Wednesday 5 June 2013

Las Vegas Sands Board of Directors Approves Multi-Year Share Repurchase Program

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwired – Jun 5, 2013) – Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE: LVS) announced today that the company’s Board of Directors has approved a multi-year share repurchase program.


“I am extremely proud to announce that the company’s outstanding financial performance, together with our expanding cash flows and strong balance sheet, has enabled us to initiate a multi-year share repurchase program,” said Mr. Sheldon G. Adelson, chairman and chief executive officer of Las Vegas Sands. “We believe the implementation of our share repurchase program, together with our previously established recurring dividend program, will allow us to maximize returns to shareholders in the years ahead.”


Mr. Adelson noted that the initial authorization for the share repurchase program is $2 billion and the company expects to utilize the program in an opportunistic fashion.


In 2012, the company’s Board of Directors established a recurring dividend of $1.00 per share per year, and increased the recurring dividend by 40 percent to $1.40 per share in 2013. In addition, the company paid a special dividend of $2.75 per share in December 2012.


“It is gratifying that the company’s businesses and cash flows have grown to a level that enabled the company to return nearly $3.1 billion of capital to shareholders in 2012, while retaining ample liquidity to pursue future growth opportunities,” concluded Mr. Adelson.


About Las Vegas Sands


Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS) is a Fortune 500 company and the leading global developer of destination properties (Integrated Resorts) that feature premium accommodations, world-class gaming and entertainment, convention and exhibition facilities, celebrity chef restaurants, and many other amenities.


The Venetian® and The Palazzo®, Five-Diamond luxury resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, and Sands® Bethlehem in Eastern Pennsylvania are the company’s properties in the United States. Marina Bay Sands® is the company’s iconic Integrated Resort in Singapore’s downtown Marina Bay district.


Through its majority-owned subsidiary Sands China Ltd. (HKSE: 1928), the company owns a portfolio of properties on Macao’s Cotai Strip®, including The Venetian® Macao, Four Seasons Hotel Macao, and Sands Cotai Central. The company also owns the Sands® Macao on the Macao Peninsula.


Las Vegas Sands is committed to global sustainability through its Sands ECO360 program and is an active community partner through its various charitable organizations.


For more information, please visit www.lasvegassands.com.


Investment Community:
Daniel Briggs
(702) 414-1221


Media:
Ron Reese
(702) 414-3607




Las Vegas Sands Board of Directors Approves Multi-Year Share Repurchase Program

Singapore to boost pool of cyber-security experts over next 5 years

SINGAPORE: Singapore is ramping up its supply of cyber-security experts through a training programme that will be conducted in Israel.


RSA, the security division of American IT solutions company EMC, announced on Wednesday that it will be working with the Economic Development Board (EDB) on a multi-year agreement to train some 2,500 Singaporeans in cyber-security over the next five years.


The move is to address the global shortage of qualified cyber security professionals needed to defend critical IT infrastructures in civilian and government organisations.


According to Interpol statistics, 14 people fall prey to cyber crime every second.


In his opening speech for the RSA Asia Pacific conference, Senior Minister of State for Home Affairs and Foreign Affairs Masagos Zulkifli said: “Already, cyber-criminals are targeting the smaller companies as larger corporations up their ante against cyber-crime. They gain access to the large corporations when these smaller companies merge or get acquired. It is thus critical to invest in, or provide capacity-building and training programmes for our counterparts to improve our overall resilience against cyber-threats on a global scale.”


Qualified graduates from Singapore universities and existing cyber-security professionals can apply for the multi-year residency and repatriation programme designed to equip them with the relevant skills needed for cyber-security and anti-fraud careers.


The programme will be complemented by a new training course administered by the EDB, in cooperation with RSA, to bring certified candidates to RSA’s world-class cyber security and RSA Anti-Fraud Command Center (AFCC) located outside Tel Aviv, Israel.


The training initiative is part of EDB’s Strategic Attachment and Training (STRAT) Programme, which aims to build up Singapore’s manpower capabilities in strategic areas and sectors through overseas training and attachment with leading companies.


Director of Safety and Security Industry Programme Office (SSIPO) at EDB Gian Yi-Hsen said: “The SSIPO is focused on developing and strengthening the local and global talent pool to meet the global demand for cyber security professionals.


“The collaboration with RSA would lead to the creation of good jobs for Singaporeans and creates a readily available talent pool for companies to tap when they set up operations in Singapore.”


Candidates can take part in either a one-year or two-year training rotational programme to gain advanced skills required to fight cyber crime and advanced cyber threats in areas such as phishing, pharming and Trojan attack detection, analysis and shutdown; e-commerce and online banking fraud; security management and monitoring; breach preparedness and incident response; and governance, risk and compliance.


Chairman of RSA Arthur Coviello said: “They will actually see fraudsters in action. We monitor their chatrooms and performances. They will learn lots of information about how Trojans morph and change, attack methodologies, different threat actors…. they will also learn a lot about security operations and how to defend against these very attackers so the best way to develop skills to defend is to know how they come at you offensively.”


The candidates will be selected graduates from Singapore universities and existing cyber-security professionals.


At the end of the course, they will return to Singapore to take on a spectrum of roles in the IT industry, which could be related to anti-fraud analysis and software development.


Mr Coviello said: “One of the issues that we face today with young engineers and software programmers coming out of school is they know lots about programming but precious little about security and attacks, and having that kind of knowledge and then combining it with the ability to develop software is a heck of a skill to have.”


Mr Corviello said the collaboration with EDB is a win-win partnership as it also allows the RSA to expand its presence in the Asia Pacific region.


He said: “We think it is an attractive opportunity to work with talented upcoming professionals from Singapore and train them for a couple of years in our anti-fraud techniques for the purpose of hiring them and building our anti-fraud command centre here in Singapore.


“It is a mutually beneficially relationship because we have more and more Singaporeans who will learn these techniques. And even if we don’t hire them, they will come back and be available to be hired in other businesses. But I can assure you, we will take maximum advantage of them as they go through their rotations.


RSA will open the application process for the cyber security residency programme in the third quarter of this year.



