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Parliament live streaming: Now go for live radio broadcast

Live streaming of Parliament proceedings has just made a comeback. And almost immediately, Singaporeans learnt how members of the legislature go about their duty of debating issues affecting people’s lives. And there could not have been a better issue than TraceTogether, the contact-tracing digital system being rolled out to cope with the spread of Covid-19. We discovered that data captured by the system could be used to help in criminal investigations, despite an assurance at no less than Cabinet level that it was to be used only for Covid-19 contact tracing. Suddenly, privacy of personal data was at stake and anti-Covid 19 efforts could be undermined by an erosion of trust in the government because of the earlier non-disclosure.

Right in front of us – live – we saw how the truth was prised out after some probing questions. It could well be that there was intention to come clean earlier at the recent sitting – in case this is uncovered later and thus causes far greater damage to the government’s credibility in the long run.

Whether PAP MP Christopher de Souza asked his question in all sincerity as a concerned MP or he was simply trying to take the fire out of any Opposition MP with a similar probing question, it may not be fair to speculate. He did everyone a favour anyway. So good for him. Members of the public would make up their own mind. Indeed, there was not a small number of points and lessons to be derived out of the live coverage of Parliament.

Live streaming has made a welcome return. Let it be a permanent part of our political landscape, notwithstanding past feedback about poor viewership. It should be institutionalised, the way that public funding is behind MediaCorp’s existence. If MediaCorp helps to disseminate official information, then live streaming’s role is even more vital: it is the immediate bridge between the community and their representatives in Parliament. You get to monitor how your MP performs. Every MP is essentially a leader and you will witness how your leader performs vis-à-vis others. Can he or she effectively communicate your concerns in Parliament? Is he or she just a Yes person? Does he or she vote on crucial Parliamentary motions according to principle or conscience or simply as an unthinking cog of a party machine?

Yes, we can track all this now with live streaming because the Internet enables us to do this.

Live streaming is timely.

It is part of a new media landscape dominated by live webinars, YouTube, Zoom and Skype and TikTok. Politicians have to keep up with the trend of immediacy which demands their being on their toes in public dialogue engagement.

It may be cruel for those who are not natural public speakers. But public speaking is integral. The Oxford dictionary defines politics as “the activities associated with the governance of a country or area, especially the debate between parties having power”. If you are not a natural public speaker, you have to learn to be. Live streaming will quicken the learning pace. And if after the experience, you feel you are not up to it, then it is better for you to contribute to society in other ways. No shame. Not everyone can think well on his or her feet or is an excellent communicator. Ultimately, always remember, a political leader represents a certain community and must be someone who has what it takes to at least not make a fool of himself or herself in public – or be the butt of public jokes. That does not mean you have to be a fiery orator or play to the gallery, it just means you have to think clearly and express yourself fast and succinctly. As the dominance of the ruling People’s Action Party wanes, how everyone – PAP or Opposition MP – performs in Parliament will help Singaporeans decide who are worthy of moving the country forward.

It will put real-time pressure on MPs to take their Parliamentary duties more seriously. They will have to do proper research before filing their questions, learn quickly how to navigate House protocols and be on their toes always. The camera can be cruel but it can also be forgiving. Arrogance, poor choice of words or an elitist attitude will be captured for eternity on YouTube.

I totally welcome the return of the live streaming of Parliament. It got off to a good start with the TraceTogether exposure.

Unlike the early years when there were only a handful of Opposition MPs to take on the likes of Lee Kuan Yew, the situation today is different. The seeds of today’s larger Opposition presence were planted by JB Jeyaretnam, Chiam See Tong and Low Thia Khiang to whom we owe a big debt. To a large extent too, Dr Tan Cheng Bock played his part when he stood for the Presidential Election in 2011. He showed everyone that there were large numbers of Singaporeans who wanted a handbrake on government power at the highest level.

Today’s new breed of Opposition MPs – and in greater and growing numbers – will carry the torch of alternative voices in Parliament right in full view of Singaporeans.

After live streaming, what about live radio broadcast? Why not? They already have that in, for example, Australia.

 

Tan Bah Bah, consulting editor of TheIndependent.Sg, is a former senior leader with The Straits Times. He was also managing editor of a local magazine publishing company.

 

SHOCKING: Charmaine Sheh was reportedly paid only SGD3.4K to attend a ribbon-cutting event

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Charmaine Sheh whose career rose to fame after her role in Story of Yanxi Palace received just HKD20,000 (SGD3,400) to attend a ribbon-cutting ceremony, proving how dire things are for the Hong Kong entertainment industry right now.

