Wednesday, December 30, 2009

of why Sezairi Sezali is the 2009 Singapore Idol winner


"Touched by an Angel", the wonderful song penned by Singapore Idol's ruthless judge Ken Lim ought to be the decisive piece which determined the winner of the Singapore Idol 2009.

Although I am one of those who are dying to see the winner of Singapore Idol 2009 to be a female & not a Malay, I must admit Sezairi Sezali performed the song, "Touched by an Angel" way better than Sylvia Ratonel.

Wait a minute, explain why you want the winner to be a female & not a Malay, I can hear that question alright.

See, the winners of Singapore Idol so far have been a Malay male: Taufik Batisah (2004) and Hady Mirza (2006).

And I can imagine the future Singapore Idol competition may be less appealing if such a strong pattern has been established. And guess, the Singapore Idol 2010 winner is ... (insert the name of another Malay male).

I tell you, what, let's rename "Singapore Idol" to "Singapura Idola", shall we?

However, on the other hand, I too had a feeling that the title of Singapore Idol ought to go to the male finalist, Sezairi Sezali.

The flaw lies in the voting system. No matter how wonderful Sylvia Ratonel performs the song (or how short her skirt is like in her rendition of the song, "Mercy". Hur hur), there are more 'logical' male audiences who would rather support her 'morally' than to bother wasting their time & money to sms their votes for her.

For Sezairi Sezali, he can rely on the generous support of his group of fans namely female audience. Wanna bet?

Oh, and don't forget about Tabitha Nauser who was one of the top three of Singapore Idol 2009 before she's eliminated.

Very likely her fans would turn their votes to Sezairi Sezali and not to Sylvia Ratonel. They are thinking like this: If their chosen female contestant (Tabitha) is not the winner, why should there be a female winner for this year Singapore Idol?!

Whatever. I mean, congratulations to Sezairi Sezali!

And as a proof that I really like his performance of the song, "Touched by an Angel", please check out this YouTube clip here.

And the Facebook of Sezairi Sezali & read how the fans support him.

Sezairi Sezali beat hot favourite Sylvia Ratonel to be crowned the winner of Singapore Idol at the Singapore Indoor Stadium on Sunday.

"I don't know what to think right now. Thank you guys so much, you made my dreams come true," said a shocked Sezairi.

The 22-year-old, who is waiting to enlist for National Service, dashed audiences' hopes of crowning a female Singapore idol. Taufik Batisah won the singing competition in 2004 and Hady Mirza took the title in 2006.

Along with the title and bragging rights, Sezairi wins a recording contract with Universal Music.

Though Sezairi's laid-back performances did not make much of an impression with the judges throughout the third season of the singing competition, he was determined not to go down without a fight.

And Sezairi, who performed Jamiroquai's "Virtual Insanity", "Crazy" by Aerosmith and "Touched By An Angel", a song penned by Idol judge Ken Lim for this year's winner, sure sang his way into the hearts of voters on Sunday.

From Channel NewsAsia, "Sezairi Sezali wins third season of Singapore Idol".

SEZAIRI Sezali made it three wins in a row for aspiring male Malay singers when he was crowned 2009's Singapore Idol on Sunday night.

The laidback 22-year-old beat hot favourite Filipino-Singaporean Sylvia Ratonel to become champion of the reality TV singing contest in front of an estimated 8,000-strong crowd at the Singapore Indoor Stadium.

Sezairi, who is waiting to enlist into National Service, dashed public hopes of crowning a female Singapore idol. His rival, a hotel secretary, was expected to win after defying expectations to become the first woman to make it to the competition's finale.

He joins Taufik Batisah, who won the inaugural competition in 2004, and Hady Mirza, the 2006 winner.

"I don't know that to think right now. Thank you guys so much, you made my dreams come true," a visibly shell-shocked Sezairi told Channel NewsAsia.

Along with the title and bragging rights, he wins a recording contract with Universal Music.

From MSN Entertainment, "HAVE YOUR SAY: Sezairi Sezali wins Singapore Idol".

22-year-old Sezairi Sezali has won the third edition of Singapore Idol. But his win garnered some mixed reactions.

"I'm very happy and proud, and this drink is for you, Sezairi. All the hard work and effort he went through - thank God," said Rubiah Chayan and Sezali Suliman, parents of Sezairi.

The judges said it has been a fair competition.

"Sezairi did a better performance tonight. And to be fair to him, he showed a lot more. He was a lot more convincing than Sylvia," said Ken Lim, Singapore Idol 2009 Judge.

But Sylvia's supporters were in shock, and within 24 hours, disgruntled fans had voiced their displeasure on the online platform.

Mr Lim said: "Every competition has got its plus points - its advantages and disadvantages. What is important here is that we have to support who the public has chosen as their idol".

The winner is looking ahead and gearing up for his music career. Sezairi has signed with Universal Music Singapore, and he said his album will be out by April or May 2010.

"My musical direction will probably be very acid jazz, very soul. It is a mix of Jamiroquai, John Mayer. Expect to hear a lot of live instruments, expect to hear a lot of guitar as well," Sezairi said.

On asking whether this is enough to set him apart from the past two Singapore Idols - Taufik Batisah and Hady Mirza - Sezairi said all three idols have different singing styles and personalities which show in their music.

Sezairi said: "The three of us have distinctively very different styles, and we are completely very different people and we have really very different personalities as well.

"So if you see beyond that, and if you really take a listen and open your heart, your mind, and your ears, you will see the difference."

From Channel NewsAsia, "Sezairi Sezali's Singapore Idol win garners a mixed reaction".

Friday, December 25, 2009

The Singapore Solution: National Geographic misquoted MM Lee Kuan Yew?

I suspect the article which is supposed to be published in January 2010 (how it appears in the Net days before that I am not really interested) contains some misquotes of MM Mr. Lee Kuan Yew. For example: he was allegedly reported to say, "one must understand human nature. I have always thought that humanity was animal-like. The Confucian theory was man could be improved, but I'm not sure he can be. He can be trained, he can be disciplined."

Google "human nature" and you'll come across amusing articles such as the one of Psychology Today, "Ten Politically Incorrect Truths About Human Nature" and of course insightful ones, like in Wikipedia, "Human Nature".

And guess what, (thank you Wikipedia!) there are others who may share what MM Mr. Lee's alleged thinking (that humanity is animal-like):

1) Aristotle describes man as a "rational animal," i.e., a single, undivided being that is at once animal (material) and rational (intellectual soul).

2) Bertrand Russell suggests that moral evil or sin is derived from the instincts that have been transmitted to us from our ancestry of beasts of prey.

3) Jean Jacques Rousseau proposes that humans had once been solitary animals, and had learned to be political.

So perhaps the the idea that humanity is animal-like is not at all absurd and shocking. Shall we train & discipline ourselves to accept wholeheartedly that theory? Hmm...

If you want to get a Singaporean to look up from a beloved dish of fish-head curry—or make a harried cabdriver slam on his brakes—say you are going to interview the country's "minister mentor," Lee Kuan Yew, and would like an opinion about what to ask him. "The MM?Wah lau! You're going to see the MM? Real?" You might as well have told a resident of the Emerald City that you're late for an appointment with the Wizard of Oz. After all, LKY, as he is known in acronym-mad Singapore, is more than the "father of the country." He is its inventor, as surely as if he had scientifically formulated the place with precise portions of Plato's Republic, Anglophile elitism, unwavering economic pragmatism, and old-fashioned strong-arm repression.

People like to call Singapore the Switzerland of Southeast Asia, and who can argue? Out of a malarial swamp, the tiny island at the southernmost tip of the Malay Peninsula gained independence from Britain in 1963 and, in one generation, transformed itself into a legendarily efficient place, where the per capita income for its 3.7 million citizens exceeds that of many European countries, the education and health systems rival anything in the West, government officials are largely corruption free, 90 percent of households own their own homes, taxes are relatively low and sidewalks are clean, and there are no visible homeless people or slums.

If all that, plus a typical unemployment rate of about 3 percent and a nice stash of money in the bank thanks to the government's enforced savings plan, doesn't sound sweet to you, just travel 600 miles south and try getting by in a Jakarta shantytown.

Achieving all this has required a delicate balancing act, an often paradoxical interplay between what some Singaporeans refer to as "the big stick and the big carrot." What strikes you first is the carrot: giddy financial growth fueling never ending construction and consumerism. Against this is the stick, most often symbolized by the infamous ban on chewing gum and the caning of people for spray-painting cars. Disruptive things like racial and religious disharmony? They're simply not allowed, and no one steals anyone else's wallet.

Singapore, maybe more than anywhere else, crystallizes an elemental question: What price prosperity and security? Are they worth living in a place that many contend is a socially engineered, nose-to-the-grindstone, workaholic rat race, where the self-perpetuating ruling party enforces draconian laws (your airport entry card informs you, in red letters, that the penalty for drug trafficking is "DEATH"), squashes press freedom, and offers a debatable level of financial transparency? Some people joke that the government micromanages the details of life right down to how well Singapore Airlines flight attendants fill out their batik-patterned dresses.

