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Women on the 2018 ballot are busting perceptions of motherhood and leadership

Krish Vignarajah, Democratic candidate for Maryland governor, with her daughter Alana. AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Motherhood is taking center stage in U.S. politics.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth, the first United States senator to give birth while in office has been seen on Capitol Hill with her newborn nestled in her lap.

Screenshot of ‘Our Girls – Kelda Roys for Governor’ video.
Kelda for Governor 2018

Two Democratic gubernatorial candidates, Maryland’s Krish Vignarajah and Wisconsin’s Kelda Roys, made waves with campaign ads that, in addition to touting their capabilities as leaders, also show them nursing their babies.

A Democratic congressional candidate in New York, Liuba Grechen Shirley, was just granted permission from the Federal Election Commission to use campaign funds to cover the cost of child care while she runs for office.

Plus, women are running for office in record numbers this year. Among their many experiences, roles and identities, many are emphasizing being a mom.

What does this acknowledgment of motherhood tell us about U.S. politics today? As I have discussed in my work as a scholar of gender and politics, women running for office have not traditionally made motherhood central to their candidacies.

Here’s why that appears to be changing.

Mothers of young children

In the past, women who ran for office typically did not have young children. Research shows that women who are professionally best positioned to run for office are less likely to have children than men, and that female officeholders are more likely than their male counterparts to not have children.

If female candidates did have children, they were often adult children – making their role as a mother less intensive and less central to their personal narrative at the time of their candidacy. Scholars have shown that women who hold office at various levels of government tend to do so when their children are older.

Enter Hillary Clinton, whose groundbreaking presidential candidacy made motherhood central to her political appeals and policy agenda. While Clinton fit the traditional mold of a woman by running when her child was an adult, she made motherhood a major theme in her campaign. She spoke about her own experience of raising a child. She elevated the voices of other mothers and drew attention to their concerns.

And she relied on her own daughter, Chelsea Clinton – who gave birth to her second child just weeks before the 2016 Democratic National Convention – as a key surrogate for her on the campaign trail. By focusing on motherhood in so many ways, it’s possible that her historic nomination may have empowered more women with young children to run for office.

Negotiating motherhood

Previously, female candidates with children had to deftly negotiate their role as a mother, rather than fully embrace it. While being a mother fulfills a strong societal expectation associated with womanhood, social psychologists have found that motherhood may be at odds with public perceptions of what strong, competent leadership looks like.

Moreover, women who highlight their children in campaigns may open themselves up to greater scrutiny. Voters may wonder, “Who is caring for your children while you are governing?”

These are the types of questions that Republicans Jane Swift and Sarah Palin faced during their political careers. These are questions that similarly situated male candidates do not receive.

Ironically, today, women without children may face the highest hurdle. There is some evidence that women running for office who do not have children are judged most harshly by would-be voters because childless female candidates violate traditional expectations of women.

Running as a woman

Scholarship, that focuses on the issues that female candidates highlight and the types of voters they reach out to, suggests that making motherhood front and center may be a smart strategy. Scholars have found that in some electoral contexts, female candidates who highlight their gender and target female voters can build a strategic advantage.

For example, as the only woman running in the Democratic primary for the Maryland gubernatorial seat, Krish Vignarajah may distinguish herself from her six male competitors when she highlights her role as a mother. Research suggests she might build an advantage if she talks more about issues that affect women and spends more energy courting women primary voters, because these same approaches may be less effective for her male competitors.

Risks and rewards

The current focus on motherhood in U.S. politics is a mixed bag.

Running “as a mom” may open some female candidates up to the negative impact of gender stereotypes. On the other hand, some recent research suggests that gender stereotypes may no longer hinder women in the ways that they previously have. Other scholars argue that while gender stereotypes shape perceptions of female candidates, many voters ultimately cast their votes for the candidate of their preferred party, making gender and its stereotypes less consequential.

Candidates who highlight motherhood risk oversimplifying their own complex motivations. They may end up perpetuating the myth that women – perhaps because of motherhood – are best at legislating on issues related to family life, thereby keeping them tethered to the home and hearth.