According to a report by 8days.sg on January 16, the COVID-19 pandemic has had such a devastating impact on Hong Kong’s entertainment industry that TVB could not offer any year-end bonuses or pay increments to its employees including its artistes. Some artists had to depend on financial aid to make ends meet. What is worse is that the situation may be worse than we thought. A veteran entertainment reporter revealed recently that there are currently over 600 Hong Kong artistes that are unemployed right now.

A-listers like Sheh have also reportedly suffered a pay cut. According to the reporter, In comparison, Chinese artistes can earn up to 1 million yuan (SGD205,000), which sounds closer to Sheh’s usual rate. The 45-year-old lives in a posh apartment where the rent goes up to HKD320,000 (SGD 54,700) a month.

Charmaine Sheh is one of the TVB artistes who is affected by the low pay. Picture: Instagram

Upon this revelation, some resourceful netizens then compiled a list of how much TVB artistes are allegedly paid per episode. The information may be outdated and also unverified. Many of those mentioned have left TVB but it gives a rough estimate of their remunerations.

Among those mentioned on the list are Sheren Tang, who earned HKD80,000 (SGD13,700) per episode; Roger Kwok and Kevin Cheng, who each pulled HKD70,000 (SGD12,000) per episode; and Charmaine with HKD65,000 (SGD11,100).

These are the information for A-listers. For those who are not as famous, they are said to be paid less than HKD500 (SGD86).

Last year, actor Auston Lam announced his departure from TVB and he revealed that he could only be guaranteed an annual income of HKD12,000 (SGD2,100). Actress Christy Chan said she was basically “cheap labour” and that she was once paid just HKD28 (SGD5) per hour to film a show in Vietnam.

It is no surprise then that Liza Wang felt compelled to deliver a rousing speech of hers at the Anniversary Awards where she called on TVB to consider increasing the salaries of its artistes, at least after the pandemic has died down. /TISG

Chee Soon Juan: TraceTogether saga another sad and frightening chapter

Singapore — Opposition Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) leader Chee Soon Juan published a Facebook post on Friday (Jan 15) about the TraceTogether saga that has caught the attention of many people and that has hogged the headlines since Monday (Jan 4).

The TraceTogether saga is another sad – and frightening – chapter of our political history.

Posted by Chee Soon Juan 徐顺全 on Thursday, 14 January 2021

On that day, Minister of State for Home Affairs Desmond Tan had told Parliament that the police had the power under the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) to obtain TraceTogether data for criminal investigations.

This surprised and shocked many people and led to Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister-in-charge of the Smart Nation Initiative, Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, to state the next day, also in Parliament, that he had not considered the CPC when he had spoken in the past about TraceTogether’s privacy safeguards.

In a lengthy post, Dr Chee has called the saga another sad — and frightening — chapter of the country’s political history.

He explains why the issue matters — to the Singaporean and to the Singaporean’s family.

Dr Chee says “the use of TT other than exclusively for Covid-19 matters, the constriction of online space, the throttling of even the most benign of political dissent, the employment of defamation laws, the castigation of academics, just to cite a few examples, cast a long and pernicious shadow on the Singaporeans’ psyche”.

He adds that “when people know they are being watched and sanctioned, self-censorship becomes the norm. It becomes baked into society’s culture”.

Dr Chee says that “when our society was young, we were talked to like children. But as society grows up, we must discard our childish ways of thinking and behave in a manner befitting an intelligent and mature people”.

He adds that “the sooner we realise that this autocratic system robs us of our future, the sooner we can start building a quality life for our nation, our loved ones and ourselves”.

“If society is going to imagine a vibrant future, if our younger generations are going to be among the leaders of the world, and if our citizens aspire to live fulfilled lives, then we need to embark on the urgent road of reform.”

Dr Chee says that a good and necessary start is by pushing back against the TT U-turns, the Pofmas, the criminalisation of political action — that is, standing up to the autocrats. And that more, much more, needs to be done.

The online community has responded to his remarks with many comments of support on his post.

Denise Teh is an editorial intern at The Independent SG. /TISG

Kim Lim receives Covid-19 vaccination as part of healthcare sector

Singapore — Socialite Kim Lim has just received the Covid-19 vaccination as part of the healthcare sector.