They say Lee Kuan Yew has mellowed over the years, but when he walks into the interview wearing a zippered blue jacket, looking like a flint-eyed Asian Clint Eastwood circa Gran Torino, you know you'd better get on with it. While it is not exactly clear what a minister mentor does, good luck finding many Singaporeans who don't believe that the Old Man is still top dog, the ultimate string puller behind the curtain. Told most of my questions have come from Singaporeans, the MM, now 86 but as sharp and unsentimental as a barbed tack, offers a bring-it-on smile: "At my age I've had many eggs thrown at me."

Few living leaders—Fidel Castro in Cuba, Nelson Mandela in South Africa, and Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe come to mind—have dominated their homeland's national narrative the way Lee Kuan Yew has. Born into a well-to-do Chinese family in 1923, deeply influenced by both British colonial society and the brutal Japanese occupation that killed as many as 50,000 people on the island in the mid-1940s, the erstwhile "Harry Lee," Cambridge law degree in hand, first came to prominence as a leader of a left-leaning anticolonial movement in the 1950s. Firming up his personal power within the ascendant People's Action Party, Lee became Singapore's first prime minister, filling the post for 26 years. He was senior minister for another 15; his current minister mentor title was established when his son, Lee Hsien Loong, became prime minister in 2004.

Lee masterminded the celebrated "Singapore Model," converting a country one-eighth the size of Delaware, with no natural resources and a fractured mix of ethnicities, into "Singapore, Inc." He attracted foreign investment by building communications and transportation infrastructure, made English the official language, created a superefficient government by paying top administrators salaries equal to those in private companies, and cracked down on corruption until it disappeared. The model—a unique mix of economic empowerment and tightly controlled personal liberties—has inspired imitators in China, Russia, and eastern Europe.

To lead a society, the MM says in his precise Victorian English, "one must understand human nature. I have always thought that humanity was animal-like. The Confucian theory was man could be improved, but I'm not sure he can be. He can be trained, he can be disciplined." In Singapore that has meant lots of rules—prohibiting littering, spitting on sidewalks, failing to flush public toilets—with fines and occasional outing in the newspaper for those who break them. It also meant educating his people—industrious by nature—and converting them from shopkeepers to high-tech workers in a few decades.

Over time, the MM says, Singaporeans have become "less hard-driving and hard-striving." This is why it is a good thing, the MM says, that the nation has welcomed so many Chinese immigrants (25 percent of the population is now foreign-born). He is aware that many Singaporeans are unhappy with the influx of immigrants, especially those educated newcomers prepared to fight for higher paying jobs. But taking a typically Darwinian stance, the MM describes the country's new subjects as "hungry," with parents who "pushed the children very hard." If native Singaporeans are falling behind because "the spurs are not stuck into the hide," that is their problem.

If there is a single word that sums up the Singaporean existential condition, it is kiasu, a term that means "afraid to lose." In a society that begins tracking its students into test-based groups at age ten ("special" and "express" are the top tiers; "normal" is the path for those headed for factory and service-sector work), kiasu seeps in early, eventually germinating in brilliant engineering students and phallic high-rises with a Bulgari store on the ground floor. Singaporeans are big on being number one in everything, but in a kiasu world, winning is never completely sweet, carrying with it the dread of ceasing to win. When the Singapore port, the busiest container hub in the world, slipped behind Shanghai in 2005 in total cargo tonnage handled, it was a national calamity.

One day, as part of a rehearsal for the National Day celebration, I was treated to a veritable lollapalooza of kiasu. Singapore armed forces playacted at subduing a cabal of "terrorists" who had shot a half dozen flower-bearing children in red leotards, leaving them "dead" on the stage. "We're not North Korea, but we try," said one observer, commenting on the rolling tanks, zooming Apache helicopters, and earsplitting 21-gun salutes. You hear it all the time: The only way for Singapore to survive being surrounded by massive neighbors is to remain constantly vigilant. The 2009 military budget is $11.4 billion, or 5 percent of GDP, among the world's highest rates.

You never know where the threat might come from, or what form it will take. Last summer everyone was in a panic about swine flu. Mask-wearing health monitors were positioned around the city. On Saturday night, no matter how stylo milo your threads, there was no way of getting into a club on trendy Clarke Quay without a bouncer pressing a handheld thermometer to your forehead. It was part of the unending Singaporean state of siege. Many of the newer public housing apartments come with a bomb shelter, complete with a steel door. After a while, the perceived danger and excessive compliance with rules get internalized; one thing you don't see in Singapore is very many police. "The cop is inside our heads," one resident says.

Self-censorship is rampant in Singapore, where dealing with the powers that be is "a dance," says Alvin Tan, the artistic director of the Necessary Stage, which has put on dozens of plays dealing with touchy issues such as the death penalty and sexuality. Tan spends a lot of time with the government censors. "You have to use the proper approach," he says. "If they say 'south,' you don't say 'north.' You say 'northeast.' Go from there. It's a negotiation."

Those who do not learn their steps in the dance soon get the message. Consider the case of Siew Kum Hong, a 35-year-old Singaporean who thought he'd be furthering the cause of openness by serving as an unelected NMP, or nominated member of parliament. With only four opposition MPs elected in the history of the country, the ruling party thought NMPs might provide the appearance of "a more consensual style of government where alternative views are heard and constructive dissent accommodated." This was how Siew Kum Hong told me he viewed his position, but he was passed over for another term.

"I thought I was doing a good job," a surprised Kum Hong says. What it came down to, he surmises, were "those 'no' votes." When he first voted no, on a resolution he felt discriminated against gays, his colleagues "went absolutely silent. It was the first time since I'd been in parliament that anyone had ever voted no." When he voted no again, this time on a law lowering the number of people who could assemble to protest, the reaction was similarly cool. "So much for alternative views," Kum Hong says.

The Singapore government is not unaware of the pitfalls of its highly controlled society. One concern is the "creativity crisis," the fear that an emphasis on rote learning in Singapore's schools is not conducive to producing game-changing ideas. Yet attempts to encourage originality have been tone-deaf. When Scape, a youth outreach group, opened a "graffiti wall," youngsters were instructed to submit graffiti designs for consideration; those chosen would be painted on a designated wall at an assigned time.

Similarly, the government has maintained a campaign against the use of "Singlish," the multiculti gumbo of Malay, Hokkien Chinese, Tamil, and English street patois that is Singapore's great linguistic achievement. As you sit in a Starbucks listening to teens saying things like "You blur like sotong, lah!" (roughly, "You're dumber than squid, man!"), Singlish seems a brilliantly subversive attack on the very conformity the government claims it is trying to overcome. Then again, one of Singlish's major conceits is the ironic lionization of the flashy, down-market "Ah Beng" culture of Chinese immigrant thugs and their sunglass-wearing Malay counterparts. You know that won't fly in a world where the MM ("minister de-mentor" in Beng speak) has advocated "assortative mating," the idea that college graduates should marry only other college graduates so as to uplift the national stock.

Perhaps the most troubling problem facing the nation is a result of its overly successful population control program, which ran in the 1970s with the slogan "Two Is Enough." Today Singaporeans are simply not reproducing, so the country must depend on immigrants to keep the population growing. The government offers baby bonuses and long maternity leaves, but nothing will help unless Singaporeans start having more sex. According to a poll by the Durex condom company, Singaporeans have less intercourse than almost any other country on Earth. "We are shrinking in our population," the MM says. "Our fertility rate is 1.29. It is a worrying factor." This could be the fatal error in the Singapore Model: The eventual extinction of Singaporeans.

But there is an upside to all this social engineering. You could feel it during the "We Are the World" production numbers in the National Day show. On stage were representatives of Singapore's major ethnic groups, the Chinese, Malays, and Indians, all wearing colorful costumes. After riots in the 1960s, the government installed a strict quota system in public housing to make sure that ethnic groups did not create their own monolithic quarters. This practice may have more to do with controlling the populace than with true multiracial harmony, but at the rehearsal, as schmaltzy as it was, it was hard not to be moved by the earnest show of brotherhood. However invented, there is something called Singaporean, and it is real. Whatever people's grumbles—and as the MM says, "Singaporeans are champion grumblers"—Singapore is their home, and they love it despite everything. It makes you like the place too, for their sake.

The kicker is that things are about to change. In a famous quote, Lee Kuan Yew said, "If you are going to lower me into the grave, and I feel something is wrong, I will get up." But this is beyond even him. "We all know the MM will die someday," says Calvin Fones, a psychiatrist who runs a clinic at Gleneagles Hospital on Orchard Road. Fones likens his homeland to a family. "When the country was young, there was a need for wise oversight. A firm hand. Now we are in adolescence, which can be a questioning, troublesome period. Coming into it without the presence of the patriarch will be a test."

The great engine of cultural change, of course, is the Internet, that cyber fly in the authoritarian ointment. Lee acknowledges the threat. "We banned Playboy in the sixties, and it is still banned, that's true, but now, with the Internet, you get much more than you ever could from Playboy." Allowing pornography sites while banning magazines may seem contradictory. But attempting to censor the Internet, as has been tried in China, would be pointless, Lee says. It is an exquisitely pragmatic reply.

And so bloggers, like the satirist Mr. Brown and the urbanely pugnacious Yawning Bread, are free to broadcast opinions unlikely to be found in the pages of the government-linked Straits Times. As a result, more and more young people are questioning the trade-off between freedom and security—and even calling for freer politics and fewer social controls.

