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Tan Chuan-Jin and Edwin Tong race on treadmills to raise funds for charity

Speaker of Parliament Tan Chuan-Jin and Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Edwin Tong ran a half-marathon relay for the Standard Chartered Singapore Marathon’s (SCSM) Race As One live show, on Saturday (5 Dec).

The annual SCSM, which attracts 50,000 runners each year, was conducted as a virtual race using augmented reality (AR) technology this year given COVID-19 restrictions.

Leading teams of five that faced off against one another, Mr Tan and Mr Tong raced on treadmills this year to raise funds for the Community Chest. Mr Tan documented the race on social media and said that he and Mr Tong “survived” doing their bit for charity.

Photo: Tan Chuan-Jin FB

About 11,400 runners took part in the hybrid race, alongside the ruling party politicians. The participants were allowed to complete the relay at a location of their choosing and had to record each kilometre they completed.

For every one kilometre recorded by participants, Standard Chartered pledged to donate S$15 to help youth causes in Singapore. The target for the charity event was S$1 million, with funds being channelled through the Community Chest towards multi-year programmes held in partnership with the National Council of Social Service network members.

On how sports event have transformed amid the coronavirus crisis, Mr Tong told the Straits Times: “Covid-19 has changed the way sports events are organised.

“Through technology, we can…(give) participants a more engaging and interactive experience within safety guidelines. For example, digital technologies can provide real-time feedback to participants, complementing social and entertainment elements of a sporting activity.”

While Mr Tong hopes such sports projects can gain greater traction in Singapore and abroad, he added that the authorities are working on bringing back more sporting events for citizens. He said:

“As many Singaporeans are eager to participate and enjoy sports events, we are working towards resuming more large-scale events in a safe manner.”

“WP is PAP-lite” claim is among the myths party member seeks to dispel in new book

The claim that the Workers’ Party (WP) is a lite version of the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) is one of the perceptions party member Yee Jenn Jong aims to break in his new book, ‘Journey in Blue’.

The term ‘PAP-lite’ was first used by Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishnan to describe the WP’s manifesto during the 2020 general election campaign period. During a televised debate, Dr Balakrishnan said that the positions in the WP manifesto were so similar to the ruling party’s positions that the PAP could have written it.

Dr Balakrishnan has said of the WP’s position: “…It’s almost a position where whatever line or stand the PAP has taken, you basically use that as your reference point and take a half step to the left.”

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong grabbed onto the term and urged Sengkang voters to vote for the “real thing” during an election webinar, just a few days later. He said: “As Vivian said in the TV debate a few days ago, this is PAP-lite. But I tell you – why do you want to settle for PAP-lite? The real thing is much better.”

Asserting that the WP’s plans were just like the PAP’s, just with more money added, the PM quipped: “They take the PAP’s plan, they say very good, here are a few holes, please patch the holes, here are a few places where you can add more money, make it cheaper, do more, work harder. I also can!”

WP chief Pritam Singh criticised the “PAP-lite” claim as an electoral ploy and said, then: “If that was the case, I hope the PAP takes up all our manifesto points and introduces them into their agenda, because that will really change the shape of Singapore, and we will have a more caring and compassionate society.”

He added: “The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Did any PAP MP file any question on the Keppel Marine scandal? I think voters should think about that. Did any of them step up to consider the other alternatives to Bills like Pofma (Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act)? I think these are the questions Singaporeans need to ask.”

Although PM Lee lent weight to the PAP’s Sengkang GRC team – which included cabinet minister and labour chief Ng Chee Meng, Senior Minister of State Lam Pin Min and grassroots MP Amrin Amin – the PAP ultimately lost the ward to the WP’s team, which was comprised mostly of fresh faces.

Despite the WP’s win and stronger performance at it’s Aljunied-Hougang stronghold, the “PAP-lite” tag has stuck in some quarters. WP member Yee Jenn Jong now seeks to dispel this misconception in his upcoming biography, which is scheduled for release this month.