The 29-year-old billionaire heiress and founder of an aesthetic brand received her vaccine together with some of her staff.

Kim documented her experience on Instagram on Thursday (Jan 14). At first, she was reluctant, but then she decided to “go for it” after much research and deliberation.

“Wanted to do it for my team too so they know it’s ok to take the vaccine. 💪🏻,” she said, according to Mothership.sg on Friday (Jan 15).

Kim said the process was smooth and well-organised. She shared more about the day via her Instagram Stories as well.

Kim explained that General Practitioner (GP) Clinics are also part of her portfolio, thus making her and her staff eligible for the vaccine. She encouraged everyone to take the vaccine when it is more widely available.

Vaccinations became available on Dec 30 last year. A 46-year-old senior staff nurse was the first to receive the vaccine in Singapore that day.

The Ministry of Health said that public healthcare institutions will progressively arrange for their staff to be vaccinated on-premises.

Kim Lim is a Singaporean billionaire heiress. Picture: Instagram

Born in 1992, Kim is the daughter of Singaporean billionaire Peter Lim. Despite her social media presence on Instagram where she has more than 267,000 followers, Kim keeps a relatively low-profile family life. She has a child and even kept the pregnancy out of the public eye.

However, her connections with high-profile celebrities like Christiano Ronaldo, David Beckham and Big Bang’s Seungri has brought her into the limelight frequently. Described as a down-to-earth person, Kim spends a substantial amount of her time doing charity work.

Despite being one of the two children of Peter Lim, Kim maintains she had an ordinary childhood and that she only knew of his wealth in her adolescence.

Kim’s parents divorced when she was four years old. Recounting the seven-year-long divorce to an interviewer in 2019, she described it as:

“… the darkest period of [her life]”.

The messy divorce ended in 2002, but Kim still remembers shuttling between her parents’ homes every two to three days. Her father married Cherie Lim in 2003. /TISG

MAS appoints new deputy managing director

Singapore — The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) announced on Thursday (Jan 14) that it has appointed Leong Sing Chiong as Deputy Managing Director (Markets & Development).

51-year-old Mr Leong has been with the central bank for close to three decades. He began his career with the Reserves Management Department of MAS in 1993. He went on to hold various appointments in MAS covering Markets and Investment, International, and Financial Centre Development.

He also served for two years as Chief Representative of MAS’ London Representative office from 2002 to 2004.

Prior to his new appointment, Mr Leong served as Assistant Managing Director (Markets and Investment) from 2018, as well as Assistant Managing Director (Development and International) from 2013 to 2018.

Mr Leong is set to take on his new role on 1 February 2021. He will oversee the Markets and Investment Group which conducts money market and foreign exchange operations, issues Singapore Government Securities, and manages Singapore’s official foreign reserves.

He will also oversee MAS’ Development and International Group which promotes Singapore as an international financial centre creating good jobs and supports vibrant financial markets. Mr Leong will oversee the FinTech and Innovation Group, as well.

Mr Leong takes over the position from Ms Jacqueline Loh, Deputy Managing Director (Markets & Development and Corporate Development). Ms Loh will remain as Deputy Managing Director (Corporate Development) while Mr Leong will continue in his current role as Assistant Managing Director (Markets & Investment) until a successor is appointed. /TISG

Alamak! IKEA misprints reusable bags, sells them as limited edition

Singapore — A typo in IKEA Singapore’s KLAMBY reusable shopping bag resulted in a discount on its price. The store has admitted to the mistake with an “alamak” and has since tagged the shopping bag as a “limited edition” item that “won’t be back”.

On Friday (Jan 15), Facebook user Alicia Cho took to social media to highlight a discovery at the IKEA Tampines outlet. “Ikea has S$1.90 reusable bag coz (sic) of their printing error…I wonder who approved the design before printing…how can make such a mistake,” read the caption.

This was the photo uploaded.

Photo: FB screengrab/Alicia Cho

Upon closer look, it appears that the IKEA website was missing the letter “m” in “.com.sg.”

IKEA is aware of the typo and admitted it in the product description hanging above the KLAMBY aisle. They entitled it “Limited, Unique, Alamak…”

“At IKEA, it’s OK to make a mistake. We printed the wrong website address on the KLAMBY reusable bag but because it’s reusable, we won’t scrap them. They’re limited edition and they won’t be back!” said the popular Swedish furniture and home accessories store.