Moreover, images of motherhood seen in electoral politics often reflect just one form of mothering. They do not embrace many other forms of motherhood and mothering across racial, ethnic and other identity groups.

On the other hand, when we ignore motherhood altogether, we do a disservice to all women. And, importantly, we may perpetuate the myth that women cannot or should not, to paraphrase Rep. Patricia Schroeder, “have a brain and a uterus, and use them both.”

The Conversation

Jill S. Greenlee is affiliated with EMILY’S List, Planned Parenthood and other women’s Democratic organizations.


Source: US-Politics

Should Australia join ASEAN? Lessons from Vietnam

By: Huong Le Thu, ASPI

The accession of Vietnam, a formerly antagonistic communist neighbour, to ASEAN was the result of several major geostrategic power shifts that continue to impact on the grouping’s development today.

Conflict in Vietnam in the 1960s and 70s provided the context for the genesis of ASEAN. Despite the hard feelings original member states held towards each other during the period of decolonisation and Cold War tension, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines agreed to work together to shield themselves from the domino effect of communist expansion. ASEAN’s diplomatic response to Vietnam’s 1978 intervention in Cambodia remains the organisation’s biggest success.

The threat of communism brought together a group of dissimilar interests and provided a reason for ASEAN to unite. When it subsided in the 1990s, Vietnam’s regional integration became a necessity and the former adversary acceded to ASEAN in 1995. This marked one of the most meaningful transitions in the region’s history — Southeast Asia had embraced its political and ideological diversity and overcome Cold War bipolarity.

ASEAN was a critical platform for Vietnam to break out from its diplomatic isolation, re-engage with its neighbourhood and indirectly move towards normalising its relationship with the United States. Vietnam’s accession to ASEAN entailed an adjustment in the original members’ strategic thinking and additional considerations of ASEAN’s economic goals. Post-war Vietnam was significantly less developed than the ‘ASEAN 6’. It was grouped into the ‘second tier ASEAN’ group alongside newcomers Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar for which separate arrangements were made in regards to economic integration.

Vietnam’s successful transformation from an external threat into a fellow member state can be seen as the best example of a member state adopting ASEAN principles. Vietnam is now one of the most active members of the organisation. Under the pressure generated by rivalry between the United States and China, Hanoi has been consistent in insisting that ASEAN play a role in dispute management.

Vietnam has also vocally supported multilateral ASEAN initiatives, such as the ASEAN Regional Forum, to uphold the rules-based order and stability of the region. The continuity of Vietnam’s domestic leadership, alongside Singapore, means that its ruling elites still maintain the original vision held by the founders of ASEAN. Unlike Southeast Asian democracies such as Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand (which have experienced power transitions that somewhat undermined their commitment to ASEAN), Vietnam’s outlook on the strategic importance of the group has remained consistent.

Vietnam’s accession has been a mutually beneficial process: ASEAN was the bridge to Vietnam’s liberalisation and connection with the world when the United States was still isolating it from global opportunities. Likewise, the inclusion of Indochinese states reinvented ASEAN into a regional grouping that included maritime and mainland Southeast Asia.

For half a century the region has shaped ASEAN as an institution while ASEAN has framed the conduct of regional politics. After decades of expansion, however, ASEAN is struggling to adjust to new shifts in power, particularly the rise of China. The organisation also suffers from a need to reform itself internally.

Increasing influence by China on individual member states has led to the abuse of ASEAN norms, including the principle of consensus. Growing frustration about this ineffective practice has led to internal discussion about the possibility of a new ‘ASEAN–X’ approach, where issues are resolved among those that are willing or are directly concerned with the problem at hand. While this idea is still in the making, it signals that the innate diversity and different priorities within ASEAN make it increasingly hard to reach ‘consensus’. The pending membership application of Timor Leste, if successful, will only lead ASEAN towards even deeper heterogeneity.

