Lochte is done as a public figure, of course. Which is
probably the most effective form of justice for someone who apparently so
craves attention. Oblivion is what he deserves.
When someone shares with you something of value, you have an obligation to share it with others.
Saturday, 20 August 2016
Hacking tools stolen from NSA show Chinese cyberfirms were targeted, experts say
Hacking tools claimed to be pilfered from the US National
Security Agency reveal a severe security threat to China, mainland experts
say, with a leading national provider of network security said to be among the
victims of the government hackers.
Meet Ryan Lochte, the world's latest 'ugly American'
It is Ryan Lochte's turn to be scorned as the world's
ugliest American: a man wrapped in shame for his concocted story of being
robbed at gunpoint at the Rio Olympics.
Thursday, 18 August 2016
It looks increasingly likely that the NSA has been hacked, as experts scrutinise leaked code
Analysis of the cyber weapons that hackers say they extracted
from the top secret National Security Agency has left a key team of outside
experts increasingly certain that the files came from the NSA.
Pyramid scheme plays on 'Britishness' to ensnare China investors
That operation, called EuroFX, had also promised fat returns
on foreign exchange. Chinese law enforcement authorities now say it was a pyramid
scheme, which used cash from new investors to pay older ones. One Chinese
official with direct knowledge of the matter says it could also have been part
of a global fraud.
NSA hacking tools revealed online
Some of the most powerful espionage tools created by the
National Security Agency's elite group of hackers have been revealed in recent
days, a development that could pose severe consequences for the spy agency's
operations and the security of government and corporate computers.
Wednesday, 17 August 2016
A letter from Normandy to Abe: Lessons for Japan from WWII
I spent a few days with my grandchildren visiting the
beaches in Normandy in France that witnessed the landings of D-Day and the
cities and towns that were ravaged by the fighting; these represent the first
crucial steps to eventually bringing an end to World War II in Europe.
Why Australia's luck may be running out
Australians of a nervous disposition should probably avoid
reading the Chinese press and social media at the moment. A combination of
tensions over the South China Sea and the Olympics has made Australia the
target of wild invective by Chinese nationalists.
Friday, 12 August 2016
Judge affirms her earlier acquittal
She again throws out case against director and company for
allegedly importing rosewood without a permit
Xi Jinping's here to stay: China leader tipped to outstay term
Already China's most powerful leader in decades, President
Xi Jinping will probably seek to extend his term to more than 10 years,
analysts say, the first Communist Party chief to do so since Deng Xiaoping.
Thursday, 11 August 2016
Xi Jinping is no Mao Zedong
Much of the world is watching Chinese President Xi Jinping
with concern. Not only has he been re-concentrating power in the hands of the
central government, but many believe his radical anti-graft campaign is a fig
leaf for a political purge. They worry that Mr Xi is building a cult of
personality, much like the one that surrounded Mao Zedong and fuelled the
Cultural Revolution.
Wednesday, 10 August 2016
Man used as test subject in CIA torture program to ask for Guantánamo release
A man the CIA used as a guinea pig for its post-9/11 torture program will plead his case for freedom from Guantanámo Bay later this month, the Pentagon announced on Tuesday, in perhaps the hardest challenge to date for Barack Obama’s intentions to empty the infamous detention center.
The Guardian
The Guardian
New Singapore Law Slammed as Attack on Free Speech
Critics say a proposed bill is yet another assault on
freedom.
Tuesday, 9 August 2016
In Japan, an Emperor Constrained by History and a National Identity Crisis
The hint by Emperor Akihito of Japan that he would like to
abdicate challenges something bigger than the laws requiring him to serve until
his death and questions over succession.
Friday, 5 August 2016
Why do Chinese think differently from the West?
Without understanding these fundamental differences in
language, context and decision-making under uncertainty, it would be difficult
to bridge the yawning gap between both sides of the Pacific. It also means that the Chinese approach to
economics and geo-politics will be quite different than is more commonly
interpreted outside China.
