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Surprise, surprise…medals for Little India riot officers

The government is trying very hard to keep the morale of the police force up in the aftermath of the huge embarrassment the Home Team suffered during the Little India riot. PM Lee Hsien Loong had a highly-publicised lunch with the key members of the team who had a hard time dealing with the rioters on the night of Dec 8 last year.

Then came the announcement that the wages of officers were being increased. And here’s news that five police and five civil defence officers were given commendation medals in this year’s National Day awards.

The interviews with some of them don’t spell out what their heroic deeds were on that night. One report had ASP Edwin Yong, who helped form a human cordon around the bus that had run over an Indian foreign worker, saying his team members offered him their riot helmets because there were not enough to go around.

“You really feel quite touched when you have them trying to protect their team leader,” he said.

Another said the burning and flipping of police and civil defence vehicles turned out to be a blessing in disguise.

ASP Jonathan Tang said: “Every vehicle they damaged bought me more time. I got at least 15 minutes more…As long as they are not going around setting fire to the shophouses, I am okay. Because this is a police car, you can replace it.”

He forgot to mention that the damaged cars were bought with taxpayers’ money.

Elitist schools? So what?

Elite schools are old chestnuts that keep getting tossed in the roasting pan. It usually starts with the heart-wrenching stories about getting a place in primary one for one’s seven-year-old.  It then moves on to stories about how some schools have become so elite that they make a mockery of Singapore’s meritocratic principles.

Not all elite primary schools are in expensive residential districts but many are located in the Bukit Timah area. These schools do have better facilities than neighbourhood schools because rich parents raise money for them.

The next level of “elitism” is when students, depending on their P6 exam results, try to get a place in the top secondary schools — which produce the best results for the O Level exams.

The thinking goes like this: top schools present their students with better opportunities to shine in their academic work and leadership skills. This in turn will enable the teenagers to get into the “better” junior colleges where they do their A Level exams.

This system of school selection has been in practice for generations, until the new Education Minister Heng Swee Keat decided to prove that all schools are good schools and introduced policy changes to “equalise” the quality of education and dismantle perceptions of elitism. He was, no surprise, responding to parents whose children couldn’t get into these elite schools.

First he stopped the ministry from announcing which students and schools scored the highest marks in the national examinationss. Then he allocated more places to seven-year-olds who had no links to schools to claim priority for places. Finally, he posted principals of well-known — elite — schools to neighbourhood schools and vice-versa.

Have these measures “equalised” education in Singapore? Hardly. A child’s examination scores may not be the best measure of his intelligence and personality but, it’s still the main means of judging a student’s performance in school.  A lot of has been said by government leaders about measuring other aspects of education, like civic mindedness, sporting and team spirit and other co-curricular activities, and there are a lot more opportunities for students who are less academically inclined to make something of their lives.

But parents will only continue to press for niggly changes to the system (including moving top schools out of their traditional locations) when it is they who need to change most — by not pressuring their children to do well in examinations (driving some to suicide!) and to make sure that the so-called elitism doesn’t become a focal point of young lives.

Singapore children know full well from a young age that to succeed in examinations, you have to work hard. As parents, we have to teach them that that maxim is true of life in general.

Honour the humble

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Promoting a culture of honour for the well-being of Singapore from the ground up — that is the aim of the newly-launched non-profit organisation called Honour (Singapore).

I am going to approach it from a different point of view about Singapore. I shall introduce you to people who live here, who may or may not be Singaporean, but who live in our space and therefore fill at least part of our day here. They contribute to the well-being of Singapore and thus need to be recognised.

Let me begin with a young man and four young women from China, who work in the coffee shop in my block. It is a humble place but without them, life would not be the same for people like me. It is, after all, the café for most of us who live in the neighbourhood, and a very clean café at that. They would be run off their feet but for the assistance from two older women who are Singaporeans and live close by. The five young Chinese expats share a flat above the coffeeshop. One of them helps with a noodle stall in the coffeeshop.