Timor Leste’s pending membership may only further strain ASEAN unity. But it does offer a useful case-study for those who also contemplate joining. This takes the edge off one of the oldest arguments against Australia’s joining ASEAN: that it differs too much from the group. While Australia’s difference is indisputable, that is not the main show-stopper.

The main obstacle to Australian membership is not related to how unified ASEAN is but rather the lack of ASEAN leadership. Before the membership debate, Canberra should ask if it has a vision of the leadership it can offer to ASEAN and what sort of leadership it is willing to follow.

The strategic considerations for Australia to join ASEAN differ from those that were imperative for Vietnam or the Indochinese members in the post-Cold War context. Joining ASEAN is optional for Canberra, and the rationale for Australia to consider joining the club is to better position itself in a region with a stronger China. But whether belonging to the ASEAN group can shield Australia from a more omnipresent China is an open question.

Even so, this debate is an opportunity for Australia to lever existing ASEAN platforms such as the East Asia Summit and ASEAN Regional Forum to assert its status as the oldest and closest ASEAN dialogue partner. Unlike other key major dialogue partners whose current political contexts have shifted their immediate focus away from ASEAN (such as the United States, China, Russia, India, Japan and the EU), Australia is in the position to demonstrate support for this regional institution.

Vietnam’s ASEAN success story should give Australia a reference point that ASEAN is able to adjust geopolitical needs. ASEAN membership does not necessarily give more leverage. It is a question of what Canberra wants from ASEAN and whether it has really made most of the existing frameworks of dialogue and strategic partnership.

Huong Le Thu is a senior analyst at Australia Strategic Policy Institute.

This article first appeared on the East Asia Forum.

https://theindependent.sg.sg/reflecting-on-the-asean-australian-relationship/

Police Powers, Governance and Accountability: Has the Law Minister Got It Right?

By M Ravi

The issue of police powers, governance and accountability has resurfaced again in our public discourse. Civil society members and members of the legal fraternity have expressed concerns over the unfretted police powers and if the state has over-extended itself by over-shadowing the commissioner.

The issue, whenever raised, reveals the growing uncertainty among citizens about the scope of police powers and whether current procedures ensure due process. The topic stirred up sentiments again last week when Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam said that Ministers have the “ultimate decision-making responsibility to consider what is right, what is good for society, and not be side-tracked by a vocal minority.”

Citing the Public Order and Safety (Special Powers) Act (POSSPA), he stated that, “POSSPA gives a lot of powers to the police. It is probably legislation that is not very doable in many countries,” he acknowledged, yet went on to justify that it was doable in Singapore because citizens trust the police.

As always done in true Singaporean style, whenever new, controversial or unpopular policies are rolled out, the government often cites statistics garnered from its own feedback unit. This time REACH revealed that 82% of Singaporeans polled said they agreed with POSSPA. But what about the growing dissenting voices that are side-tracked and ignored? These voices are loud in social media spaces and surely the government knows about them. The noise was particularly deafening in the tragic case of 14-year old Benjamin Lim who was found dead after he was questioned by police on allegations of outrage of modesty.

In discussing the case, Mr Shanmugam said that his Ministry was responsible for the protocols in place. He stated, “Ultimately, responsibility is with me as the Minister. It is not with individual police officers; their responsibility is to act according to protocols in place. If there are issues with the protocols, the responsibility is mine, let’s not attack the police officers who cannot defend themselves.”

The Minister’s position cannot be right. He is gradually arrogating the role of the Commissioner of Police (COP) onto himself and that is worrying due to its unconstitutionality. It upsets the doctrine of separation of powers. The Minister’s statement erodes the independence of the police force.

Below, I advance this constitutional position to elaborate why the Police cannot be answerable to any one Minister or to a Ministry, but to the Law only.