Giving his followers on social media a glimpse into what his book will cover, Mr Yee unveiled a list of 10 myths he will address in his book. Aside from the claim that the WP is “PAP-lite”, the opposition politician will also respond to the claims that:

  1. The opposition is here to disrupt the work of the government. They are disloyal to Singapore;
  2. Opposition members appear once every five years during general elections;
  3. Opposition candidates contest to earn the relative well-paying MP salary. It does not cost them to contest;
  4. The WP also has its own whip and party discipline for its parliamentarians that is no different from the PAP, which does not allow MPs to vote against its own bills and motions unless the whip is lifted;
  5. NCMPs now have full Parliament and voting rights as elected MPs. That makes them the same;
  6. Singapore will collapse when the PAP loses power or when the PAP loses a large number of seats;
  7. The WP only criticises and never make any proposals;
  8. The WP is too silent in criticising the government;
  9. My career will be affected when I join the opposition.

Mr Yee’s biography will also cover his life before he joined the WP, his reasons for joining the opposition, his three contests in the general elections from 2011–2020 as well as his parliamentary work and other political activities. It includes his thoughts on the shape of Singapore’s politics moving forward, as well.

WP member Yee Jenn Jong to release memoir chronicling his journey in the opposition

Ex-PAP MPs Inderjit Singh and Teo Ser Luck endorse WP politician’s memoir

Experts say Phase 3 not likely by year-end unless more people use TraceTogether

Singapore—While it was announced in October that the country could move to Phase 3 of Singapore’s reopening by the end of the year, experts quoted in the straitstimes.com (ST) are saying that this is unlikely unless more people use the TraceTogether app or token, which is effective for contact tracing.

“At present, it appears we will not be moving to phase three by the end of the year as it appears that token distribution has not achieved a complete coverage of the entire population,” ST quotes the dean of the National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, Professor Teo Yik Ying, as saying.

The number of Covid-19 infections in Singapore have been steadily decreasing, and there were no local cases for two weeks in November, which has made people hopeful that more restrictions could be eased.

Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said in Parliament in November that the objective for Phase 3 “is to reach a steady state of permitted economic and social activities until an effective vaccine or treatment is widely available.”

However, the multi-ministry task force assigned to tackle matters related to the pandemic listed three conditions that needed to be met in order for the country to enter phase 3, which are, adequate testing capabilities, safe management compliance and a take-up rate of the Trace Together app or token of 70 per cent.

Approximately 2.9 million people have claimed the token or downloaded the app, according to the Smart Nation and Digital Government Office. This puts the number of adapters at 50.8 per cent, which falls far short of the 70 per cent target.

The ST report quotes the vice-dean of research at the NUS Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, Associate Professor Alex Cook, as saying, “One of the targets set has been for sufficient numbers of people to have TraceTogether as more effective contact tracing will counter the relaxation in rules. I think we’re not yet at that target, and that may hold us back from advancing a phase.”

By the end of this month, checking in with the TraceTogether app or token will be mandatory at all public venues, starting at movie houses.

The task force said that people will no longer be able to enter these venues via the SafeEntry QR codes with their phone cameras, or through the SingPass mobile app or barcodes on their NRIC when usage of the TraceTogether app or token is compulsory.

TraceTogether tokens are given out one constituency at a time and in at 37 community centres and clubs. —/TISG

Read also: Workers’ Party MP helps residents install and setup TraceTogether app

Workers’ Party MP helps residents install and setup TraceTogether app

After a 102-year-old beating COVID-19 twice, now it’s a 104-year-old veteran who done it!

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Major Wooten, also known as ‘Pop Pop’ celebrated an unusual birthday. He survived a bout of COVID-19 infection at 104!

To congratulate him, a parade of cars drove by his granddaughter’s home and honked in celebration of his birthday.

Pop is from Alabama and spent World War II repairing bomb-damaged trains in France. On Thursday, he recovered from a fight with COVID-19 in time to mark his 104th birthday.

