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Veteran opposition politician weighs in on $7 million E-Scooter Trade-in “Grant of Death”

Veteran opposition politician and head of the People’s Power Party (PPP) Goh Meng Seng referred to the S$7 million E-Scooter Trade-in Grant as the ‘Grant of Death’ in a social media post on November 23.

In a Facebook post, he wrote that the “PAP government should stop the $7 million grant to Delivery Riders immediately”. He draws similarities between Power Assisted Bicycles (PABs), or e-bikes, and motorcycles, adding that “Motorcycles have one of the highest fatal accident rate in Singapore, despite of having all riders taking Highway Code and Driving test”.

“Encouraging PMD riders to take up Ebikes on the road WITHOUT giving them proper training and licensing test is extremely dangerous and irresponsible.

This is basically the Grant of Death, so to speak” Goh said.

He opined that the grant given to delivery riders is a “RASH Knee Jerk decision made to solve a problem created by the FIRST Rash Knee Jerk decision of banning PMD from foothpaths without much planning nor careful considerations”.

He wrote that PABs should be regulated as well, “even more so than PMD(s)”.

The S$7 million e-scooter Trade-in Grant (eTG), was set up to provide funding assistance for the affected food delivery riders to switch to bicycles, Power Assisted Bicycles (PABs) or Personal Mobility Aids (PMAs). Under this scheme, LTA will match dollar-for-dollar the food delivery companies’ funding support for their food delivery riders who trade in their existing e-scooters for alternative LTA-approved devices – and each rider will receive an eTG of up to S$1,000 for PABs or S$600 for bicycle.

In a statement by the Ministry of Transport, they add, “This decision to prohibit e-scooters from footpaths was a difficult one and arose because of many instances of irresponsible riding. Even as the delivery riders switch to other modes of transport, they should be mindful of safety both for themselves and other path and road users. They should strictly abide by the safety rules, including speed limits, so as not to cause unnecessary injury”. /TISG

Read related: PPP head Goh Meng Seng weighs in on e-scooter ban

Workers’ Party MPs provide free legal services to Aljunied-Hougang residents

Workers’ Party (WP) politicians, who are also practising lawyers, certified Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) documents for Aljunied GRC and Hougang SMC residents at no charge last weekend as part of their effort to educate their constituents on the importance of LPAs.

An LPA is a legal document that allows an individual to appoint people they trust to make decisions and act on their behalf in the areas of personal welfare, property and affairs should they lose mental capacity.

The family members of those who lose mental capacity and do not have an LPA are not automatically allowed to make legal decisions on their loved one’s behalf. This can impede their efforts to care for the loved one and manage their affairs. In such a case, the family member would have to go through the more costly deputyship application process in Court to act on their loved one’s behalf.

Aljunied GRC MPs Sylvia Lim and Chen Show Mao have been giving talks on LPA. On Sunday (24 Nov), Ms Lim – who also serves as the WP’s chairman – led a team of volunteer lawyers in certifying LPAs for Aljunied residents at no charge at an event held at Block 117 Hougang Avenue 1.

Sharing photos of the MPs and volunteers helping residents, WP secretary-general Pritam Singh wrote on Facebook: “A big thank you to all volunteer lawyers and volunteers who helped residents of the Paya Lebar ward of Aljunied GRC certify their LPAs this morning.

“Ms Sylvia Lim led the LPA talks and certification in her Serangoon ward some months back. Last week, along with a volunteer lawyer and support from MP Chen Show Mao’s volunteers, she briefed Paya Lebar residents on the LPA before leading a team who helped certify the LPA documents for residents today. Glad to have NCMP Dennis Tan Lip Fong join in the effort too!

“The Team Eunos volunteers of the Eunos division ran an LPA talk last year. We will plan another one for residents very soon!”

Mr Singh wlecomed lawyers with a valid practising certificate who wish to help Aljunied GRC residents certify LPAs pro bono to get in touch with him at pritam.singh@wp.sg.

Lasting Power Of Attorney (LPA)——————————————-A big thank you to all volunteer lawyers and volunteers who helped…

Posted by Pritam Singh on Sunday, 24 November 2019

Anwar says he is not seeking cabinet post

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After a flurry of comments from various politicians, including that of Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad on a possible cabinet reshuffle, Anwar Ibrahim stated his position on the matter.