In the 1968 historic case of R v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner, ex parte Blackburn, Lord Denning famously said that the Commissioner should be, and is, independent of the Executive. He is not subject to the orders of the Secretary of State, save that under legislation. The Secretary of State can call on him to give a report, or to retire in the interests of efficiency, yet “no Minister of the Crown can tell him that he must, or must not, keep observation on this place or that; or that he must, or must not, prosecute this man or that one. Nor can any police authority tell him so. The responsibility for law enforcement lies on him. He is answerable to the law and to the law alone”.

In Dermot Walsh, and Vicky Conway, “Police Governance and Accountability: Overview of Current Issues” (2011), the following was said:

“Given the sensitive nature of aspects of the police function, it is easy to appreciate why there should be a concern to protect the police against the full rigours of democratic governance and accountability as applied to the executive generally. The failure to do so would run the risk of politicising safety, security and justice. The prospect of the police being required, whether directly or indirectly, to apply vindictive or preferential law enforcement treatment to distinct groups or individuals for politically partisan ends, is clearly intolerable in any liberal democracy based on respect for human rights. On the other hand, to insulate the police too heavily against democratic direction and accountability will only lay the foundations for the worst excesses of a police state. The open-ended challenge, therefore, is to devise methods which strike a reasonable accommodation between these conflicting tensions.”

In the same article, the authors clarify, that the objective of ‘police independence’ is to ensure that they are deployed and act only in the broad ‘public interest’ rather than in partisan political, corporate or personal interests; that they are not subject to undue partisan political influence, from whatever source, in doing their work; that they are not deployed to suppress or harass political opponents or dissidents; and that in doing their work, they uphold the civil and human rights (such as rights of free association and expression) of those they police. While many western developed democracies have mechanisms for civilian oversight of police, the extent to which citizen oversight exists in Singapore is desperately unclear.

For those unfamiliar with how the Ministries and the various Departments under them are organised, the Singapore Police Force is a Department organised under the Ministry of Home Affairs. The COP oversees the Department. This way, if there are mishaps, the public knows who to bring an action against. In the same spirit, if something is amiss in the Department and allegations are made against it, the COP must speak up and defend his Department. Police matters should therefore not leapfrog to the Ministry or a Minister.

The exercise of the power of arrest inevitably carries with it a friction between the constitutional right of liberty and the countervailing public interest in crime prevention and control as well as the maintenance of public order. No one denies that the police ought to be able to work freely and unconstrained, but this cannot be at the expense of forgoing fundamental rights. In short, a balance between the liberty of a person and the need to uphold law and order must be struck. Parliament has imposed limitations and safeguards to ensure that the power of the police to arrest is not arbitrarily exercised. The task of interpreting whether there has indeed been transgression is then burdened on to the judiciary.

While the court mybe slow to question the bona fide exercise of an executive discretion by the police, history is littered with examples from around the world of cases where the court has delivered appropriate relief when legitimate grievances exist. Lord Diplock in Holgate-Mohammed v Duke said that the lawfulness of the arrest and detention based on that suspicion does not depend upon the judge’s own view as to whether the arrest was reasonable or not, but upon whether the police officer’s action in arresting was an exercise of discretion that was ultra vires because an irrelevant matter was considered.

Powers of arrest are provided for in several statutes in Singapore. A recent press article revealed the extent of legislation related to security and defence matters. Yet, it must be remembered that the primary sources remain the Constitution and the Criminal Procedure Code.

It is time that vague police protocols and the default systems of extracting confessions change. It is time to make it clear that the COP is answerable to the public for its own determinations and policies and cannot hide behind any Ministerial shield. It is time to start a dialogue on police accountability and governance. It is time for the government to stand by its international proclamations at the UN to strengthen its protection of citizens’ rights to free expression.

There is clearly much to do.

M Ravi is a leading civil rights advocate in Singapore. The opinion expressed herein represent the views of the writer.

Smart windows could combine solar panels and TVs too

Could this monitor and window be combined with a solar panel? patat/Shutterstock.com

Imagine standing in front of a wall of windows, surveying the view. You hear someone enter the room behind you. You turn. “Welcome,” you say. “Here is the video I wanted to show you.” At the press of a button, the view vanishes and the windows transform into a high-definition TV screen.