Singapore-bound Taipei rep sorry for drink driving
Taiwan's new representative to Singapore, Mr Antonio Chiang,
has apologised for drink driving, saying that one should never drive after
drinking alcohol.
How the US Misjudged the South China Sea, Part II
In Part I, we looked at U.S. actions and strategy in the
South China Sea (SCS), and how U.S. policy so far has failed to achieve its
desired result. The main reason for this is that U.S. strategy is based on a
misunderstanding of China’s actions and goals in the SCS. In Part II, we
examine China’s stance in the SCS and its response to U.S. actions.
Thursday, 4 August 2016
Taiwan's new envoy to Singapore, Antonio Chiang, accused of drink driving
Taiwan's new representative to Singapore Antonio Chiang has
been arrested for drink driving - just hours after being sworn in for his job,
the island's media reports said.
How the US Misjudged the South China Sea, Part I
Since President Barack Obama took office in 2008, his
administration has made achievements in both domestic and foreign affairs. In
terms of politics and diplomacy, he is committed to become a peaceful president
through conducting smart power diplomacy, which so far has included promoting
his vision of a world free of nuclear weapons; ending the war in Iraq;
accelerating withdrawal of forces and the end of military mission in
Afghanistan; restraining U.S. involvement in Libya and Syria; championing the
Iran nuclear deal framework; and normalizing relations with Cuba.
Yum! Brands, McDonald's look for buyers as Chinese tastes shift
When it comes to China's multi-billion dollar fast food
industry, Yum! Brands and McDonald's Corp are living large, enjoying a combined
38 per cent share of the market in 2015. Yum's KFC restaurant chain and the
Golden Arches have long enjoyed a run of super-sized growth as consumers craved
a taste of Americana.
Indonesian tax amnesty pitch: bring it home to a new home
Indonesians who have stashed billions of dollars abroad over
the years can now bring their hoard safely back home - literally, to a newly
bought condo.
Wednesday, 3 August 2016
S$50m unauthorised investment by Mindef among lapses flagged by AG
Auditor-General says some of the lapses led to loss of
revenue and raised concerns about governance in government departments and stat
boards
Employment Pass holders must soon have higher minimum pay
Qualifying salary for foreigners to be hired on Employment
Passes raised to $3,600
China parties lose online defamation suit
Two Singaporeans cleared in case that underscores Net
anonymity
Didi shows Uber the way to doing business in tough China market
Just a year ago, Travis Kalanick told anyone who would
listen that China was Uber Technologies Inc's most pivotal market. He's now
waved the white flag.
China, Not Silicon Valley, Is Cutting Edge in Mobile Tech
“China was able to develop a lot of innovative business
models, which arose in a different kind of economy,” said Ms. Chang, who spends
time in both China and in Menlo Park, Calif. “Whether or not we admit it here
in Silicon Valley, it’s had an impact on us and our thinking.”
Monday, 1 August 2016
Bus case another hot potato for President Tsai
In its editorial on Aug 1, the newspaper examines
speculation that the driver's death was an act of self-immolation that left
Chinese tourists as victims.
Friday, 29 July 2016
Swiber's move to wind up sends shock waves through market
Announcement stuns investors and analysts; news savages some
O&M counters; DBS among banks with heavy exposure. Firm announces
resignation of 3 exec directors
Thursday, 28 July 2016
Most Asean countries ‘want to stay out of Beijing’s South China Sea dispute with the Philippines’
Most Asean countries want to stay out of the South China Sea
dispute between China and the Philippines, says a diplomat with inside
knowledge about the negotiations that went on before the bloc issued a joint
statement on the matter this week.
Monday, 25 July 2016
Indonesian tax amnesty could spark outflow from Singapore wealth industry
Singapore's wealth management industry is likely to suffer a
bad dent as rich Indonesians move some money back home to take advantage of a
tax amnesty, but the exodus of funds isn't going to be as big as Jakarta is
predicting.
