Saturday 2 March 2013

Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore

Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore
By Imelda Saad |
Posted: 02 March 2013 1309 hrs


 


 





 

 

 











SINGAPORE: Authorities are planning for more car-free weekends around Singapore and this will involve pilot projects to close off roads on a more regular basis in areas like Haji Lane in Kampong Glam and at Club Street / Ann Siang Road in Chinatown.


National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan revealed this in his latest blogpost on Saturday.


He said one indicator of liveability in a city is the extent in which its dwellers embrace car-free ones.


Mr Khaw spoke about how many big cities have made a conscious decision to be more pedestrian-friendly – for example, in New York’s Times Square, London’s Trafalgar Square and Tokyo’s “Pedestrian Haven” in Gin a.


In Singapore, Mr Khaw pointed to several examples such as Albert Mall, and more recently, the Samsara Sunday Fair held at Haji Lane.


He said organisers had pushed for road closure at Haji Lane from midnight to 5pm, and took care of all the logistics, from the design of banners to crowd control measures.


Visitors, he noted, had a great time, enjoying the many outdoor activities like hand painting and juggling performances. And, they did not have to watch out for traffic.


“All had a car-free carefree weekend and what a change! Particularly wonderful was that the shopkeepers did all of that by themselves,” said Mr Khaw.


But the minister noted that it’s not always easy to close roads as the interests of motorists and other stakeholders in the neighbourhood have to be accounted for.


He said Singapore can take “small incremental steps” to test out this initiative and grow more converts.


“The Haji Lane weekend example shows how we can create small car-free areas in the city which are welcome by businesses and visitors,” he said.


Mr Khaw added small sections of road closures over weekends or evenings do not affect arterial roads and motorists.


And where there is a local community champion, he said Singapore can do more – for instance, promote cycling.


“If more local communities step forward, the reality of more car-free carefree weekends will materialise faster,” he said.


- CNA/ck


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–>



Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore

Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore

Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore
By Imelda Saad |
Posted: 02 March 2013 1309 hrs


 


 





 

 

 











SINGAPORE: Authorities are planning for more car-free weekends around Singapore and this will involve pilot projects to close off roads on a more regular basis in areas like Haji Lane in Kampong Glam and at Club Street / Ann Siang Road in Chinatown.


National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan revealed this in his latest blogpost on Saturday.


He said one indicator of liveability in a city is the extent in which its dwellers embrace car-free ones.


Mr Khaw spoke about how many big cities have made a conscious decision to be more pedestrian-friendly – for example, in New York’s Times Square, London’s Trafalgar Square and Tokyo’s “Pedestrian Haven” in Gin a.


In Singapore, Mr Khaw pointed to several examples such as Albert Mall, and more recently, the Samsara Sunday Fair held at Haji Lane.


He said organisers had pushed for road closure at Haji Lane from midnight to 5pm, and took care of all the logistics, from the design of banners to crowd control measures.


Visitors, he noted, had a great time, enjoying the many outdoor activities like hand painting and juggling performances. And, they did not have to watch out for traffic.


“All had a car-free carefree weekend and what a change! Particularly wonderful was that the shopkeepers did all of that by themselves,” said Mr Khaw.


But the minister noted that it’s not always easy to close roads as the interests of motorists and other stakeholders in the neighbourhood have to be accounted for.


He said Singapore can take “small incremental steps” to test out this initiative and grow more converts.


“The Haji Lane weekend example shows how we can create small car-free areas in the city which are welcome by businesses and visitors,” he said.


Mr Khaw added small sections of road closures over weekends or evenings do not affect arterial roads and motorists.


And where there is a local community champion, he said Singapore can do more – for instance, promote cycling.


“If more local communities step forward, the reality of more car-free carefree weekends will materialise faster,” he said.


- CNA/ck


<!– one Tag : Channel News Asia In Text


innity_pub = “66368270ffd51418ec58bd793f2d9b1b”;

innity_ one = “12251″;

innity_width = “**”;

innity_height = “**”;

innity_country = “SG”;


–>



Plans for more car-free weekends around Singapore

Singapore Avoids Stimulus as Minister Acts to Curb Bubble Risk

Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said there’s no need for monetary stimulus in a country with full employment, leaving policy makers reliant on unorthodox tools to prevent asset bubbles.