No, your friend isn’t James Bond, and you aren’t the next Q. Still, even as you watch the video, your window-TV is doing as much to help avert global catastrophe as any Bond-film gadget ever did. You see, it’s also a solar panel, constantly harvesting renewable energy from the sun. The problem of climate change is not a typical movie supervillain, but it’s a trickier problem than Goldfinger posed. Worse, humanity’s efforts to solve it with existing technologies aren’t working fast enough.

The heroes swooping in to the rescue could be a new technology called organic semiconductors, a new way to make materials that conduct electricity only under certain conditions. Most semiconductors in modern electronics are made of crystalline, rock-forming elements like silicon. Organic semiconductors, by contrast, are made primarily of carbon-based molecules. They take less energy to make than conventional semiconductors. A conventional photovoltaic cell, for instance, can take years to produce as much energy as was required to build it; an organic photovoltaic cell takes just months.

However, perhaps the most exciting thing about organic semiconductors is that it’s possible to design molecules that are flexible, lightweight, colored or completely transparent. In the lab I work in, we design and test new small molecules that have specific, targeted properties – like making a simple transparent pane into a window, screen and solar panel.

Each of these research samples is a small organic solar panel made from different molecules, with varying degrees of transparency to visible light.
Kerry Rippy

Capturing solar energy

Making a solar panel that’s also a window involves a bit of creativity: It has to be something that both absorbs light, to make electricity, and lets light through, to let people see in and out.

Our material takes advantage of the fact that a window only needs to transmit human-visible light; in my lab, we can make molecules that absorb only UV and infrared light, wavelengths of light our eyes don’t see. These are parts of the spectrum we don’t really want to pass through a window anyway. UV light gives you a sunburn. And infrared light is hot: Filtering it out can save on the energy use and expense of air conditioning. It’s true that our method doesn’t capture absolutely all the energy in sunlight, but that’s okay. The amount of solar energy that reaches Earth every hour is more than all humanity uses in a year.

Transparent organic solar panels don’t absorb the part of the solar spectrum that includes visible light; they only absorb UV and infrared light.
Kerry Rippy, CC BY-ND

Flipping the process around

Organic semiconductors are also useful for making monitors and displays. If you think about it, a screen is basically a solar panel run backwards. It generates light from an electric current. Both solar panels and display screens involve conversions between light and electricity. Just like we can design transparent organic semiconductors, we can design molecules that emit specific colors of light when an electric current is applied.

Put together one molecule that emits red, one molecule that emits blue, and one molecule that emits green, and you have an organic light-emitting diode. Those are the key to what are known in the TV and monitor marketplace as OLED screens.

Simplified diagrams of organic photovoltaic cells and organic light emitting diodes show how they operate very similarly, just in reverse.
Kerry Rippy, CC BY-ND

To make a smart window, we would need to deposit two layers of organic semiconductors – one layer to generate electricity from sunlight and another to emit light – onto a pan of a transparent conducting material, like indium tin oxide. These technologies exist, but are not yet available for sale.

Putting the pieces together

Half of this device is already commercially available: Energy-efficient high-resolution OLEDs are a big hit in the marketplace for home and office TVs.

Companies selling organic solar panels, and even organic solar panel windows, are just getting going. Ongoing research efforts, like mine, are aimed at optimizing the properties of these materials, increasing their efficiency, and making them more durable.

As we make the components better, we’ll also find ways to integrate organic-semiconductor solar cells and organic-semiconductor displays together. It may be a few years out yet, but there is certainly incentive to do so, with so many possible applications. An electric car with smart windows could collect enough solar energy to drive the car 10 to 15 miles a day, enough for a typical commute. Driving directions could appear on the windshield, too. Anywhere there’s a window – whether in a skyscraper or a mobile home – there could be a smart window, saving space, saving energy and letting the occupants feel like James Bond.