If nothing else, at least Trump understands the folly of ‘empire’
Donald Trump gets a lot of things wrong, but there is at
least one thing much of the rest of the world can agree on with him: the United
States is in no position to lecture other countries about civil liberties or
human rights.
Sunday, 24 July 2016
South China Sea air strips’ main role is ‘to defend Hainan nuclear submarine base’
China’s underwater military strategy in the South China Sea,
which remained concealed for the past two decades, suddenly emerged after an
international tribunal rejected most of Beijing’s territorial claims in the
hotly contested waters.
Saturday, 23 July 2016
Americans too busy to stop wasting food
Americans say they feel bad about the 130 billion pounds (60
billion kg) of food that the nation wastes every year. But not badly enough to
do anything about it.
A lack of respect for laws and the courts
The decision by bodies like the Hong Kong chapter of Amnesty
International to criticise the convictions of Occupy activists casts groundless
doubts on the integrity of the judiciary.
Friday, 22 July 2016
The Philippine suit: A brilliant US machination?
Whatever the results of the Permanent Arbitral Court deliberations on the Philippine suit against China, which would be known after this column had been submitted, I can’t shrug off the suspicion that the US deftly played with President Aquino’s administration to file the case. For good or for bad.
RIGOBERTO D. TIGLAO is a Filipino diplomat and writer. He was formerly the Ambassador to Cyprus and Greece.
RIGOBERTO D. TIGLAO is a Filipino diplomat and writer. He was formerly the Ambassador to Cyprus and Greece.
Will we be the West’s ‘tank man’ vs China?
I certainly hope we won’t, or President Duterte’s term will see an
economic downturn, a year or so after what this overexcited Solicitor
General Jose Calida called the country’s “crowning glory,” our victory
in the UNCLOS case we filed against China at the Permanent Court of
Arbitration. It’s a real possibility, though, that Calida’s crown of
glory could be our crown of thorns.
Rigoberto Tiglao is a Filipino diplomat and writer. He was formerly the Ambassador to Cyprus and Greece.
Rigoberto Tiglao is a Filipino diplomat and writer. He was formerly the Ambassador to Cyprus and Greece.
Thursday, 21 July 2016
'Wolf of Wall Street' sued as US seeks 1MDB-tied assets
The US Justice Department is seeking to seize more than US$1
billion in assets including real estate, art and proceeds from the "Wolf
of Wall Street" movie that it says were illegally acquired through money
diverted from the embattled Malaysian development fund known as 1MDB.
Tuesday, 19 July 2016
The South China Sea Case and China's New Nationalism
Putting Chinese nationalism in historical context.
Friday, 15 July 2016
Oil wrestling: US and Britain fought over Iraq’s assets in aftermath of war, Chilcot report shows
The US and British governments fought bitterly over control
of Iraq’s oil following the toppling of Saddam Hussein, the UK Chilcot report
into the war shows.
Chinese scholar says ‘new evidence in Japan proves Beijing’s sovereignty over South China Sea islands’
Zhu Jianrong, a professor at Toyo Gakuen University, said that
he had found several pieces of evidence – including a telegram and newspaper
clippings from the 1920s to 1930s – which could prove that the Japanese
government at the time acknowledged China’s sovereignty in the Spratly and
Paracel Islands, Xinhua reported.
Thursday, 14 July 2016
The Hague ruling: 'Absurd award that contravenes procedural justice'
China views the Arbitral Tribunal as wrongly conceived,
lacking jurisdiction to rule on territorial matters. But it remains open to
negotiations.
Wednesday, 13 July 2016
Mountains out of Molehills: The Pentagon’s Big Lie About the South China Sea
By February 2016, the U.S. “discovery” of a surface to air
missile (SAM) capability on one of the Paracel Islands has been fielded as a
new political tool to cry foul against China for breach of its commitment “not
to militarize” the Spratly Island disputes.