None of the servers use a pad/pencil but none would forget any order of beverage or noodle either. It isn’t a big coffeeshop, so orders are yelled out to the young man who prepares the beverages. When he wants to take a break from pouring hot cups of coffee from the copper urn, he clears the tables!

The hierarchy has it that the two older Singapore helpers clear the beverage utensils but not the plates, which go into designated pails which are then washed by the respective stall holders during a lull in orders. No wonder it’s a job few will take up: it’s hard work. But the young people from China always have a smile on their faces.

Singapore for them is a step in the right direction for their future. But unfortunately for them, their future is not certain. The young man’s two-year work permit is up for renewal soon and with the pressure to give jobs first to Singaporeans (whether they want the jobs or not) he thinks his chances for an extension are slim. The women, who keep the tables spick and span, unlike “dirty Singaporean workers” according to local customers have only been here for less than a year. Moreover, the menial task of clearing the tables was too strenuous for the older Singaporean men who used to do it.

I hope they get their permits renewed. They have a role to play here, improving the quality of lives for a small group of Singaporeans, and surely, that should matter too, shouldn’t it?

As ambassador at large Chan Heng Chee pointed out recently: “Identity is also organically reshaped by the way people interact and live.” The way these five China expats interact and live with us is evident they should be recognised and allowed to stay. Let’s start here and show we care.

What gay activism means for these two

By Simon Vincent

“You can’t talk about gay issues without talking about politics,” said Alex Au in a discussion hosted by the Humanist Society of Singapore on Sunday afternoon at the SMU Administration building.

Called Human Worth and Dignity: Two Stories of the LGBT Community in Singapore, the talk also featured Lynette Chua, author of Mobilizing Gay Singapore: Rights and Resistance in an Authoritarian State.

Au shared poignant and humorous anecdotes about his engagement, as a gay man and activist, with the Singapore state and society.

He said it had been 21 years since he first joined People Like Us, a local gay advocacy group, which had “run into trouble with the authorities.”

2000 was a “seminal year” for Au because it was the first time that The Straits Times had interviewed him. Au recalled how for the sake of “balance” an interview with a psychologist was positioned alongside his article.

“I got the bigger share of the feature, so that was progress in a way,” he said, drawing laughter from the audience.

While highlighting organisations like 7-11 which have  hired LGBT people as front-line workers, Au expressed scepticism over just how much progress has been made. “How many people have we convinced with our arguments?”

Following Au’s talk, Lynette Chua discussed the main themes of her book. She likened gay activism in Singapore to “pragmatic resistance.” Gay activists, according to her, have to balance between “toeing the line” and “pushing boundaries.”

“You have to come across as non-confrontational,” she said.

When a gay haunt called Rascals was raided by the police in 1993, its patrons wrote a letter of protest. Chua said the protest was framed as a complaint against the police officers for overstepping their boundaries. “There was nothing about gay rights.”

While noting the greater acceptance of the LGBT community today, Chua drew attention to what she saw as a “problem of not being inclusive enough.” She said LGBT issues tend to be framed around gay men.

When asked about the recent Christian opposition to the LGBT community, Au said he was quite confident that the movement will eventually lose steam.

Chua  felt that opposition from the Muslim quarters of society should also be taken into account. The state is more fearful when it comes to the Muslim community, she said.

Vincent Wijeysingha, who was among the audience members, said “a radical critique of religion” has to take place. The churches would grow, not diminish, because they are “oriented to money.”

When interviewed about his stance, he noted that people would have to negotiate laws such as The Religious Harmony Act. Nevertheless, he felt that it was important to “begin the process of questioning religion.”

“The radical critique will have to occur, it will be painful,” he said. “My experience of critiquing the archbishop was painful as well, but it has to start somewhere.”

Sharing his thoughts on how progress can be made on LGBT issues, Paul Tobin, the president of the Humanist Society, said: “I think it’s about getting people on your side, people who may be your opponents at the moment, but as long as they accept you for who you are, everybody wins.”

