Monday, May 12, 2025
30.3 C
Singapore
Home Blog Page 5194

Anwar guilty: What next?

Anwar Ibrahim’s plans to become Selangor’s chief minister have hit the rocks after a government appeal against his not-guilty verdict on sodomy charges was upheld in the Court of Appeal in KL today.

He was sentenced to five years jail thus barring him from competing in  a key by-election in Kajang later this month. He could also be disqualified from all his political positions.

Anwar was accused of having sex with a male aide in 2008. A High Court acquitted him in 2012, citing a lack of evidence. But shortly after, the government appealed against the acquittal.

Human Rights Watch has called the Court of Appeal’s decision a “travesty of justice”. It is a sign of the ruling party’s selective persecution of its political opponents, the group said.

Political scientist Professor James Chin noted that the Court’s verdict might make many residents of Kajang vote for the opposition party.

“The by-election will now become a referendum on the verdict. The Opposition is sure to use the court’s decision to get sympathy votes,” the Head of School of Arts and Social Sciences at Monash University said.

“People vote along party lines. Pakatan Rakyat [the opposition party] is likely to announce a new candidate [for the by-election] on Monday,” he added.

Anwar’s defence team is expected to appeal the court ruling.

Mystery of virtual currency CEO’s death in Singapore

by Zafar Hassan Anjum of ComputerWorld

Ever since the news of the ‘unnatural’ death of Autumn Radtke, 28, hit the headlines on Wednesday (though The Wall Street Journal had reported it on Feb 27), the picture of the deceased from a less grim time, where she poses smilingly with a dog (her pet pitbull?), has gone viral internationally.

Radtke, the CEO of Singapore virtual currency exchange First Meta, was found dead on February 26. Her body was discovered on the roof of a ground floor rubbish collection point at a Cantonment Close Housing Board block (The Straits Times, March 7, 2014) in Singapore.

Many observers and readers are not able to reconcile to the fact that a pretty and young high-achiever like Radtke could take her own life. Before joining First Meta, Radtke had worked in major corporations such as Apple, T-Mobile, Verizon Wireless, Clear Channel and Universal. Starting at the young age of 22 in the tech industry, she had worked closely with Richard Branson as a Virgin Charter consultant.

So, who killed Radtke and how? Or did she take her own life? According to Singapore police, initial investigations suggest that there was no suspected foul play and toxicology reports are still awaited. Nothing is conclusive about her death yet.

A case of suicide?

While investigations are on, many facts are emerging about her recent life. Apparently, in the reports that quote her friends and acquaintances, Radtke faced business challenges prior to her death.

That might well be the case but facts, quoted in the same report, suggest otherwise. First Meta’s business grew 20 to 30 percent from 2012 to 2013 (The Straits Times, March 7, 2014). How could a 20-30 percent growth in business not be considered good enough for a startup? The new company had attracted investors such as Plug and Play Singapore and National Research Foundation, a fact Radtke proudly mentions in her LinkedIn profile.

According to a report by Reuters, Douglas Abrams, director of First Meta, ‘denied the company was struggling or up for sale’, and said Radtke “did a great job as CEO”. But he also told Reuters that ‘selling the company always remained an option’.

It is also being reported that Radtke missed her home (United States). This brings an emotional angle to the case.

She has been staying in Singapore since 2008 (some reports say 2012). She used to visit the States two to three times a year to cure herself of her home sickness. If she visited her home country so often, where was the point of missing her motherland? And if she did miss America so badly, why wouldn’t she go back and run the virtual currency exchange business from the Silicon Valley or New York? Those are places that are renowned for being start-up friendly. What was stopping her?

After the Mt. Gox episode that busted the Bitcoin business (an estimated $500 million worth of virtual currency was lost by Tokyo-based Mt. Gox), it might have seemed end of the road for many who had banked on bitcoins, including Radtke.

In this light, some are linking her death to the troubles with the digital currency. If the Mt Gox hacking had not happened, would Radtke still be alive?