He made it clear he will not accept any post in the event a reshuffle is done at any time.

He also said he is not offering himself to join the cabinet.

On Saturday, the Pakatan Harapan agreed to a cabinet reshuffle following their massive defeat in the Johor by-election 11 days ago.

“I’ve said it before. I didn’t apply. To me, the understanding is clear. And I will wait.”
He meant to say he did not apply to join the cabinet, and he wants to respect the deal that Dr Mahathir will quit and he becomes the 8th Prime Minister of Malaysia.

He also said, “I have no intention,” when asked by reporters if he wants to join in Dr Mahathir’s cabinet as a minister.

Pakatan has agreed that Anwar will take over from Dr Mahathir but there is no specified period.

Dr Mahathir previously said he will handover the position in two years but later changed this statement to become three years.

There are various opinions out there on why Anwar should, or should not take a cabinet position.

Some observers said it is important for Anwar to take a post in the cabinet, even suggesting he replaces Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail who is currently holding this position. Wan Azizah is Anwar’s wife.

One school of thought says it is not enough for Anwar to be the prime-minister-in-waiting because it is a weak position. They say being out of a cabinet post makes Anwar look weak.

However, people close to the PKR and to Anwar said it is okay for Anwar to wait in the wings especially with the amount of backlash the Mahathir cabinet is being subjected to at the moment.

They argue Anwar will instead be weakened if he was in the cabinet with a situation that shows no improvement for Pakatan when it comes to reforms and other changes promised by the coalition when it was in the opposition.

Anwar being in the cabinet would have stopped the massive drubbing handed to Dr Mahathir in the ‘referendum’ that was the Tanjung Piai by-election in Johor. -/TISG

Tan Cheng Bock and Sylvia Lim among those invited to Belgium Embassy’s high-profile King’s Day reception

Progress Singapore Party (PSP) secretary-general Tan Cheng Bock and Workers’ Party (WP) chairman Sylvia Lim were among those who were invited to the King’s Day reception hosted by the Belgium Embassy in Singapore. The annual event took place on 14 Nov this year at the Victoria Concert Hall.

The function, which serves to celebrate bilateral relations between Singapore and Belgium, was a high-profile one and saw the attendance of prominent members of Singapore society, the Belgian community and the diplomatic corps. Ruling party politicians like Minister of State Sam Tan, Macpherson SMC MP Tin Pei Ling and Sembawang GRC MP Lim Wee Kiak were among the attendees.

Dr Tan Cheng Bock and Ms Sylvia Lim appear to have been the only opposition politicians who were present at the function. The PSP shared on Facebook that Dr Tan met with Ambassador Andy Detaille, Ms Lim as well as other esteemed guests, including entrepreneurs, law professionals, and ambassadors.

The Belgium Embassy in Singapore said that Ambassador Detaille and Mr Sam Tan discussed the flourishing bilateral relationship between Singapore and Belgium in the trade industry as well as people-to-people, cultural and educational exchanges. The Embassy added:

“Both Belgium and Singapore are small, diverse, dynamic and outward-looking states whose economies are in the heart of our respective regions in Europe and Asia. Our country is Singapore’s 5th largest trading partner in the EU while the city-state is Belgium’s top trading partner in ASEAN.

“The imminent entry into force of the EU-Singapore FTA promises to enhance our levels of cooperation even further. Look forward to excelling bilateral ties!”

CELEBRATING BILATERAL RELATIONSYesterday the Embassy hosted its annual King's Day reception at Victoria Theatre…

Posted by Embassy of the Kingdom of Belgium in Singapore on Thursday, 14 November 2019

Last week, Dr Tan was invited to attend a function at the Victoria Concert Hall. It was hosted by His Excellency, Mr…

Posted by Progress Singapore Party on Friday, 22 November 2019

Israel to expel Human Rights Watch country director

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by Joe Dyke

Israel was set to expel the country director of Human Rights Watch on Monday after a lengthy court battle over claims he supports a boycott of the Jewish state.

US citizen Omar Shakir, the New York-based rights group’s director for Israel and the Palestinian territories, denies the claims and accuses the Israeli government of seeking to suppress dissent.

Shakir’s deportation, expected in the afternoon, would be the first from inside the country under Israel’s controversial 2017 law allowing the expulsion of foreigners who support a boycott, according to authorities.