Singapore to boost pool of cyber-security experts over next 5 years

In pictures: Onboard meals go flying as plane hits turbulence



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3562f 130605123732 sg airlines turbulence 3 vertical gallery Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...
A Singapore to London flight suddenly dropped 20 meters after breakfast was served, leading to chaotic scenes onboard.


3562f 130605123203 sg airlines turbulence 1 horizontal gallery Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...Cabin crew were told to return to their seats mid-way through the meal service.


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Passengers snapped pictures of the in-flight chaos, and reported meal trays and even some people hitting the ceiling as the turbulence struck.


df972 130605123932 sg airlines turbulence 4 horizontal gallery Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...Coffee is served — on the ceiling.


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Minor injuries to passengers and crew were reported by the airline.


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Singapore Airlines staff were commended for the way they handled the incident, and for how quickly they got everything back in order.


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You’d hardly know anything had occurred after the clean-up operation.


715c2 130605124636 sg airlines turbulence 8 horizontal gallery Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...Passengers were given luxury chocolates on landing — the perfect panacea to in-flight meal mayhem.


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(CNN) — Images taken on a recent Singapore Airlines flight might suggest passengers had become unusually ferocious in their disdain for the onboard meal.


But this was no “Bugsy Malone”-esque food-flinging fiesta.


The plane hit turbulence shortly after breakfast was served, and the result was culinary carnage.


“Singapore Airlines flight SQ308 experienced moderate to severe turbulence en route from Singapore to London on 26 May,” said airline spokesman Nicholas Ionides.


“Eleven passengers and one crew member sustained minor injuries when the aircraft experienced a sudden loss of altitude and were attended to by medical personnel on arrival at Heathrow Airport.”


Passengers reported coffee cups, cutlery and even a few people were thrown about the cabin as the plane lost altitude.


Alan Cross, one of the passengers who took the images you see here, told CNN: “Everything violently rocketed off all the tray tables into the ceiling. You literally felt your stomach going into your throat.”


The mess was cleaned up soon after and passengers were given chocolate gifts on landing in London.





In pictures: Onboard meals go flying as plane hits turbulence

Two steps back

b0451 sing media 000 hkg8638809 595 Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...

SINGAPOREANS live in one of the most wired countries in the world, and as such they are used to receiving gobbets of news on their smartphones and tablets as a daily if not hourly affair. So it was to the dismay of many that the Media Development Authority (MDA) put a draconian new licensing requirement into effect on June 1st. The authority’s purpose would seem to be to tighten its grip on what is already a claustrophobic media environment.


The new regulations demand that all websites concerned with the news be licensed, and also that each puts down a “performance-bond” of 50,000 Singapore dollars ($39,550). Any content deemed to be in breach of standards would have to be removed within 24 hours of being notified. This is all in addition to a host of prior regulations, including another licence scheme wherein both internet-service and content providers must follow an official code of practice and meet other conditions.



The new licensing framework is to affect everything that could be called a “Singapore news programme”, as defined by two criteria. The first is that the programme (or online newspaper, blog, etc) reports an average of one article or more about Singapore’s news and current affairs, per week, over a period of two months. The second that the content have “significant reach” by the standard set by the MDA, ie that it is read (or viewed, etc) by at least 50,000 unique IP addresses from within Singapore. That is a meagre threshold in a country with a population of just over 5m that enjoys a “wireless broadband population penetration rate” of 166%.


The traditional media are primarily represented by just two companies, one of them owned by Temasek, one of the state’s sovereign-wealth funds, and the other tending to have a pro-government stance. So the rise of alternative news websites, over the last six years or so, has been especially significant here. Singaporeans have taken to the internet with alacrity—especially for news about the country they call home.


Perhaps the first worrisome thing to note about the MDA’s new policy was the complete lack of public consultation beforehand. The authority announced the new rules just a couple of days before their implementation—along with a starter course of ten websites that will need to be licensed (nine are owned by those two largest of Singapore’s media companies, which are often associated with the state). Critics argue this may be a strategy to ease the implementation of the controversial change.


The second reason for anxiety is a bit subtler. While the ministry of communications and information has assured bloggers that they will not be affected by the new rules, the legislation doesn’t guarantee the same. The definition of “Singapore news programmes” is broad enough to include “any programme containing any news, intelligence, report of occurrence, or any matter of public interest, about any social, economic, political, cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific or any other aspect of Singapore,” though of course it “does not include any programme produced by or on behalf of the government.”


Yacoob Ibrahim, the communications minister, told reporters that the move provided “some form of parity between online news sites and traditional mainstream media newspapers and TV broadcasters.” On the face of it, that might make sense. Why shouldn’t online media be subject to the same regulations as those that pertain to other media platforms? Well, apart from the fact that those existing regulations have resulted in Singapore’s abysmal ranking in the world’s league tables for press freedom—it comes 149th out of 179 countries on Reporters Without Borders’ list; 153rd out of 197 countries in Freedom House’s. Licensing aside, content online is already subject to laws concerning libel and slander; incitement to public disorder; sedition; and more.


“What the authorities call “light-touch” regulation has been replaced with the mailed fist. The only certainty is the continuity of this approach online,” says Choo Zheng Xi, Co-founder of The Online Citizen, a popular self-styled “social news site” which receives visits from some 150,000 to 200,000 unique IP addresses monthly, most of them from within Singapore. The new regulations, many online users believe, is just a preview of things to come.


Mr Yaacob told The Business Times that at present the new regulations need apply only to Singapore-based news websites. But there are plans afoot to to bring foreign websites under the licensing framework next year.


“If [foreign media] are transmitting news to Singaporeans and Singapore is their target market, then we will have to do something about it,” said Mr Yaacob


Several of the potentially affected sites and bloggers plan to protest the new licensing scheme on June 8th at HongLimPark in central Singapore—assembling offline, as well as online. As part of the same protest they are encouraging other Singaporeans to freeze their blogs and websites for 24 hours on June 6th.


Singapore’s press has been always been tightly regulated, both before and since the state won its independence. A new generation of “netizens” is hoping to find that the keyboard is nimbler—if not quite mightier—than the pen.