The problem with this assumption is that Radtke was found dead on 26 February whereas Mt. Gox filed for bankruptcy protection in Tokyo District Court on 28 February only. If Radtke committed suicide (just a conjecture at this point), did she know of any of the troubles with Mt. Gox (besides the loss of value of the Bitcoins)?

Again, this is doubtful because, as noted by a report, “though First Meta acts as a virtual currency exchange, Bitcoins make up only a fraction of the firm’s overall business.”

“Even if [Radtke] did commit suicide, how do we know it had anything to do with Bitcoin’s troubles? We don’t. And for the record, suicide is rarely the result of any single cause,” wrote Slate.

The Reuters report, however, mentions friends of Radtke who held that she was a huge fan of Bitcoin and had invested in it personally. One of her friends said ‘she had persuaded friends to invest as well. Her Facebook page includes several links to bitcoin stories, mostly celebrating last year’s rise in value’.

“It would be naive to think it (ups and downs of Bitcoin) didn’t have a role (in her death),” said one friend (as quoted in the report). Others contested any role the virtual currency had in her death, the report caviled.

At the moment, there are more questions than there are answers. We will have to wait for the final police report on this matter to establish the truth behind Radtke’s death. Meanwhile, we can only pray for the peace of her soul.

Aljunied affair: Call for independent review

Set up an independent committee to review town councils, suggested Gillian Koh, senior reseach fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies.

Koh said that the government must be seen to be even-handed in dealing with town councils as a result of the Workers’ Party-run town council saga. National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan told Parliament on March 3 that his ministry was re-examining the framework governing Town Councils. The move was to ensure better protection of public money.

Khaw has listed three key areas for review – the town council’s duties and responsibilities, its sinking funds and long-term financial sustainability and the hand-over arrangement when MPs change.

Responding to Khaw’s action plan, Koh said: “I wonder if we are all better served by a parallel group that reviews these three key points.”

She added that the independent committee should consist of respected leaders in their appropriate professional groups.

She said: “They should receive as much feedback as possible about the practical difficulties faced, review the rules attending if they exist, and give their best thoughts on how to proceed.

“All parties [involved] should be heard, the public should see this as an occasion to better understand how town councils should be managed, and know how each team should be assessed at the ballot box when the time comes.” The independent committee should submit its report to both the MND and the public.

However Koh’s concern was who should call together the independent committee.

“They can be called together by the government, which might be ideal as it can also have the authority to call on relevant information from government agencies.”

A ground-up initiative is possible. She said: “They may not get the official information but then their advantage would be the stronger sense of representation, although the public would then need them to declare their political and professional interests [for a fairer assessment].”

To ensure public accountability, there should also be more disclosure of town councils’ financial statements to the public, said Eugene Tan, associate law professor at the Singapore Management University.

“There is no such thing for any town council to be immune to such disclosure. This move would allow for more accountability of the town councils to their residents,” he said.

The biggest challenge for the MND was to prove they could hold all town councils accountable, not just the opposition town council, another political commentator, Bridget Welsh, associate professor (political science) at the SMU, said.

“Otherwise, it would be seen as an attempt to discredit WP. It would backfire on the government because the public would only see it as a political manoeuvre to systematically attack WP,” she explained.

Tan said it was inevitable for the situation to be seen as a political spat between the two parties.

“So in these disputes, whoever has swayed public opinion and influenced public perceptions will come out looking better,” he said.

On the flipside, Gillian Koh said WP’s move to avoid “petty politicking” by not engaging with the PAP when the latter raised queries left many questions unanswered in the public’s mind.

She said: “At the end of the day, Singaporeans are pragmatic; so whatever rules exist must work and serve the direct stakeholders’ interests. These would be the residents, the traders, the hawkers in the local areas. Singaporeans will want to know how the ordinary man in the street is served as they make up their minds about who are the leaders, who are sincere, whom they can trust and vote for.” And these direct stakeholders would include long-time PAP supporters within the WP’s constituencies.

