it is unlikely that we would go back this route. And I believe there is no need to resort to militancy or disruptive tactics to advocate a cause. A peaceful and collective civic participation to a fair cause at the right moment is useful in getting concerns heard.

The students group is a testament to this. Yet, it’s lamentable that right now students can’t do much outside their studies and co-curricular activities, and that they can only look forward to a day whereby even a public petition wouldn’t be a taboo any longer.


http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27692.1

Student activism - what’s next?

Student activism - what’s next?

Thursday, 23 April 2009

Darren Boon

It has been three weeks since the reduction of public transportation fares in Singapore, including a reduction in concession passes for tertiary students. Indeed, this move had been welcomed by the students group National Petition for Fairer Transportation Fares for Polytechnic/Tertiary Students. Although the petition’s aim to achieve equitable pricing in concession passes with JC/ITE students may have fallen short, one should not be too quick to dismiss the group’s efforts as fruitless and worthless.

Dr Kevin Tan, Adjunct Professor in Law, National University of Singapore analyses that online petitions are usually ignored by the state and the corollary players as they lack the mass mobilisation of people. The adequate mobilisation of the student group and their taking the issue to the streets to canvass for physical signatures might have help get their cause noticed by the authorities.

Dr Tan further adds that it is also likely that the PTC and government do not want to be seen as being too hostile towards a cause which seems fair to avoid an-government sentiment and backlash.

Dr Tan believes that the current economic crisis and the government’s efforts to get citizens to tighten their purses might have contributed to the price reduction. In good times however, petitions by students “don’t count for anything” as “there will be less public sympathy for the cause”

While these individuals could have spent their time relaxing weekends or working part time, they chose instead to spend them under the scorching heat and stifling humidity to collect signatures. Their efforts offer a beacon of hope that students are not all apathetic and nonchalant and that student movements are not dead and buried.

Yet this is far cry from the what is described by Dr Huang Jianli, Associate Professor in History, National University of Singapore as the pinnacle of student political activism between 1974–1975 in a 2006 paper: Positioning the student political of Singapore: articulation, contestation and omission.

That era in student activism has been noted by Dr Huang as being characterised by the duo of Tan Wah Piow (picture, right) and Juliet Chin who were then the leaders of the University of Singapore Student Union. In February 1974, they managed to rally students from the four tertiary institutions in a widespread protest against a proposed ten-cent bus fare hike. August that same year also saw a partnership with the Singapore Polytechnic Student Union to manage a ‘Bangladesh Flood Relief Campaign’.

There was more. Dr Huang chronicles that Tan had successfully managed to shore up support amongst students to take action over the enforced relocation of the Tasek Utara squatters in Malaysia and the predicaments of the retrenched American Marine workers in Singapore.

Tan was later arrested on allegations of initiating a riot in a PAP-affiliated union office whilst demanding a better deal for the workers. Five of the student co-leaders were taken into custody and deported.

The arrests incited a tremendous response by the students. It sparked off student demonstrations on and off campus, a mass rally attended by 4000, and a two-day boycott of classes. After serving his jail term, Tan escaped to England before his military service and has remained there since.

Dr Huang informs The Online Citizen that the “full story of Tan Wah Piow is not out yet” with “many issues not fully disclosed and explored”, and whatever knowledge he has about Tan has been recounted in the paper. However, Dr Huang acknowledges the key role Tan played in student activism and in the 1987 Marxist Conspiracy.

It is no doubt that Tan has left his imprint in student activism or the lack of it in Singapore. In A History of Singapore 1819–1988, Mary Turnbull a historian denotes 1975 as the demise of student activism. Dr Tan explains that the government “effectively killed student activism” with Tan and Tan’s co-leaders of the University of Singapore Student Union. This had been achieved through what Dr Huang describes as “depoliticising the student community and confining students to their studies” by amending the university constitutions, changing the structure and funding of all student bodies and the extent of their activities.

Dr Tan tells The Online Citizen: “There is a very high price for student activism and if students knew what was good for them and what was expected of them, they should sit down, buckle down to their studies and leave politics to the politicians. This set the tone for the demise of activism for the next three decades.”

Yet on the other hand, Dr Huang notes in his study that the deep impression of Tan’s activism inspired some of the ruling party’s members such as Dr Balaji Sadasivan and Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam to serve Singapore.