Photo: FB screengrab/Alicia Cho

A quick look online at www.ikea.com.sg shows that the bags with the typo were also used and are being sold at the same price. They were used during the marketing photoshoot for the product. However, there was no indication in the web posting that there was a misprint on the bag.

Photo: Taken from IKEA website

/TISG

Kim So Hyun is the youngest actress to surpass 10 million followers on Instagram

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South Korea — Korean actress Kim So Hyun surpassed 10 million followers on Instagram as of January 15, making her the youngest actress to do so according to a report by Allkpop.

Kim So Hyun has not been sharing photos of her daily life but instead has been regularly sharing photos promoting her activities.

The 21-year-old actress was able to secure this many followers as fans not only in Korea but all over the world, were able to view her work.

Kim So Hyun also uploads various greetings in addition to promoting her activities, starting from the new year greetings to messages cheering on the students taking the CSAT and messages thanking her fans.

Kim So Hyun in River Where the Moon Rises. Picture: Instagram

In an interview published in the August issue of TS Magazine back in 2017, she stated, “I want to follow all my fans who follow me. So there was a time I spent the whole night following back my followers and then my account was restricted momentarily. I think the issue was that I tried to follow so many people in a short period of time.”

Kim So Hyun joined IU, Suzy, Lee Sung Kyung, YoonA, Park Shin Hye, and Song Hye Kyo becoming the youngest among the actresses with over 10 million followers on Instagram.

Born on June 4, 1999, Kim So Hyun is a South Korean actress who began her career as a child actress in 2006 and initially gained public attention for playing a villainous young queen-to-be in Moon Embracing the Sun (2012) and a murderer’s teenage daughter who falls into tragedy in Missing You (2013).

She took on her first leading role in teen drama Who Are You: School 2015 (2015) and since then, has starred in musical Page Turner (2016), historical melodrama The Emperor: Owner of the Mask (2017), romantic comedy Radio Romance (2018), television dramas based on Naver Webtoon’s Hey Ghost, Let’s Fight (2016), Love Alarm (2019–2021) and The Tale of Nokdu (2019) and Korean folklore River Where The Moon Rises (2021). She was the regular host of MBC’s music program Music Core and survival reality show Under Nineteen in 2019.

‘Friend’ China to donate one million vaccine doses to Cambodia: PM

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China will donate one million doses of its Sinovac coronavirus vaccine to Cambodia, the kingdom’s strongman premier Hun Sen has said, thanking “friend” Beijing for its generosity.

Cambodia has long been a staunch ally of Beijing, receiving billions of dollars in soft loans and investment from China.

While many countries reacted early in the pandemic by closing its borders to Chinese travellers, Hun Sen refused, and even travelled to Beijing to meet with leader Xi Jinping in a show of solidarity.

The premier announced late Friday that China has offered to donate shots made by the firm Sinovac.

“Friend China is helping us with one million doses,” Hun Sun said in an audio message on his official Facebook page, adding that the doses will vaccinate 500,000 people.

“To prevent the nation and people from being infected with this deadly virus, we have to use vaccines that were already used on Chinese leaders and millions of people… We cannot wait any longer.”

The first people to get the jab would include frontline health workers, teachers, soldiers, the premier’s bodyguards, and officials around the king, he said.

Sinovac’s CoronaVac was rolled out in Turkey on Friday, after tests there showed it to be 91.25 percent effective.

But more robust trials in Brazil demonstrated an efficacy rate of around 50 percent — much lower than those of rival shots from Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca.

A third trial in Indonesia — where authorities this week kicked off a mass vaccination drive with CoronaVac shots — showed an efficacy of 65.3 percent.

Cambodia has appeared to do well in the pandemic so far, registering just 436 cases, though experts say the low numbers are likely due to a lack of testing.

Beijing has also offered to help another nation in the region, with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi promising this week to provide 300,000 doses to Myanmar.

© Agence France-Presse

281 million people were living outside their country of origin in 2020

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The coronavirus pandemic has slowed global migration by nearly 30 percent, with around two million fewer people than predicted migrating between 2019 and 2020, according to a UN report released on Friday.

Some 281 million people were living outside their country of origin in 2020.

The report, entitled “International Migration 2020,” showed that two-thirds of registered migrants lived in just 20 countries, with the United States at the top of the list, with 51 million international migrants in 2020.

Next came Germany with 16 million, Saudi Arabia with 13 million, Russia with 12 million and Britain with nine million.