The European Union, United Nations and others have criticised the looming expulsion, with the UN warning of a “shrinking space for human rights defenders to operate” in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

But the United States, Israel’s closest ally, declined to do so, saying Sunday only that it supported freedom of expression.

The rights group said Shakir would continue in his position despite being expelled, working from neighbouring Jordan.

‘Boycott support’
Israel refused to extend Shakir’s work permit in May 2018 after parliament passed a law mandating the expulsion of foreign supporters of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.

BDS activists call for a broad-ranging embargo of Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians.

Israel sees the movement as a strategic threat and accuses it of anti-Semitism. Activists strongly deny this and compare it to the economic isolation that helped bring down apartheid in South Africa.

Shakir, who started in the HRW Israel post in 2017, appealed but Israel’s supreme court backed the government’s decision earlier this month.

The case against Shakir was initially based on statements he had made supporting a boycott before joining HRW.

But the government also highlighted work he did with rights groups, including criticising Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

“The Israeli government pretends it is only deporting Omar Shakir and that it is not penalising Human Rights Watch,” its executive director Ken Roth told AFP Sunday.

“But in fact it is deporting him for the core message of Human Rights Watch with respect to the settlements.”

More than 600,000 Israelis live in settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, communities considered illegal under international law.

Israel disputes this, and the United States last week broke with decades of international consensus and announced it no longer considered the settlements illegal.

Roth contended that US President Donald Trump’s support for Israel’s fellow right-wing government had emboldened it to crack down on human rights groups.

“It is hard to imagine Omar’s deportation going ahead if the US government hadn’t given a kind of implicit green light,” he told AFP.

The US embassy said only it had raised Shakir’s case with Israel and that it supports “freedom of expression.”

“At the same time, our strong opposition to boycotts and sanctions of the State of Israel is well known,” it said.

‘Move backfired’
Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs, which led the campaign to expel Shakir, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The right-wing group NGO Monitor meanwhile charged that HRW’s record was anti-Israel.

“It’s the singling out we disagree with,” said Gerald Steinberg, head of the organisation which argues that international organisations put a disproportionate focus on Israel and the Palestinians.

“They are not saying ‘we disagree with Israeli policy but we believe in the Jewish people’s right to self-determination’,” he said.

“It is about ‘we don’t believe in the Jewish state’s right to exist’,” he argued.

HRW strongly denied the claim.

NGO Monitor provided evidence to the government’s case and Steinberg argued that not renewing a visa was “standard practice” in democracies.

Yet Steinberg admitted that Israel’s move had created negative publicity that helps its critics.

“This is playing into their hands,” he said. “Shakir is milking this, they are going to dance their way out of the airport.”

Roth agreed that Israel’s move had actually intensified scrutiny of Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories.

“The world isn’t fooled,” he said. “When you try to censor something, the first thing you do is say ‘well what is it you are trying to censor?'”

© Agence France-Presse

‘A friendly hand’: pope urges more help for Fukushima victims

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by Catherine MARCIANO / Hiroshi HIYAMA

Pope Francis on Monday urged renewed help for victims of Japan’s 2011 earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima disaster, warning “nobody can start over alone” as he noted “concern” over nuclear power.

On the penultimate day of his Japan trip, the pontiff heard the stories of those who survived the so-called “triple disaster” — a 9.1-magnitude earthquake that triggered a devastating tsunami and sent a nuclear plant into meltdown.

In an emotional meeting, he embraced 17-year-old Matsuki Kamoshita, who spoke powerfully of his experience as an evacuee, saying he was so badly bullied he “wanted to die.”

The 82-year-old Argentine paid tribute to those who rushed to help following the disaster, but warned that more was needed.

“No one ‘rebuilds’ by himself or herself; nobody can start over alone. We have to find a friendly and fraternal hand, capable of helping to raise not just a city, but also our horizon and our hope.”

Some 18,500 were killed or are missing after the disaster. The waves swept away homes and farms, and engulfed the cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, triggering the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

Nearly half a million people fled their homes in the first days after the quake and even today, roughly 50,000 remain in temporary housing.

Survivors shared painful memories of the disaster, with Toshiko Kato recalling finding her home had been swept away by the waves.

“I remember that when I stood in the rubble where my home had been, I was thankful for being given life, for being alive and for just being able to appreciate it,” she told the pope.