“These people are used to how things work in the GRC run by the PAP. So the WP has to be prepared to meet their expectations and exceed them if they want to continue in Singapore politics; it does not help Singapore and the direct stakeholders that any group wishes to ride on sympathy votes alone at the end of the day.”

Aljunied affair: We poll 100 people

The government has spoken. So has the Workers’ Party. But what about the Singaporean?

Well, most Singaporeans whom The Independent Singapore spoke to were uninterested in or undecided about the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council’s recent disputes with the government.

Thirty-one out of 100 respondents said they felt the issues were deeply politicised and they did not know whom to believe. Thirty other survey respondents said they were uninterested about the activities of the Workers’ Party-run town council.

Twenty believed WP was at fault. The remaining nineteen said they believed WP was not at fault.

A 100-people survey was conducted to measure public perceptions of the dispute after the allegations by the National Environment Agency (NEA) that WP’s town council held an unlicensed trade fair and the fact that the auditors appointed by the opposition party were unable to express an opinion on AHPETC’s latest financial statements.

Half of the people surveyed live in the WP constituencies of Aljunied and Hougang with the other half outside.

The opposition party came under fire when the auditors appointed by the WP-run town council could not verify the accuracy and validity of 13 items worth more than $22 million. Among them were receivables, lift repair and lift upgrading expenses, temporary unidentified receipts from residents and the Housing and Development Board, advance receipts from residents for conservancy and service charges along with Goods and Services tax payables and unreconciled differences of cash and bank balances.

The auditors gave a disclaimer of opinion on WP’s latest financial statements twice. Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam subsequently directed the Auditor-General to audit the town council’s accounts.

At the same time, the NEA applied for a court summon against the town council, citing that it did not obtain a permit to hold a trade fair in January. NEA said that town councils are not allowed to engage in commercial activities, including the organisation of fairs.

Town council Chairman Sylvia Lim welcomed the move, but blamed the problems found in the town council’s books on the slow handover from the previous government in 2011.

The pre-trial of the case will be held on April 2.

Most respondents (27 out of 30) who were uninterested in the saga live outside Aljunied,Hougang and Punggol East.

“I work from dawn till 12.30 am and I do not care about the news. I don’t even have time to turn on the television,” said 62-year-old Ms Amina who is a cleaner at Jurong East MRT station. Similarly, seven other respondents in their early 20s polled at City Hall MRT station said they were not interested in the issues.

Ms Jaz, 40, a banker: “Especially the auditor’s report, I think something is wrong there. What goes on in the accounts is very important; you cannot make a mistake like that. WP has to follow the rules even if it is an opposition party.”

Mr Chen, 51, a shop owner in Aljunied, suggested that, “I think town councils need to provide yearly reports on their activities. We need more transparency. Both sides have their stories but as people you never know the truth unless everything is written down.”

Political commentator Gillian Koh remarked that Singaporeans are generally pragmatic and would unlikely be caught up with issues they regard as political spats between the government and the opposition party.

“WP has said the party will leave the judgment [on the recent controversies] to the public. People generally trust authoritative and neutral parties like the Auditor General [office]. So that would decide how the public view the issues [eventually],” she added.

Crime: Police lists key concerns

Singapore Police Force (SPF) says that crime touched a 30-year low in 2013 but there’s an increase in commercial and cyber crimes

 

Courtesy: SPF

Courtesy: SPF

 

In April 2013, Kishore Mahbubani, the dean of Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, claimed in his regular column in the Strait Times that “one of the biggest blessings Singapore has is that it is one of the safest cities in the world”. “Some of it is clearly due to the very successful Singapore Police Force (SPF) we have,” he had claimed.