Tuesday, 12 July 2016
So far it’s been the US, not China, that has flouted international law
If the US were backed by international treaties rather than
its maritime might, it might have a stronger case. Now it’s just a power play
by a hypocrite.
Of Course China, Like All Great Powers, Will Ignore an International Legal Verdict
In ignoring an upcoming verdict on the South China Sea,
Beijing is following well-established precedent by great powers.
Thursday, 7 July 2016
Chilcot report criticises Tony Blair for leading UK into Iraq war based on flawed intelligence
A British inquiry into the Iraq war strongly criticised
former Prime Minister Tony Blair and his government on Wednesday, saying they
had led the country into war based on flawed intelligence that should have been
challenged.
Britain's Iraq war inquiry delivers damning verdict on former PM Tony Blair
Former British prime minister Tony Blair took his country
into a badly planned, woefully executed and legally questionable war in Iraq in
2003, according to the findings of a long-delayed inquiry published on
Wednesday (July 6).
Wednesday, 6 July 2016
Cameron's reckless gamble could lead to breakup of the UK
The reaction to the UK's vote to leave the European Union
has been dramatic. Sterling has fallen to levels not seen since 1985, David
Cameron has resigned as prime minister and S&P has downgraded the nation's
AAA credit rating by two notches to AA, with a negative outlook, in a move that
may come to symbolise the perceived diminished status of the nation.
Tuesday, 5 July 2016
After a boom decade, Shanghai still needs room to grow
A decade ago, there were construction cranes everywhere in
downtown Shanghai, and many market analysts were sounding alarms about
overbuilding and predicted a downturn in the city’s office property market.
China to launch ‘hack-proof’ quantum satellite next month
China will launch the world’s first quantum satellite next
month to demonstrate a series of advanced technologies such as hacker-proof
communications and quantum teleportation.
Saturday, 2 July 2016
Use of mobile phones at petrol stations do not cause fires: Experts
The use of mobile phones at petrol stations will cause a
fire, right? Wrong, say experts. It's just an urban legend, circulated via
e-mail as early as the late 1990s, claiming that the microwaves emitted from
mobile phones could generate a spark that could ignite petrol fumes.
US drone strike body count doesn’t add up
US military and intelligence agencies have killed as many as
116 civilians in air strikes on militants since Obama took office, the White
House said.
Pastor Daniel Cheo Guan Beng jailed two weeks for road rage
A church pastor who challenged a businessman to a fight,
then slammed a van door on him in a road rage incident, was sentenced to two
weeks' jail on Thursday.
Why China Won’t Stop Island Building in the South China Sea
As the U.S. navy and rival Asian claimants respond to
China’s building of military-grade infrastructure on disputed islands,
heightened risks of conflict raise alarm bells over destabilization in a vital
arena of global trade. The world awaits the deliberation of the Hague on the
matter, but its decision will have little impact on China’s actions, which are
anchored by Beijing’s grand ambitions to secure an unrivalled commercial empire
throughout Eurasia and Africa.
The billionaire retail rebel
Tadashi Yanai likes T-shirts. They're comfortable, anybody
can wear one and if you get a lot of people to buy them, you could become very
rich. Mr Yanai has been selling T-shirts for over 30 years and now has more
money than anybody in Japan. All because in the mid-1980s, the son of a suit
maker from Yamaguchi prefecture got tired of selling stuffy menswear and
created Unique Clothing Warehouse, better known as Uniqlo - the temple of
everyday clothing for everybody.
Wednesday, 29 June 2016
China, the US, and Extrajudicial Abductions
China’s new willingness to abduct enemies overseas is
worrying. But remember the US has been doing the same for decades.