‘Concern’ on nuclear power
The head of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics stopped short of intervening in the debate over nuclear power in Japan, but said there were “important decisions” to be made about future energy sources.

“In turn, this involves, as my brother bishops in Japan have emphasised, concern about the continuing use of nuclear power; for this reason, they have called for the abolition of nuclear power plants,” he said.

After the meeting, Kamoshita told reporters he had been “deeply touched” to discover the pope remembered meeting him at the Vatican earlier this year.

Francis later met with youth at a Tokyo cathedral, where he repeated a warning he sounded on the first leg of his Asia tour in Thailand on the pitfalls of technology.

He called on young people to reach out to others and not isolate themselves.

“We have invented all sorts of gadgets but we still can’t take selfies of the soul,” he said, during a relaxed visit that saw him don a colourful traditional Japanese shirt over his white papal robes and give a thumbs-up.

In the afternoon, tens of thousands of the faithful and the curious flocked to a mass at the Tokyo Dome, waving Japanese and Vatican flags as the pope entered in an open-top vehicle.

He waved to the diverse crowd of Japanese and foreign attendees, smiling broadly and kissing the heads of children held up to him as he passed.

“When he appeared, tears almost came out of my eyes. I was very moved by seeing him. It was very emotional,” 17-year-old high-school student Hinako Ibuki told AFP.

In his address, Francis drove home his call for people to connect with one another, highlighting the plight of the “many people who are socially isolated” in Japan.

The message may be particularly pertinent in Japan, notorious for its long working hours. The government is already encouraging employers to give workers more freedom to pursue family lives, hoping to boost the country’s dwindling birth rate.

The pope began his trip in Nagasaki and Hiroshima, where he called the use of nuclear weapons a “crime”, against the backdrop of two cities synonymous with the atomic bomb’s destruction.

Later Monday, he told Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that “every means necessary of dissuasion” must be used to ensure such destruction “will never take place again in human history.”

Abe replied he had a “steadfast belief” in a nuclear-free world and vowed to be “utterly tireless” in efforts to bring it about.

The final day of his visit on Tuesday includes meetings with young students at Sophia University, before he concludes his Asian tour.

© Agence France-Presse

LVMH puts ring on jeweller Tiffany in $16.2 bn union

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by Katia DOLMADJIAN

LVMH and US jewellers Tiffany announced Monday a $16.2 billion tie-up that vaults the French group to the top spot in the luxury jewellery segment.

The deal comes after LVMH, already the top luxury firm overall, spent more than a month wooing Tiffany, the most iconic of US luxury brands known for its wedding rings and diamonds.

“It is an emblematic brand, an American icon that will become a little bit French,” LVMH’s chief executive Bernard Arnault told AFP. “It has lots of potential and an incredible history.”

Tiffany, founded in 1837 and headquartered on glamorous 5th Avenue in New York next to Trump Tower, is the most iconic of US luxury brands, an image reflected in the “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” novella by Truman Capote, made into a film with Audrey Hepburn in 1961.

The companies said in a joint statement that LVMH will acquire Tiffany for $135 per share in cash in a transaction with an equity value of approximately 14.7 billion euros or $16.2 billion.

The deal adds Tiffany to LVMH’s extensive stable of luxury brands that include Louis Vuitton, Dior and Moet & Chandon and will strengthen its position in the United States.

Tiffany “is a very well-known brand, one of the rare global brands to have a strongly recognised heritage, in the United States obviously because it is its top market but in Asia as well,” said Arnault.

Such a deal has been seen as the way ahead for Tiffany, which has trailed rivals in terms of sales growth in recent years.

“Following a strategic review that included a thoughtful internal process and expert external advice, the Board has concluded that this transaction with LVMH provides an exciting path forward…” said Tiffany’s board chairman, Roger Farah.

The addition of Tiffany to LVMH’s jewellery holdings that already includes Bulgari, Chaumet, Tag Heuer and Hublot vaults it past Swiss-based Richemont, which holds Cartier among other brands.

Richemont led the pack with a 14.8 percent share of the luxury jewellery market in 2017, according to Euromonitor International data.

But with Tiffany at 10.8 percent and LVMH at 7.5 percent, combined they will now lead the segment.

LVMH began its public courting of Tiffany on October 15 with an offer of $120 per share. Last week it raised its bid to around $130, which convinced Tiffany to open its books to LVMH, which then offered $135 to clinch the deal.