The death of student activism meanwhile led to an increase in youth political apathy. An article in The Straits Times on 16 June 2001 highlighted that young voters felt that this was a result of being “perpetuated by the Government arguing that citizens should join political parties if they want to be involved in politics, and an environment that is still heavy on permit requirements for all things remotely political”.

Meanwhile student activism continued to flourish in other Western democracies and even in countries such as Indonesia and Iran. Student groups in Indonesia were key engineers in the fall of the Suharto regime. A May 2008 article in Business Week highlights the efforts of Tom Kalil to energise and empower students at the University of California, Berkeley to engage in challenging social problems of pollution, healthcare and sustainability.

Dr Huang points out that the Government is aware of the political indifference of Singapore youths, and is committed to raising political awareness amongst the youth. Yet youths are still restricted to non-political, socio-community involvement. There is no relaxation of the rules put in place post-Tan Wah Piow era. In the various discourses and exchanges between students and the authorities, there have been no critical examination of the history of student activism in Singapore.

Will student activism in Singapore remain entombed forever? “Whether student activism will ever flourish again depends on whether the state is prepared to review and liberalise their policy on political participation by the general public beyond the narrow platform of party electoral politics,” Dr Huang said. “And whether the student community is able to harness the new media to circumvent hurdles and get their issues and opinions across to the larger society.”

By firstly acknowledging our history of student activism and conducting a thorough unbiased examination and critical analysis of its causes and consequences would society be then able to correct the political apathy amongst the youths.

Having a heightened interest in community and political affairs is just as important as knowing where the latest fashion is, the newest movies, the top 20 charts, or the hottest hangouts in town.

Singapore has come a long way from violent protests and demonstrations, and it is unlikely that we would go back this route. And I believe there is no need to resort to militancy or disruptive tactics to advocate a cause. A peaceful and collective civic participation to a fair cause at the right moment is useful in getting concerns heard.

The students group is a testament to this. Yet, it’s lamentable that right now students can’t do much outside their studies and co-curricular activities, and that they can only look forward to a day whereby even a public petition wouldn’t be a taboo any longer.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27692.1

Chan Kap Luk to testify at inquiry

April 23, 2009
NTU STUDENT'S DEATH
Prof to testify at inquiry
Injured don will be one of about 16 witnesses at coroner's hearing
By Kimberly Spykerman
The family of NTU student David Hartanto Widjaja, (from left) older brother William Widjaja, mother Huang Lixian and father Hartanto Widjaja, flew in from Jakarta to attend the hearing of the case yesterday. -- ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW
THE coroner's inquiry into the death of Nanyang Technological University student David Hartanto Widjaja - who allegedly stabbed his professor - will be held over five days next month.

The dates for the hearing have been set for May 20 to 22, 25 and 26.

Early last month, the 21-year-old Indonesian student, in his final year of studies at the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, fell four storeys to his death on campus.

Only minutes before, he was seen running out of his professor's office midway through a discussion, bleeding profusely.

The professor - Associate Professor Chan Kap Luk - had knife wounds and was taken to the National University Hospital.

On Wednesday, lawyer Shashi Nathan, who represents the Widjaja family, and State Counsel Shahla Iqbal, who is assisting the court in the inquiry, spent almost an hour in the chambers of State Coroner Victor Yeo before the matter was mentioned in open court.

The court heard that around 16 witnesses will take the stand.

Mr Nathan said that although the list has yet to be finalised, it is certain that Prof Chan will be one of those in the line-up.

He added that the pathologist who conducted the autopsy is likely to be the first witness.

Mr Widjaja's parents and older brother flew in from Jakarta on Tuesday to attend the hearing. At court, they were accompanied by Indonesian embassy officials. The family have also arranged to meet the head of investigations of the Jurong Police Division later today.


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Singapore : quelling dissent, and the Meaning of 'Asian Democracy'

Singapore : quelling dissent, and the Meaning of 'Asian Democracy'

I was delivering a lecture to an acquaintance a short while ago – I call it a ‘lecture’ because when I speak of anything non-trivial to most here, I generally get silence – on the incident in singapore where some bloke doused a minister or MP with flammable liquid and set him on fire. I recall quite a few people in the neighbourhood coffeeshop sniggering amongst themselves when the news about it came on. I also heard some, ‘deserve it’, phrases. Whilst I believe that none of those who sniggered or said it would act similarly, their reaction, nevertheless, begs the question, ‘why such a reaction?’ Personally, I don’t really care much about local goings on as I see both the proposition and oppositional voices, in varying degrees, as part of the same problem. But this still sparked my curiosity. Well, off the top of my head….