Last August, a wide-ranging speech by new NMP Viswa Sadasivan created a lot of buzz on the blogosphere: "I do lament our lack of freedom to express ourselves, and the government's seemingly unmitigated grip on power and what appears to be an inconsistent willingness to listen to public sentiment that does not suit it," Viswa said before parliament. "Accountability requires the government to go beyond lip-service in addressing the call for greater democracy … If not, people are likely to feel increasingly alienated."

Irked by Viswa's criticisms of the way some ethnic groups are treated in Singapore, LKY interrupted a medical treatment to angrily refute the "highfalutin" speech in a rare appearance on the parliament floor. The patriarch, in case anyone needed reminding, was not yet in his grave.

Singapore can be a disconcerting place, even to the people who call it home, though they'd never think of leaving. As one local put it, "Singapore is like a warm bath. You sink in, slit your wrists, your lifeblood floats away, but hey, it's warm." If that's so, most Singaporeans figure they might as well go down the tubes eating pepper crabs, with a couple of curry puffs on the side. Eating is the true national pastime and refuge. The longer I stayed, the more I ate. It got so I'd go over to the marvelously overcrowded Maxwell Road Food Centre, stand in the 20-minute queue for a plate at the Tian Tian food stall, eat it, then line up again.

On my last day, I climbed the hill in the Bukit Timah Nature Reserve, at 537 feet the highest point on the island and the closest thing in Singapore to the jungle it once was. In the unexpected quiet, I returned to what the MM had said about Confucius's belief "that man could be perfected." This was, the MM said with a sigh, "an optimistic way of looking at life." People abuse freedom. That is his beef with America: The rights of individuals to do their own thing allow them to misbehave at the expense of an orderly society. As they say in Singapore: What good are all those rights if you're afraid to go out at night?

When I got to the top of the hill, I thought I might be rewarded with a view of the entire city-state. But there was no view at all—only a rusting communication tower and a cyclone fence affixed with a sign saying "Protected Place" and showing a stick figure drawing of a soldier aiming a rifle at a man with his hands raised.

Later I mentioned this to Calvin Fones, the shrink. "See, that shows the progress we've made," he said. "Until a few years ago, we had the same sign, except the guy was lying on the ground, already shot." And then, being a Singaporean, living a life he didn't believe possible anywhere else in Asia, he laughed. 

From National Geograhic Magazine, "The Singapore Solution".

Daphne Iking enticement trial


The date had been set for the High Court Hearing. The stupid law dating from the British colonial era might just be the proof of the laziness of the Malaysia government to review their law. Just because this archaic law is rarely invoked (so far no case has gone to a full trial), there's no plan to abolish it. Well done, Malaysia! Just continue to make fool of yourself, why don't you?!

KUALA LUMPUR: Magistrate Zaki Ashraf Zubir this morning granted an application for the unprecedented "wife-enticing" case involving celebrity Daphne Iking to be heard in the High Court.

Dec 17 was set as the new date for the High Court hearing.

The high-profile case started when Iking’s husband — Ryan Chong Yiing Yih — dragged prominent managing director Choy Khin Ming, 44, to court in a private prosecution under Section 498 of the Penal Code for "enticing or taking away or detaining with a criminal intent a married woman", in August.

Chong's lawyer Wong Kian Kheong took up the case after a deputy public prosecutor refused to take up the case as it was a private matter between husband and wife. Choy was charged with enticing Iking, knowing that she was a married woman, with the intention of having sexual intercourse.

He allegedly committed the offence at a condominium unit in Taman Tun Dr Ismail between July 2007 and September last year.

Lawyers for Choy, Akberdin Abdul Kader and Jagjit Singh, had also applied to challenge the constitutional validity of Section 498 of the Penal Code (See accompanying story).

Choy's lawyer had on Aug 26 appealed for the case to be heard by another judge other than magistrate Mohd Faizi Che Abu, who was then presiding.

They had also requested to transfer the case to the Hight Court on the grounds that Mohd Faizi had earlier heard the statement of complaint and issued the summons against Choy.

Mohd Faizi rejected the application, explaining that he had no personal knowledge of the offence and that he was only following the law to decide if there were enough reasons to issue the summons.

Coincidentally, Mohd Faizi had since been transferred, with Zaki taking over. However, the High Court will still decide on the validity of the court order granted by Mohd Faizi to enable Chong to sue Choy.

Iking, a TV presenter, host and brand ambassador, was married on Jan 27, 2007 in Bali, and gave birth to Isobel, who is now two years old.

She is separated from Chong. Lawyers had described this as a rare case that will whip up intense debate about adultery and enticement.

Holding a watching brief for Daphne is Pushpa Ratnam, Ravi Nekoo, David Mathew and Vicky Alahakone.

Lawyers to challenge Section 498

KUALA LUMPUR: Darren Choy's lawyers are challenging the constitutionality of Section 498 of the Penal Code, saying that it is an outdated law that treats women as property and is a "clear example of gender inequality".

Jagjit Singh said in court today that he had applied for the High Court to decide on seven questions posed on whether the law goes against the Federal Constitution.

Among the questions are whether Section 498 violates Article 8 of the Federal Constitution which guarantees all persons equality before the law.

He said that the law only applied to males and therefore it is gender discrimination.

"Section 498 carries an inherently unreasonable classification as it is predicated on the pre-modernistic assumption that women are mere chattels and incapable of a rational choice as to their male companionship," said Jagjit.

Jagjit said it was a pre-Merdeka law that cannot be applied and must be modified to conform to the Federal Constitution(see accompanying questions).

Jagjit and Akberdin Abdul Kader had on Dec 7 applied for the High Court to answer seven constitutional questions (see accompanying story) about the "outdated" law.

At 10.30am today, Ryan Chong's lawyer Wong Kian Kheong agreed that the defendant had the right to question the constitutionallity of the law.

"Until the issue has been settled, then there should be no other disturbances to proceed with the case," he said.

The Magistrate also allowed the proceedings to be stayed until the issue is settled in the higher courts.

The Iking case had spurred several women's rights groups, demanding that the law, said to be archaic and "demeans women", needs to be repealed.

Lawyers told Malay Mail that it comes across as a law that was framed in the “old days” when married women were enslaved to their husbands.

A crime was therefore committed when someone enticed or detained a man’s wife and “took” what was “rightfully” his violates their dignity and denies them the ability to decide for themselves.

As there is no crime of enticing a married man, there should not be a crime of enticing a married woman, the Women’s Centre for Change said.

At the Dewan Rakyat sitting in October Seputeh MP Teresa Kok had asked whether the Government had any plans to amend Section 498; to which Home Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein replied that the Government had no intention of abolishing the law as “it is an isolated case”.

THE CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS

1. Whether Section 498 of the Penal Code is an unequal law as it imposes criminal liability on the male party only and is therefore in breach of Article 8(1) and (2) of the Federal Constitution.

2. Whether Section 498 of the Penal Code is inherently discriminatory of the male sex as it criminalizes the conduct of the male party in a joint and/or consensual actinvolving a female party, and is therefore gender discriminatory under Article 8(1) and 8(2) of the Federal Constitution.

3. Whether the targeting of the male party only for criminal liability under Section 498 of the Penal Code is an unreasonable classification for the purpose of Article 8 of the Federal Constitution and without reasonable nexus to the perceived objective of the classification.

4. Whether Section 498 carries an inherently unreasonable classification as it is predicated on the pre-modernistic assumption that women are mere chattels and incapable of a rational choice as to their male companionship

5. Whether Section 498 achieves the unreasonable object of consigning a woman to the custody of a man with whom she no longer wishes to reside or consort with as her husband.

6. Whether Section 498 is inherently violative of Art 5(1) of the Federal Constitution as it is deprives the liberty of a man in his choice of consortium or a married woman to consort with a man other then her husband.

7. Whether Section 498 of the Penal Code as a pre-Merdeka law cannot be applied without the modification to bring it in conformity with the provisions of the Federal Constitution as envisaged under Article 162(1)(b) and is therefore unenforceable.

What Section 498 of the Penal Code says

“Whoever takes or entices away any woman who is and whom he knows, or has reason to believe, to be the wife of any other man, from that man, or from any person having the care of her on behalf of that man, with intent that she may have illicit intercourse with any person, or conceals, or detains with that intent any such woman, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both.”

Section 498 is stated as “Enticing, taking away or detaining a married woman”. The ingredients of this offence are:

● any person, man or woman, must entice another woman;
● he must know that the woman is the wife of another man;
● he must entice her from the person who is in charge of her and takes care of her;
● the enticement must be within the intention that she should have illicit intercourse with another person;
● any person who conceals or detains any woman with that intent will also be punished.

From Malay Mail, "Wife enticement trial starts soon".

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — A Malaysian man is facing trial for allegedly seducing another man's wife — a charge under a rarely used law that defense lawyers criticized Wednesday as archaic and tantamount to sexual discrimination.

A decades-old law dating from the British colonial era calls for a two-year prison sentence for any man who "entices away" a married woman with the intention of having sex with her.