How Hamas took on Israel in Gaza

The recent news of Israel bombing schools and the death of civilians there would seem that Israel was the victor in the conflict in Gaza. Israel with all its military might could have disarmed Hamas and could have had complete control of the Gaza Strip. However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided against this and he now enjoys the highest approval ratings.

It is more important, in any conflict, to compare the goals that both sides have set for themselves before the fight begun and what they have accomplished. This time, some would argue that Hamas had won.

Hamas began the war because it was forced to the corner but soon after, Hamas was in control of the time period of the issue by refusing cease-fires repeatedly. Hamas was also able to fire missiles and rockets at Israel territories, regardless of the efforts the Israeli Air Force spent in knocking launch sites out.

Hamas inflicted an urban campaign against the ground forces of Israel around five times and used tunnels to penetrate their territory and established fear. Hamas made Israel pay a great price and Israel finally had to withdraw its ground troops from the Gaza Strip.

Demilitarization of Gaza has become of the goals of Israelites. However, Hamas would never agree to remove weapons unless they were faced with protracted Israelites of the Gaza Strip, and this is something that Mr. Netanyahu would never undertake.

The question is, how exactly did a terrorist guerrilla organization dominate the most powerful army in the Middle East?

They learned lessons and then acted on them. The Hamas first used counterintelligence measures to stay away from the electronic surveillance of Israel. Next, they prepared for an Israel invasion. They replaced their battalion commanders with men who had gone for training in Iran and Lebanon. Last, but not least, Hamas invested in the formation of a complex network of tunnels that made their way to Israeli territory and created units of frogmen to attack the country by sea.

These were big advancements and Hamas definitely surprised Israel. As much as Israel wants to marginalize Hamas, the nation is on the verge of being recognized internationally as an equal party in the Palestinian-Israeli issue.

WHO declares Ebola epidemic as an international health emergency

Nigeria became the most recent West African nation to declare a state of emergency as the result of the current outbreak of the Ebola virus. With Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea already in a state of emergency, that makes Nigeria the fourth nation to this precautionary measure.

The World Health Organization has taken the rare step of defining the outbreak as a public health emergency of international concern. This is only the third time that an epidemic has been named as such, the other two being the swine flu incident from 2009 and a polio scare from earlier this year.

The director-general of the WHO has appealed for a greater international aid efforts for countries hardest hit by the disease. The response to the epidemic has been somewhat slow and some experts believe that it is likely to claim many more lives before the situation is under control. At the time of writing, there have been approximately 1,800 confirmed cases of infection resulting in close to 1,000 deaths.

The Ebola virus has no established cure or treatment and with the high-fatality rate of the current outbreak it has pushed some nations to consider measures that could be risky. Health officials are currently discussing the possibility of using experimental drugs to treat some of the most extreme cases.

The drug in question is known as ZMapp and it has been used to treat two American aid workers that were infected with the disease. The drug has not completed testing and it has yet to be proven as an effective method to treat the Ebola virus. This raises ethical concerns in regard to the use of ZMapp on a large group of human subjects. That being said, the American aid workers who were treated with the drug have begun to show signs of improvement.

The World Health Organization is currently holding emergency meetings to address a situation that they have deemed an international health emergency. While they have not taken the drastic step of recommending travel restrictions to the affected nations, they have advocated for awareness and screening of all travelers that are flying out of West Africa.

John Kerry concerned about territorial disputes in South China Sea

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The meeting of the ASEAN regional forum saw the United States trying to reduce tension between China and many of the summit’s member states. Recent disputes between China and her Southeast Asian neighbors have centered on claims of maritime rights to the South China Sea. The US Secretary of State, John Kerry, has proposed a halt to actions that could be viewed as hostile while also trying to negotiate a resolution to the disputed region.

The conflict stems from overlapping claims of maritime rights to the South China Sea. China claims that most of the sea is within their sovereign territory, which puts them in dispute with nations such as the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam. The South China Sea is critical to many of these nations because it provides access to shipping lanes and the rights to natural resources that are in the region.