Trending topics


Netizens of at least three neighbouring countries have faced official crackdowns in the past few years. In each case the state makes itself look almost desperately keen to protect itself. Earlier this year Thailand used its Computer Crime Act to set a precedent for intermediary liability with its conviction of Chiranuch Premchaiporn. Her crime was not responding quite quick enough to remove comments from her website, comments that were opposed to the monarchy.


In September 2012 Vietnam’s courts handed out long jail sentences to three prominent bloggers whom they accused of subverting the state. The bloggers had apparently “distorted the truth about State and Party, created anxiety among citizens and supported schemes to overthrow the government.” Another 13 journalists were jailed earlier this year, for content published online.


And bloggers in neighbouring Malaysia have not been spared either. Raja Petra Kamaruddin was jailed in May for alleging that Najib Razak, the deputy prime minister, and his wife were involved in the murder of a Mongolian model in 2006. Bloggers there can be charged under an Officials Secrets Act, an Internal Security Act and a Sedition Act, as well as for posting on “sensitive topics”—which tend to include corruption among officials.


(Picture credit: AFP)



Two steps back

Meritus Hotels & Resorts Offers Guests Free Wi-Fi Access Across All Properties

— /PRNewswire/ — Responding to the need of today’s traveller to stay connected at all times, award-winning Asian hospitality group Meritus Hotels Resorts announced the roll-out of free Wi-Fi service across the Group’s properties in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and China.


(Logo: http://www.prnasia.com/sa/2011/12/09/20111209194931399475-l.jpg )


Guests can expect to enjoy straightforward access to the complimentary amenity throughout their stay, not only from the guestrooms but from anywhere within the hotels’ premises.


The service allows every guest sufficient bandwidth to exchange data across virtual private networks and social media channels, as well as download and upload reasonably-sized files, including rich media formats. For heavy bandwidth users looking to stream high-definition videos or download movies, a premium bandwidth package is available at competitive rates.


Guests carrying multiple devices can enjoy complimentary Wi-Fi access for up to three devices.


“Free and efficient Wi-Fi connectivity has become an increasingly important benchmark for hotel end users,” said Maria Taylor, Meritus Hotels Resorts Regional Vice President, Revenue. “By offering this value-add and adopting it as a brand standard, we ensure that we are meeting the ever evolving needs of our guests and remaining at the forefront of a highly competitive industry.”


Meritus Hotels Resorts have been making headways in hospitality through product and service innovations aimed at enhancing the overall experience of guests. In 2012, its flagship Mandarin Orchard Singapore became the first hotel in Singapore to offer a “second screen” mobile device solution for an advanced in-room technology that connects guests to a host of conveniences and services at the touch of a button, from anywhere within the hotel.


The Group was also recently named Most Admired Enterprise in the Innovation category at the ASEAN Business Awards held in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, in conjunction with the ASEAN Leaders Summit.


For more information on Meritus Hotels Resorts, visit www.meritushotels.com.


About Meritus Hotels Resorts


Meritus Hotels Resorts is part of the hospitality division of Overseas Union Enterprise Limited (SGX-ST: “OUE”), a diversified real estate owner, developer, and operator with a complete portfolio of prime assets in key locations in Singapore and the United States, and hotels in Malaysia and the People’s Republic of China.


Meritus Hotels Resorts is long established as an icon of Asian hospitality in Singapore. The brand founded its roots from The Mandarin Singapore, now Mandarin Orchard Singapore – the first hotel of its scale and caliber to be built on Orchard Road in the late 1960s.


More than 40 years on, Meritus is an award-winning hospitality brand providing guests its signature Asian grace, warmth, and care through hotels and resorts strategically located in key cities and idyllic resort destinations in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and China. Its current portfolio includes the flagship Mandarin Orchard Singapore, Marina Mandarin Singapore, Meritus Pelangi Beach Resort Spa Langkawi, Meritus Mandarin Haikou, Meritus Shantou China, and Meritus Surabaya City Centre. The brand is also slated to launch a resort in Bali by end of 2013.


Combining comprehensive business and leisure facilities with warm intuitive service, Meritus strives to consistently deliver its trademark hospitality experience as it continues grow its geographical footprint, particularly in Southeast Asia and China. More recently, the Group was conferred the Heritage Brand Award at the Singapore Prestige Brand Awards 2012. It was also cited Global Winner – Luxury Hotel Chain at the World Luxury Hotel Awards 2012, and Most Admired Enterprise in the categories of Growth and Innovation at the 2012 ASEAN Business Awards.


Press Contact:


Janice Azupardo Regional Vice President, Branding Communications Meritus Hotels Resorts DID: +65-6831-6385 Email: janice.azupardo@meritushotels.com


SOURCE Meritus Hotels Resorts



Meritus Hotels & Resorts Offers Guests Free Wi-Fi Access Across All Properties

Singapore"s Classiest Afternoon Tea: Fullerton Bay Hotel

d7fcf Fullerton Bay Hotel Tea Landing Point Delhi gang rape case: Singapore hospital doctors to depose before fast track ...


The venue itself is Landing Point, the hotel’s swanky all-day dining spot. And in addition to its gorgeous surroundings (the paved marble floor and crystal sculptures dangling over the bar really completed the look), we were totally impressed by the service.


Our waiter not only helped us pick out our preferred tea from a menu of around 20 different blends (black, green, herbal, you name it), but when our tea arrived, he even unscrewed the honey jar, spooned out a little, and stirred it into the cup for us! The only time we even lifted a finger was to drink it.


If we had happened to be in the mood for a cocktail at 3 in the afternoon (not something we generally make a habit of), there would have been plenty of options for that, too, as the bar is filled with endless bottles lined up along the shelves. Thankfully, our appointment was business-related, so tea and a biscuit was plenty.


Afternoon Tea is clearly a thing in lots of hotels, but this may just be the classiest act we’ve encountered so far. To experience it yourself, show up between 3pm and 5:30pm, though Landing Point is open all day (7am-midnight Sun-Thurs; 7am-1am Fri-Sat).