“We don’t have an output gap, and evidence of that is in an extremely tight labor market,” Shanmugaratnam, 56, said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Haslinda Amin yesterday. “In that context basically, you can’t have an easy monetary policy, which in our case is an exchange-rate policy.”


The minister, who also discussed so-called currency wars and Singapore’s efforts to limit the influx of foreign workers in an hour-long interview, said property prices need to stabili e further even as measures implemented earlier this year begin to take effect.


A search for higher-yielding assets amid monetary easing in developed economies has fueled record property prices in Singapore, sparking inflationary pressures and social tensions. The central bank tightened monetary policy in 2012 by allowing faster currency gains even as the economy grew the least in three years.


“We can’t just rely on exchange-rate policy and monetary policy to prevent bubbles from being formed,” said Shanmugaratnam, who is also deputy prime minister and chairman of the central bank. “You’ve got to find ways of throwing sand in the wheels, you’ve got to add some friction in the process.”


Property Curbs


Singapore has imposed steps to cool the housing market since 2009, with the last round in January including an increase of as much as 7 percentage points in stamp duties. The finance minister said he is “pretty confident” that the government will get a handle on the situation.


“We’re still in a wrong part of the cycle,” and there is still “some ways to go” before prices are at an acceptable level, he said. “It’ll happen through a combination of income improvement, as well as prices certainly not going up further, but some correction in prices will not be out of order.”


While the government will never be able to tame the “sentiment-driven” market, it has to limit gains because of the social impact when people can’t afford to buy homes, Shanmugaratnam said.


“We can prevent a real bubble from being formed which then eventually crashes, and that’s our objective,” said the minister, who obtained his master’s in economics from the University of Cambridge and holds a master’s in public administration from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “We can’t use the full arsenal in one shot,” he said, referring to seven rounds of property curbs since 2009.


Entrenched Inflation


The city forecasts growth of 1 percent to 3 percent in 2013. Expansion “could come out at the lower end” of the range, Shanmugaratnam said in the interview at the Ministry of Finance.


Singapore’s jobless rate fell to a five-year low of 1.8 percent last quarter as companies hired more local workers after the government tightened the inflow of foreign labor.


“There is no need to ease policy at the moment,” said Vishnu Varathan, an economist at Mi uho Corporate Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “They don’t want entrenched inflation expectations especially as the labor market has not loosened.”


Singapore sets monetary policy via the nation’s dollar, guiding the exchange rate against a basket of currencies within an undisclosed band. The Monetary Authority of Singapore adjusts the pace of appreciation or depreciation by changing the slope, width or center of the band.


Biggest Issue


Singapore’s currency has depreciated 1.2 percent against the U.S. dollar this year, after reaching an all-time high on July 27, 2011, and climbing 6.1 percent in 2012.


Located at the southern end of the 600-mile (965-kilometer) Malacca Strait and home to one of the world’s busiest container ports, Singapore has remained vulnerable to fluctuations in overseas demand for manufactured goods. The government has boosted the financial services and tourism industries to become less reliant on exports.


“The biggest issue is still what happens in the most developed economies,” Shanmugaratnam said, referring to potential threats to Singapore’s growth. “As a highly open economy, as an economy that lives by being global and regional, that matters to us.”


Shanmugaratnam, who is also the chairman of the International Monetary Fund’s steering committee, said policy makers in developed economies such as the U.S., Europe and Japan “have their monetary settings about right.”


Currency War


The risk of a currency war has surfaced as monetary easing from Japan to the U.S. spurs demand for higher-yielding assets and boosts inflows into emerging markets. Russia said in January that policies which end up weakening currencies may lead to reciprocal action as nations try to protect their export industries.


While talk of currency wars “has run further than the reality,” there is now a good understanding among “major players” about what is appropriate, Shanmugaratnam said. “There might have been a little bit of clumsiness in public statements.”


Shanmugaratnam unveiled tighter curbs on foreign labor for a fourth consecutive year when he presented the annual budget on Feb. 25. In a white paper released in January, the government said total workforce growth will ease to 1 percent to 2 percent annually through 2020, compared with an average rate of 3.3 percent per annum in the last three decades.


Labor Force


“The foreign workforce can’t keep growing faster than the local workforce, not indefinitely,” Shanmugaratnam said. “That’s why our key priority now, our most important economic and social strategy is that of raising productivity to a new level.”