The law was invoked for the first time since the 1980s when businessman Ryan Chong initiated a criminal case against Choy Khin Ming earlier this year. Chong accused Choy of having a 14-month affair with his wife, television celebrity Daphne Iking, between 2007 and 2008.

A Kuala Lumpur Magistrate's Court had been scheduled to hear the case Wednesday, but it was transferred to the High Court, which Choy's lawyers said was more suited to hear a case that involves complicated constitutional issues.

"The most important issue is the validity of the law itself," said Choy's lawyer, Akberdin Abdul Kader. "The law is totally archaic."

The law might be considered unconstitutional because it violates the principle of gender equality and is based on the "assumption that women are mere chattels and incapable of a rational choice as to their male companionship," according to the defense lawyers' written statement submitted to the court.

Women's rights groups in recent months have also criticized the use of the law. However, Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has said there were no immediate plans to abolish it because it was so rarely invoked.

The charge had only been used a few times in Malaysian history, but no case went to a full trial, Akberdin said.

Choy, a sports apparel company manager, was present in court but declined to comment. He pleaded innocent to the charge in April.

Neither Chong nor Iking attended the hearing, which has attracted wide media attention partly because of Iking's popularity as a talk show host.

Iking has reportedly separated from Chong. Choy's lawyers say she is also not currently seeing Choy, but they declined to confirm whether the two were ever in a romantic relationship.

From Google News, "Malaysian faces trial in rare seduction case".

TV personality Daphne M Iking’s enticement case has been stayed by the magistrate’s court here and will be moved to the High Court.

The stay order was granted by magistrate Zaki Asyaf Zubir today after defendant Darren Choy Khin Ming filed an application on Dec 7 to refer seven constitutional issues dealing with gender discrimination with regards to Section 498 of the Penal Code to the High Court.

Choy’s lawer Jagjit Sing said the application for a stay was also pending an appeal against a decision made by the previous magistrate, Mohd Faizi Che Abu, who had earlier rejected an application by Choy to recuse him due to legal and prejudicial issues.

Jagjit said the appeal against the decision was fixed to be heard on Dec 4 but was postponed to Dec 17 as some documents were not in the appeal record.

In reply, lawyer Wong Kean Kheong, who is representing the complainant Ryan Chong Yiing Yih, agreed with the adjournment, pending the referral to the High Court.

Wong said the magistrate’s court does not have any jurisdiction to decide on constitutional issues.

He also said the defendant had the "right to raise constitutional issues on the subject matter of the charge".

On the recusal appeal, Wong said it was no longer relevant as a new magistrate, Zaki, had taken over the case.

Corporate figure Choy, 44, faces a private summons of enticing Iking, 30, with the knowledge that she was Chong’s wife, between July 2007 and September 2008 at a unit at The Plaza, Jalan Wan Kadir 3, Taman Tun Dr Ismail.

Iking, a model, actress and TV host, and showbusiness producer Chong were married in Bali on Jan 27, 2007.

Section 498 of the Penal Code states: "Whoever takes or entices away any woman who is and whom he knows, or has reason to believe, to be the wife of any other man, from that man, or from any person having the care of her on behalf of that man, with intent that she may have illicit intercourse with any person, or conceals, or detains with that intent any such woman, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both."

Lawyer Akbardin Abdul Kader is also representing Choy, while lawyer Ravi Nekoo is holding a watching brief for Iking.

From Sun2Surf, "Enticement case goes to High Court".

The Magistrate Court here on Wednesday ordered a stay of the hearing of a private summons involving TV personality Daphne Eleanor Iking.

Magistrate Zaki Asyraf Zubir made the order following an application by Darren Choy Khin Ming to refer to the High Court seven constitutional questions pertaining to a charge of enticement.

Choy's counsel, Jagjit Singh, applied for the stay pending a decision on the matter by the High Court and also on another appeal by Choy, against a decision by previous magistrate, Mohd Faizi Che Abu, in rejecting his application Mohd Faizi to recuse himself.

Choy had applied to recuse Mohd Faizi from hearing the case on grounds of prejudice because he was the magistrate who recorded the complaint from Iking's former husband, Ryan Chong Yiing Yih, 31.

The High Court will hear this matter on Dec 17.

Chong and Choy are embroiled in a legal battle with the former accusing Choy of "enticing or taking away or detaining with a criminal intent a married woman", a crime under Section 498 of the Penal Code.

Choy is charged with enticing Iking, knowing that she is a married woman, with the intention of having sexual intercourse at The Plaza, Jalan Wan Kadir, Taman Tun Dr Ismail here between July 2007 and September last year.

If found guilty, he can be jailed up to two years, fined or both.

The constitutional questions raised by Chong included whether Section 498 of the Penal Code was inherently discriminatory of the male sex as it only criminalised the conduct of the male in a joint and/or consensual act involving a female.

Choy also wanted the High Court to determine whether the section 498 of the Penal Code was an unequal law as it imposed liability on the male party only and was therefore in breach of Article 8 (1) and (2) of the Federal Constitution which regarded all persons are equal before the law.

Meanwhile, lawyer Wong Kian Kheong, who represented Chong, did not object to the stay of the hearing.

Iking married Ryan on Jan 27, 2007 in Bali, Indonesia. The couple has a daughter, Isobel Daniella Iking-Chong, who is now 21 months old.

From Bernama, "Magistrate Court Orders Stay Of Hearing Of Case Involving Daphne Iking".

You've got to give it to Daphne Iking for staying cool all the time.

But underneath her crazy, sexy, cool public persona, the smoking hot Malaysian TV personality admits to feeling under pressure over the excessive media attention on her "enticement case".

"I'm going through the toughest moments in my life," Daphne 'fesses up during a private chat at the newly opened Celebrity Fitness in Wangsa Walk Mall.

"It's stressful. Most people are judgmental. They love to speculate. And it can be painful. But they don't know what's going on in my marriage. But I'm not going to discuss it in public because I'm a very private person."

Begging the public (and the media) to respect her privacy, the 30-year-old has only this to offer: "I'm leaving it up to my lawyer.

"All I can say is that one is the man I'm married to. (Ryan Chong) The other one is a lovely friend (Darren Choy), who has been misunderstood."

For those in the dark, Ryan is suing Darren for 'enticing or taking away or detaining with a criminal intent a married woman', a crime under Section 498 of the Penal Code.

So, how is Daphne coping with all the stress?

"I work out a lot," says the gym buff, who is a regular at Celebrity Fitness.

"I do yoga and pilates a lot of late. It helps me to de-stress. It's also a good form of meditation for me."

There's also a lot of TLC (tender, loving, care) from her family and close friends. Not to mention an adorable two-year-old daughter, Isobel, who is her pillar of strength.

"She's been such a good girl," the doting mum beams proudly, adding "This crisis has taught me a lot about my inner strength.

"It brings me closer to God. It has also made me realise who my true friends are. I used to have a lot of party friends. But they disappeared when I hit the lowest point in my life."

But Daphne is determined to stay strong.

"It's a lot easier for me to pick myself up when I know I've got responsibilities. I've got to work hard for Isobel. She's depending on me. I've also got to work hard for my family 'coz my dad is retired already."

From Asiaone, "Daphne is stressed but staying cool".

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

AFTER LAYOFF SURVEY (allegedly from Ministry of Manpower)

I don't know about the word 'alleged'. The content of the letter below seems professional enough. Still, I have not seen the letter myself, so I can't (and shouldn't) really comment about it.

Dear Sir/Madam,

AFTER LAYOFF SURVEY - 2009

1) We understand you were laid-off from your job sometime between January and March this year when Singapore's economy experienced a recession due to the global financial crisis. We hope you have now found a new job.

2) The Ministry of Manpower's Research and Statistics Department is conducting a survey to obtain statistics on the employment status of affected workers to gain a better understanding of the labour market situation. The data collected will assist the Government in the review and formulation of manpower-related policies and programmes to help workers seek alternative employment and upgrading opportunities during the recession. The survey is expected to take up less than 15 minutes to complete.

3) The survey is conducted under the Statistics Act (Chapter 317) which ensures that the information you provide will be kept strictly confidential and used only for the purpose of compiling aggregates statistics. However, the Act also requires that you furnish the necessary information.

4) Please complete the questionnaire and return it to us by 6 Nov 2009 using the enclosed postage-free envelope. Alternatively, you may provide us the information through the Survey Hotline at 65921020 during office hours.

5) If we do not receive your return by the due date, our interviewers will contact you either through telephone or visit your household to assist you in completing the questionnaire. For interviews through telephone, our interviewers will identify themselves and quote your Reference Number as indicated in the attached questionnaire. In the case of personal visits, our interviewers will display the Ministry of Manpower Identification Card. You can verify our interviewer's identity with the MOM Contact Centre at 64385122 (24 Hours). If you require any clarification or assistance in the survey, please contact us at the abovementioned Survey Hotline or email us at mom_rsd_lfs@mom.gov.sg

6) For assistance in looking for a job, you may wish to call the WDA Jobs Hotline at 68835885 or visit the WDA JOBS website at www.wda.gov.sg/jobs. Alternatively, you can visit the nearest Career Centres of the Community Development Council (CDC) in your constituency for job assistance and skills training. Locations of the Career Centres are enclosed for your information.

7) We look forward to you participation in the survey.