Inconsistencies emerge from Hong Kong bookseller Lam Wing-kee’s comments on his detention
The bookseller maintains that colleague Lee Po gave him the
impression he was taken to the mainland involuntarily, although Lee denies this
Monday, 27 June 2016
Faster immigration clearance for eligible Singaporeans travelling to US
Frequent travellers to the United States will soon be able
to clear immigration checks faster with the launch of the US-Singapore Trusted
Traveller Programme (TTP) on Monday (Jun 27).
Online legal-drafting services on the rise in Singapore
Firms offering fuss-free contract-drafting services have
been sprouting here over the past couple of years, many of which target
start-ups that value high speed with small price tags.
Sovereignty, jurisdiction and international law
Singapore's transboundary haze pollution law is consistent
with international law principles, which do permit a country's laws to have
extraterritorial jurisdiction in some instances.
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
China is threatening to leave a major UN sea treaty—and there’s nothing the US can say about it
Over 160 countries and the European Union have signed on to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos). The United States, however, has long declined to do so.
Quartz
Quartz
Asean's disunity undermines its centrality
One thing is clear from the confusion and controversy
arising from the recent special meeting between Asean and Chinese foreign
ministers in Kunming: South-east Asia's premier organisation is structurally
split over its divergent territorial interests.
Sunday, 19 June 2016
The US military struggles to win hearts and minds in Okinawa as thousands protest woman’s murder
Crimes by US troops based on the southern Japanese island of
Okinawa have long angered residents, who for decades have claimed the American
military was out of control.
Some in Guam push for independence from US as Marines prepare for buildup on Asia’s doorstep
Guam, home to a large US air base, could see a vote on its
political status in November
Asean must not be divided by South China Sea disputes
China has quoted historical facts to support its case. That
countries did not come forward to dispute its position post-World War II,
perhaps lends credence to this order. International agreements made thereafter
may have further supported this view.
Can't always get what you want? Don't worry
The first time I went on a silent meditation retreat, a few
years back, I was terrified that the experience might prove impossible to
endure.
Bookseller Lam Wing-kee is lying, colleagues claim in ‘exclusive’ newspaper interview
Booksellers Lui Por and Cheung Chi-ping, both associated with
the Causeway Bay Books store, have accused their recently returned
colleague Lam Wing-kee of lying and being manipulated.
hongkongfp
hongkongfp
Friday, 17 June 2016
In Manila, police welcome arrival of president Duterte
That was welcome news to police in the Philippine capital
who say they are so under-funded that they often have to buy their own bullets
and get lifts to murder scenes in funeral service cars because they have no
vehicles of their own.
China's plan for college spots for poor ignites class conflict
Cheng Nan has spent years trying to ensure that her
16-year-old daughter gets into a college near their home in Nanjing, an
affluent city in eastern China. She wakes her at 5.30am to study maths and
Chinese poetry and packs her schedule so tightly that she has only 20 days of
summer vacation.
As China acts to cool property frenzy, volatility spurs new risk
China's use of administrative measures to control property
prices can have painful repercussions for its swelling ranks of homeowners.
Just ask Shanghai resident Yi Miaowen.
Thursday, 16 June 2016
Half of Afghans captured and deliberately ‘terrorised’ by Canadian troops were innocent, say military police
Nearly half of the Afghans captured by Canadian troops in
2010 and 2011 had no links to the Taliban and were illegally held far longer
than Ottawa has publicly acknowledged, military police said Wednesday.
Singapore targeting private firms linked to Indonesian fires, not national sovereignty
Singapore's move to go after companies linked to fires in
Indonesia that led to last year's haze is not an issue of sovereignty or
national dignity, said a Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources (MEWR)
spokesman yesterday.
Wednesday, 15 June 2016
CIA documents offer glimpse inside secret ‘black site’ prisons, where detainees faced brutal treatment
The CIA has released dozens of previously classified
documents that expose disturbing new details of the agency’s treatment of
terrorism suspects after the September 11, 2001, attacks, including one who
died in Afghanistan in 2002 after being doused with water and chained to a
concrete floor as temperatures plunged below freezing.