Fellow veterans, law enforcement, friends and family all showed ‘Pop Pop’ love, honouring him with the cortege of cars.

Doctors say Major Wooten was physically drained and a little fuzzy mentally after battling the coronavirus.

But he is now fully recovered.

Granddaughter Holley Wooten McDonald says, “I’m just thankful that they were able to treat him so quickly and we were able to get him tested,” said McDonald, adding: “It’s amazing that a 104-year-old survived COVID.”

“I don’t know if that medicine just started working … but within 24 hours he was better,” she said. Wooten’s blood-oxygen levels are good now and his lungs are “clear as a bell,” McDonald says.

Wooten, a big University of Alabama football fan, received a video phone call from Alabama coach Nick Saban.

Last week, a 102-year-old New York woman who showed incredible human resistance surviving against two COVID-19 infections had also lived through the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic!

Angelina Friedman’s remarkable recovery from COVID-19 is celebrated as a triumph over the deadly coronavirus.

It is incredible that people of their age are defeating the disease that has proven especially dangerous for adults over the age of 65.

LGE: Expect more credit rating downgrades if PN govt continues to bury its head in the sand

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KUALA LUMPUR, Dec. 7 — DAP’s Lim Guan Eng has warned the government to expect more sovereign credit rating downgrades for Malaysia in the future if it does not accept that the country is in the midst of an economic and political crisis.

The recent revision of Malaysia’s sovereign credit rating by Fitch Ratings was primarily driven by the negative impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the country’s fiscal position and the ongoing domestic political situation.

Last week, Fitch Ratings downgraded Malaysia’s long-term foreign-currency issuer default rating (IDR) to ‘BBB ‘ from ‘A-‘ with a stable outlook, on the grounds that the impact of the Covid-19 crisis has weakened Malaysia’s key credit metrics.

“Perikatan Nasional (PN)’s denial that Malaysia is in the midst of a political and economic crisis risks further future downgrade of sovereign credit ratings,” Lim said in a statement today.

The Bagan MP also noted Fitch Ratings had downgraded Malaysia’s sovereign credit ratings for the first time since the 1997/98 Asian Financial Crisis, making Malaysia the first major Asean country to suffer such a fate in the current Covid-19 pandemic.

“Unfortunately, the PN federal government has chosen to be in denial and not address the decline of Malaysia’s key credit metrics that led to the downgrade from A – to BBB , namely political instability and lack of transparency or governance standards.

“The unceremonious removal of the mentri besar of Perak by his own PN ally Umno last week, underscores Fitch’s on the spot assessment of Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin’s slim two-seat parliamentary majority as the cause of the political instability,” he added.

The ratings agency said measures to contain the domestic spread of the coronavirus, combined with weak investment and low tourism receipts due to the pandemic, have reduced economic activity in Malaysia, as it has in many countries globally.

Fitch said it expects Malaysia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to contract by 6.1 per cent in 2020 before rebounding by 6.7 per cent in 2021 due to base effects, a revival of infrastructure projects and an ongoing recovery of exports of manufactured goods and commodities.

In the same statement, the former finance minister chided his successor Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz for apparently “sugar-coating the numbers” to make Malaysia’s financial equity look good when in reality his projections are way off.

“He (Tengku Zafrul) should stop sugar-coating the numbers but disclose realistic and accurate growth projections of our GDP growth, revenue collections and government debt, which is at variance with Fitch’s analysis.

“Fitch expects general government debt to jump to 76 per cent of GDP in 2020 from 65.2 per cent of GDP in 2019, and direct government debt at RM874.27 billion or 60.7 per cent of GDP as at end of September, which is above the statutory ceiling of 60 per cent of GDP,” said Lim.

Lim said the sovereign credit rating downgrade is akin to a vote of no confidence by foreign investors and financial experts.

He also reiterated his call for the PN government to work with all parties to resolve the crisis.