That certainly seems true according to the Annual Crime Brief 2013 released by SPF recently. “Overall crime reported in 2013 fell by 4.3% as compared to 2012. Significant dips were seen in four of the six crime classes, namely crimes against persons, housebreaking and related crimes, theft and related crimes and miscellaneous crimes,” said the police.

Key concerns

But, interestingly, some key concerns emerged last year, mainly cheating involving e-commerce and commercial crimes.

“Commercial crimes increased by 373 cases (10.6%) from 3,507 cases in 2012 to 3,880 cases in 2013. In particular, cheating and related offences increased by 286 cases (+9%) from 3,180 cases in 2012 to 3,466 cases in 2013,” noted the SPF.

low_crime_poster_1.jpg

 

Additionally, e-commerce cheating cases saw a surge of 271 cases (+113.9%) from 238 cases in 2012 to 509 cases in 2013. Describing the modus operandi of the perpetrators, the police said, “The scam involves culprits posing as sellers of smart phones/tablets, who would then cheat victims by failing to deliver the goods purchased and yet ask for further payments on the pretext of mixed delivery orders. Victims typically accede to the request for further payment but end up not receiving the item.”

Another concern expressed by SPF are the “Internet Love Scams”, which registered an increase in 2013 from 50 cases in 2012 to 81 cases in last year. Notably, the amount cheated rose from to S$5.8m in 2013. It was S$1.18m a year earlier.

These “love scams” are carried out mainly by suspects “who mostly claim to be from Britain and target women searching for love online through dating or social networks”, elaborated the police.

“Correspondences are made through emails or phone calls. In such cases, the suspect would claim that he would be coming to Singapore to ask for the victim’s hand in marriage. On the supposed day of arrival, the suspect would then call the victim and claim that he had been detained by Customs for carrying excess cash. The victim would then be asked to transfer money to secure his release. In another variation, the suspect would claim to be sending a parcel containing valuable items such as branded bags and watches. The suspect would then ask the victim to transfer money to clear penalty charges imposed on the items.”

Ng Guat Ting, Assistant Commissioner of Police concluded, “Singapore recorded the lowest crime rate in 30 years. The support from the public in our crime fighting efforts, along with increased awareness and education of crime, has allowed us to reach this milestone achievement. With the community’s continued support, we will strive to do better and will devote more energy and focus to make this happen.”


A slight drop in outrage of modesty cases 

“Singapore recorded 1,325 cases in 2013, a slight drop of 6.7% from a year before. The number of cases reported for outrage of modesty has fallen by 95 cases (-6.7%), from 1,420 cases in 2012 to 1,325 cases in 2013. Cases reported onboard buses have decreased slightly by 3 cases (-3%), from 94 cases in 2012 to 91 cases in 2013. Cases reported onboard trains have increased slightly by 5 cases (+8%), from 60 cases in 2012 to 65 cases in 2013. Overall, arrests onboard buses and trains have increased by 10 persons (+14%), from 70 persons in 2012 to 80 persons in 2013,” informs SPF.

Apart from conducting regular patrols at the train networks and bus interchanges, the SPF also “encourage victims not to remain silent and to expose culprits at the earliest opportunity possible, to ensure that the culprit is caught and to save others from being victimized”.

Credit: Newzzit

 

History: The brothels of colonial Singapore

Smith Street, Temple Street, Japanese Street and Banda Street; all adjoining streets in today’s Chinatown had one thing in common during the colonial times. Three and four-storey brothels which along with prostitution, also promoted opium smoking, drinking and gambling

chinatown_streets.jpg

When Raffles founded modern Singapore as a British trading settlement in 1819, migrants poured in the island from China, India and Malaya. As the number of migrants increased, which were overwhelming males settling in the areas around Chinatown, brothels became an important outlet for their sexual needs. These migrants or sinkhehs came to Si Lat Po(Singapore’s old Chinese name) without their wives and found solace in the arms of Ah Ku or prostitutes.