The Conversation

Kerry Rippy does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


Source: Science-Technology

ESM Goh: Draws parallels between Lee Kuan Yew and Mahathir Mohamad in congratulatory message

Obbana Rajah

Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong offered his congratulations to Dr Mahathir Mohamad on Facebook yesterday evening.

The 76 year old, whose Facebook page is titled ‘MParader’, short for ‘Marine Parader’, the division ESM Goh represents in Parliament, made a comparison between Dr Mahathir and the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

He said,

“Watching Mahathir fight Malaysian GE14 reminds me of Lee Kuan Yew who famously said, “Even from my sick bed, even if you are going to lower me into the grave and I feel something is going wrong, I will get up.””

Mr Lee will always be remembered for that quote he said during his National Day Rally speech in 1988. Incidentally, that was also when he was preparing to hand over the premiership to ESM Goh.

In his post, ESM Goh continued,

“One must salute Mahathir for his indomitable will and energy to right what he thinks is wrong with his country. He and his coalition partners scored a stunning victory. Congratulations to them on their success, and to Mahathir on becoming the Prime Minister of Malaysia for the second time.

Whatever happens on one side of the Causeway affects the other. This is a historic and unprecedented moment for our closest neighbour. We wish them well and success, and offer Mahathir and the new government our continued goodwill and friendship. — gct”

 

In his post, he also made references to a time when he was Prime Minister, the same time when Dr Mahathir served as Prime Minister as well. The two prime ministers were known for their disagreements over water prices, between the years 1998 and 2003.

Netizens had quite a bit to say on the matter:


[email protected]

PM Lee congratulates Dr Mahathir on swearing in

Obbana Rajah

Late last night, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong took to Facebook to extend warm wishes and congratulations to Dr. Mahathir Mohamad on being sworn in as the Prime Minister.

PM Lee posted his message on Facebook only after Dr. Mahathir was officially sworn in. His opposition coalition Pakatan Harapan won Malaysia’s 14th general election in a rather unexpected turn of events and many were shocked at the results.

In his post, PM Lee said,

“Congratulations to Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad on being sworn in as the 7th Prime Minister of Malaysia.

I wish Tun Mahathir and his team every success, and hope to catch up with him in person soon. Malaysia is a vital partner of Singapore, and our peoples share strong and deep bonds. I look forward to working with Tun Mahathir and the new government to enhance our cooperation. We can do much more together. – LHL”

Along with his personal message of congratulations was the congratulatory statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

It read:

“The Singapore Government congratulates the new Prime Minister of Malaysia Tun Dr Mahathir bin Mohamad and Pakatan Harapan on the outcome of the General Election yesterday. The people of Malaysia have given the new Government a clear mandate to lead the country. Malaysia is Singapore’s nearest neighbour and a vital partner. We have had close relations and extensive cooperation with successive Malaysian governments, including the government of Tun Mahathir when he was previously Prime Minister. We look forward to cooperating with Tun Mahathir and the new Government of Malaysia to further strengthen and deepen bilateral ties, for the benefit of both our peoples.”

Many netizens used the opportunity to offer their wishes as well.

 


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Mo Salah: “If he scores another few, then I’ll be Muslim, too.”

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Obbana Rajah

The sight of Egyptian soccer star Mohamed Salah scoring goals for Liverpool Football Club is getting common these days. But there is another aspect of this striker, who has won a couple of Player of The year awards, that fans are getting used to.

After scoring another goal, and having his teammates congratulate him, Mo Salah takes a moment. As Neil Atkinson, host of The Anfield Wrap, a Liverpool fans’ podcast, and a regular at the stadium said, “There is this pause”.

The football player raises his hands to the sky in adulation, and then kneels on the field, prostrating himself in a personal demonstration of his Muslim faith. Atkinson continues, “The crowd goes a little quieter, allows him that moment of reflection,” Then, there is another roar as he stands up, “and then everyone celebrates again.”

 

Photo: Facebook/Mohamed Salah FANS

Miqdaad Versi, the assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, said that Mo Salah “is someone who embodies Islam’s values and wears his faith on his sleeve. He has a likability. He is the hero of the team. Liverpool, in particular, has rallied around him in a really positive way. He is not the solution to Islamophobia, but he can play a major role.”