“This sovereign credit rating downgrade is an urgent wake-up call for the PN government to carry out urgent political and economic structural reforms. Unless PN seeks to unite and work together to provide certainty, clarity and consistency to our political and economic policies, Malaysia’s prospects will not be bright and the outlook foresees risks of future downgrades,” he said.

Fitch noted that the new government continues to implement some transparency-enhancing measures launched under the previous coalition, and corruption trials of former officials have continued.

However, in its view, the government’s thin two-seat parliamentary majority implies persistent uncertainty about future policies.For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at [email protected] 2017 Malay Mail Online

Chinese Covid-19 vaccine maker gets $500 million funding boost

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Chinese pharmaceutical firm Sinovac Biotech has secured half a billion dollars in extra funding to produce its Covid-19 vaccine, it said Monday, as the country races to roll out a jab for general use.

Beijing has largely brought the virus under control, with only 281 active cases still receiving treatment, according to official figures.

But it has promised to make its vaccines available as a “global public good” as it seeks to counter global criticism for its early handling of the pandemic.

Sino Biopharmaceutical Limited, a Hong Kong-listed medical research firm, said on Monday that it will invest $515 million for the development and production of CoronaVac, one of Sinovac’s most advanced vaccine candidates.

Sinovac — one of China’s leading vaccine producers — said the funding will be used for the “further development, capacity expansion and manufacturing” of CoronaVac.

It added it hoped to be able to manufacture 600 million doses by the end of the year.

Sino Biopharmaceutical will receive a 15 percent share in a Sinovac subsidiary, Sinovac Life Sciences, under the agreement.

Although regulators have yet to approve China’s vaccines for mass distribution, the country has approved some advanced candidates for emergency use. Since July a range of people from state employees to international students have been given jabs.

CoronaVac is being tested in multiple countries including Brazil, where final-stage clinical trials for the jab have restarted after hitting a setback in November when a volunteer experienced an “adverse incident.”

The vaccine “has reached critical milestones in clinical trials in Asia and Latin America,” Sinovac CEO Yin Weidong said in the statement.

The company earlier said almost all its employees and their families have voluntarily taken the vaccine.

Sinopharm, another Chinese vaccine maker, said in November that nearly a million people have already taken its experimental Covid-19 vaccine.

Last week Britain became the first Western country to approve a vaccine for general use, piling pressure on other countries to follow suit swiftly.

© Agence France-Presse

China animal rescuer shares home with 1,300 dogs

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by Helen Roxburgh and Qian Ye

Twenty years ago, Wen Junhong saved an abandoned dog from the streets of Chongqing in southwestern China. She now shares her home with more than 1,300 of them, and they keep on coming.

After taking in that first dog, a Pekinese she named Wenjing — “gentle and quiet” in Chinese — Wen found she couldn’t stop.

She says she was driven by worries about what strays face on the streets in China, from accidents to being snatched up for the dog meat trade.

“It’s important to look after these dogs,” she said. “Each of us should respect life, and the Earth is not only for humans but for all animals.”

Dog ownership was previously termed a bourgeois pastime and banned under the leadership of Communist China’s founder Chairman Mao.

Views on pets have changed dramatically since, and ownership has boomed — but the country still does not have a national animal welfare law and there are tens of millions of stray dogs and cats, according to charity AnimalsAsia.

Urban strays are rarely sterilised, exacerbating the problem and placing more pressure on overwhelmed and underfunded animal rescue centres.

As well as the abandoned pets and strays that are regularly left in her front yard, Wen says she receives calls “every day to help more dogs”.

And it’s not just canines that the 68-year-old has a soft spot for.

She also lives with one hundred cats, four horses and a scattering of rabbits and birds.

“Some people say I’m a psychopath,” she admits.

Mucking out
Her day starts at 4 am with the unenviable task of clearing 20-30 barrels of overnight dog waste and cooking more than 500 kg (1,100 pounds) of rice, meat and vegetables for the animals.

