Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Rare Singapore riot forces soul searching over foreign workers

Rare Singapore riot forces soul searching over foreign workers
10:23 PM
10
December
2013
Reuters/Singapore
Singapore’s first major riot in four decades is forcing the wealthy island to confront a stubborn but vexing question: how to treat low-paid foreign workers whose muscle underpins much of the economy but whose presence increasingly riles its citizens.
Images of rioters overturning police cars, throwing garbage bins and burning an ambulance in Singapore’s Little India on Sunday night shocked the orderly Southeast Asian nation and stirred debate over whether foreign workers should be better integrated or see their numbers reduced.
“This is just a tip of the iceberg,” said Gayathiri, 30, an engineer who lives near the scene of the riots and goes by one name.
“I hope the government will take it as a wake-up call. We need foreigners to boost our economy, but not at the expense of our security,” she added, echoing a widely held sentiment.
Police charged 24 Indian nationals with rioting, which carries a maximum penalty of seven years’ prison and caning.
They were among an estimated 400 people who rampaged after a private bus fatally struck construction worker Sakthivel Kumaravelu, 33. The number of arrests could rise.
The government has urged people not to jump to conclusions but many Singaporeans blame an overabundance of migrant workers and could use the riots to intensify a push for tighter immigration curbs — a step that could hurt the economy.
The dominant People’s Action Party (PAP) that has ruled Singapore for more than half a century was already facing pressure over Singapore’s high cost of living and its reliance on foreign workers on the island of nearly 5.4mn people.
Founded by Lee Kuan Yew, the father of the current prime minister, the PAP is credited with transforming Singapore from a colonial outpost in the 1960s into a global financial hub with world-class infrastructure, safe streets, an efficient civil service and the world’s highest concentration of millionaires.
Part of that success is built on cheap foreign labour, which makes up nearly 20% of the population. Many Singaporeans have expressed concerns over a government proposal on Jan 29 to raise the population to 6.9mn by 2030.
Of that, up to 36%, or 2.5mn, would be made up of foreign workers to balance a low birth rate and sustain economic growth.
Many of the current 1.3mn foreign workers do low-paid jobs shunned by locals — from construction to domestic work.
Jobs in the construction industry, for instance, are dominated by male workers from India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka who earn a basic monthly salary of between S$460 ($370) and S$700, according to campaign group Transient Workers Count Too.
That compares with the average Singaporean monthly wage of about S$4,433.
Employers must pay a government-imposed levy on each foreign worker they wish to hire, with a higher levy for lower-paid workers to regulate their numbers.
Authorities could tighten that measure to slow the influx of foreign workers.
 “The latest incident may further increase pressures to reduce Singapore’s dependence on foreign workers,” said Chua Hak Bin, a Singapore-based economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
“Construction as a segment is already seeing some of the steepest levy hikes and tightening in quotas.”
Others, however, argue that policymakers should focus more on the workers’ welfare and integration. Many foreign workers live in crowded dormitory compounds, some housing up to 8,000 people, on the fringes of the island.
“There is no policy for promoting integration. It is a separatist policy,” said Bridget Tan, the founder and chief executive of the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics in Singapore.
In their scarce free time, many gather in Little India, an area of narrow streets and rows of shop-houses selling colourful fabrics, spices and groceries, a legacy of the 19th-century British colonial rulers who laid out the city in ethnic zones.
Indians and Bangladeshis have congregated peacefully in large crowds in the area for years, eating and drinking, and illustrating decades of success of maintaining religious harmony in a polyglot community of ethnic Chinese, Malays and Indians that was convulsed by race riots in the late 1960s.