India topped the list of countries with the largest diasporas in 2020, with 18 million Indians living outside their country of birth.

Other countries with a large transnational community include Mexico and Russia, each with 11 million, China with 10 million and Syria with eight million.

In 2020, the largest number of international migrants resided in Europe, with a total of 87 million.

Nearly half of international migrants resided in the region they came from, with Europe accounting for the largest share of intra-regional migration. Seventy percent of migrants born in Europe live in another European country.

Refugees account for some 12 per cent of all international migrants, the report said, with around 80 percent hosted in low- and middle-income countries.

© Agence France-Presse

India starts huge vaccine drive as global virus deaths top 2 million

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by AFP Bureaus

India kicked off one of the world’s largest coronavirus vaccination drives Saturday as the pandemic spread at a record pace and global Covid-19 deaths surged past two million.

The World Health Organization has called for accelerating vaccine rollouts worldwide as well as ramping up efforts to study the sequencing of the virus, which has infected more than 93 million people globally since it was first detected in China in late 2019.

India, home to 1.3 billion people, has the world’s second-largest caseload.

The government has given approvals to two vaccines — though one is yet to complete clinical trials — aiming to inoculate around 300 million people by July.

One of the first to receive a jab in the eastern city of Kolkata was 35-year-old health worker Santa Roy, who told AFP he now saw a “ray of hope” after witnessing people die of the coronavirus.

Authorities say they are drawing on their experience with elections and child immunisation programmes for the drive, which is a daunting task in an enormous, impoverished nation with often shoddy transport infrastructure and one of the world’s worst-funded healthcare systems.

Regular child inoculations are a “much smaller game” and vaccinating against Covid-19 will be “deeply challenging”, said Satyajit Rath from India’s National Institute of Immunology.

The government has readied tens of thousands of refrigeration tools and about 150,000 specially trained staff to try and overcome some of those challenges.

The vaccines will also have high security, so that doses do not end up being sold on India’s large black market for medicines.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Friday said he wanted “to see vaccination under way in every country in the next 100 days so that health workers and those at high risk are protected first”.

His call came as infections snowballed, with 724,000 new cases recorded on average per day globally over the past week, according to AFP’s tally — a record 10 percent increase on a week earlier.

‘Unacceptable’ vaccine delays
The worrying spikes in deaths and infections come as concerns and criticism grow over vaccine logistics and supply issues in many parts of the world.

US pharmaceutical giant Pfizer said shipments of its vaccines would slow for a period in late January.

In hard-hit Europe, there are concerns that the Pfizer delays could further slow a vaccine rollout that has already faced heavy criticism.

Pfizer, which jointly developed its vaccine with German company BioNTech, said EU countries could expect delayed deliveries in the coming weeks due to work being done at its plant in Belgium.

It promised that there would be “a significant increase” in shipments in March, and the European Commission said all vaccines ordered by the bloc for the first quarter would be delivered on time.

But ministers from Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Sweden said in a joint letter that the situation was “unacceptable” and “decreases the credibility of the vaccination process”.

As cases mount, nations have doubled down on restrictions.

Portugal entered a fresh lockdown Friday, and new curbs on populations were announced from Italy to Brazil.

Beijing extended its isolation period for overseas arrivals, requiring travellers to spend an extra week at home after the 21 days in hotel quarantine already in place, state media reported on Saturday.

Fears are also growing that a new strain of the virus found in Brazil could be more contagious, just like the variants recently found in Britain and South Africa.

Chinese pharmaceutical giant Sinopharm has claimed that ongoing tests showed its vaccine to be effective against the variant first detected in Britain, according to state media.

Out of control
In the United States — the hardest-hit nation in the world — President-elect Joe Biden vowed Friday to harness the full strength of the government in a vaccine blitz: creating thousands of immunisation sites, deploying mobile clinics and expanding the public health workforce.

Known US infections have surpassed 23 million with more than 390,000 deaths, and the American economy — the world’s largest — has been battered.

The virus has slammed California in recent weeks, and there have been so many deaths in some parts of the state that funeral homes are running out of capacity.

Boyd Funeral Home in Los Angeles has begun turning away customers for the first time in its history.

At its reception desk, the phones keep ringing, mostly going unanswered as overwhelmed staff have abandoned setting appointments and now tell customers to just show up and get in line.

“It’s sad. But that’s pretty much how it is now,” said owner Candy Boyd.

“Things are getting more and more out of control.”

© Agence France-Presse