I told the acquaintance that this incident really plays into the government’s hands doesn’t it.

If one was to think about it a bit, one might find that this, fortunately non-fatal, incendiary approach most conducive to the aims of any government with authoritarian tendencies.

When you keep a people perspectivally-retarded through fear and miseducation, as and when a few amongst them get irate, they will quite likely do so irrationally whilst focusing on their own personal interests. And in doing so irrationally, such as setting a mandarin afire, punching him in the nose, or kicking her/is dog, three things are achieved to further institutionalise the political impotence of the people and reinforce an 'Asian Democracy'.

Firstly, more laws favourable to government officials may be instituted, such as imposing harsher sentences on those who threaten or injure them as opposed to the common serf on the street. Psychologically, this has the impact of further reinforcing any tendencies amongst the people to view the government as above the people, ruling by the ‘mandate of heaven’, etc, whilst further and dynamically reinforcing similar self-perceptions by the government.

Secondly, the government can use such incidents to bolster their argument against the expansion of democratic rights as the people will be deemed to have yet to come of age and be able express their rights sensibly.

Thirdly, the people themselves will begin to see this as a reason why they ought not to support movements for greater democracy. This will especially be the case if their cultural history has little or no democratic flavour to it, and if so, provided they identify strongly with the culture of their biological ancestors. Additionally, if the people are given the opportunity to survive economically, albeit through gross opportunism, they will tend to shun democratic impulses for near-sighted concerns.

An important point to appreciate here is that what is most publicised is not the thoughts of local activists and writers, but the primitive actions of people who don’t know how else to express their ire given the general underdeveloped state of democratic intelligence, institutions and checks in this country. In this, 'democracy' and 'freedom' are associated with such actions in the popular professionalised imagination. And such associations find most fertile ground in the imagination of those whom are trained to embrace cultures that have little or no historical democratic flavour to it. In this, we get the phenomenon called ‘Asian-style Democracy’ – which, for the sake of definitional accuracy, ought to be termed ‘Chinese-style Democracy’, as the only other ancient Asian civilisation, India, bears little cultural resemblance to its sino counterpart.

So what happens in the 'Democratic Asian' mind?

On the political side, the mandarins religiously adopt the notion that the people are too stupid to be able to express themselves rationally and must have their freedoms curtailed, and the identity that can appreciate it, culled – which is a perspective borne of the syncretised Confucianism and Han Fei’s Legalism adopted in 221b.c. in China. In this perspective, and the actions that issue forth, a self-fulfilling prophecy is effected via the institution of an environment that actually ensures that the people remain just that and nothing besides for the interests of the elite.

On the popular side of things, the people will underdevelop perspectivally and view democracy and freedom as nothing more than the freedom to satisfy their self-interested economic, gastronomic and trivial concerns. Freedom of expression and critical thought will be seen as threatening the popular desire to focus on nothing more than satisfying their said concerns, along with forcing them to think outside of related matters, which, their increasing political stupor will lead them to reject. In such a milieu, people who question and challenge are commonly perceived as 'troublemakers'; people who forward intelligence and logical arguments, 'tongue twisters' and 'long-winded'. Such people are weeded out gradually by discrimination against such people on all fronts be it the social, workplace, etc. Believe me, this is what i've encountered personally, and have heard been encountered by similar others for quite a few decades.

Additionally, freedom and democracy will be seen as aggression and violence inducing. After all, democracy and freedom, in its most primitive form is exhibited in aggressive self-assertion. Where it is in its infant stage, but where people are economically more advanced, such a link is popularly believed to be true. And it is true that when you subtract relevant education from this primitive form of democracy, it can exhibit itself in such a politically delinquent manner. Just as, say, socialism, has been linked to totalitarianism by the global media and thus contributed to global scepticism or/and rejection of it, the relatively greater publicity given linking violence and freedom of expression and democracy can lead the people to lower or associate the idea of democracy with its most primitive form and expression. Given that their democratic imagination is grossly underdeveloped, coupled with the perception of themselves as merely economic units, they cannot imagine what one can do with democracy. That is why the government can frequently ban democratic expressions with impunity with little reason other than stating that 'it can cause law and order problems'. And as the idea of democracy is lowered, a goodness-of-fit between the thus-reduced human identity that is created, and thus reduced idea of democracy is achieved. In this, democracy is not perceived as reduced, but as matching the identity that is fulfilled within it.