Released documents shed light on US CIA's torture programme
United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) lawyers
sought guarantees the US spy agency would never be prosecuted for torturing
suspects after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, while other staff warned the
programme was an impending "train wreck", documents showed on Tuesday
(June 15).
Monday, 13 June 2016
How to register for VEP
•Create an account
at Malaysia's Road Transport Department (RTD) website.
•You can download
your Vehicle Registration Card PDF file from the website of Singapore's Land
Transport Authority and upload it to the RTD website. Once successful, a PDF
confirmation slip will be sent to you via e-mail.
•Those registering
at the Johor Customs, Immigration and Quarantine Complex will need to have
their vehicle registration card, latest insurance cover note and passport with
them.
•To collect the
VEP tag, users must have the registered vehicle, passport, confirmation slip
and RM10 (S$3.30) for an administration fee.
•The VEP tag is valid for five
years and must be renewed three months before the expiry date.
•For more details, visit the RTD website at
https://vep.jpj.gov.my
Singapore has picked the wrong target in its balance of powers strategy: Global Times commentary
Mr Chen Jiulin (founder of Beijing Joseph Investment Co and
former CEO of China Aviation Oil) wrote an opinion piece, "Singapore should
support China's South China Sea stand too", in the Global Times recently,
hoping that Singapore "will stop using US' power consistently to contain
China". Mr Chen has good intentions, but I think it is quite difficult for
Singapore to change its stand. A rough recap will provide some understanding on
how Singapore's views on security came about.
Sunday, 12 June 2016
How Donald Trump Bankrupted His Atlantic City Casinos, but Still Earned Millions
“People underestimated Donald Trump’s ability to pillage the
company,” said Sebastian Pignatello, a private investor who at one time held
stock in the Trump casinos worth more than $500,000. “He drove these companies
into bankruptcy by his mismanagement, the debt and his pillaging.”
Saturday, 11 June 2016
Why I renewed my COE for five years
Last month, the 10-year COE for my Category B car expired. I
was faced with four options: buy a new car; renew the COE for 10 years; renew
for five years or do without a car.
Friday, 10 June 2016
Singapore aims to prosecute Indonesian polluters under haze law
Singapore is prepared to prosecute any Indonesian companies
found responsible for the fires that produced hazardous ash clouds afflicting
the city state last year, a minister said, standing his ground even as recent
efforts to take firms to account drew ire from the country's largest Southeast
Asian neighbour.
Serve court papers – via Facebook
Court okays use of electronic means beyond e-mail if
defendant cannot be reached in person
The BSI story: How a 143-year-old Swiss bank took a quick road to ruin in Asia
Even in Asia's cutthroat world of wealth management, the news
of a mass defection at RBS Coutts, venerable bankers to the British royals,
came as a shock.
Bruce Lee quote on water
You must be shapeless, formless, like water. When you pour water in a cup, it becomes the cup. When you pour water in a bottle, it becomes the bottle. When you pour water in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Water can drip and it can crash. Become like water my friend.
Thursday, 9 June 2016
Legality of China's claims in South China Sea 'not weak': George Yeo
Citing Beijing's assertions that its claims in the contested waters date back to the Qing dynasty, Mr Yeo said that countries did not earlier object to China when it drew the controversial nine-dash line. Beijing uses the nine-dash line to mark a large swathe of the areas in the South China Sea that it claims.
Wednesday, 8 June 2016
South China Sea islands part of Taiwan's territory
The statement that the occupation of Itu Aba Island (Taiping
Island) by Taiwan in 1956 violates Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter
and, therefore, does not confer lawful title, is not based on facts or history
("Will China decide to reduce tension in the South China Sea?"; May
31).
Tuesday, 7 June 2016
Forget Pearl Harbour, Abe should go to Nanjing
If the two largest economies of Asia are at daggers drawn,
the consequences cannot be conducive to peace and prosperity. Japan has to take
steps to assuage the wounds of the past with China.