Tiffany’s shares closed trading on Friday at $125.51. They were trading around $90 per share at the beginning of October, before LVMH first began to make overtures to Tiffany’s management.

LVMH shares rose 2.3 percent to stand at 405.30 euros in midday trading in Paris. They have risen since the LVMH first announced a bid for Tiffany, and struck a record high of 407.85 earlier this month.

“Some companies in the retail sector have complained about softer demand, but luxury brands tend to hold up well when economies cool as the mega rich usually fare better in a cooler economic climate,” said market analyst David Madden at CMC Markets UK.

The boards of directors of both companies have approved the acquisition, with Tiffany’s board recommending shareholders approve the transaction.

The companies said they expect the transaction to close in the middle of 2020 following approval by Tiffany’s shareholders and regulators.

LVMH is the world’s largest luxury group when high-end cars are excluded. It posted record sales of 46.8 billion euros in 2018.

© Agence France-Presse

Hong Kong leader vows to ‘listen’ as voters send sharp rebuke to Beijing

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by Yan ZHAO / Xinqi SU

Hong Kong’s deeply unpopular leader vowed Monday to “listen humbly” to voters after the pro-democracy camp scored a crushing victory in community-level elections that revealed broad public support for a protest movement that has stirred months of violence.

In a rout that stunned the semi-autonomous territory, candidates seeking to loosen control by China seized an overwhelming majority of the 452 elected seats in the city’s 18 district councils, bodies that have historically been firmly in the grip of a Beijing-aligned establishment.

The result, the first vote to be held since protests engulfed the city, was a humiliating rebuke to Beijing and Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

She has stubbornly dismissed calls for political reform and repeatedly suggested that a silent majority supported her administration and opposed the protest movement.

“The government will certainly listen humbly to citizens’ opinions and reflect on them seriously,” Lam said in a statement issued by the government.

But she gave no specifics on the likely response.

China’s foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Beijing “resolutely supports” the leader and backs the police and judiciary in Hong Kong in “punishing relevant violent and illegal behaviours”.

Opponents quickly called on Lam to accede to a five-point list of demands, including direct elections for the city’s legislature and leadership and a probe into alleged police brutality against demonstrators.

“The government must squarely face public opinion,” said Wu Chi-wai, the chairman of the Democratic Party, Hong Kong’s largest anti-establishment party.

The Labour Party, another leading component of the pro-democracy bloc, attributed the election result to “the sweat, blood and tears” of protesters.

There has been no tear gas fired in Hong Kong for a week, rare respite for a city upturned by months of chaos and violence.

The lull follows some of the most intense clashes yet between police and protesters at the city centre PolyU campus.

Dozens of newly elected councillors marched on Monday evening on the campus urging police to allow the small number of hardcore protesters who remain holed-up inside to leave freely.

“The people of Hong Kong have spoken,” Paul Zimmerman, a pro-democracy councillor re-elected in Sunday’s poll, said in a speech outside PolyU.

“Now is time for the government to respond. Don’t fail Hong Kong again.”

Chatter on a popular web forum used to urge people to turn out for protests called for a march on Sunday to press the government to respond to the movement’s demands.

Revolution
Millions took to the streets earlier this year after Lam’s government introduced a bill to allow extraditions to China’s opaque judicial system.

It was eventually withdrawn, but the resulting public anger unleashed broader demands and led to violent clashes between police and protesters.

District councils handle mundane community-level issues like garbage collection. But backlit by protests, Sunday’s contest took a new political significance.

The outcome is “a sound repudiation of the (Hong Kong) administration and Beijing’s policy toward Hong Kong,” political analyst Willy Lam said.

But it does not mean Beijing will budge on the protesters’ demands, he added.

Pro-democracy candidates grabbed 388 seats — a stunning net gain of 263 — according to local media, with the establishment holding on to only 59. Five went to independents.

Dominic Raab, the foreign minister of Britain, which handed the territory over to China in 1997, said: “There is now an opportunity to find a way through the crisis with political dialogue that reflects the legitimate aspirations of the people of Hong Kong and respects the one country two systems model.”

Record turnout
Chinese state media moved to downplay the poll debacle for pro-Beijing parties, suggesting mischief-making by western governments was at play in the poll run-up while violent protests chiselled away at the pro-government turnout.