From Asiaone Forum, "After Layoff Survey".

English teacher raped & murdered in Japan - the timeline

Check out the comprehensive timeline of key events in Lindsay Ann Hawker murder. It spans from Oct 2006 to early Nov 2009. Relentless pursuit of justice by the family of Miss Hawker.

Japanese prosecutors on Wednesday charged a 30-year-old man with raping and murdering a British teacher in 2007, in a high-profile case that shocked both countries.

Tatsuya Ichihashi, 30, had already been charged with dumping the body of 22-year-old English teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker and the case was now expected to go to trial.

Ichihashi was arrested last month as the only suspect in the murder after spending two years on the run and altering his appearance with plastic surgery.

He has refused to answer questions over the killing since his arrest. Ms Hawker's naked body was found on March 26, 2007 in a sand-filled bathtub on the balcony of Ichihashi's apartment just outside Tokyo.

From Straits Times, "Man raped, murdered teacher".

Tiger Airways IPO: exciting but not encouraging?


It's exciting news! Tiger Airways will soon launch its IPO! Or perhaps not.

Not that exciting, I mean. As early as 5 Dec this year (or actually 21 Nov), Tiger Airways was reported to plan for IPO to raise up to S$694 million.

Compare that amount with the latest news which has the figure revised downwards to about S$200 million to S$250 million. Perceived lack of interest, eh Tiger?

I will definitely give this counter a miss.

Budget carrier Tiger Airways said on Monday it has informed the central bank of its plans to list on the Singapore Exchange ahead of an initial public offering (IPO).

The airline said in a statement it 'has lodged its preliminary prospectus with the Monetary Authority of Singapore on Dec 21 in connection with a proposed listing on the main board' of the Singapore Exchange.

Dow Jones Newswires said the prospectus did not spell out how much money Tiger Airways plans to raise or the percentage of shares it plans to sell through the IPO.

But sources had earlier said Tiger is looking to raise S$250 million (US$178 million) through the initial shares offer scheduled next month.

Tiger Airways, which is 49 per cent owned by Singapore Airlines, flies from Singapore to destinations across Asia and to the Australian city of Perth. It also operates domestic services in Australia.

From Straits Times, "Tiger Airways seeks IPO".

Budget carrier Tiger Airways has confirmed that it’s seeking a listing on the Singapore Exchange mainboard.

The airline said in a statement on Monday that it has lodged its preliminary prospectus with the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

Earlier media reports had said that Tiger may raise about S$200 million from an initial public offering (IPO).

The budget airline, which began flying in September 2004, is part-owned by Singapore Airlines.

According to the draft prospectus, Singapore Airlines and state investor Temasek Holdings will not sell their shares in the budget carrier in its planned IPO.

The carrier also announced that it has appointed Gerard Ee as its new chairman.

Mr Ee is also currently chairman of the National Kidney Foundation.

He replaces Daniel Ee, who is retiring.

Tiger also appointed three new independent directors -- Po'ad Mattar, a senior partner from Deloitte & Touche, Rachel Eng, a partner in law firm WongPartnership and Yap Chee Keong, who sits on the board of several companies in Singapore and Australia.

The new board members replace Soo Kok Leng, Declan Ryan and William Franke, who are retiring.

From Channel NewsAsia, "Tiger files IPO prospectus with MAS".

Singapore budget carrier Tiger Airways plans to raise a smaller-than-expected S$200-250 million in its upcoming IPO, following lukewarm response from potential investors, sources said on Wednesday.

Tiger, 49 per cent owned by Singapore Airlines, will offer S$250 million worth of shares with an option to increase the issue size by 10-15 percent, a source briefed on the deal told Reuters.

A second source said Tiger will raise between S$200 million and $250 million - below the S$420 million it had hoped to raise initially following feedback from bookrunners Morgan Stanley and Citigroup.

Citigroup and Morgan Stanley declined comment, while Tiger's spokesman said the firm was considering an IPO as one of several options and declined to provide further details.

Tiger, which plans to use the money to buy new aircraft and repay existing debt, is scheduled to file a draft prospectus next week. Its investor roadshow will begin on Jan 6, the sources said.

The downsizing of Tiger's planned IPO highlights investor concerns about the airline industry, which has been battered by falling travel and cargo demand and a rally in fuel prices.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) on Tuesday said the world's airlines are set to lose US$5.6 billion in 2010, up from a previous forecast loss of US$3.8 billion, as rising fuel prices offset a recovery in passenger and air cargo demand.

Tiger, one of Asia's more successful budget carriers, has grown rapidly since it started operations in Singapore in September 2004, turning a profit in its third year of service.

The carrier, which now also operates out of Australia, has 17 Airbus A-320 aircraft in service with orders for another 55 A-320s that will be delivered between now and 2016.

Its Singapore operations are profitable, but the carrier suffered a S$50.8 million loss for the financial year ended March 2009 due to costs incurred in starting up its Australia-based operations.

Besides Singapore Airlines, Tiger's other owners are: Singapore state investor Temasek, which holds 11 per cent stake; RyanAsia, a company controlled by the founding family of Irish airline RyanAir, with 16 per cent; and Indigo Partners LLC, an investment firm, which owns the remaining stake.

Sources said about 90 per cent of Tiger's IPO will comprise new shares with the balance coming from existing investors that want to cut their stake in the airline.

From Asiaone, "Tiger Air cuts IPO size".

And previously on 05 Dec 2009 news about the much larger amount of IPO that Tiger Airways had aimed for:

Reports from Singapore yesterday indicated the airline was considering an IPO of $US300-$US500m as early as the first quarter next year and it has hired DBS Group to help manage the float.

A source told Dow Jones Newswires the funds were needed to fund Tiger's expansion in Australia as well as the purchase of 50 new Airbus A320 aircraft already under order.

A Reuters report said 49 per cent shareholder Singapore Airlines had agreed to the float and Citigroup and Morgan Stanley were joint book-runners.

Tiger confirmed an IPO was one option being considered by its shareholders.

Renewed rumours of a Tiger IPO surfaced last month after Singapore Airlines chief executive Chew Choon Seng told analysts it was "a project in progress" but no definitive schedule had been set.

But Mr Chew told a November 11 analysts' briefing that he could not speak for other shareholders, which included Singapore government investment arm Temasek and the Ryan family, and he did not want to pre-empt a decision.

Tiger has been slowly growing its Australian footprint and announced last month it would expand its network to Brisbane from March 28.

This gives the low-cost carrier a foothold in the nation's five biggest cities and will bring the number of Tiger routes to 18.

Chief executive Tony Davis recently indicated Tiger planned to add more planes in Australia.

Mr Davis said the airline was here for the long haul.

"Slowly but surely we keep adding routes and we keep adding more aircraft to the bases and I think that's going to be the theme going forward into 2010."

From The Australian, "Tiger Airways is planning $540m IPO".

...and even before that on 21 Nov 2009:
Singapore low-cost carrier Tiger Airways is considering an initial public offering (IPO) of at least US$500 million (S$694 million) some time next year, the Wall Street Journal reported, quoting a person familiar with the situation.

'At this time, they are considering a US$500 million minimum, but it could change. They have the agreement of shareholders. They need to fund their expansion in Australia and the purchase of new planes,' the person said on Thursday, adding that Tiger Airways is considering listing 30 per cent of its share capital.

Tiger Airways, 49 per cent owned by Singapore Airlines, is one of the biggest budget carriers in South-east Asia, with 25 destinations in Asia and Australia.

From Asiaone, "Tiger Airways may launch IPO".



Update on 07/01/10: An indicative price of $1.35 to $1.65 per share is revealed today. The amount raised will be up to $273 million.

TIGER Airways plans to raise up to $273 million in an initial public offer this month, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters, braving a still struggling air market in the first listing of an Asian airline in almost five years.

Tiger, whose owners include Singapore Airlines and Singapore investment company Temasek, is selling around 165 million shares, or about 30 per cent of its enlarged share capital, to raise funds for aircraft purchases.

The money raised will also be used to set up a new operating base for Tiger as well as pay off some existing debt, the term sheet said.

Tiger's IPO, downsized from an earlier estimated figure of around $300-350 million, comes amid concerns about the health of the global airline industry, which has been battered by falling travel and cargo demand and a rally in fuel prices.

The tough environment has pushed some traditional airlines, including Japan Airlines, to the brink of bankruptcy, and even low-cost carriers such as Tiger have been affected.

Rival budget carriers AsiaAsia and Jetstar, the budget airline owned by Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd, announced yesterday that they will form a non-equity alliance to cut costs, a further sign that budget airlines were feeling the burden of the aviation industry downturn.

Tiger set an indicative price of $1.35 to $1.65 a share for its offer, valuing the shares at 11.4 to 13.9 times forecast 2011 earnings.

Its IPO is the first by an airline in Asia since India's Jet Airways in February 2005, according to Thomson Reuters data.

About 94.2 per cent of Tiger IPO comprises new shares while the balance 5.8 per cent are vendor shares currently held by Indigo Partners.

RyanAsia, a company controlled by the founding family of Irish budget airline RyanAir, will divest some of its stake in Tiger if an overallotment option is exercised.

Singapore Airlines, which currently owns 49 per cent of Tiger, and Temasek will remain invested, although their stakes will be diluted after the IPO.