Slowly, Chinatown was flooded with tea-houses, theatres and opium dens tended by young singsong girls locally known as Pei Pa Chai or Pipa girls. These girls were paid by the hour by rich clients to play mahjong or prepare opium. Many, in due course, were lured into prostitution.

These prostitutes mainly came from China, Japan and Europe. Though, there were no British prostitutes due to a ban imposed by the then British administration of Singapore.

The National Heritage Board (NHB) describes the life of a prostitute in colonial Singapore as “horrendous”. “Once in a brothel, the girls were often subjected to beatings, and received little or no medical attention. Riddled with diseases, these pitiful women were often also murder victims. Seeing no other escape from their living hell, a number of these prostitutes took their own lives. While some threw themselves off buildings, others preferred a more subtle method – an opium overdose,” informs the NHB in one of the placards placed in Chinatown.

Interestingly, by 1923, there were 423 government-run shops selling opium over-the-counter between 6am to 10pm. But in brothels, opium would be available till 2am.

Chinese brothels

Shop no. 64-66 on Smith Street now converted to a hotel and a shop

Shop no. 64-66 on Smith Street now converted to a hotel and a shop

The most infamous street at the turn of the 20thcentury was the Smith Street, which was lined with 25 three and four-storey shop-houses packed with prostitutes. While two were Japanese, most of the other brothels were Chinese, with the most notorious being the no. 65. It’s owner, Loh Sai Soh, was stabbed when she attempted to stop a customer from leaving without paying. This street served as a red-light area between 1901 and 1930. Adjoining Smith Street was the Temple Street, which got its name after the Sri Mariamman Temple located at one end of the street, and was also famous for its Chinese brothels.

img_6038.jpg

Japanese brothels

Also known as Yap Pun Kai (or the lane of foreign prostitutes) or Japanese Street, this street hosted the few Japanese brothels in colonial Singapore. Notably, “until the pre-war years, Japanese prostitutes plied their trade along this street in an oddly noble effort to help finance their country’s military campaigns,” says NHB. Another street notorious for Japanese brothels till 1930 was the Banda Street located at the junction of Sago Street, Sago Lane and Spring Street.

“Sexually transmitted disease became rampant and epidemics swept through Chinatown, leading to the passing of the Contagious Disease Ordinance in 1870, requiring brothels to be registered and prostitutes to be examined medically for disease. In 1887, the Ordinance was repealed, and the registration of brothels was stopped in 1894. Without these controls in place, the number of brothels increased further. This was fuelled by the record increase in the migrant labour at the end of the century. It was also at this time, that the full effects of the repeal came into effect; the pandemic spread of gonorrhea and syphilis in the Chinese community. The importing of prostitutes to Singapore was finally banned in 1927 and brothels made illegal in 1930,” informs the Chinese Heritage Centre situated in Chinatown, Singapore.

A display at the Chinese Heritage Centre in Chinatown, Singapore, depicting the room of a prostitute in colonial Singapore

A display at the Chinese Heritage Centre in Chinatown, Singapore, depicting the room of a prostitute in colonial Singapore

All information in this story is courtesy National Heritage Board and Chinese Heritage Centre, Chinatown, Singapore.

Credit: Newzzit

Little India inquiry’s fearless duo

by Tan Bah Bah

So far we have not heard anything much from NTUC’s John   De Payva or chairman of West Coast CCC’s Chua Thiam Chwee at the Committee of Inquiry hearing on the Little India riot.

But the Singapore Police Force and The Straits Times had quite a earful from the other two members- COI chairman former Supreme Court Judge G. Pannir Selvam and former police commissioner Tee Tua Ba.

A  couple of Home Team heroes did emerge from the hearing and their actions earned deserved praise from the committee.

For example, SCDF Lieutenant Tiffany Neo was lauded for her bravery in dealing with a risk-fraught situation. She protected the body of the accident victim against the rioters by moving it into the SCDF ambulance, which was against crime-scene investigation protocol. She also rescued the bus driver and timekeeper from the bus, and stayed to help an injured colleague.

