Year 2013
WSJ fined for contempt of court
Tuesday, 25th November 2008
A Singapore court has found the Wall Street Journal in contempt of court for publishing three articles relating to Singapore's judiciary, and fined it SGD $25,000. According to court statement "The three publications, read individually or collectively, are in contempt of court because of the allegations by way of insinuations clearly possess the inherent tendency to interfere with administration of justice". In addition to the fine, Dow Jones Publishing Company (Asia) was ordered to pay $30,000 in legal costs to the Attorney-General, who had initiated the legal action.
Pay cut for top civil servants
Monday, 24th November 2008
Ministers and top civil servants will get a pay cut of up to 19 per cent next year. The Civil Service is also reducing the year-end bonus payment for this year. In 2009, the Prime Minister and President will see their annual salaries cut by 19 per cent. Ministers and Senior Permanent Secretaries will see an 18 per cent fall. The allowance for Members of Parliament will be cut by 16 per cent. Next year, according to his spokeperson, the Prime Minister will actually see his salary fall to pre-revision levels?
Indian won Singapore Open
Sunday, 16th November 2008
Jeev Milkha Singh, an Indian National, thanked the 'golfing gods' after clinching the 2008 Barclays Singapore Open in Sentosa by a shot from Ireland's Padraig Harrington and South Africa's Ernie Els in a dramatic finish. This is Mr. Singh's third victory of the 2008 season, with his seven-under-par 277. He pocketed a cool USD 792,500 dollars in this win.
Zoo cleaner killed by Tigers
Thursday, 13th November 2008
A zoo cleaner, a contract worker with Sun City Maintenance Company, was mauled to death at the Singapore Zoo's white tiger enclosure. The tragic incident when he jumped into the enclosure and provoked the tigers into attacking him. It is not known exactly why the 32-year-old, Nordin Montong from Malaysia, decided to jumped into the tiger enclosure. During the incident, zookeepers and onlookers had thrown various items at the tigers in an attempt to distract them from Nordin. He was still alive after zookeepers succeeded in making the tigers retreat to their dens, but Nordin died later of his neck and leg injuries. This was the first time a person had been killed by an animal at the zoo since it opened in 1973.
Prostitute Murdered at Flanders Square
Saturday, 25th October 2008
At about 7.15pm, the victim, a 41-year-old Malaysian woman, stumbled out of a room on the ground floor of a three-storey building in Flander Square, a dead-end street off Petain Road in Little India, with a knife still lodged in her chest. Neighbours believe the suspect was a regular patron of the dead woman, who goes by her working name Coco. She was described as being over 1.7m tall, slim and attractive. Coco was known as an "Ang Pai" (Red Card in Hokkien) in that area which means she was one of the most popular prostitutes there - her asking rate was $50 per session and have about 20 male clients a day. More than 100 women working in the stretch of budget brothels along Flanders Square.
PM Lee asked Citizen not to Over react
Friday, 24th October 2008
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong called for a measured response to the ongoing global financial crisis, cautioning against an over-reaction that might cause more alarm and uncertainty. He urged Financial authorities to keep in close contact. PM Lee stressed that it is important to engage the international financial institutions, which have the resources and knowledge to help governments manage this crisis.
China Free trade pact signed
Wednesday, 22nd October 2008
The landmark free trade agreement (FTA) between China and Singapore, which is the Chinese government's first with an Asian country, will eliminate tariffs for 85 per cent of Singapore's exports to China from January 2009. An additional 10 per cent of exports, or 95 per cent of Singapore's exports to China, will be duty-free from 2010 onwards. The Singapore exports covered by the FTA, which include such items as instant coffee, aviation kerosene and ornamental fish, have a total trade value of over $18 billion. As part of the China-Singapore FTA , Singapore will lift tariffs for all Chinese exports to Singapore. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loon and his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao signed the FTA in Beijing.
PM Lee, MM Lee awarded 6-figure sums in libel case
Monday, 13th October 2008
The Singapore High Court has awarded six-figure sums to both Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and his father, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, in their libel case against the Singapore Democratic Party and its leaders. The Judge came to the conclusion that a fair and reasonable figure for damages was S$500,000 for Mr Lee Hsien Loong and S$450,000 to his father for defamatory remarks which appeared in an SDP publication during the 2006 General Election. The Judge said the amount was commensurate with and proportionate to the gravity of the libel and the "egregious behaviour" of the defendants Dr. Chee Soon Juan and his sister, Chee Siok Chin.
Two Jailed for exposing breasts
Monday, 6th October 2008
Two Filipina were fined $1,000 each on Monday for exposing their breasts in a pub in Duxton Road. Ms. Camela Dimante Brucal, 24, and Ms. Mariecel Jusi Eballa, 29, pleaded guilly to committing an obscene act in a public place. A district court heard that the two pub hostesses had displayed their breasts to two men last Thursday, 2 October 2008, at Club Genova at 10.30pm. Police caught them in the act as they were carrying out a check at the pub. Pleading for leniency, both women said that they were very remorseful and would not re-offend. Both Ms. Camela Dimante Brucal and Ms. Mariecel Jusi Eballa will serve five days in jail as they could not pay the fine.
Singapore Grand Prix 2008
Sunday, 28th September 2008
The Singapore Grand Prix is a Formula One race staged in the Marina Bay area of Singapore. The first race, which was also Formula One's first night race, was won by Spanish driver Fernando Alonso of the Renault F1 Team. The official name of the event is FORMULA 1 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix 2008. The race was co-funded by the Government of Singapore, footing 60% of the total bill, or about SGD $100 million, out of a total tab of SGD $160 million. Around 110,000 tickets sold Singapore's first Formula One night race and about 2.5 billion people watched the Singapore Grand Prix on television across the world.
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