After years of letting companies bring in thousands of foreign laborers to work at hotels, shipyards and restaurants, public discontent over the influx has diminished support for Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s government. Several thousand Singaporeans unhappy with the growing presence of foreigners and overcrowding held the country’s biggest political protest since such events were allowed in 2000, when they gathered Feb. 16 in a downtown park.


The government has stepped up efforts since 2010 to restructure the way companies operate and make productivity a cornerstone of the economic blueprint for this decade. Officials blamed some industries’ use of cheaper, low-skilled foreign labor as a reason for low productivity in the last decade.


“If you don’t raise productivity, it’s hard to raise incomes,” Shanmugaratnam said. “And if you can’t raise incomes for the average person, for the median household and for those at the lower end of the wage ladder, your society frays.”


To contact the reporters on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net; Stephanie Phang in Singapore at sphang@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at sphang@bloomberg.net


More from Bloomberg




Singapore Avoids Stimulus as Minister Acts to Curb Bubble Risk

Singapore Avoids Stimulus as Minister Acts to Curb Bubble Risk

Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said there’s no need for monetary stimulus in a country with full employment, leaving policy makers reliant on unorthodox tools to prevent asset bubbles.


“We don’t have an output gap, and evidence of that is in an extremely tight labor market,” Shanmugaratnam, 56, said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Haslinda Amin yesterday. “In that context basically, you can’t have an easy monetary policy, which in our case is an exchange-rate policy.”


The minister, who also discussed so-called currency wars and Singapore’s efforts to limit the influx of foreign workers in an hour-long interview, said property prices need to stabili e further even as measures implemented earlier this year begin to take effect.


A search for higher-yielding assets amid monetary easing in developed economies has fueled record property prices in Singapore, sparking inflationary pressures and social tensions. The central bank tightened monetary policy in 2012 by allowing faster currency gains even as the economy grew the least in three years.


“We can’t just rely on exchange-rate policy and monetary policy to prevent bubbles from being formed,” said Shanmugaratnam, who is also deputy prime minister and chairman of the central bank. “You’ve got to find ways of throwing sand in the wheels, you’ve got to add some friction in the process.”


Property Curbs


Singapore has imposed steps to cool the housing market since 2009, with the last round in January including an increase of as much as 7 percentage points in stamp duties. The finance minister said he is “pretty confident” that the government will get a handle on the situation.


“We’re still in a wrong part of the cycle,” and there is still “some ways to go” before prices are at an acceptable level, he said. “It’ll happen through a combination of income improvement, as well as prices certainly not going up further, but some correction in prices will not be out of order.”


While the government will never be able to tame the “sentiment-driven” market, it has to limit gains because of the social impact when people can’t afford to buy homes, Shanmugaratnam said.


“We can prevent a real bubble from being formed which then eventually crashes, and that’s our objective,” said the minister, who obtained his master’s in economics from the University of Cambridge and holds a master’s in public administration from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “We can’t use the full arsenal in one shot,” he said, referring to seven rounds of property curbs since 2009.


Entrenched Inflation


The city forecasts growth of 1 percent to 3 percent in 2013. Expansion “could come out at the lower end” of the range, Shanmugaratnam said in the interview at the Ministry of Finance.


Singapore’s jobless rate fell to a five-year low of 1.8 percent last quarter as companies hired more local workers after the government tightened the inflow of foreign labor.


“There is no need to ease policy at the moment,” said Vishnu Varathan, an economist at Mi uho Corporate Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “They don’t want entrenched inflation expectations especially as the labor market has not loosened.”


Singapore sets monetary policy via the nation’s dollar, guiding the exchange rate against a basket of currencies within an undisclosed band. The Monetary Authority of Singapore adjusts the pace of appreciation or depreciation by changing the slope, width or center of the band.


Biggest Issue


Singapore’s currency has depreciated 1.2 percent against the U.S. dollar this year, after reaching an all-time high on July 27, 2011, and climbing 6.1 percent in 2012.


Located at the southern end of the 600-mile (965-kilometer) Malacca Strait and home to one of the world’s busiest container ports, Singapore has remained vulnerable to fluctuations in overseas demand for manufactured goods. The government has boosted the financial services and tourism industries to become less reliant on exports.


“The biggest issue is still what happens in the most developed economies,” Shanmugaratnam said, referring to potential threats to Singapore’s growth. “As a highly open economy, as an economy that lives by being global and regional, that matters to us.”