[Photos: HotelChatter]



Singapore"s Classiest Afternoon Tea: Fullerton Bay Hotel

The Clover Hotel Moves Into Singapore"s Kampong Glam District


Gallery: Inside Singapore’s New Clover Hotel






























































The rooms continue the theme with a simple layout, plenty of reclaimed wood furnishings, and odd touches, like a vintage leather briefcase, or an old gas lantern. The design is deceptively simple, but when you look more closely, you notice that everything is in its exact place: the perfectly-placed hangers, the slippers tucked in under the nightstand.


Additionally, the showers are peekaboo, but there is a convenient shade you can pull down for added privacy.


We also loved the little epithets scrawled onto the walls of the hotel: in the lobby, one wall proclaimed, “I drink therefore I am,” while on the shower glass was written:



“To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee, and revery.”

Evidently, the owners are big Emily Dickinson fans, since this line formed the inspiration for the hotel’s name.


Though the decor and feel of the hotel are rustic, rooms are fully air-conditioned, which is a good thing, since the minute you step outside you’re likely to start dripping sweat. And yes, there is free WiFi throughout the hotel.


Rates from $133/night, breakfast not included.


[Photos: HotelChatter]



The Clover Hotel Moves Into Singapore"s Kampong Glam District

Tuesday 4 June 2013

Las Vegas Sands to Webcast 2013 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

Where the U.S. Economy Is Still No. 1The Exchange

Our schools stink. Our tax system is labyrinthine and wasteful. College grads can’t find decent jobs. And too many …



Las Vegas Sands to Webcast 2013 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

Come To The TechCrunch Singapore Meetup And Echelon After-Drinks Tonight

TechCrunch is serious about covering Asia Pacific. So we’re holding a TechCrunch meetup today after the Echelon conference where you can connect with TechCrunch writers and teach us about the region’s startup ecosystems. It’s from 6pm-8:30pm today, Tuesday June 4th at MOA New Zealand Bar, Changi City Point Mall #01-70/71, 5 Changi Business Park Central 1, Singapore City.


Silicon Valley-based TechCrunch writer Josh Constine and APAC-based writer Victoria Ho will be on hand to hear about your startup, offer entrepreneurship guidance, and have a drink with you. There’ll be appetizers too, plus a chance to meet other high-powered techies from Singapore and the rest of Asia. AngelHack will be helping us have a techie good time, and afterwards we’ll all head to the official Echelon after-party.


We see APAC blossoming into an even more critical part of the world startup scene. But to offer great coverage, we need to meet you and get your insights. Tell us about local talent, funding, opportunities, and challenges to success. Turn us on to something fascinating and your company could end up in TechCrunch.


39245 tc writers 21 Singapore Airlines Profit Rises


So whether you’re an entrepreneur, investor, dreamer, or tech enthusiast, come out to the TechCrunch Singapore meetup and unwind after a long day at the Echelon 2013 conference. Bring your friends and let’s grow this community!


  • Where: MOA New Zeland Bar and Grill, 5 Changi Business Park Cental 1, Singapore City, Singapore

  • . MOA is in the Changi City Point Mall in the outdoor ground level Oasis area. This Foursquare listing has an accurate map of the location.


  • When: 6pm-8:30pm local Singapore time

  • More Details: Check out our Eventbrite page and Follow @joshconstine on Twitter for updates on the event or to connect if you can’t make it in person

Come show us why Singapore and APAC are the next big things in tech.



Come To The TechCrunch Singapore Meetup And Echelon After-Drinks Tonight

Shades of Manila 1945: Novel about Singapore deals with Japanese occupation






fa0cd t0603amadis book black feat6 1 196x300 Singapore Airlines Profit RisesThis long, ambitious novel is, like most recent and current Asian novels written in English, brilliant but with a difference: There are ghosts swarming all over the place.


It is a fictional history of Singapore from 1929, the year of the stock market crash in the United States, to the present. But, distinguo, as the Jesuits would say, it is a work of fiction and author Tan, wary perhaps of lawsuits, calls the city-state the Black Isle of the title.


A dead giveaway, however, is the map featured just before the text. It shows a large blackened island directly south (joined no doubt by a causeway) of the then British Malaya.


“The Black Isle” by Sandi Tan (Grand Central Publishing, NY, 2012; 469 pages) is a long flashback, with occasional shifts to the present. The narrator-heroine is Cassandra (Ling during her childhood), a psychic. Like the boy in the movie “Sixth Sense,” she sees “dead people.” And, when motivated, she can invoke the restless spirits to wreak havoc upon the land.


As the tale begins, we see Cassandra, now 88, living in self-exile in Tokyo, alone and friendless and not particularly caring about this. She has outlived all who have loved or hated her. Cassandra is, however, stalked by a Professor Maddin who is fascinated by her life story (and who, unknown to Cassandra, has her own agenda).


And Cassandra or Ling is persuaded to recount her incredible story.


Ling spent her childhood in Shanghai during the 1920s, when the city “was either the Pearl of the Orient (like Manila?) or the Devil’s Den.” The unloved child had a neurotic mother, an indifferent father and a twin brother with whom she had a near incestuous relationship.


The Wall Street crash in 1929 affects the family, and the father and the older twins (Ling and Li) are forced to migrate to the Black Isle to become “overseas Chinese.” Left behind are the mother and two younger children (also twins).


The island is a British colony.


Swirling around Cassandra are other fully realized characters: Daniel, scion of a rich family who falls in love with Cassandra; his sister Violet, who despises Cassandra; Issa, a shaman who becomes the revolutionary terrorist Isakandar; Cricket, an errand boy who becomes a businessman with many wives and children; Kenneth, a scheming politician and later prime minister with blood on his hands; and Taro, the charismatic Japanese officer who transforms Cassandra into a sex slave.


Surrealist images


The novel has many surrealist images, like a giant octopus making love to a Japanese woman, a ghostly dog-man and thousands of jellyfish clambering over the beach as war is about to erupt.


Under the Japanese yoke, the Isle deteriorated, just like Manila during the 1940s: “The rest of the city regressed.” And Cassandra asserts, “the Japanese were animals.”