Tiger has grown rapidly since it began operations in Singapore in September 2004 and briefly turned profitable in its third year of service.

The carrier posted a $50.8 million loss for the financial year to March 2009 due to costs incurred in starting up its Australia-based operations.

Tiger has 17 Airbus A320 aircraft in service with orders for another 55 A320s that will be delivered between now and 2016.

Morgan Stanley and Citigroup are bookrunners for Tiger's IPO.

Tiger's investment roadshow began yesterday and the pricing of its share is scheduled to take place on Jan 16.

From Busines Times, "Tiger eyes up to $273m from IPO".



Update on 14/01/10: the IPO launch aimed at raising $247m to fuel ambitious growth plans. I will still give it a miss, though.

LOW-COST carrier Tiger Airways celebrated the launch of its much-anticipated initial public offering yesterday by giving away air tickets for next to nothing.

The airline, which aims to raise $246.8million when its IPO takes off later this month, is offering 165.2 million shares - 30.6 per cent of the company - at $1.65 apiece with trading expected to start on Jan 22.

To commemorate the share sale, Tiger has released 16,500 one-way seats to some destinations including Kuala Lumpur, Langkawi and Phuket for $1.65 each, including taxes.

Bookings are now open for travel between July and October.

The airline, the first low-cost carrier which will be listed on the Singapore Exchange, will use the bulk of the cash raised to buy new planes in order to fuel its ambitious growth plans.

Tiger operates 17 Airbus 320 aircraft to 33 destinations but aims to boost its fleet size to 68 planes by the end of 2015.

From Straits Times, "Tiger shares at $1.65".



Update on 18/01/10: Tiger Airways IPO is said to be priced at $1.50? Compare that to the earlier news above (which stated the offer price at $1.65). Selling at a discount to make this unattractive counter attractive? Not for me, thank you!

Budget airline Tiger Airways said on Monday it had raised S$247.7 million (US$178 million) in its initial public offering to help fund its ambitious plans in the growing Asian market.

The IPO, the first by an Asian carrier in five years, was priced at 1.50 dollars per share and means the Singapore-based carrier will have a market capitalisation of 781.3 million dollars, Tiger Airways said in a statement.

The funds raised will go towards mainly aiding Tiger Airways' plans to expand into the region where air travel demand is tipped by industry analysts to continue growing at a rapid pace.

"Going forward, we aim to continue growing our airlines in Singapore and Australia as well as establishing new airlines in additional markets in Asia," chief executive Tony Davis said in the statement.

"Tiger Airways is well-positioned to leverage the opportunities for growth in air travel in Asia and Australasia, the fastest growing aviation market in the world," he said.

Shares of Tiger Airways are to begin trading on Friday on the Singapore Exchange.

Tiger Airways, which is 49-percent owned by Singapore Airlines, is competing with Jetstar Asia and Malaysia's AirAsia, among others.

It said in a statement last week it would set aside 166 million dollars of the proceeds from the IPO to pay for the planned purchase of new jets.

The carrier wants to expand its current fleet of 17 Airbus A320s to 68 by December 2015 as it plans to fly to more destinations within the region and in Australia.

It is also looking to establish new operating bases and airlines when the opportunities arise, as well as repay short-term loans.

Tiger said the region was poised to be the biggest travel market by 2020 and was aiming to expand its route network to take advantage of growing demand for air travel.

Tiger, which began its first commercial flights in September 2004, flies from Singapore to destinations across Asia including popular holiday spots such as Penang in Malaysia, and Bangkok and Phuket in Thailand.

It has also expanded into Australia where it offers domestic flights between key cities and towns across the continent.

In its prospectus, Tiger said it made a net loss of 50.8 million dollars and revenues of 378 million dollars in the financial year ended March 2009 compared to a profit of 9.9 million dollars on income of 303.8 million dollars in the previous year.

In the six months to September 2009, losses totalled 8.3 million dollars which was smaller than the 25.2 million dollars recorded in the same period the year before.

From Channel NewsAsia, "Tiger Airways raises US$178m in IPO".

Prevent Mosquito breeding by 1 cent copper coins: Fact or Fiction?

Received the followings from a well-intentioned colleague of mine. Quoted:

Cheap & Efficient way to stop mosquitoes.

We cannot stop mosquitoes lay eggs at any stagnant water in drains/ponds or water collected in waste pails, tanks, tins, used tyres etc. etc. Of course if you have fish inside the tanks/containers then there should be no problem.

Do you know that there is a very simple and very economical way to destroy the mosquitoes' eggs and not let them hatch into larvae. Very very simple, just put in few 1 cent copper coins into the tanks/containers then it will solve all your problems.

Because in accordance to Japanese Research Scientists, they found the mosquitoes eggs will be destroyed by a kind of mineral discharge from the copper. DON'T BELIEVE, Try it by yourself and even the small snails also will not visit the containers (with copper coins) collected with stagnant water. Your will observe the water collected in the containers will be very clean and clear.

Please Share with friends
I can't wait to try this in the summer!


The idea of being able to stop mosquito breeding by a simple method of putting in a few 1 cent copper coins piqued my interest. How come our National Environment Agency or NEA never suggested it? Unbelievable.

But wait a minute, if the preventive solution suggested above is feasible, surely NEA has done its part to encourage us to throw away those precious coins?!

That's one of the reasons I conclude that the versatile use of copper coins to prevent mosquito breeding is merely a work of fiction. (The other reason being the email quoted the unnamed Japanese Research Scientists. If it's indeed a fact, I'd have thought that the scientists would insist to be properly credited.)

Anyway, I'm still curious about the outrageous possibility of the misuse of copper coins to discourage mosquito breeding & thus, I did a quick search on the Net.

Here are the findings, the quite related articles on the subject:

1. Dated August 8, 1999:

They are brazen biters, efficient disease carriers, and hunt by day, not just at night. Stealthy and resilient, they have thwarted most scientific efforts at control and eradication.

They will try to eat you alive.

But these mosquitoes are not your garden-variety bloodsuckers. This new pest plaguing parts of the Washington region is called the Asian Tiger, and it is wreaking havoc on bare skin from Baltimore to Virginia Beach.

It is especially prevalent in inner-Beltway communities in Prince George’s County, where it has found one favorite habitat in abundance – old tires. But researchers caution they are sure that Asian Tigers are all over the metropolitan area.

How bad a bug is it? It’s so tough that this summer’s drought, which has curbed other mosquito populations, has done nothing to tame it. Instead, “they’re spreading and worsening,” said Jeannine M. Dorothy, an entomologist in the Maryland Department of Agriculture’s Mosquito Control division. “There’s really no way we can control it.”

And that’s a problem because the Asian Tiger poses a potential health threat. In laboratory settings, it has been found to be a successful disease bearer, or “vector,” able to transmit maladies affecting humans such as encephalitis, Dengue fever and yellow fever, as well as dog heartworm. Outside the laboratory, there have been no reported fatalities connected to the Asian Tiger.

“We keep watching it. We monitor it,” said Duane J. Gubler, director of vector-borne infectious diseases at the Centers for Disease Control in Fort Collins, Colo. “So far, there is no evidence that it is involved in human disease transmission.”

The Asian Tiger defies most mosquito stereotypes. It will breed in anything that holds water, even the tiniest amounts, such as flowerpots, tires, old soda cans and clogged rain gutters. It bites more often than standard-issue mosquitoes do. It has nothing against sunshine.

Researchers in New Orleans tried for almost a decade to breed a cannibal mosquito to try to check the Asian Tiger population. They were not successful. Other experts around the country also are studying the mosquito’s habits and trying to find ways of controlling it.

And to make matters worse, the Asian Tiger is out-competing the area’s native mosquito, which is a much less aggressive pest.

“They’re tearing us up. And we just basically gonna keep getting ate alive,” said Quayshawn Briscoe, 20, a resident of Fairmount Heights, one area of inner-Beltway Prince George’s that has a dense population of Asian Tigers.

So named because of white stripes on its legs and thorax, the Asian Tiger is believed to have arrived in Houston around 1985 via a shipment of tire castings from Japan. They quickly swept up the coast of the southeastern United States, transported mostly in scrap tires. Asian Tigers were found around a tire recycling plant in Baltimore in the late 1980s and showed up around the same time in Prince George’s.

Scientists describe Asian Tigers as skittish, making them hard to kill by the traditional method of death by big slap.

“There are some mosquitoes that will just sit on you, but the Asian Tiger is hard to kill because it’s very flighty,” said Stephen Sackett, field operation supervisor for the New Orleans Mosquito Control Board, which has been researching the insect for more than a decade. “The Asian Tiger will come in quick, bite and fly off.”

Insect repellent creams and sprays for the body do work, Dorothy said, but there is little else anyone can do.

“Mosquito control programs cannot adequately control this species because of its habits,” Dorothy said. “All we can do is inform the public. You’ll never get rid of them, but you can cut the numbers.”

How? By getting rid of standing water, however little, anywhere.

Dorothy and her small staff spend a lot of time posting in business windows signs that warn “The Tiger’s In Town!” The poster has a menacing-looking tiger head in the middle and gives tips about how to keep mosquitoes from breeding around the home: “Get rid of unnecessary containers.” “Change birdbath and wading pool water once a week.” “Keep ornamental pools stocked with minnows.” “Keep shrubs and grass well-trimmed.”