At a time where hate crimes are becoming increasingly common towards Muslims, especially after terror attacks in Paris, London and Manchester in recent years, Mo Salah becomes an equaliser of sorts. Football has a fan base made up of billions, and by being unafraid and proud to display his religion, Mo Salah has not only been breaking barriers, he has also been getting rid of them altogether.

Even when it comes to his fellow Muslims, Mo Salah sets an example. He shows them that through hard work, regardless of faith or race, one can make a name for themselves. This thread is evident in how in one of the football chants in Mo Salah’s honour has the line, “If he scores another few, then I’ll be Muslim, too”.

It is no wonder then that Mo Salah’s Facebook fan page alone has over 80,000 fans and followers alike.


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First summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un will take place in Singapore: POTUS confirms

UPDATE – POTUS has confirmed that the summit will take place in Singapore on June 12 2018:

President of the United States of America (POTUS) Donald Trump has selected Singapore as the venue to host his historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. CNN reported yesterday that US officials prefer to hold the summit in Singapore, due to its neutral stance and infrastructure, while official confirmation is expected to come in the next few days.

Administration officials have reportedly been instructed to begin organising the meeting. The CNN report followed North Korea’s release of three US citizens who had been held prisoner – a move that bodes well for the forthcoming summit.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has stated that the US’ goals for the summit is the immediate “permanent, verifiable irreversible dismantling of North Korea’s weapons of mass destruction program.” It remains unclear whether the Pyongyang regime will accept this demand but both sides are reportedly confident that the meeting will be mutually successful. Pompeo said:

“Now that part is behind us for sure, and we had a chance to talk substantively about what we intend to be on the agenda, and also how we’re going to begin to coordinate in the days ahead between now and the summit in a way that we – both sides are confident that we will set the conditions for a successful meeting between the two leaders.”

The CNN report came after Trump confirmed that the meeting will not take place in the demilitarised zone (DMZ) between North Korea and South Korea – a venue he is said to have previously preferred.

Some analysts have predicted that the summit could take place in Marina Bay Sands since it is owned by one of the POTUS’ biggest campaign donors, Sheldon Adelson. The owner of Las Vegas Sands Corp, Adelson is said to be close to Mr Trump, to the point that he is believed to advise the President on Middle East policy matters.

The little red dot last hosted Chinese President Xi Jinping’s historic meeting with then-Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou three years ago, in 2015.

Author of notable Asian newsletter Nelson Report, Chris Nelson, noted: “It will surprise most observers if the pick isn’t Singapore, apparently at the outer limits of Kim’s personal aircraft if he wants a non-stop flight. Trump today did say the reachable-by-train DMZ has been ruled out.”

Mintaro Oba, a former state department official who worked on Korean negotiations, told the Guardian: “Singapore wasn’t my first choice for the North Korea summit location. But Singapore is a very valued US partner and a remarkable city-state that punches many times above its weight. This is a good choice.”

MOE will “dial back the overemphasis” on exam results: Ong Ye Kung

Education Minister Ong Ye Kung announced in Parliament today that the Ministry will continue to “dial back the overemphasis” on examination results. The Ministry will undertake a number of measures to achieve this, including revising Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) scoring and enhancing Applied and Experiential Learning in schools.

Ong, who was recently promoted to take full control of the Ministry of Education (MOE) in the latest Cabinet reshuffle, announced this as part of MOE’s addendum to the President’s address.

The Minister, who one of three frontrunners tipped to succeed Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, said that reducing the overemphasis on exam scores will increase the joy of learning and inspire a passion for lifelong learning: “As an Asian society, we put strong focus on academic excellence, but we need to continue to dial back the overemphasis on examination results, which can dampen the enthusiasm for learning.”