The rival claims involving the South China Sea have been a point of trouble for US diplomacy in the region as American diplomats try to balance their relationship with China and attempt to maintain a significant role in Asian diplomacy.

While in the Asia-Pacific region, the US Secretary of State also held a meeting with leaders from Japan and South Korea. According to Kerry, much of the meeting was spent addressing security concerns that are related to North Korea.

Economic aid and nuclear arms have been a point of contention between the United States and North Korea. American diplomats would like to strike a deal with the impoverished North Korean nation that sees an end to their pursuit of nuclear weapons while also providing financial assistance.

The ASEAN summit touched on many issues, but most of the talks came back to security concerns and the disputes over rights to the South China Sea. The Chinese Foreign Minister met with Kerry at the Chinese Embassy in Myanmar, but there seems to have been little progress.

After the meeting, a statement released by the Chinese Embassy claimed to welcome the role of American diplomacy in the dispute while at the same time reasserting the legitimacy of their actions in the region. With that being the case, the disputed claims will likely continue into the foreseeable future.

The Test is not the Territory

The recent changes in the Individual Physical Proficiency Test standards have met with mixed reactions. Described as a way to ensure National Servicemen would be better able to train for and pass the test, the new format has raised questions over whether fitness standards will be compromised. It is time to take a step back and look at the big picture, to understand the rationale of having an IPPT in the first place.

Different types of fitness

There is physical fitness, and there is psychological  fitness. The former is a baseline standard of health. The latter is physiological adaptation to task. It is fair to say that an Olympic-class weightlifter is as biologically fit as a sprinter in the same league, but as they have trained for different sports one is better than the other in their respective sports.

From a military perspective, troops need both kinds of fitness. They need to be of good health, and they need to be able to do their jobs well. Modern-day militaries have dozens, if not hundreds, of different specialities, each with their own specific tasks and requirements.

An infantryman would have to be able to march long distances hauling heavy loads, and be able to sprint from cover to cover in a firefight. An artilleryman must be able to set up, load, tear down and move his assigned piece all day long. A Naval diver will have to swim long distances quickly and stealthily, then emerge from the water and execute the mission.

Different vocations have different fitness requirements, which are best met through training specific for that vocation. But this kind of specialised training needs a foundation of good health to build upon. It is that baseline that the IPPT seeks to test for and establish.

Fitness to Task

Regulars and Full-time National Servicemen are the first in line for combat. They are able to train full-time for their specific jobs. Their concern is not simply passing the IPPT – it is being able to do their jobs well. Combat fitness is outside the scope of this article, but if they can pass the new IPPT standards, these soldiers will have a foundation upon which to build the kind of fitness they need for their specific roles.

National Servicemen who have completed their full-time NS liability are the nation’s second line of defence. In times of crises, with the NSFs and regulars holding the enemy at bay, NSmen would be furiously equipping and being trained to task before being sent out into the fray. The purpose of annual in-camp training is to refresh and maintain their technical skills first, and then physical fitness. In pre-deployment training, the same priorities would likely apply. It’s more important to ensure reservists can use their equipment properly first, so they can actually do their jobs. Any leftover time can be dedicated to physical fitness, so they can do their jobs better and longer. The higher the level of baseline fitness, the faster and easier it is to bring the NSmen up to speed, and the sooner they can be sent to the front.

For that to happen, NSmen must be fit, and must be able to train.

The compromise

The new IPPT, at heart, is about finding the best compromise between baseline fitness and ability to train for National Servicemen. Full-time soldiers can train often, but not reservists accustomed to civilian life. If a reservist finds it difficult to train for a test, laziness may set in. He will not train for the test, and therefore will not be fit.

The new IPPT format is made completely of calisthenics that do not require any equipment beyond a pair of running shoes. Anybody can train for the IPPT anywhere. By making it convenient to train, the military planners are hoping that soldiers will become fitter as a result.

Will it work? Foreign militaries with similar tests seem to have good experiences. The Israeli Defence Forces and the United States Army use the same exercises the new IPPT uses. The Australian military has a shuttle run in lieu of a distance run.