Shanmugaratnam, who is also the chairman of the International Monetary Fund’s steering committee, said policy makers in developed economies such as the U.S., Europe and Japan “have their monetary settings about right.”


Currency War


The risk of a currency war has surfaced as monetary easing from Japan to the U.S. spurs demand for higher-yielding assets and boosts inflows into emerging markets. Russia said in January that policies which end up weakening currencies may lead to reciprocal action as nations try to protect their export industries.


While talk of currency wars “has run further than the reality,” there is now a good understanding among “major players” about what is appropriate, Shanmugaratnam said. “There might have been a little bit of clumsiness in public statements.”


Shanmugaratnam unveiled tighter curbs on foreign labor for a fourth consecutive year when he presented the annual budget on Feb. 25. In a white paper released in January, the government said total workforce growth will ease to 1 percent to 2 percent annually through 2020, compared with an average rate of 3.3 percent per annum in the last three decades.


Labor Force


“The foreign workforce can’t keep growing faster than the local workforce, not indefinitely,” Shanmugaratnam said. “That’s why our key priority now, our most important economic and social strategy is that of raising productivity to a new level.”


After years of letting companies bring in thousands of foreign laborers to work at hotels, shipyards and restaurants, public discontent over the influx has diminished support for Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s government. Several thousand Singaporeans unhappy with the growing presence of foreigners and overcrowding held the country’s biggest political protest since such events were allowed in 2000, when they gathered Feb. 16 in a downtown park.


The government has stepped up efforts since 2010 to restructure the way companies operate and make productivity a cornerstone of the economic blueprint for this decade. Officials blamed some industries’ use of cheaper, low-skilled foreign labor as a reason for low productivity in the last decade.


“If you don’t raise productivity, it’s hard to raise incomes,” Shanmugaratnam said. “And if you can’t raise incomes for the average person, for the median household and for those at the lower end of the wage ladder, your society frays.”


To contact the reporters on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net; Stephanie Phang in Singapore at sphang@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at sphang@bloomberg.net


More from Bloomberg




Singapore Avoids Stimulus as Minister Acts to Curb Bubble Risk

Friday 1 March 2013

Singapore Pet Cruise Company Among Other Animal Luxuries In Wealthy City ...

The guests lean over the side of the boat to catch the morning bree e as their catamaran eases off from a jetty in Singapore. A typical cruise, except for the fact that the passengers are dogs.


“Actually, this is their third cruise,” said Andy Pe, 43, the doting owner of two Black Labrador Retrievers, a Yellow Labrador, a Golden Retriever and two mongrels. “They enjoy the sea bree e and water so much.”


From boat cruises and spas to their own obituary section in the leading newspaper, pets are pampered in a big way in Singapore, a city-state with one of Asia’s highest standards of living.


Boat owner Joe Howe, 48, started the Pet Cruise company last July.


His 26-foot (7.8-metre) motor catamaran, which comes with a swimming deck, has a fully-stocked cleaning station and life jackets for dogs.


On weekends, a basic cruise lasting two hours costs Sg$40 ($32) per guest — human or pet — or Sg$400 to book the entire boat.


Howe, a retired broker who now leads an average of two cruises every week, has even had people bring pet tortoises on board.


“Young couples are having pets before they have children, it’s a stand-in, and at times even a replacement (for kids),” Howe said.


Owners concur. “They are very much like my kids because I’m single and I have some time on my hands,” said Pe as the vessel made its way to Seletar island, where his dogs went for a splash in the sea.


According to official data, there were 57,000 registered dogs in 2012 in Singapore. A densely populated island of 5.3 million people, the majority of its inhabitants live in high-rise apartment blocks with little room for dogs to run.


There are more than 250 licensed pet shops in the city-state, many of them operating in shopping malls, offering everything from hamsters priced at Sg$10 to pure breed dogs costing thousands.


Marcus Khoo, the executive director of Petopia, a shop which offers dog grooming services as well as board and lodging, said owners are willing to pay a premium for their pets’ well-being.


The shop’s modern interior has a wall of doggy collars and glass panels through which owners keep an eye on pets undergoing various treatments.


“People now understand that quality canine lifestyle is not just a roof over their heads and food,” Khoo told AFP.


These services offering the best in canine comfort don’t come cheap.


A 20-minute microbubble bath treatment for an odour-free coat can cost anywhere between Sg$64 to Sg$119, depending on the breed and si e of the dog.