Besides being “on track” to transforming PSLE scoring, the Minister added that Applied and Experiential Learning in schools and Institutes of Higher Learning (IHLs) will encourage students to learn by doing. This will “cultivate an innovative spirit” in students and help them apply their knowledge and skills when they leave school.

On top of this, MOE is planning on enhancing outdoor learning and activities. Besides focusing on making the learning of languages “encouraging and fun”, MOE also has plans to deepen students’ understanding of the nation, society, the region and the world.

MOE will also continue to build “smart schools” that will help students better prepare for the future and will further develop the Singapore Student Learning Space platform that will allow students to learn “anytime, anywhere and at their own pace.”

Additionally, teachers will be positioned as “designers of learning experiences” and take advantage of technology to enhance learning experiences.

The efforts of the MOE, especially that seen in programmes like the Institute of Technical Education’s (ITE) Work-Learn Technical Diploma, the SkillsFuture Earn and Learn and Work-Study Degree programmes, will help recognise talents beyond solely academic strengths.

This will help uncover and develop students’ talents by making multiple pathways available to them across the education system. Ong added: “Through initiatives such as Direct School Admission in schools and aptitude-based admission in IHLs, we recognise the interests and non-academic abilities of students in our admission systems.”

Ong said that IHLs will also undergo a “major change” and expand its offerings of industry-relevant and modular training courses that will build a “vibrant and high-quality lifelong learning industry that enables continual up-skilling and re-skilling of the workforce”.

He elaborated: “All these efforts are anchored on the philosophy of SkillsFuture, which is to support all Singaporeans, regardless of their starting points, to uncover their strengths and interests, and learn throughout life through multiple pathways to develop skills mastery…Over time, our society will embrace a broad meritocracy of skills.”

Sisters hoping to turn their luck around paid $1450 for 9 bottles of ‘holy water’, only to get conned

A pair of sisters hoping to turn their luck around reportedly paid an Indonesian man a hefty $1450 for nine bottles of ‘holy water’, only to feel cheated after their lives did not change after drinking the beverage. On top of this, the sisters and their family continued to be hounded by the Indonesian who kept asking them for more money, prompting them to lodge a police report.

One of the sisters, 30-year-old Madam Yang, told the Chinese daily that she lives in a Bukit Batok flat with her husband, sister and their father. She added that both she and her husband are unemployed and that their two children and presently living with foster families.

Madam Yang’s sister is the sole breadwinner of the household. She was the one who was first taken in by the Indonesian seller who would frequent their block, selling scavenged goods, and became a regular customer.

Having been disturbed for a few months that their house was “unclean” and that something had been tugging at her feet while she slept, Madam Yang’s sister became attracted to the seller’s claims that the 50-year-old ‘holy water’ could solve her problems.

Madam Yang shared: “I don’t know how the man came to know about this, but he told my sister that he had a solution to her problems. My sister believed him and wanted me to go along to see him.”

The seller was an eloquent speaker, according to Madam Yang, who claimed to be a “spiritual consultant” capable of solving a myriad of problems with his ‘holy water’. The seller allegedly bragged that consuming a spoonful of the water and showering with the remaining liquid would solve any of their problems.

Madam Yang cried: “I don’t know why, but I too was taken in by him. I thought of my two children, and hoped to use the power of the ‘holy water’ so they could return home.”

The sisters allegedly spent $1450 on 9 bottles of the substance that were contained in transparent plastic bottles and looked no different from normal water. Mdm Yang reportedly spent $400 for four bottles of ‘holy water’, while her sister spent $800 for five bottles. It remains unclear who paid the remaining $250.

The sisters’ hopes were dashed when the ‘holy water’ failed to work and they did not find their luck turning around. Instead, they started facing more problems when the man began hounding them for more money even though his product did not deliver results.

When Madam Yang declined to give him more money and asked for a refund, the Indonesian man refused and instead taunted her to call the police, besides threatening to curse her children if she did not give him more money.

Angry, Madam Yang contacted the police. She said, “My life did not turn around after drinking the ‘holy water’. I have called the police and I hope to publicise the matter so as to encourage others to be more careful.”