The waste gets burned in the back yard, sending a continuous plume of smoke into the sky.

A handful of dogs run free around the building, while a tethered pit bull terrier at the back door growls and barks at strangers.

Every room in the two-storey house is full of cages, piled next to and on top of each other.

Surrounded by fences and locked gates, her hillside location is the latest in a series of homes after complaints from neighbours forced her and her charges to keep moving.

Wen finances the operation with proceeds from selling her apartment, loans of up to 60,000 yuan ($9,100) and her pension and life savings from an earlier career as an environmental technician.

She also receives donations after gaining attention on social media, where she has been dubbed “Chongqing Auntie Wen”.

Wen hopes the attention will lead to adoptions, but new arrivals far outpace those being re-homed.

And she has suffered abuse online, after pictures of the animals’ living conditions were posted.

“Living in such a small cage is no better than being a stray dog,” wrote one critic on social media.

‘Even if they bite me’
Six dogs had arrived on the day AFP visited, including four small puppies.

Large dogs are kept outside, and small ones in cages indoors.

“If all the dogs are released, they will fight,” Wen said.

Some attempt to gnaw through the bars while others yap relentlessly and scrap with each other.

One mutt snapped at anyone walking past until Wen covered its cage with a coat.

She has six staff, who sleep in a room piled high with bags of dog food.

One, Yang Yiqun, shows arms and hands covered in scars and scratches.

“I like the dogs even if they bite me,” says the stoic Sichuan local who has worked with Wen for five years.

“She is under too much pressure to handle it alone”.

Even with her love of animals and a team to help her, Wen admits re-homing strays is a struggle.

“It’s really very hard,” she laments.

“There are more and more dogs and each of them gets less space.”

© Agence France-Presse

Senior citizen unable to use MediSave to pay for colonoscopy bill due to CPF withdrawal limit

Workers’ Party (WP) member Kenneth Foo Seck Guan has reiterated his party’s call for the authorities to widen the use of MediSave for elderly Singaporeans, after sharing how a senior citizen was unable to use the mandatory savings scheme to foot his medical bill due to a withdrawal limit.

Mr Foo, who contested East Coast GRC in the 2020 general election, met the senior during his rounds at Bedok North 216 Hawker and Market on Sunday (6 Dec). The elderly man told Mr Foo that he went for a regular check up at the hospital recently and underwent a colonoscopy.

Although the senior citizen had enough in his MediSave account to pay for the entire bill, he could only use MediSave to pay for part of the bill and had to fork out cash for the balance due to the Central Provident Fund (CPF) withdrawal limit that is in place for the procedure he underwent.

The senior citizen told Mr Foo that he hoped that the government will review the cap for seniors as preventive screening will help to lower incidence of diseases and lower the healthcare cost in the long term.

Pointing out that this call was a part of the WP’s 2020 election manifesto, Mr Foo said, “The Workers’ Party Manifesto did call for the government to review and widen to use of CPF medisave for Singaporeans 60 and above.”

He added: “We will continue to pursue policies review to benefit Singaporeans in the long-term.”

Mr Foo is not the only WP politician who highlighted issues with CPF policies, this week. Sengkang GRC MP Jamus Lim drew attention to several suggestions the WP has put forth with regards to CPF usage in its manifesto after meeting with some of its residents, on Friday (4 Dec).

Jamus Lim reiterates call to lower CPF payout eligibility age to 60

Malaysia: Dismal December diagnosis of doom & gloom

This December of Malaysia’s Vision 2020 year must be the most dismal in the country’s history. It is not the floods or another flight disaster this year. It was Fitch that downgraded Malaysia’s ratings to a BBB+.

A former Attorney General is suing for wrongful dismissal and a Court of Appeal judge who had alleged gross judicial misconduct is being examined for ethics when there are clearly larger, incredible issues of good governance. Then a Menteri Besar fails a confidence vote and there is a boastful Menteri Besar of a state famed for multicultural harmony, who instead of pacifying, provokes a small minority. He also splashes news that his state has substantial subterranean geological assets amounting to trillions. This is an acute, almost chaotic state of disarray in which the elite are the exclusive participants.