“The Black Isle” is not the first Asian novel to document Japanese atrocities in fictional form, nor will it be the last. There is the recent “The Glass Palace” by Amitav Ghosh, and we have our own “Without Seeing the Dawn” by Stevan Javellana, “More than Conquerors” by Edilberto Tiempo,” and “Sugat ng Alaala” by National Artist-designate Lazaro Francisco.


For the Japanese, unlike the Germans, have not really repented of their World War II crimes. This is the reason behind the continuing tension between Japan on one hand, and China and the Koreas on the other.


The Chinese and Koreans have a sense of history; we don’t.


“The Black Isle” is available in Fully Booked, tel. 8587000; National Book Store; and PowerBooks.


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Shades of Manila 1945: Novel about Singapore deals with Japanese occupation

Singapore: Internet freedom under threat

Alarm bells rang among the Singaporean online community as the government revealed a new licensing scheme for news websites that could potentially give a heavy blow to grassroots citizen journalism.


The Media Development Authority (MDA) has announced that Singaporean news websites with about 50,000 unique hits a month will now require individual licences to operate.


These licenses come with a 50,000-Singapore dollar (US $39,500) “performance bond” and a commitment to take down anything deemed to be in breach of content standards within 24 hours.


Ten websites were singled out in the MDA’s announcement as being in need of individual licences. Only one of them – Yahoo! Singapore – does not belong to a local mainstream media outlet. Yet the outcry among Singaporeans has shown that no one really believes the government will stop at these ten.


Singapore’s mainstream media has been licensed and regulated for years. Under the Newspaper and Printing Presses Act (NPPA) and the Broadcasting Act, the government has had the power to grant or deny permits to operate, as well as to appoint management shareholders.


This has led to a suppressed mainstream media reduced to favouring the state narrative in much of its coverage, constantly aware of its “accountability” to the government. The memoir of Cheong Yip Seng, former editor-in-chief of Singapore’s major newspaper The Straits Times, is just one chronicle of government interference in the media.


The advent of the internet shifted the balance. Singaporeans, used to the top-down method of communication, found themselves able to go from passive consumers to active producers of news, commentary and analysis. Rather than wait for the official take, it was now much easier for concerned citizens to participate.


But this democratisation of content production and discussion is now under threat from the new licensing regime. While commercial media outlets might be able to pay the hefty “performance bond”, it is difficult to think of a community blog that would be able to come up with such a sum. Without the ability to get a licence, these blogs would then have to shut down, depriving the public of both an information channel and a space to express themselves.


Will they, won’t they?


The MDA has clarified on its Facebook page that an “individual publishing views on current affairs and trends on his/her personal website or blog does not amount to news reporting” and would therefore not be required to apply for a licence.


However, it had previously told Reuters that it would keep an eye on blogs and “evaluate them accordingly”. Its clarification on individual blogs also did not address the issue of community blogs, set up by groups of citizen journalists.


The Online Citizen (TOC), one of the more prominent socio-political blogs in Singapore, has released statements indicating that it fulfils the criteria set forward by the MDA. However, the MDA claims that TOC does not fulfil the criteria, adding, “Should MDA determine later that it ought to be individually licensed, it will be notified”. 




It is a signal that the MDA wields the discretion in determining who does or does not fall within the stipulated criteria. This is worrying, especially when crucial definitions – such as what would make a website a news site – are kept disconcertingly broad. The MDA defines a “news programme” as “any programme (whether or not the programme is presenter-based and whether or not the programme is provided by a third party) containing any news, intelligence, report of occurrence, or any matter of public interest, about any social, economic, political, cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific or any other aspect of Singapore in any language (whether paid or free and whether at regular interval or otherwise) but does not include any programme produced by or on behalf of the Government.”


Similarly, the definition of “prohibited content” as set out in the MDA’s Internet Code of Practice is just as opaque. It states that any material deemed “objectionable on the grounds of public interest, public morality, public order, public security, national harmony, or is otherwise prohibited by applicable Singapore laws” could be banned.


Deliberate or not, this vagueness causes no end of uncertainty for Singaporean bloggers. Unable to discern how and when the MDA makes its decisions, these new regulations become a shadow that hangs over everyone. The possibility of a “chilling effect” is all too real.


As retired journalist Bertha Henson - now a blogger with Breakfast Networkwrites: “What should I do now? Odd that my fellow members on Breakfast Network and I would have to think about how NOT to make ourselves so popular that we would breach the 50,000 threshold. Even if we have $50,000 to spare, it’s not nice to have to wonder about phone calls in the night or an email to demand that a post be deleted. And it’s not nice to have to second guess what the [Government] (or which god in which department) thinks about this post or that and that particular god-person’s threshold of ‘sensitivity’.”


A political tool


While the government continues to insist that the new licensing scheme is being put in place to create more “consistency” in the regulation of print, broadcast and online media, the potential for these licences to be used as political tools is obvious.


The mainstream media can usually be counted on to stay fairly close to the government line, but the accessibility of online media has given citizens an opportunity to express themselves. This has led to more criticism of the state, and the political awakening of many “apathetic” Singaporeans.


Alternative views have been shared freely online, on blogs and social media, which very likely led to an increase in support for alternative political parties. Opposition politicians, previously painted as social pariahs, are now seen in a different light, and the fear of being identified as an opposition supporter has been significantly reduced. In fact, the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) had never performed as badly as it did in the last general election in 2011, where it received 60 percent of the vote.


This is why the latest media regulation has been interpreted as a government attempt to cling on to power by any means necessary. By introducing a new licensing regime that could effectively shut down socio-political blogs – many of which tend to be critical of the incumbent party – the PAP is seen as censoring the internet and silencing the opposition.


The government has so far been unsuccessful in fighting that perception. The Minister for Communications and Information, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, has indicated the government’s intention to amend the Broadcasting Act to include overseas-based websites that write about Singapore. In an interview with the BBC, he said: “We want to protect the interest of the ordinary Singaporean. As long as they go online to read the news I think it’s important to make sure that they read the ‘right thing’, insofar as if there’s an event yesterday it is reported accurately.”