“It is hard to imagine how many people’s opinions the election result represents,” ran a commentary in the China Daily.

“When people live under so heavy shadow of the rioters’ terror that they dare not speak out against them.”

A record 71 percent of the 4.13 million registered voters had cast ballots, according to Hong Kong’s election watchdog.

Among the losers were firebrand lawmaker Junius Ho, one of the politicians most loathed by democracy activists, and who was stabbed this month during campaigning.

“The world is turned upside down,” Ho wrote on Facebook after his loss.

The vote is the closest Hong Kong gets to direct representation.

Its legislature is elected by a mix of popular vote and industry groups stacked with China loyalists, a system that ensures Beijing’s control.

District councils have little political sway, but some candidates for next year’s legislative elections will be drawn from the councils, which also will contribute about one-tenth of the 1,200 members of the Beijing-controlled electoral college that chooses the chief executive.

Protests eased in the poll run-up after pro-democracy figures urged calm in a campaign marred earlier by violence.

One pro-democracy candidate, Andrew Chiu, had part of an ear bitten off in an attack while campaigning. He won his race.

© Agence France-Presse

Transport for London rejects new licence for Uber

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London’s transport authority on Monday refused to renew an operating licence for the ride-hailing giant Uber because of safety and security concerns.

“Transport for London (TfL) has concluded that it will not grant Uber London Limited (Uber) a new private hire operator’s licence in response to its latest application,” it said in a statement.

The rejection is the latest set-back to the firm’s operations in London, which have been targeted by protests from traditional black cab drivers to previous licence suspensions.

In September, Uber was granted a two-month extension to its licence following the expiry of a previous 15-month agreement. The extension was conditional on passenger safety improvements.

But TfL said on Monday there were a “pattern of failures”, including the use of unauthorised drivers on other drivers’ accounts, allowing them to pick up passengers.

The transport authority said this happened at least 14,000 times, endangering users, as it invalidated insurance. Some trips took place with unlicensed, suspended or dismissed drivers.

TfL said it recognised steps the company had taken to address such issues but was concerned about the ease with which its checks and balances could be manipulated.

Legislation allows Uber 21 days to appeal and the company can continue to operate during this time.

Helen Chapman, director of licensing, regulation and charging at TfL, said safety was its “absolute top priority” and the infringements were “unacceptable”.

“It is clearly concerning that these issues arose, but it is also concerning that we cannot be confident that similar issues won’t happen again in future,” she added.

There was no immediate comment from Uber, which will have to demonstrate on appeal that it has put in place sufficient measures to eliminate risks to passengers.

Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said he backed the decision. He added he recognises the decision would be unpopular but that companies need to play by the rules.

“Keeping Londoners safe is my absolute number-one priority, and TfL have identified a pattern of failure by Uber that has directly put passengers’ safety at risk,” he said.

© Agence France-Presse

Dr Tan Cheng Bock’s Progress Singapore Party emphasizes that “We must put our people first”

Earlier today (November 25), the Progress Singapore Party (PSP), of which Dr Tan Cheng Bock is secretary-general, emphasized upon the need to put Singaporeans first.

The party wrote on its Facebook page, “This is our country, this is our land. We must put our people first”.

“Our government must take care of our own first. That is the duty of any government to its people”, they wrote.

This is not the first time that PSP has echoed similar sentiments of putting the people of Singapore first.

At a PSP event in August, Dr Tan took Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat to task and said, “We need to ensure job priority for Singaporeans…PSP will call for a review of the India-Singapore Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement, known as CECA”.

“Now this agreement, you must understand, was negotiated by our current Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat…Among the terms of CECA: allow the free movement of professionals in 127 sectors to enter and work in Singapore”, he added.

Progress Singapore Party will review CECA

PAP has failed Singaporeans when they opened the flood gates of Indian FTs to our shores with CECA. Now PSP wants to accountability for this bad policy and for it to be reviewed!

Posted by All Singapore Stuff on Monday, 28 October 2019

“This has brought a lot of unhappiness with Singaporeans PMETs who feel vulnerable in their jobs and are anxious for the future”.

“We need the Government to publish a balance sheet for CECA, to show how Singapore and Singaporeans have benefited from this agreement, how many local jobs have gone to Indian professionals and how many Singaporeans have gone to India. We need accountability”, Dr Tan said. /TISG