Selvam praised Neo for her courage and commonsense in going against protocol in the face of ground reality, a “very rare commodity”, according to him.

Sgt Fadli Shaifuddin stood his ground and charged at the rioters three times. “Instinctively, I charged at them with my baton drawn as I wanted them to know that the police were still in control of the scene.

I also wanted to institute some law and order before the situation got more out of hand,” he said. The   over-conservative approach of the force, however, came under heavy fire from Selvam and Tee.

The COI focused extensively on the decision by the police to “hold the line” until the Special Operations Command arrived on the scene that fateful Dec 8 2013 night. Tee said: “The rioters are   watching you: how you behave, how you respond, or if you stand there and wait. They may get a perception that you are not going to do anything so it becomes even worse.

A lot of things were wrong.” Deputy Police Commissioner T Raja Kumar explained that the decision not to engage the rioters directly at this point was because Deputy Assistant Commissioner Lu Yeow Lim,   commander of Tanglin Police Division, had decided that there were not enough officers at the time to “dominate the ground”.

“It was a matter of   judgement,” DPC Raja Kumar said. Selvam shot back and called it poor judgement (and that presumably will go into someone’s performance assessment file this   year).

Apart from the alleged tactical misjudgement, the late arrival of the SOC was regarded as unacceptable by the COI. The first SOC team was activated 18 minutes after the initial request from the officer on the ground.

The first team which had formed up at South Bridge Road that night took 38 minutes to arrive at the scene in Race Course Road. The two highly engaged members of the COI were very professional, exhibiting no fear and expecting no favour.

Selvam even questioned the claim by the police that about 100 were rioting, a figure not backed by the number of people who were eventually arrested. He was also rather puzzled that the police/Home Team had not acted earlier on the problem of alcohol sale and heavy consumption of alcohol in the area:

“Police have done nothing.” Reiterating his point that the police had been too defensive, the former judge repeatedly suggested replacing the current T-baton with the less defensive lathi, a long, heavy wooden stick used by riot police in South Asian countries such as India and Bangladesh.

Besides questioning the judgement of police, Selvam told The Straits Times off for interfering with the COI’s work. The newspaper had interviewed the bus driver, a key witness for the hearing, and ran a story before he even gave his testimony in court. Selvam described it as “plain contempt of court”. The newspaper’s editor Warren Fernandez subsequently apologised for “crossing the line”. The hearing has a long way to go yet. But it is in good and fearless hands.

Anger at Sports Hub’s monopolistic behaviour

The most ambitious sports project is facing stormy seas as a monopoly on ticket booking has upset others in the business.

The exclusive rights to selling tickets to all events at the Hub have been given to Sports Tix Hub thus shutting out players like Sistic and the Esplanade.

When Sistic tried to corner the market for itself some time back for events at the Singapore Indoor Stadium and Esplanade, the Competition Commission of Singapore stepped in and imposed a fine of $1 million.

The Today paper, which reported on this, also said fans are complaining of problems getting tickets through Sports Tix Hub for the June 12 Taylor Swift concert at the Indoor Stadium.

The Hub’s software is not up to scratch, many complained.

Midas Promotions director Steven Woodward was quoted as saying: “You got to come into the game playing at the level where it is now and not where it was five years ago. They should be at a standard where Sistic is now.”

The ball is now squarely in the court of the competition commission.

Why US media more obsessed with Indonesia than Ukraine

By Tom Plate

Viewed from Los Angeles, tiny Ukraine seems much, much farther away and remote from our core national interests than, for example, gigantic Indonesia. So perhaps something is wrong with us on the West Coast of the United States and maybe we simply fail to understand history.

This past weekend, the American mass news media, which is anchored on the East Coast of the US, in New York and Washington, was all over the “Crisis in the Crimea” like a rash on a baby. American television became Putin-obsessed, as if the Russian President were the new Hitler and President Obama a Neville Chamberlain, the vaunted Munich appeaser of Nazi evil. You know, it’s Her Putin with his finger on the trigger … today Kiev, tomorrow London.