It is a situation that brings little satisfaction to anyone. The backlash can already be felt. Singaporean bloggers have already come together to launch the #FreeMyInternet campaign, calling for an online blackout in the run up to a protest demanding the government to withdraw licensing. The government was mistaken if it had thought that it could seize control of the internet without any outcry, and this licensing regime could be causing headache on both sides for quite a while yet.


Kirsten Han is a freelance journalist and blogger from Singapore, with an interest in human rights and social justice issues. She is currently a Master’s student in Journalism, Media and Communication at Cardiff University.


Follow her on Twitter: @kixes




1411



The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.



Singapore: Internet freedom under threat

Eight New and Affordable Hotels to Stay in Singapore for 2013

  •  Singapore Airlines Profit Rises

2f447 gI 72585 Singapore%2520Business%2520District%2520Skyline%2520at%2520Dusk Singapore Airlines Profit Rises


These new budget hotels couldn’t choose a better time than now to open. There is a huge pent-up demand from travelers for cheaper accommodation.


Singapore (PRWEB) May 27, 2013


Underpinned by healthy hospitality outlook, hotel openings have sprouted throughout Singapore to support the increase in international visitors. Eight new budget hotels have since opened in Singapore this year.


The new hotel developments are built on the numerous new attractions to Singapore’s tourism landscape such as the opening of River Safari, Marine Life Park and Gardens by the Bay. In addition, the estimated 15 million visitors’ arrival to Singapore in 2013 has pushed up the demand for hotel rooms.


With the average room rate hovering around US$205 in 2012 (according to Singapore Tourism Board’s statistics) and Singapore being rated the sixth most expensive city in the world according to a recent survey conducted by London-based Economic Intelligence Unit, the opening of these eight new budget hotels certainly provides a cheaper alternative for the cost-conscious travelers.


“These new budget hotels couldn’t choose a better time than now to open. There is a huge pent-up demand from travelers for cheaper accommodation and especially visitors from countries like Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia. Also, as part of the hotels’ opening marketing drive, these hotels will be offering special Singapore hotel promotions that discerning travelers should take advantage of,” says Danny Lee of BudgetHotels.sg, an online hotel guide platform specializing in listing budget hotels near MRT train stations.


Check out the eight new budget hotels highlighted below:


1)    Days Hotel Singapore at Zhongshan Park

A three-star hotel with 405 rooms under the well-known Days Inn hotel chain and located in Balestier/Novena area.


2)     Venue Hotel

A Perankan-style hotel in a restored Chinese shophouse characterized by colorful themed-rooms and is located within walking distance to Paya Lebar MRT train station.


3)    Hotel Clover

Within walking distance to Bugis MRT train station, the rooms are Scandinavian-inspired and equipped with work-desk and free Wi-Fi for business travelers.


4)    The Seacare Hotel

A stylish and contemporary business hotel with 103 rooms that is located in Chinatown district and within 10-minute walk to Chinatown MRT train station.


5)    Bliss Hotel Singapore

A boutique hotel with avant-garde rooms and free Wi-Fi that is located near the vicinity of Chinatown MRT train station.


6)    The Daulat Hotel

A quirky hotel with Persian-designed elements straddling Bugis and Little India districts and is blessed with close proximity to either MRT train stations.


7)    Big Hotel

A mid-size hotel in downtown Bugis with 300 over rooms and all rooms come with Serta mattress and free Wi-Fi.


8)    Amaris Hotel Bugis, Singapore

A small and no-frills budget hotel conveniently located in Bugis and within short walking distance to Suntec Convention and Exhibition Center that will appeal to the budget-conscious business travelers.


For more information on each of the hotels listed above, please visit http://www.budgethotels.sg/new-hotels-in-singapore-2013/


About BudgetHotels.sg

Created by a local expert, http://www.budgethotels.sg is a first-of-its kind hotel guide platform in Singapore that provides a compilation of budget hotels in Singapore with key information like the location of nearby MRT train stations, popular local food haunts and shopping places.


 Singapore Airlines Profit Rises




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Eight New and Affordable Hotels to Stay in Singapore for 2013

Wyndham Hotel Group debuts two brands in Singapore

Wyndham Hotel Group, part of Wyndham Worldwide Corporation recently announced the company’s entry into Singapore with the opening of two properties: Ramada Singapore at Zhongshan Park and Days Hotel Singapore at Zhongshan Park.


Ramada Singapore at Zhongshan Park has 384 rooms and include a full service restaurant, fitness center, swimming pool, business centre and pillarless ballroom for events. Days Hotel Singapore at Zhongshan Park has 405 rooms, featuring a range of amenities including a full-service restaurant and a fitness centre.


Both hotels, now opened and managed by Wyndham Hotel Group, are located at Zhongshan Park, the newest development area in Singapore, and are part of an integrated development that includes a commercial tower and shopping mall.



Wyndham Hotel Group debuts two brands in Singapore

Singapore"s Classiest Afternoon Tea: Fullerton Bay Hotel

17b4b Fullerton Bay Hotel Tea Landing Point Singapore Airlines Profit Rises


The venue itself is Landing Point, the hotel’s swanky all-day dining spot. And in addition to its gorgeous surroundings (the paved marble floor and crystal sculptures dangling over the bar really completed the look), we were totally impressed by the service.


Our waiter not only helped us pick out our preferred tea from a menu of around 20 different blends (black, green, herbal, you name it), but when our tea arrived, he even unscrewed the honey jar, spooned out a little, and stirred it into the cup for us! The only time we even lifted a finger was to drink it.


If we had happened to be in the mood for a cocktail at 3 in the afternoon (not something we generally make a habit of), there would have been plenty of options for that, too, as the bar is filled with endless bottles lined up along the shelves. Thankfully, our appointment was business-related, so tea and a biscuit was plenty.


Afternoon Tea is clearly a thing in lots of hotels, but this may just be the classiest act we’ve encountered so far. To experience it yourself, show up between 3pm and 5:30pm, though Landing Point is open all day (7am-midnight Sun-Thurs; 7am-1am Fri-Sat).