Dog yoga — or Doga — is also catching on in Singapore after becoming popular in Hong Kong and Taiwan.


“Pets are left at home for hours, so Doga is a way for owners and dogs to bond,” said Rosalind Ow, 42, the owner of Super Cuddles Clubhouse, which started offering Doga classes last August.


Luxury options extend to the departed. Owners can publish tributes to their deceased pets in the classified ads section of the city-state’s leading daily The Straits Times on Sundays.


At the suburban Pets Cremation Center, niches can be rented at a columbarium after the funeral services.


“Most owners treat their pets as part of their family. (A pet’s passing) is a very sensitive issue. When that happens, a pet that usually sleeps with them is suddenly gone from their lives,” said the firm’s owner Patrick Lim, 60.


A simple cremation for a dog costs anywhere from Sg$150 to Sg$500, depending on its si e.


Owners can opt for express cremation — extra charges apply, of course — and then pay Sg$300 to place an urn in the columbarium for one year, after which the rent falls to Sg$180 annually.


That excludes a yearly “maintenance fee” of Sg$180 for the upkeep of the premises.


But there is a darker side to the growing fondness for pets in Singapore — some of the animals end up being dumped after the novelty wears off and the reality of long-term caring sets in.


Abandoned dogs and cats, even guinea pigs, await adoption in steel enclosures at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA), which takes in up to 600 unwanted or abandoned animals each month.


“A lot of people wouldn’t bat an eyelid on spending several thousand dollars on a dog. The litmus test is whether the dog stays with them for the rest of its life or not,” said the SPCA’s executive director Corinne Fong.


“Society at large is not quite there yet,” she added.


Copyright (2013) AFP. All rights reserved.


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    Tha Sophat, a 20-month-old Cambodian boy, suckles from a cow in Koak Roka village, Siem Reap province, Cambodia, Friday, Sept. 9, 2011. Tha Sophat started suckling the cow in July after he saw a calf do the same since his parents moved to Thailand in search of work, said his grandfather UmOeung.




  • This Little PIggie Has Two Snouts


    This tiny porker has an excuse for making a pig of himself at mealtimes. He really does have two mouths to feed. The bi arre two-month-old youngster — part of a litter born on a farm in northern China — can use both his mouths to eat and appears otherwise normal, say his owners.




  • Drunk Moose


    A moose is seen stuck in an apple tree in Gothenburg, Sweden, September 6, 2011. The police believe the moose was trying to eat apples from the tree and became intoxicated by fermented apples. The moose was freed by police officers and after a dose on the lawn, he sobered up and returned to the woods.




  • Woman Punches Bear to Save Dog


    Brook Collins holds her dog, Fudge, at her home in Juneau, Alaska on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011. Collins punched a black bear in the snout after the bear attacked Fudge on Sunday, Aug. 28.




  • Elephant with Prosthetic Leg


    Motala, age 50, rests in the afternoon sun with the new prosthetic made for her at the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) elephant hospital in the Mae Yao National Reserve August 29, 2011 Lampang,Thailand. Motala lost a foot many years back after stepping on a land mine and now is on her third prosthetic, as they need to be changed according to the weight of the elephant. The world’s first elephant hospital assists in medical care and helps to promote a better understanding of the elephant’s physiology, important in treating them for illness. For generations elephants have been a part of the Thai culture, although today the Thai elephant mostly is domesticated animal, since Thailand now has few working elephants. Many are used in the tourism sector at special elephant parks or oos, where they perform in shows. In some cases Thailand is still deals with roaming elephants on the city streets, usually after the mahout, an elephant driver, becomes unemployed, which often causes the elephant serious stress.




  • Elephant in Water Reservoir


    Indian army personnel use a bulldo er during a rescue mission to save a wild elephant trapped in a water reservoir tank at Bengdubi army cantonment area some 25 kms from Siliguri on August 30, 2011. A wild elephant fell into the water reservoir tank as a herd crossed the area. Army personnel of 16 Field Ammunition Depot along with wildlife elephant squad of Mahananda wildlife sanctuary joined forces to save the animal.