While traditional mosquito-control efforts target swamps, ponds and large bodies of stagnant water and most likely include nighttime neighborhood spraying (because most mosquitoes come out at dusk), “There’s no way to go around treating every flowerpot, birdbath and kiddie pool for the Asian Tiger,” said Kim Largen, the gypsy moth and mosquito control branch chief in Prince William County.

Largen said the mosquitoes were first noticed in Prince William in 1997.

“Now, pretty much anywhere we look we’re finding them,” she said.

Dorothy is investigating the unproven idea that copper might kill Asian Tiger larvae. She said cemetery workers in Louisiana noticed that bronze vases in which families leave flowers to honor the dead don’t incubate mosquitoes eggs the way ceramic and cement vases do.

To test the hypothesis that copper leaching into the water kills the Asian Tigers, Dorothy has set up little experiments in Cheverly, Bladensburg and other small Prince George’s towns. Her control tires have stagnant water in them; others hold copper tubing, old pennies and water.

“I hope it works,” she said. “If it does, we will be able to say, ‘You can control Asian Tigers and it only costs pennies a year.’. . . But for now when people call and ask me, ‘How do you get rid of them?‘ I have to say I wish I knew.”

From Washington Post, "Asian Tiger Mosquito Spreads Trouble".

2. Not dated, though:

The District Health Department Vector-Borne Diseases Program staff are finding mosquitoes breeding in many ponds in the area. Our staff usually treat the ponds initially with one of several products that kill mosquito larvae. These products are effective for about one month in suppressing larval mosquitoes. If conditions are right, the staff may also recommend planting the pond with mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis), which are avid consumers of mosquito larvae. Ponds which are not appropriate for mosquito fish require some other type of continued treatment to prevent breeding mosquitoes.

Our staff request that homeowners take responsibility for continuing mosquito prevention in their own ponds. Homeowners can take several steps to reduce the possibility of breeding mosquitoes. These include:

* Remove overhanging plants from the edge of the pond. These provide protection for breeding mosquitoes.
* Remove algae from the pond by raking or use of copper sulfate. Mosquito larvae thrive in algae.
* Line the edge of the pond with rock. This will inhibit plant growth.
* Install a small fountain or aerator. The movement of the water interferes with egg-laying by female mosquitoes. An aerator will also suppress mosquitoes by improving general water quality.
* Try using mosquito donuts for larval control. This is a product similar to one used by our staff for larval abatement. The donuts may be bought at hardware, nursery, and ornamental pond stores in the area.

Our staff are available to answer questions and provide consulting to assist you in finding long-term solutions to prevent mosquitoes from breeding in your ornamental or stock pond. Please call us at 785-4599 to inquire about this service.

From Washoe Channel, "Mosquito Prevention for Ornamental Ponds".

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno: Cane me tender...Cane me quick, dammit!!

Poor Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno. First, she was convicted for having a beer in a nightclub in Malaysia. The courageous lady was insistent to have her caning carried out publicly. Alas, the six strokes of cane was delayed at the very last minute. And now, the mother of two was upset that the punishment has yet to arrive.

Malaysia, you are really very wishy-washy. On the one hand, you want to enforce the curious law of not allowing beer consumption by Muslims. On the other hand, you are very damn slow in putting your words into action.

The poor Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno just wants to have this shameful episode to be over with & yet, you just continue to drag it on.

A Muslim model who was ordered to be caned for drinking beer urged the Malaysian authorities on Sunday to decide what should happen to her four months after her case was halted.

Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, 32, was sentenced to six strokes by a religious court in July, the first woman ordered to be caned under Islamic law in Malaysia, a moderate Muslim-majority country.

But she won a surprise reprieve in late August when she was detained and then abruptly released by religious officials who had planned to take her to a jail where she was to undergo the thrashing.

The government said the sentence was 'too harsh' and could damage Malaysia's reputation.

'They should declare what they want to do with me, tell me, don't leave me in limbo, at least I would know where am I,' Ms Kartika told AFP by telephone from her hometown in northern Perak state. 'My stand is still the same - if they decide they want to cane me, please do it. I don't want to pressure them but what they promised is to postpone the caning until after the holy month of Ramadan, which was over in September.

'Even my lawyers don't know how they should help me now,' said Ms Kartika, adding that she is now a volunteer at an orphanage in Perak after quitting her job in Singapore at the height of her case to avoid public attention.

From Straits Times, "'Please expedite caning'".

A Muslim model who was ordered to be caned for drinking beer wants Malaysian authorities to decide what should happen to her four months after her case was halted.

Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, 32, was sentenced to six strokes by a religious court in July, the first woman ordered to be caned under Islamic law in Malaysia, a moderate Muslim-majority country.

But she won a surprise reprieve in late August when she was detained and then abruptly released by religious officials who had planned to take her to a jail where she was to undergo the thrashing.

The government said the sentence was "too harsh" and could damage Malaysia's reputation.

"They should declare what they want to do with me, tell me, don't leave me in limbo, at least I would know where am I," Kartika told AFP from her hometown in northern Perak state.

"My stand is still the same - if they decide they want to cane me, please do it. I don't want to pressure them but what they promised is to postpone the caning until after the holy month of Ramadan, which was over in September.

"Even my lawyers don't know how they should help me now," said Kartika, adding that she is now a volunteer at an orphanage in Perak after quitting her job in Singapore at the height of her case to avoid public attention.

Kartika, a part-time model and mother-of-two, has stared down religious authorities by saying she is ready to be caned, refusing to appeal against her sentence and challenging them to cane her in public.

The religious court itself agreed to review the sentence after the case triggered a public furore, but the appeals panel later upheld the decision and ordered the caning to go ahead.

Abdul Hamid Abdul Rahman, the chief religious judge of Pahang state - where Kartika was arrested in a hotel nightclub - told the Star newspaper on Sunday that "there is nothing happening" at present.

Alcohol is widely available in Malaysia but is forbidden for Muslim Malays, who make up 60 per cent of the population. They can be fined, caned, or jailed for up to three years but prosecutions are extremely rare.

Malaysia has a dual-track legal system and Islamic courts can try Muslims for religious and moral offences.

Islamic scholars, who have mostly backed the sentence, said the punishment would be carried out with Kartika fully clothed and with a cane that is smaller and lighter than the heavy length of rattan used in most cases.

From SMH, "Beer-drinking Malaysian model 'in limbo'".

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Tampines: the first cycling town

Congratulations. Hope to see other parts of Singapore declaring themselves to be the next cycling town. Oh, by the way, with regards to the recent 'misadventure' (a man died after hit by a teen cyclist) at Henderson Road, it's not part of Tampines I guess?

Tampines is set to become Singapore's first cycling town. The Tampines GRC MPs announced on Sunday that after a two-year trial to see if cyclists and pedestrians could share footways safely, cycling on footways will be allowed, starting 1 March 2010.

The GRC has been working with the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and the Traffic Police since May 2007 to assess the feasibility of the idea, said MP Mr Masagos Zulkifli.

The trial was sparked off by a 2005 parliamentary debate in which Tampines GRC MP Irene Ng called for cyclists to be allowed to ride on footways, in light of an increasing number of them involved in fatal accidents on busy roads.

Feedback from residents showed general acceptance of the trial, said Mr Masagos, but the tripartite decision was conditional: cycling on footways would only be sustainable in the long run if three key features identified - infrastructure, education, and enforcement- were implemented together.

The GRC has already begun widening footways to accommodate both pedestrians and cyclists as part of the infrastructure efforts. The Town Council has also constructed two new stretches of bicycle paths, and LTA will be building 6.9km of bicycle paths in the first half of next year.

Sunday also marked the launch of the Tampines Safe Cycling Clinics, funded by the North East CDC, in a move to ramp up education efforts. The two-hour clinics will be conducted by cycling wardens, and will teach cyclists traffic rules and proper cycling etiquette.

From Asiaone, "Tampines is first cycling town".

A coffeeshop assistant died about five hours after he was hit by a teenage cyclist at a carpark, a coroner's court heard.

State Coroner Victor Yeo recorded a verdict of misadventure on the death of Mr Tay Kia Sim, 52, on March 17.

The cyclist, then 14, was named a potential defendant at the inquiry into the death of Mr Tay.

The court heard that the Secondary 3 student was cycling fast along the road in the open space carpark of Block 96 Henderson Road on March 16 evening when Mr Tay emerged from the side footway into his path.

The boy, who is now 15, tried to brake but could not avoid hitting Mr Tay, who was thrown backwards and landed about 4m away. The cyclist also lost control of his bicycle and fell to the ground after the impact.

Mr Tay was taken to Singapore General Hospital where he died of head injuries at about 12.55am.

From Straits Times, "Man hit by teen cyclist, died".

Friday, December 18, 2009

Poster "Poor Joseph. God was a hard act to follow." Outrageous?!


Is the above poster really "inappropriate" and "disrespectful"?

Put the fiery sense of defending your religion aside & bring forward your analytical thinking: No, I don't think so. Joseph is after all a legal husband of Mary. And it's not uncommon for a couple to feel 'disenchanted' about their relationship. Let alone if it's caused by the third party. Or in this case the Third Party...