We must remember that the refinement of democracy requires relevant education, exposure and practice. Without such practice, we cannot expect the practice of democracy to be refined. And without its refinement, and relevant education, the irate can quite likely cause 'law and order' problems and give the popular imagination, aided by a government-controlled media, to associate democracy with violence and reject any movement to expand democratic rights. This is especially the case where the people have learnt to link economic success with intelligence. Hence, they will reject all insinuations that they need more rights than they have been accustomed to as 'trouble-making'. So the governmental method in maintaining such an intellectual status quo is quite simple. Simply ensure that people have the opportunity to work, maintain a high cost of living, ensure that they are bereft of the relevant education, exposure and practice for and of democracy, and then associate aggression with democracy as and when the opportunity presents itself. The only way to stop a horse from drinking is not keeping it away from the stream, but to get rid of its thirst.

That is the so-called ‘Asian-style democracy’.

In a way, we cannot see the phase as paradoxical or oxymoronic. Freedom is, after all, how you are developed to appreciate it - though it must be stated that 'Asian'-style 'democracy' does not give full expression for, or accomodate the maximal development of all human potentials. If you perceive yourself as a self-sustaining economic unit and nothing more, democracy simply becomes a means via which you can express that identity. And this is how ‘western democracy’ takes its irrelevant meaning in the ‘Asian’ mind. That is why Kishore Mahbubani in HardTalk could denounce western calls for global democracy as 'imposition'. That is why, most of the chinese I’ve spoken to over the years and whom I’ve directed to look at western-style democracy and how we too might be able to enjoy a similar political experience here, have discounted it with, ‘the west is the west, we are we’.

The Development and Reinforcement of an Asian-style Democracy.

The methods are many. But the following is one amongst.

First, (1)create or maintain a situation that will in turn give rise to a minority of (2)problems, i.e. irrational expressions of ire. Then, utilise this minority of problems (3)to justify and maintain the prior situation. After that, the (4)people themselves, underdeveloped by (1) and (3), and with the aid of their psychologically and culturally endowed ‘coping mechanism’, will step in and maintain it. How else do you think that singapore turned out the way it has today from, say, the 70s till now? I’m not saying that governments necessarily do this on purpose, but the consequences are nevertheless the case most of the time. The Americans did it too with 11/9, but given the greater democratic consciousness of the people, nothing less than 11/9 was sufficient to deliver a similar result. (even if the government might not have directly inflict 11/9, there is sufficient evidence to render plausible the allegations that the government knew about it beforehand.)

After number 4, over time, all oppositional tendencies can cease – as it generally already has in singapore. This would especially be the case amongst a people who don’t see themselves as cosmopolitans but are trained to identify with a culture that has little or no historical democratic flavour to it. Cultural practice is, after all, a replication of the perspectives it took to create it, and a foundation upon which the political institutions that created these perspectives may be erected. When oppositional tendencies become most pronounced in, say, an incendiary manner, that is not necessarily an indicator of the birth of a democracy, but can just as well signal its end.

You can be sure that even more people will link the event between ‘the minister and the match’ as a further justification for the continuation of an ‘Asian democracy’, and, in the worst case, view oppositional voices, however relatively intelligent, as being inciters of such behaviour. Since the only well-publicised manifestation of political awareness in recent times is the said incident, professionalised and thus irrelevantly educated people will tend to equate democracy or political awareness with instability and chaos. And if few are seen to be engaging politically with their heads (perhaps due to perspectival debility or censorship), the vocal will be perceived as inciters of violence. The equation is simple. Political Awareness = Lit matches. Those inciting political awareness = inciters of violence. This will especially be the case in a country with little or no political education in schools, or a perspectival infrastructure that promotes it.