  • Open Rabbit Sport Tournament


    Lisa Marie Bach leads her pet rabbit Marie through an obstacle course in the middle-weight category at the 5th Open Rabbit Sport Tournament (5. offene Kaninchensport Turnier) on August 28, 2011 in Rommer near Fulda, Germany. Eighty rabbits competed in light-weight, middle-weight and jumping-for-points categories at today’s tournament in Rommer that is based on Kanin Hop, or Rabbit Hopping. Rabbit Hopping is a growing trend among pet rabbit owners in Central Europe and the first European Championships are scheduled to be held later this year in Swit erland.




  • Hippo Goes To The Dentist


    North Carolina oo Chief Veterinarian Dr. Mike Loomis recently returned from Bayamon, Puerto Rico, where he helped perform a dental procedure on a 3,000-lb. old friend.

    Loomis, along with veterinarians and keepers from the Parque de las Sciencias museums in Bayamon, conducted dental surgery on “Tomy,” a 39-year-old male hippopotamus that the N.C. oo veterinarian has been treating on a semi-regular basis for two decades.




  • Dolphin’s Fake Tail


    Winter, a six-year-old dolphin at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Florida, lost her tail when she was three months and now uses a prosthetic tail made especially for her.




  • Otis The Skydiver


    “Otis” the pug gets his harness put on him before making his 64th skydive at the Parachute Center in Acampo with his master, veteran skydiver Will DaSilva of Galt. Otis knows that harness means he’s going skydiving and sits patiently while it is put on him.




  • City Chicks


    John Huntington poses with one of his chickens on a lead in Sydney, Australia, on Aug. 15, 2011. Mr Hungtington’s ‘City Chicks’ are chickens for those living in an urban enviroment, complete with small walking leads and harnesses and elasticised nappies. ‘City Chicks’ will be showcased at Sydney’s ABC Gardening Australia Expo.




  • Dolphin Flip


    A dolphin flips in the air and splashes water over a watching crowd during a summer attraction at an aquarium in Tokyo on August 17, 2011. Theme parks and attactions such as this one are booming in August when many people try to beat the summer heat by visiting indoor attractions.




  • Sprinkles The Koala


    ‘Sprinkles’ the Koala following her life saving radiation treatment at the Brisbane Veterinary Specialist Centre in Brisbane, Australia, August 9, 2011. Suffering from an extremely rare case of excessive drooling, sprinkles developed a skin infection due to the excessive moisture flowing from her mouth.




  • Sprinkles The Koala


    Veterinary specialist Dr Rod Straw holds ‘Sprinkles’ the Koala following her life saving radiation treatment at the Brisbane Veterinary Specialist Centre in Brisbane, Australia. Suffering from an extremely rare case of excessive drooling, sprinkles developed a skin infection due to the excessive moisture flowing from her mouth.




  • Mobile Home Filled With 154 Reptiles


    Inside Walter Kidd’s North Carolina trailer home were 154 reptiles, including cobras, vipers and Gila monsters. About 100 of the animals were dead and fro en, according to the Henderson County Sheriff’s Office.




  • Camel In The Family


    t’s not every day you can say that a camel has shared your breakfast – unless you’re Nathan and Charlotte Anderson-Dixon. Each morning they and their 18-month-son Reuben are joined by pet camel Joe, who pokes his head through their conservatory window to help himself to something to eat. The three-year-old happily munches eats bread, fruit and cereal plucked from the table at the family’s detached country farmhouse. Joe, who measures 17.5 hands, loves bananas on toast but hates toast with cheese or Marmite. He lives with four other camels but is the only one to share breakfast with his owners. The others have to eat hay, barley, straw and corn mix in their stable in Ashbourne, Derbyshire. Nathan, 32, has owned Joe for two years and uses him for camel racing.




  • Camel In The Family


    Charlotte Anderson-Dixon pushes her 18-month-old son Reuben on the swing as Joe the camel watches.




  • Camel In The Family


    Nathan Anderson-Dixon, his wife Charlotte, their 18-month-old son Reuben, Joe the camel and a reindeer.





Singapore Pet Cruise Company Among Other Animal Luxuries In Wealthy City ...

Singapore Budget brings cheer

‘Robin Hood’ budget allows government to regain ground lost recently due to unpopular policies that had been poorly implemented.


BUDGET times are not occasions when the thrifty government here would likely score a lot of brownie points among its citi ens. In fact, Singaporeans are often more worried about being made to pay more fees and levies than to be able to receive goodies.


However, Budget 2013 last week was a surprising exception. It has allowed the government to regain a little ground lost through unpopular policies poorly implemented – including excessive immigration, spiralling prices and a worsening rich-poor gap.


Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam became the man of the hour when he increased taxes for the rich to be used on the needy and middle class.


One commentator called it a “Robin Hood” budget while another described it as an “appeasement budget”, implying it was to assuage public anger against large-scale immigration.


The finance minister also restored the employers’ contribution to the Central Provi­dent Fund (CPF). It won him accolades, even from a few traditional critics.


Property tax: His approach was to impose a greater “Wealth Tax”, including a hike of thousands more in property tax on high-end residences or new luxurious cars.


It was probably the first time the words “Wealth Tax” were used by a finance minister in a budget speech in this city.


High-end cars: He also imposed a tiered Addi­tional Registration Fee (ARF), which can add S$100,000 (RM250,400) or more to a top-end car.


One news report said a millionaire enthusiast cancelled the purchase of a new S$1.16mil (RM2.9mil) without COE Ferrari F12. Reason: It would cost S$300,000 (RM751,200) more under the new rules.


The ARF of a Rolls-Royce Phantom will cost S$1,088,000 (RM2.72mil) in ARF – S$456,000 (RM1.14mil) more.


To cut down dependency on foreign workers, a popular move in the eyes of the public, the finance minister imposed an additional levy of S$50-S$160 (RM125-RM400) per worker. Additionally, pressure will be put on some 142,000 S-Pass holders, mid-skilled foreigners.


Firstly, their minimum salary will be raised from S$2,000 to S$2,200 (RM5,000 to RM5,500) and, more importantly, the authorities will review their skill and quality.


One newspaper said that up to half, or nearly 70,000, will be affected by the tougher approval system. These people are potential, if not already, permanent residents.


The wage shock to employers will be significant, especially for industries where local replacements are difficult to get, OCBC economist Selena Ling was quoted as saying.


All these have somewhat endeared Shan­mugaratnam to many Singaporeans. One observer said the strategy resembles socialism rather than capitalism in practice here for nearly 50 years. It comes two years after former Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew retired from the Cabinet.


Special tax on the rich wasn’t often in his vocabulary, and he was unlikely to have approved it. Lee’s past government also frowned on giving welfare benefits to the poor and needy, believing that they would encourage dependency.


The property market here is one of the priciest in the world. While it is preventing ordinary wage earners from the market, it has, however, enriched many rich investors, including Malaysians, Indonesians, Chinese and Indians.


The higher property tax will apply to the top 1% of homeowners who live in their own residences – or 12,000 properties.


“This tax is a wealth tax and is applied irres­pective of whether lived in, vacant or rented out,” Shanmugaratnam said. “Those who live in the most expensive homes should pay more property tax than others.”


As budget talk intensified, it also made Shanmugaratnam one of the more popular ministers in Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s Cabinet.


“It shows the finance minister understands the concerns and feelings of Singaporeans,” said an observer.


It also raised talk about potential leadership in Singapore. Shanmugaratnam, who is Second Deputy Prime Minister, ranks behind Teo Chee Hean, the first DPM.


Some political analysts say that in terms of achievements and popularity, he would make a better front runner if the premiership were suddenly to fall vacant.


PM Lee, aged 60, and his two deputies are no more than four years apart in age. Teo is 59, while Shanmugaratnam is youngest at 56.


The finance minister became a PAP MP only 12 years ago. He is also chairman of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).


Theoretically, if PM Lee were to suddenly step down now, Teo – as first Deputy PM – would probably lay first claim. In party and government seniority, he is ahead of Shan­mugaratnam. Besides, Teo heads the powerful National Security and Home Affairs Ministry, and is Minister in charge of Civil Service.


Succeeding the Prime Minister is a much avoided subject, probably to avoid encouraging competitive in-fighting.


PM Lee has said he will step down after another 10 years, which means that either of his deputies would be too old by then to assume office. However, politics in Singapore is changing and unpredictable. No one can predict if the practice of having a small group of men in power meeting to decide on a successor will be able to continue for too long.


Although few expect the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) will be replaced in the next election in 2016, its longer term future is cloudier.


Last week’s budget has strengthened the Second DPM’s prospect in the succession ladder. But his Indian ethnicity could stand in the way of his success in this predominantly Chinese city.


Meanwhile, a government critic-friend of mine summed up the achievement: “There are still many things wrong in the country but this week I am feeling a bit better about the government than I did last week.”



Singapore Budget brings cheer