Saturday, 4 June 2016
Forget Pearl Harbour, Abe should go to Nanjing
If the two largest economies of Asia are at daggers drawn,
the consequences cannot be conducive to peace and prosperity. Japan has to take
steps to assuage the wounds of the past with China.
Friday, 3 June 2016
Why Japan should apologise to neighbouring nations
Instead of urging the US to apologise, Japan owes Hong Kong
an apology for the terrible atrocities it committed during World War II.
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
Mitsubishi Materials, Chinese WWII slave workers reach deal
Mitsubishi Materials Corp., one of dozens of Japanese companies that used Chinese forced laborers during World War II, reached a settlement with thousands of victims on Wednesday that includes compensation and an apology.
AP
AP
Dormitory operator fined $300,000 for housing more workers than allowed in facility
A dormitory operator was fined $300,000 on Tuesday (May 31)
for housing foreign workers in an overcrowded dormitory, contravening the
Employment of Foreign Manpower Act (EFMA).
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
When running wears out the knees
Medication can stop pain, inflammation; more serious injury
may require surgery
Housing crisis in China’s ‘Silicon Valley’: Huawei, other hi-tech giants head for cheaper cities as rising costs deter talents
Home prices in Shenzhen surged almost 50 per cent last year
and are now more than double those in provincial capital
Tuesday, 24 May 2016
China tycoon saves Australia lambs to show perks of foreign cash
When biting winter winds whip through the paddocks of the
170-year-old Lal Lal sheep farmin Australia's central Victoria this year, a
Chinese wool tycoon will be trying to help revive an ailing industry. He's also
hoping to overturn scepticism toward foreign investors.
Saturday, 21 May 2016
US, China closer on South China Sea issues than they appear
When big countries reach agreement, small countries may pay
the price, says Ambassador-at-large Bilahari Kausikan in a speech he delivered
in Tokyo this week. The excerpt below includes notes prepared in anticipation
of questions.
Tuesday, 17 May 2016
China at an inflection point: what's in it for Asia?
China’s size and promise have long enthralled the world. The
dream of penetrating China's market was colourfully captured in the words of a
British commentator in the 1840s: "If we could only persuade every person
in China to lengthen his shirt-tail by a foot, we could keep the mills of
Lancashire working around the clock." Well, war, revolution, and central
planning quickly laid to rest that fantasy.
Lawyers in Dallas Buyers Club action face punishment
The Law Society of Singapore (LawSoc) will be going after
two former lawyers of the legal firm representing United States film studio
Dallas Buyers Club LLC, following a complaint lodged last year on their conduct
in civil claims against illegal downloaders of the movie.
Thursday, 12 May 2016
Taiwan enters South China Sea legal fray, as group seeks to sway court on Philippines-China spat
A Taiwanese group has intervened in the Philippines'
international court case against China's claims in the South China Sea,
pressing Taipei's position that Taiwan is entitled to a swathe of the disputed
waterway as an economic zone.
Wednesday, 11 May 2016
Johor's EduCity drawing Singaporean students
For decades, scores of Malaysian children have been boarding
crowded buses daily at unearthly hours to come to Singapore to attend schools
here.
Sunday, 8 May 2016
New TechSkills Accelerator to help Singapore develop 'world-class' ICT workforce
The TechSkills Accelerator (TeSA), a skills development and
job placement initiative introduced during this year's Budget, will be the "umbrella
framework" for information and communications technology (ICT) related
training programmes and career development for all ICT professionals - and will
help Singapore develop a "world-class ICT workforce".
Ex-BSI banker received 'secret profits' of US$4m: prosecutor
Former BSI private banker Yeo Jiawei allegedly received
"secret profits" of about US$4 million when he was with the Singapore
branch of the Swiss private bank, which has been embroiled in the probe into
1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB).
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