[Photos: HotelChatter]



Singapore"s Classiest Afternoon Tea: Fullerton Bay Hotel

Monday 3 June 2013

In Singapore, A Rare Call for Protest Against Blogging Censorship





4332e print Three day Natas Travel Fair 2013 opens at Singapore Expo



Student Scott Teng (L) speaks during a demonstration at “Speaker’s Corner” in Singapore October 5, 2008, when a small group protested against censorship at a university newspaper. (Photo: Reuters)


Singapore’s blogging community is rebelling against a stringent new law that requires online news sites to put up a performance bond of US $40,000 and to submit to government censorship, calling for the general public and bloggers to rally next Saturday against the measure.


Last Tuesday, the Singapore Media Development Authority issued the new regulations, which it said were designed to place the websites “on a more consistent regulatory framework with traditional news platforms which are already individually licensed.”


The protest group, calling itself “Free My Internet,” is asking Singaporeans to rally in Hong Lim Park, the site of Singapore’s speaker’s corner, where a May 1 protest drew 3,000 participants protesting the government’s plans to let in vast numbers of new immigrants. It was said to be the biggest protest crowd in Singapore in modern times.


“We encourage all Singaporeans who are concerned about our future and our ability to participate in everyday online activities and discussions, and to seek out alternative news and analysis, to take a strong stand against the licensing regime which can impede on your independence,” the organizers said.

“We urge Singaporeans to turn up to send a clear message to our elected representatives to trust the Singaporeans who elected them.”


The message was signed by 35 bloggers, who asked all Singapore bloggers to go black for 24 hours from midnight June 6.


“You can choose to create your own blackout notice, or use www.freemyinternet.com we have created for your convenience,” the group said. “When you reopen your blog, write your account of the protest, about the new regulations and censorship, or anything related to media freedom in Singapore. Share your thoughts. Share your hope that the light that free speech provides will not go out on us.”


The Speaker’s Corner, modeled after London’s free speech site of the same name, is hardly free. Demonstrations are allowed only by Singapore citizens and attended by Singapore citizens. Banners, films, flags, photographs, placards, posters, signs, writing or other visible representations or paraphernalia containing violent, lewd or obscene material must not be displayed or exhibited, the government says.

Events must not deal with any matter that relates directly or indirectly to any religious belief or to religion generally, or which may cause feelings of enmity, hatred, ill-will or hostility between different racial or religious groups.

Events adhering to the regulations are not immune from other existing laws, such as those relating to defamation and sedition, which in Singapore can be extremely broad, especially when the Lee governing family is mentioned.


Asia Sentinel’s attempts to reach the Media Development Authority by telephone and email went unanswered last week.

The Singapore-based Channel News Asia, however, quoted the agency in an article on May 29 as saying the new licensing framework “is not intended to clamp down on internet freedom,” adding that the regulations will only apply to news sites that meet the content and reach criteria.


But while the government was characterizing the new regulations as merely bringing the internet into line with print publication restrictions, the protesters said, they apply to all content on the news sites including readers’ comments. In the recent past, the Singapore government has gone after news sites for not erasing what are deemed to be offending comments fast enough, threatening lawsuits.


Any blog that reaches more than 50,000 unique visitors in a month and prints a single article of Singapore news within two weeks is liable to come under the regulation and to be forced to withdraw the story within 24 hours or be faced with forfeiting the bond although the bigger problem, for most bloggers, is coming up with the money in the first place.


Although bloggers have been a circumspect presence in Singapore for more than a decade, the government apparently grew irritated by reporting particularly by Yahoo News, the giant news aggregator that claims nearly 700 million Internet readers across the planet, for carrying stories on the arrest and deportations of striking Chinese bus drivers last December and the aftermath.


Among sites named as currently falling under the MDA’s guidelines, including Asia One, Business Times, Channel News Asia, Omy, Stomp, Straits Times, TNP, Today Online, Zaobao, and Yahoo, Channel News Asia reported.


“The License also makes it clear that online news sites are expected to comply within 24 hours to the MDA’s directions to remove content that is found to be in breach of content standards,” the authority said on its website.


Presumably, that would mean Yahoo must remove the offending articles about the striking bus drivers, Leslie Chew and others within 24 hours of being notified by the authority. In particular, the MDA said the websites must take down content that “is prejudicial to racial harmony.”


Related Posts :



In Singapore, A Rare Call for Protest Against Blogging Censorship

In Singapore, A Rare Call for Protest Against Blogging Censorship





71683 print Singapore GDP expands by 1.3% in 2012



Student Scott Teng (L) speaks during a demonstration at “Speaker’s Corner” in Singapore October 5, 2008, when a small group protested against censorship at a university newspaper. (Photo: Reuters)


Singapore’s blogging community is rebelling against a stringent new law that requires online news sites to put up a performance bond of US $40,000 and to submit to government censorship, calling for the general public and bloggers to rally next Saturday against the measure.


Last Tuesday, the Singapore Media Development Authority issued the new regulations, which it said were designed to place the websites “on a more consistent regulatory framework with traditional news platforms which are already individually licensed.”


The protest group, calling itself “Free My Internet,” is asking Singaporeans to rally in Hong Lim Park, the site of Singapore’s speaker’s corner, where a May 1 protest drew 3,000 participants protesting the government’s plans to let in vast numbers of new immigrants. It was said to be the biggest protest crowd in Singapore in modern times.


“We encourage all Singaporeans who are concerned about our future and our ability to participate in everyday online activities and discussions, and to seek out alternative news and analysis, to take a strong stand against the licensing regime which can impede on your independence,” the organizers said.

“We urge Singaporeans to turn up to send a clear message to our elected representatives to trust the Singaporeans who elected them.”


The message was signed by 35 bloggers, who asked all Singapore bloggers to go black for 24 hours from midnight June 6.


“You can choose to create your own blackout notice, or use www.freemyinternet.com we have created for your convenience,” the group said. “When you reopen your blog, write your account of the protest, about the new regulations and censorship, or anything related to media freedom in Singapore. Share your thoughts. Share your hope that the light that free speech provides will not go out on us.”