Thai premier rejects demand to step down

Thai premier rejects demand to step down
10:24 PM
10
December
2013
Anti-government protesters shout slogans as they gather outside the Army Club where Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra held her cabinet meeting in Bangkok yesterday.
AFP/Bangkok
Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra yesterday refused demands by anti-government protesters that she resign before upcoming elections, urging them to abandon their self-styled “people’s revolution”.
Bangkok has been shaken by more than a month of mass opposition rallies aimed at ousting Yingluck and ridding the kingdom of the influence of her older brother, deposed former leader Thaksin.
In a sharp drop from the roughly 140,000 people who attended protests Monday, police said some 7,650 protesters gathered in the capital yesterday afternoon, calling for the elected government to step down.
The demonstrators are a loosely-allied group united by their animosity towards Thaksin, a billionaire tycoon-turned-politician who was overthrown in a military coup seven years ago but is widely thought to control the government from abroad.
Yingluck, who called an early election on Monday to try to calm the political turmoil, said her cabinet was legally bound to act as an interim government until the polls are held.
“I would like the protesters to stop and to use the electoral system to choose who will become the next government,” she told reporters after a cabinet meeting early yesterday.
A visibly emotional Yingluck — who said she had not discussed with party colleagues whether she would run in the February 2 election — reacted angrily to protesters’ calls that her family be removed from Thailand.
“I have retreated as far as I can — give me some fairness,” she said.
Rally leader Suthep Thaugsuban has rejected elections and vowed to set up a parallel government that would suspend the democratic system in Thailand and redraw its constitution.
The firebrand former deputy prime minister, who faces an arrest warrant for insurrection over the protests, issued a 24 hour ultimatum late Monday calling on Yingluck and her colleagues to resign from the caretaker government.
“When the ultimation expires at 10:30pm (1530 GMT), if there has been no clear signal that you (Yingluck) will resign, we will intensify the protests,” he said yesterday evening.
“As soon as (the interim government) hands its resignation to the King, we will all go home,” he added.
Thaksin is loathed by many in the royalist elite and Bangkok middle class, but loved among the working classes and those in his rural northeastern heartland. His overthrow in 2006 by generals loyal to the king ushered in years of political turmoil and rival street protests by the royalist “Yellow Shirts” and Thaksin’s supporters, known as the “Red Shirts”.
Pro-Thaksin parties have won every election in more than a decade, but all governments linked to the divisive former premier since 2006 have been cut short by military or judicial intervention without serving a full term.
Observers have raised fears that if another Thaksin-allied government is forcibly removed it could trigger a fresh round of violence.
Yingluck’s ruling Puea Thai Party is widely expected to win the upcoming vote, bolstered by Thaksin’s enduring popularity.
The opposition Democrat Party — whose MPs resigned en masse Sunday because they could not achieve anything in parliament — has not won an elected majority in about two decades.
Democrat Party officials said Monday they had not yet decided whether to take part in the upcoming election.
Demonstrators were divided on whether they would vote in the polls.
“We’ll boycott if it is the party line,” said protester Nui Amnoyporn, 50.
But a 25-year-old motor engineer who gave his first name as Pond said he planned to vote.
“Democracy is important. I will vote for the Democrat Party,” he said.
Tensions remain high after several days of street clashes last week when police used tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets against rock-throwing demonstrators. The unrest, which saw protesters besiege key government buildings, has left five people dead and more than 200 injured in street violence.
Police yesterday said they had found evidence of damage at offices in a sprawling government complex in suburban Bangkok used by protesters as their base for about a week until yesterday.

Polish president attends reception at embassy

Polish president attends reception at embassy
12:11 AM
10
December
2013

President of Poland Bronisław Komorowski speaking at a reception at the Polish embassy yesterday. He is in Qatar on an official visit.

QTA launches online platform for event details

QTA launches online platform for event detailsRashed al-Qurese
12:31 AM
10
December
2013

By Joey Aguilar/Staff Reporter

Qatar Tourism Authority (QTA) yesterday announced the launch of its new online platform, Qatar Events Diary - OnQatar, a one-stop-shop for information on all events and activities in the country.
OnQatar will be available through multiple channels such as a website, mobile phone application, social media as well as the news media.
Rashed al-Qurese, director of Marketing and Promotions at QTA, told reporters that the Qatar Events Diary website - www.onqatar.qa - will be the official tourism information portal of the country. Its main page features moving photographs and details of events happening all year round.
The bilingual website will benefit the general public as well as event organisers/promoters, helping the latter plan their events better and avoid any conflict of schedules. It is also expected to give them good marketing opportunities.
“We often find four or five big events happening on the same day. We think this project indirectly provides a scheduling opportunity for event organisers and promoters,” al-Qurese stressed during a press briefing.
He admitted that there had been uneven distribution and overlapping of similar events in the past. This also involved lack of awareness among the organisers and the general public.
With an interactive website in place, various expatriate communities in Doha can also submit and post their schedule of activities.
QTA has categorised these events into art & culture, business, education, fashion, food, entertainment, healthcare, charity & religion and sports.
Residents and tourists can also help promote activities posted on the website by sharing them via social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, thereby keeping the public well-informed.
With an increasing number of smartphone users, QTA has also launched the OnQatar Arabic-English mobile application. It can be downloaded on all iOS and Android-enabled mobile devices.
The new app helps people locate the exact venue of events besides guiding them on how to take part in various celebrations. It also contains additional information on bookings and where to buy tickets.
The information posted online include the venue, category, name of the organiser and type of admission. The whole file can also be downloaded on smartphones.
A number of posts will provide links to other portals such as Al Cinema. Some announcements of future activities can be seen on the lower right section of the website.
“We are trying to reach out in order to promote the country, hoping that more tourists and visitors will come to Qatar,” said al-Qurese.
He also pointed out that they would accept comments and suggestions in a bid to improve the entire platform. For the time being, they will allow organisers to post details of their events free of charge.
The new website can be viewed from today while the application is already available for free download. “This will certainly make it easier for people to participate in activities and also facilitate the promotion of these activities locally, regionally and internationally,” he added in a statement.
QTA mulled over numerous suggestions and ideas on what title to have and it finally decided to use OnQatar as “it encapsulates all, catchy and easy to remember”.