The news was also featured in Straits Times multimedia here.

An unholy row has broken out in New Zealand over a church billboard aimed at "challenging stereotypes" about the birth of Jesus Christ.

A dejected-looking Joseph lies in bed next to Mary under the caption, "Poor Joseph. God was a hard act to follow".

St Matthew-in-the-City Church in Auckland, which erected the billboard, said it had intended to provoke debate.

But the Catholic Church, among others, has condemned it as "inappropriate" and "disrespectful".

Within hours of its unveiling, the billboard had been defaced with brown paint.

The church's vicar, Archdeacon Glynn Cardy, said the aim of the billboard had been to lampoon the literal interpretation of the Christmas conception story.

"What we're trying to do is to get people to think more about what Christmas is all about," he told the New Zealand Press Association (NZPA).

"Is it about a spiritual male God sending down sperm so a child would be born, or is it about the power of love in our midst as seen in Jesus?"

He told NZPA that the church had received e-mails and phone calls about the controversial image.

"About 50% said they loved it, and about 50% said it was terribly offensive," he said. "But that's out of about 20 responses - this is New Zealand."

But Lyndsay Freer, spokeswoman for the Catholic Diocese of Auckland, said the poster was offensive to Christians.

"Our Christian tradition of 2,000 years is that Mary remains a virgin and that Jesus is the son of God, not Joseph," she told the New Zealand Herald. "Such a poster is inappropriate and disrespectful."

The family values group Family First said any debate about the Virgin birth should be held inside the church.

"To confront children and families with the concept as a street billboard is completely irresponsible and unnecessary," Family First director Bob McCroskrie told the news website stuff.co.nz.

From BBC, "Unholy row over New Zealand Mary and Joseph billboard".

World's Fattest Cat

Today, we ask the question, is this the fattest cat in the world?

Mercer 2010 forecast of salary increase

Any readers who are from pharmaceutical industry care to share their comment about the projected salary increase of 4.1%? (Higher than the average of 3.2%!)

Projected figures from Mercer Singapore:
- Pharmaceutical: 4.1 per cent
- High-tech: 3.3 per cent
- Aerospace: 3.2 per cent
- Consumer goods: 3.1 per cent
- Banking and finance: 3.1 per cent
- Chemical: 2.9 per cent
- Property: 2.6 per cent

With the recession over, the question among workers now is how well companies will pay them next year.

On Friday, human resource consultancy Mercer Singapore threw its hat in the ring with a forecast of a 3.2 per cent rise in salaries.

It is the rosiest projection among at least four companies that have recently given their forecasts for next year.

Mercer based its projection on its survey, done in October, of 262 companies in 11 industries.

Expected to give top dollars are pharmaceuticals, which plan to hand out 4.1 per cent more, and high-tech companies, at 3.3 per cent more.

The banking and finance industry plans to give a 3.1 per cent pay rise, a quick rebound over this year's average increment of less than 1.5 per cent.

From Straits Times, "Expect 3.2% pay rise".

WITH the recession over, the question among workers now is how well companies will pay them next year.

On Thursday, human resource consultancy Mercer Singapore threw its hat in the ring with a forecast of a 3.2 per cent rise in salaries.

It is the rosiest projection among at least four companies that have recently given their forecasts for next year.

Mercer based its projection on its survey, done in October, of 262 companies in 11 industries.

Expected to give top dollars are pharmaceutical, which plans to hand out 4.1 per cent more, and high-tech companies, at 3.3 per cent more. The banking and finance industry plans to give a 3.1 per cent pay rise, a quick rebound over this year's average increment of less than 1.5 per cent.

Only 15 per cent of the companies intend to freeze salaries next year, compared with 35 per cent that did so this year.

From Straits Times, "Rosy salary rise projections".

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Simply Spa International closure; outstanding prepaid packages not to refund

After Wellness Village Spa, it's now Simply Spa International.

I swear the sudden closure of spa outlets might begin a disturbing trend. Again, those outstanding prepaid packages are said--understandbly--not to be refunded. (The best part is Simply Spa official website's News & Promotions have not been updated. There's not even an effort to make it known that it's closing?! Sheesh...)

Anybody want to start a spa business? Preferably in a form of a limited liability partnership, perhaps? Hur hur.

Barely five weeks after hundreds of spa customers were left stranded by Wellness Village's sudden closure, shutters are down for another one located in a hotel - with customers told that "outstanding prepaid packages will not be refunded".

The decision by Simply Spa International looks set to spark off another round of complaints to the Consumers Association of Singapore (Case) and the Small Claims Tribunal, raising the question again if more can be done to protect consumers.

Administrative manager Lynn Koh, for one, was "shocked" when she received an email on Monday about the closure of the outlet at Parkroyal on Kitchener Road. She signed up for a 12-treatment package in July, and has "four or five" unclaimed treatments worth about $700 to $900.

But that might now be money down the drain, if Simply Spa's director Kiri Alana Edwards' email warning of no refunds is anything to go by.

"We took over the spa on August 1 this year. However, on Sept 28, we were advised to close the spa due to licensing issues. Since this time, we have tried to resolve such licensing issues as well as various other issues with the previous owner.

"Unfortunately, we have not been able to resolve these issues and therefore the spa will not be re-opening," wrote Ms Edwards.

MediaCorp emailed her for further details, but she replied: "As this matter is the subject of pending litigation, I've been advised not to comment."

A check with the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority showed the company to be "live". Its shareholders are New Zealanders Ms Edwards and Mr Brandon Patrick Edwards.

Its website states that the spa was established in 2004 and moved to its present location last year.

Yesterday, its doors were shut and a notice from the hotel management said it was closed until further notice.

Responding to queries, a hotel spokesperson said the spa is its tenant, and the hotel has not been officially informed of the company's permanent closure. The hotel is directing all enquiries to the spa itself.

Case executive director Seah Seng reiterated his call for the spa industry to better protect consumers through an insurance scheme that would reimburse consumers when a spa closes, for instance. It has also asked the Association of Banks Singapore to ask banks to pay spas in instalments when customers prepay with their credit cards.

According to Case, the number of spa, beauty or wellness closures has decreased in the past three years. There were 13 closures in 2007, seven in 2008, and five so far this year, excluding Simply Spa.

"But it doesn't matter if it's one or two closures," Mr Seah said. "Whenever a spa closes, hundreds of customers are affected and it's very damaging to the image of the industry."

From Channel NewsAsia, "Hotel spa shuts down; no refund on packages".

Other 'spa' related posts:
- Wellness Village Spa's 330 angry customers...
- Aramsa Spa: The BEST spa in Singapore
- The address of Lia Meyrina (the allegedly vanishing director of the Wellness Vilage Spa & Fitness)
- Wellness Village Spa & Fitness is a limited liability partnership...so what?!
- Wellness Village Spa & Fitness outlets disappear? And to think that SIA Boarding Pass Privileges showcase the spa...

Hong Kong teen auctions virginity online

Check out the auction bids here. Right. We're living in a crazy world, it seems.

A Hong Kong teenager tried to auction her virginity on a social-networking website with the highest bidder offering $US7,800 ($A8,510), police said on Tuesday.

The girl, whose online ad said she was desperate for money, had set a minimum price equivalent to $US1,300 ($A1,418) for sex, a police spokesman said.

The ad on the website hkmensa.net did not give the girl's age, but said she was a teenager and included details about her height and weight.

About 100 people responded to the December 9 ad, which the police spokesman said was taken down by the girl herself before the auction was over.

Police said they had launched an investigation, and posted a warning on the website advising girls not "to sell your body for money".

"One should value morals highly and respect self-esteem," said the warning on hkmensa.net, which is targeted at secondary school students.

Soliciting "unethical conduct" or having sex with an underage person are crimes under Hong Kong law.

In recent years, there has been an increasing number of teenaged girls in the city offering their virginity online or going on Japanese-style "compensated" dates with older men, which can include sex for money.

A 22-year-old US woman sparked controversy last year when she auctioned her virginity online to pay for her college education. Her offer reportedly attracted thousands of bids going as high as $US3.7 million ($A4.04 million).

From SMH, "Hong Kong teen auctions virginity online".

A HONG KONG teenager tried to auction her virginity on a social-networking website with the highest bidder offering US$7,800 (S$10,800), police said on Tuesday.

The girl, whose online ad said she was desperate for money, had set a minimum price equivalent to US$1,300 for sex, a police spokesman said.

The ad on the website hkmensa.net did not give the girl's age, but said she was a teenager and included details about her height and weight.

About 100 people responded to the Dec 9 ad, which the police spokesman said was taken down by the girl herself before the auction was over. Police said they had launched an investigation, and posted a warning on the website advising girls not 'to sell your body for money'.

'One should value morals highly and respect self-esteem,' said the warning on hkmensa.net, which is targeted at secondary school students. Soliciting 'unethical conduct' or having sex with an underage person are crimes under Hong Kong law.

In recent years, there has been an increasing number of teenaged girls in the city offering their virginity online or going on Japanese-style 'compensated' dates with older men, which can include sex for money.

From Straits Times, "HK teen auctions virginity".