The Speaker’s Corner, modeled after London’s free speech site of the same name, is hardly free. Demonstrations are allowed only by Singapore citizens and attended by Singapore citizens. Banners, films, flags, photographs, placards, posters, signs, writing or other visible representations or paraphernalia containing violent, lewd or obscene material must not be displayed or exhibited, the government says.

Events must not deal with any matter that relates directly or indirectly to any religious belief or to religion generally, or which may cause feelings of enmity, hatred, ill-will or hostility between different racial or religious groups.

Events adhering to the regulations are not immune from other existing laws, such as those relating to defamation and sedition, which in Singapore can be extremely broad, especially when the Lee governing family is mentioned.


Asia Sentinel’s attempts to reach the Media Development Authority by telephone and email went unanswered last week.

The Singapore-based Channel News Asia, however, quoted the agency in an article on May 29 as saying the new licensing framework “is not intended to clamp down on internet freedom,” adding that the regulations will only apply to news sites that meet the content and reach criteria.


But while the government was characterizing the new regulations as merely bringing the internet into line with print publication restrictions, the protesters said, they apply to all content on the news sites including readers’ comments. In the recent past, the Singapore government has gone after news sites for not erasing what are deemed to be offending comments fast enough, threatening lawsuits.


Any blog that reaches more than 50,000 unique visitors in a month and prints a single article of Singapore news within two weeks is liable to come under the regulation and to be forced to withdraw the story within 24 hours or be faced with forfeiting the bond although the bigger problem, for most bloggers, is coming up with the money in the first place.


Although bloggers have been a circumspect presence in Singapore for more than a decade, the government apparently grew irritated by reporting particularly by Yahoo News, the giant news aggregator that claims nearly 700 million Internet readers across the planet, for carrying stories on the arrest and deportations of striking Chinese bus drivers last December and the aftermath.


Among sites named as currently falling under the MDA’s guidelines, including Asia One, Business Times, Channel News Asia, Omy, Stomp, Straits Times, TNP, Today Online, Zaobao, and Yahoo, Channel News Asia reported.


“The License also makes it clear that online news sites are expected to comply within 24 hours to the MDA’s directions to remove content that is found to be in breach of content standards,” the authority said on its website.


Presumably, that would mean Yahoo must remove the offending articles about the striking bus drivers, Leslie Chew and others within 24 hours of being notified by the authority. In particular, the MDA said the websites must take down content that “is prejudicial to racial harmony.”


Related Posts :



In Singapore, A Rare Call for Protest Against Blogging Censorship

Singapore"s water companies aim to quench China"s $850 billion thirst

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Singapore"s water companies aim to quench China"s $850 billion thirst

Singapore"s water companies aim to quench China"s $850 billion thirst

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Singapore"s water companies aim to quench China"s $850 billion thirst

Shades of Manila 1945: Novel about Singapore deals with Japanese occupation






ff9c2 t0603amadis book black feat6 1 196x300 Three day Natas Travel Fair 2013 opens at Singapore ExpoThis long, ambitious novel is, like most recent and current Asian novels written in English, brilliant but with a difference: There are ghosts swarming all over the place.


It is a fictional history of Singapore from 1929, the year of the stock market crash in the United States, to the present. But, distinguo, as the Jesuits would say, it is a work of fiction and author Tan, wary perhaps of lawsuits, calls the city-state the Black Isle of the title.


A dead giveaway, however, is the map featured just before the text. It shows a large blackened island directly south (joined no doubt by a causeway) of the then British Malaya.


“The Black Isle” by Sandi Tan (Grand Central Publishing, NY, 2012; 469 pages) is a long flashback, with occasional shifts to the present. The narrator-heroine is Cassandra (Ling during her childhood), a psychic. Like the boy in the movie “Sixth Sense,” she sees “dead people.” And, when motivated, she can invoke the restless spirits to wreak havoc upon the land.


As the tale begins, we see Cassandra, now 88, living in self-exile in Tokyo, alone and friendless and not particularly caring about this. She has outlived all who have loved or hated her. Cassandra is, however, stalked by a Professor Maddin who is fascinated by her life story (and who, unknown to Cassandra, has her own agenda).


And Cassandra or Ling is persuaded to recount her incredible story.


Ling spent her childhood in Shanghai during the 1920s, when the city “was either the Pearl of the Orient (like Manila?) or the Devil’s Den.” The unloved child had a neurotic mother, an indifferent father and a twin brother with whom she had a near incestuous relationship.


The Wall Street crash in 1929 affects the family, and the father and the older twins (Ling and Li) are forced to migrate to the Black Isle to become “overseas Chinese.” Left behind are the mother and two younger children (also twins).


The island is a British colony.


Swirling around Cassandra are other fully realized characters: Daniel, scion of a rich family who falls in love with Cassandra; his sister Violet, who despises Cassandra; Issa, a shaman who becomes the revolutionary terrorist Isakandar; Cricket, an errand boy who becomes a businessman with many wives and children; Kenneth, a scheming politician and later prime minister with blood on his hands; and Taro, the charismatic Japanese officer who transforms Cassandra into a sex slave.


Surrealist images


The novel has many surrealist images, like a giant octopus making love to a Japanese woman, a ghostly dog-man and thousands of jellyfish clambering over the beach as war is about to erupt.


Under the Japanese yoke, the Isle deteriorated, just like Manila during the 1940s: “The rest of the city regressed.” And Cassandra asserts, “the Japanese were animals.”


“The Black Isle” is not the first Asian novel to document Japanese atrocities in fictional form, nor will it be the last. There is the recent “The Glass Palace” by Amitav Ghosh, and we have our own “Without Seeing the Dawn” by Stevan Javellana, “More than Conquerors” by Edilberto Tiempo,” and “Sugat ng Alaala” by National Artist-designate Lazaro Francisco.


For the Japanese, unlike the Germans, have not really repented of their World War II crimes. This is the reason behind the continuing tension between Japan on one hand, and China and the Koreas on the other.


The Chinese and Koreans have a sense of history; we don’t.


“The Black Isle” is available in Fully Booked, tel. 8587000; National Book Store; and PowerBooks.


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Shades of Manila 1945: Novel about Singapore deals with Japanese occupation