Remember George Bush, the President a sizeable portion of Americans voted into the white house? Well, a similar parallel can be seen with his illogical, ‘you’re either with us for against us’. Same thing applies here. People will just begin to think that those whom are against the government are simply inciting others to light a match. The same thing happened with ‘sensitive racial issues’. The riots of the 60s were used to quell all speech and thought with regards to the issue. And all those actually attempting to undermine the basis for racial hatred by speaking about discrimination are now seen as inciters of racial hatred. All logic has been turned topsy-turvy. Local ‘activists’ and ‘oppositional’ voices ought to start appreciating other nation’s interests more. As I’ve always said, the solutions to your problems lie in the appreciation of another’s backyard.

The trade-off between the political and popular will be perceived as acceptable within an 'Asian'-style 'Democracy'. The former gets is fill of power and profit, and the popular get the security of cultural refuge. There is nothing new in this. The British have their 'Queen', the Americans have their 'celebrities', and most of the global population have their ambitions for wealth and fame, which, i suppose, would qualify much of the global political status quo, in part, as 'Asian Democracies'. But that is not to say that the most pronounced of 'Asian' 'Democracies' also fail to give the most room for the maximal development of human potentials. At the end of the day, an 'Asian Democracy' is nothing more than a socio-economic status quo that seeks to replicate the privilege of the elite of the past and have it viewed as natural by a subservient mass. It seeks to reduce the human persona to an economic unit and have it appreciate its existence and expressions as being completely fulfilled within the realms of the trivial.


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Survey shows Asian-American image hit by China fears

Survey shows Asian-American image hit by China fears
Posted: 23 April 2009 0013 hrs

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Immigrants saying the Pledge of Allegiance after being sworn in as US citizens during naturalization ceremonies.


WASHINGTON : Fears over China are hitting the US image of Asian-Americans, as their loyalties come under suspicion despite steady improvements in perceptions of the community, a survey said.

The Committee of 100, a Chinese-American group, conducted a nationwide survey to look at changes since its major study in 2001 on attitudes toward Asian-Americans.

The latest survey found that more than two-thirds of the public believed immigration from Asia was good for the nation and that far more people than in 2001 were willing to accept an Asian-American marrying into the family or as an official representing them in government.

After electing Barack Obama as their first African-American leader, just nine percent of Americans were uncomfortable with the idea of an Asian-American president, well down from 23 percent in 2001, the survey said.

But 45 percent of the general public believed Asian-Americans were more loyal to their nations of origin than the United States -- up from 37 percent at the beginning of the decade.

Frank Wu, a scholar who helped lead the study, said that those Americans with the most anxiety about China's rapidly growing economy were also the most concerned about Asian-Americans.

"There is increasing acceptance of Asian-Americans as people who are equals with the right to take part in democracy and are no different from white or black Americans," Wu told AFP Tuesday.

"But coupled to that, there is also a great sense among a significant part of the population that they are not quite 'real' Americans," he said.

The survey, administered by Harris Interactive, interviewed 1,427 adults around the United States in January.

Wu said that unlike some other groups, particularly African-Americans, stereotypes about Asian-Americans were largely positive -- the image of a "model minority" who are hard-working.

"We're lavished with praise on the one hand but if you scratch just a bit beneath the surface, then Asians are seen as not just hard-working but as unfair competition -- that they are sort of taking over," Wu said.

Around five percent of the US population claims ancestry from Asia. Much of the community traces longstanding roots; Chinese first immigrated to the continent in significant numbers during the California Gold Rush in the 1840s.

The survey found that fears of China rubbed off on all Asian-Americans regardless of their nation of ancestry with much of the US public not making a distinction.

"Go back 25 years to the peak of Japan-bashing when everyone was saying that Japan was going to become number one," Wu said. "Asian-Americans have found throughout history that they cannot insulate themselves from whichever is Asia's up-and-coming power."

In one of the most horrific attacks against Asian-Americans, Detroit auto workers who blamed Japanese companies for economic hard times beat to death a Chinese-American, Vincent Chin, in 1982.

The latest poll found that some two-thirds of Americans feared China could pose a threat within 10 years -- roughly the same figure as in 2001. But the percentage of Americans worried about Japan tumbled from 39 percent in 2001 to 26 percent now.

Some 73 percent fretted over North Korea in the latest survey and 31 percent believed India could pose a threat.

The survey also studied Chinese-Americans' attitudes. In one interesting finding, the poll found that Chinese-Americans were much more likely than the population at large to accept gay marriage.

Like the general US public, a majority of Chinese-Americans said they would not be bothered if a family member married someone of another race.

- AFP /ls

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