At the macroeconomic level Covid-19 seems to have condemned the nation and consigned it to the boondocks of Southeast Asia. It is now increasingly clear that more economies in Southeast Asia have not only become larger but more competitive than that of Malaysia.

Yet the paramount issue of the overarching unity of the country and the need to power ahead to build a stronger and more resilient competitive nation does not seem to be the main priority of the government led by Tan Sri Muhyiddin Mohd Yassin.

Malay- Muslim Predominance

At the annual general meeting of his Bersatu party in late November, the prime minister spoke of the unity of three Malay parties-UMNO, PAS and his Bersatu – which he referred to as Malay-dominant parties.

They are in fact plain Malay parties seeking permanent political preeminence. He spoke of this three Malay party alliance as the fated destiny of divine will. He further made a pledge to fight ‘secularism and liberalism. ‘The definition of secularism and liberalism was left undefined. It was clear that the prime minister was politicising the secular aspects of effective governance practised in Malaysia as provided for in the Constitution for a very long time.

The courts have made this clear repeatedly.

Muhyiddin may have made these statements on the cusp of a contested precarious but bittersweet victory in getting his government’s budget passed. Certainly, he displayed an overdose of confidence and exuberance in speaking of Malay-Muslim solidarity.

With this statement, the prime minister entered into the most muddled and dangerous kind of polemics in a multicultural country.

Multicultural Malaysia

It will create further division, alienation and tensions within a relatively harmonious polity. He could not possibly have meant what he said. For Muhyiddin to proceed on that narrow and noxious track he would put paid to efforts to preserve multiculturalism that has been the hallmark of the nation from 1957. This was reaffirmed at the time of the formation of Malaysia in 1963 when Sabah and Sarawak agreed to join Malaysia on specified irrevocable terms

Inclusive Malay Leaders

Muhyiddin’s narrow perspective is not even shared by his main Malay political ally, UMNO. For UMNO, despite the involvement of some of its key leaders in unsavoury criminal activities for which they are being prosecuted, has maintained a modest working arrangement with lawmakers representing minority parties.

Beyond that Muhyiddin seems to be somewhat impervious to appreciating and understanding the renewed and resurgent effort being made by some better established Malay leaders to reach out, recognise and represent fairly the interests of the country’s substantial minority segment. These distinguished Malay leaders have always been there but their tack on equitable justice, burden- and prosperity-sharing were enunciated extensively during the recent big-budget debates of November.

This group of leaders have always been there but for Muhyiddin who remains steadfastly Malay-first rather than Malaysian-first these leaders are perhaps just a trifle troublesome and tangential. They are there, however, including the Justice Party chiefs, Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail and the progressive leaders of Amanah who are Dato Sris- Mohamad Sabu, Khalid Samad, Dr Dzulkifli Ahmad. This is a rather motley group.

Then there are the Malay Rulers, significant but understated power and policy powerhouses who have consistently been inclusive and sensitive to the aspirations of all Malaysians and have upheld the sanctity and sovereignty of a united Malaysian society.

It would also be unwise to ignore the inclusive and all-embracing outlook of the leaders of Sabah and Sarawak, including Dato Seri Shafie Apdal and Datuk Patinggi Abang Haji Abdul Rahman Johari who on their turf, have steadfastly maintained an inclusive kind of governance.

Muhyiddin Against The Grain

The government of Muhyiddin seems to be sustained on a narrow and nihilistic path of disregarding the minorities when its very survival depends to a large extent on the handful of parliamentary votes it garners from the minorities.

Fitch Ratings may have been influenced by this aspect in highlighting the high political risk headline. It is more a passing phase which is not only unsustainable and unrealistic but doomed.