Yes, the USA West Coast perspective on global developments really is different and I would argue you don’t have to be naïve to remain calm about Crimea.

Doesn’t anyone remember his or her Machiavelli (I’ll bet Putin has read his)? “Only annex contiguous provinces,’ the Prince was advised by the Italian geopolitical grandmaster. For many Russians, Putin – hate him or love him – is their Prince, and in the grand scheme of the future, Crimea, a contiguous province now evidently annexed, will remain Russian, one way or the other — just as Sevastopol will remain the home of Moscow’s Black Sea Fleet.

In fact, snow will fall on Los Angeles before Russia’s heavy shadow will not fall on the Ukraine. If Washington wants to upend this inevitable, if amoral, outcome, it must gear up for a major war in Eastern Europe. It is that simple.

In the absence of that Western intervention, which of course would be a folly – even more so than the US invasion of Iraq – the Crimean Crisis is relatively marginal in importance compared to other Presidential-level problems on the world stage. For in the natural evolution of geopolitics in the 21st century, Eastern Europe is not nearly as important as East Asia.

We here in Los Angeles live aside a different ocean than our friends on the East Coast, and so try to avoid the chloroform of conventional wisdom that wafts back at us like foul weather from Washington and New York. I am quite serious about this. In general we believe that our established US news media has skewed priorities. For example, we believe that which way Jakarta evolves and leans is more important to US national interests than which way Kiev evolves or leans. In effect our world on the West Coast is much larger and more inclusive than the world of the East Coast.

Recently, a magazine influential in the Asia Pacific  put Indonesia (“Emerging Giant”) on its cover as its big story. What were the editors thinking, eh? Who cares about Indonesia when you have Kiev to worry about? The answer is that the with-it editors of Global Asia, based in Seoul are facing the realities of the future and are not glued to the past, as are many US editors.

(Quick fact run: Indonesia has a population of 250 million – far more than Russia’s at 142 million and the Ukraine’s at 45 million. Indonesia is home to more Muslims than any other country. It has well more than twice as many as Egypt, for example.)

US media reporting mirrors the basic contours of US foreign policy. They are planted like fence posts in the soil of the past – in the geopolitical mire of the prior century. The consequence is that all too often the US media presents the public not with news but in effect with “olds.” Those of you who do not reside here in the US and therefore are not subject to the neurotic obsessions of the US news media should count yourself lucky. For all its vaunted “freedom,” it is too often a prisoner of the olds.

Of course we West Coasters – with our quaint Pacific perspectives – start by making an assumption. It is that the 21st century will prove to be the Asian century, just as the 19th was the European one. To relate to the future you have to break with the past. In other words, to us here, the Ukraine and its back-and-forth ping-pong ball relationship with Russia is about as relevant to what lies ahead as the future of dial-up computing.

I guess that makes us a little weird … or what?

 

Professor Tom Plate is the author of “In the Middle of the Future” and the ‘Giants of Asia’ book series (Marshall Cavendish Publishers), which includes “Conversations with Thaksin.” © 2014, Pacific Perspectives Media Center.

Breaking news: Singapore is world’s most expensive city

A new survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit shows that Singapore has become the world’s most expensive city.  Blame it on currency appreciation, price inflation and structurally expensive items like car costs.

“As a city-state with very few natural resources to speak of, Singapore is reliant on other countries for energy and water supplies, making it the third most expensive destination for utility costs. The proliferation of expensive malls and boutiques on Orchard Road also make Singapore the priciest place in the world in which to buy clothes,” says an EIU press release.

Tokyo, which traditionally hogged the dubious title of  being the most expensive city, has been pushed to the sixth spot because of its weak yen despite a return to inflation. Hong Kong is in the 13th spot.

A summary of the full report can be downloaded at www.eiu.com/wcol2014