On the other hand, the British Army requires a shuttle run, lifting a weighted bag onto an elevated surface, and completing a set course while carrying two full jerry cans of water. Danish troops undergo three or four exercise blocks to test different parts of the body, with multiple stations per block. The Canadian Armed Forces has four stations: a sandbag lift, intermittent loaded shuttle run, 20-metre rushes and a sandbag drag.

The Israeli, American and Australian militaries favour simple exercises that anybody can train anywhere. The British, Danish and Canadian forces use more comprehensive tests to assess full-body fitness and simulate combat tasks.

All six nations have performed favourably in modern war.

Based on this, it is safe to say that the new IPPT is adequate for its current task of establishing a baseline fitness level for the entire armed forces, and to encourage reservists to train through simplicity. If calibrated properly, the three-station test standards holds up favourably to the rigours of war, and against more sophisticated tests.

Where the layman is concerned, the real question is not whether the new IPPT is good enough. It’s whether National Servicemen will be willing and able to train.

Hishammuddin Hussein: MH17 Brought Down Using Surface-to-Air Missile

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Kuala Lumpur-The Defense Minister of Malaysia, Hishammuddin Hussein, said that the military intelligence and remains from the crashed MH17 flight show that a surface-to-air missile was utilized to shoot the plane down.

The Defense Minister believes that such a system to shoot down a plane can only be obtained from the rebel forces or Ukrainians. The remarks of the minister were mainly based on military intelligence and from observing the wreckage of the plane MH17.

Previously reported news showed that intelligence analysts had observed that the plane was shot down by air-to-air missiles and that the Ukrainian government was responsible for the mishap.

Boeing 777 came down with around 298 persons, including around 43 Malaysians, on the flight in a separatist held area of Ukraine. The US claimed that the Boeing 777 was shot down by a missile attack, a probable casualty of Kiev government’s rivalry with the pro-Russian rebels.

The wreckage has shocked Malaysia greatly, and the nation is still dealing with the after effects of the sudden disappearance of MH370 on March 8 with 239 passengers on board and the crew with around 38 Malaysians.

Shanmugam suggests China and ASEAN practice restraint in South China Sea Activities

The Foreign Affairs Minister of Singapore, K Shanmugam, said on August 8, 2014 that China and ASEAN should consider practicing self restraint in their actions in the South China Sea as mentioned in the DOC (Declaration of Conduct) that was signed by the two parties in the year 2002.

Nay Pyi Taw: Shanmugam, Singapore’s Foreign Affairs Minister stated that it is necessary for ASEAN and China to practice self restraint for their activities in the South China Sea. Recent calls made to Singapore by the Philippines and the US caused the foreign affairs minister to respond to questions asked by the media concerning the position of Singapore for a freeze on the activities in the maritime territory.

The ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting is being attended by Shanmugam who is in Myanmar. The meeting began in Nay Pyi Taw on Friday by sharing views on international and regional problems. Thein Sein, the president of Myanmar, began the session encouraging ASEAN to enhance its ability to struggle for a settlement of disputes. Many member countries of ASEAN are entangled in territorial disputes with China concerning the South China Sea. Philippines called for a halt on the provocative actions occurring in the disputed region.

During the meeting, no one was able to decide upon a conclusion, which is why Mr. Shanmugam suggested that a Code of Conduct (COC) should be created, which would tell how to manage and avoid such incidents and could help in halting some activities.

Wang Yi, foreign minister of China, stated that they all hope to harvest the implementation of COC and DOC consultation. He also stated that they should discuss with the other members before making any further suggestions. He refused to identify his suggestions on the spot because he was afraid that the others would disagree, but Singapore should feel free to make suggestions.

Foreign Ministers from China and ASEAN will attend the meeting on Saturday on August 9th and they are expecting to talk about the territorial dispute of the South China Sea. China suggested earlier on this week that more meetings should be held to improve the mutual understanding on the problem. China invited the senior officials of ASEAN to attend a meeting next month at a resort in China.