Malaysia has its strengths and the instant dismal diagnosis by Fitch is a bit of a stretch. While there are some dysfunctional demerits in the current government there are compelling compensatory elements in the strong lineup of the parliamentary opposition, an apolitical bureaucracy, a largely sound legal and judiciary system, feisty social media and respectable and reasonable news portals.

The chasm that exists between Muhyiddin’s mollycoddling of a small segment of the simple majority and his modest achievements in the containment of the Covid-19 pandemic pale in contrast to the high mindedness of his Malay and minority opposition. His is clearly a leadership built on infirm, insecure and insidious foundations which is disproportionately reliant on the office of the Speaker of the lower house. Never in the history of the country has the Speaker been perceived to be so biased and beholden to the mechanics of petty political power dynamics.

Muhyiddin’s sole interest seems to have been dictated by an overwhelming concern of his own survival. The convenience of the cosmetics provided by the Covid-19 contagion more than the political reality on the ground seems to have temporarily secured the tenure of both the prime minister and the Speaker.

At the height of the surge of the Covid-19 cases, the shaky position of the prime minster seems increasingly vulnerable as the senior minister handling the travel and movement control tools has announced the most liberal travel relaxations.

Hence, for some Malaysians, in general, the ratings by Fitch are somewhat flawed, founded on the first impression focus on the fluidity of a political situation, which if and when it changes, would be followed by a more consolidated government than the fragile one it will succeed.

2021 Prospects

2021 will, by the looks of it, be a more promising year. The Speaker and more than one attorney general may be entering a period of partial and possibly complete eclipse and the Sun should shine more brightly on Malaysia as it gathers steam from a modest recovery. Political stability would, by all calculations be reestablished, in a more united multihued country.

Dato M Santhananaban is a retired ambassador

Goh Chok Tong in hospital again — for procedure on vocal cords this time

Singapore — Former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong was admitted to hospital again over the weekend so that doctors could deal with a new issue involving his vocal chords.

Mr Goh, 79, was admitted to the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) twice recently and had two operations under general anaesthesia. Both procedures were to resolve a kidney stone issue.

After he was discharged from the hospital last week, he took some time for himself before attending public gatherings. He had a meal with a group of first-term People’s Action Party MPs and attended the Goh Chok Tong Enable Awards at the Istana.

At 2.05 pm on Saturday (Dec 5), Mr Goh said on social media that he was back in hospital over a new medical issue. He assured his followers: “All good so far. It is hard work pushing 80. Walk on the bright side to keep fit.”

Nearly three hours later, Mr Goh said he had undergone an ENT (ear, nose and throat) procedure under general anaesthesia so that doctors could probe an issue with his vocal chords. He added that the procedure was a precautionary one.

In his latest post, Mr Goh included a photo of a 50-cm long J stent that was removed from his ureter. He said: “This 50 cm long J stent was finally removed from my ureter. Unlike oysters, my kidneys produced calcium oxalate, not pearls. Still, not a joke to be ‘stoned’ 3 times, in two weeks.

“Decided to go under GA to probe an issue with my vocal chords. Killing two birds with one stone, though I shudder at the metaphor. Today’s ENT procedure is a precautionary stepping stone to the bank of good health.”

Mr Goh has always been frank about his health with his social media followers.

Last July, he said that he had undergone an angioplasty after doctors found, during a routine annual check-up, that his arteries were narrowing.

Ahead of the General Election this year, Mr Goh retired from politics and said that he was doing so “with a heavy heart” since he believed he would not have the same energy he had in serving the people when he crossed into his 80s.

After the July 10 elections, Mr Goh suggested that it was a health scare that triggered his retirement even though he initially told Prime Minister that he would prefer to step down from politics “whilst healthy”. He said that he had a cancer scare sometime last year when his doctor discovered a white spot on his voice box.

By July, the white spot had disappeared and Mr Goh said that, while it is “too late to reverse” his decision to retire, it was “fortunate” that he stepped down. /TISG

Goh Chok Tong undergoes laser surgery to remove large kidney stone