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Wildlife Reserves Singapore revising entrance fees

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SINGAPORE – Wildlife Reserves Singapore is revising its price structure for its multi-park ParkHopper passes to encourage more guests to visit its wildlife parks, which include the Jurong Bird Park, Night Safari, River Safari and Singapore Zoo.
From April…

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Fatal blast at Jurong gas firm was so strong that it blew workers off their chairs

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March 28, 2016 5:43 PM

SINGAPORE – An explosion at a Jurong industrial gas supply firm was so strong that it blew two workers off their chairs and caused part of the ceiling to collapse, a coroner’s court heard on Monday (March 28).



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TNI Commander-in-Chief conferred prestigious military award in Singapore

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The Meritorious Service Medal (Military) was awarded to General Gatot Nurmantyo for his significant contributions in his former capacity as Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army, says MINDEF. 

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ION Orchard 1-for-1 Dining Deals 21 Mar – 31 Jul 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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ION Orchard 1-for-1 deals (Awfully Chocolate, Dunkin Donuts & more)

ION Orchard 1-for-1 Dining Deals 21 Mar – 31 Jul 2016 | SINGPromos.com

Travel through ION Orchard with tantalizing 1-for-1 food deals from all over the world! Go on an international gastronomic adventure as you enjoy 1-for-1 dining offers at Paradise Dynasty, Tazeh, Nara Thai, Wrap I & Roll and more!

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Govt to form teams to study transformation of over 20 industries

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SINGAPORE – Teams comprising officers from various Government agencies will be set up to provide inputs and chart roadmaps for different sectors under the S$4.5 billion Industry Transformation Programme, Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat said on Monday (March…

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Philippines puts Marcos jewel images online to teach about graft

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MANILA, Philippines – Philippine authorities are staging an online exhibition of jewelry owned by late dictator Ferdinand Marcos and his family to try to educate a new generation about the corruption of that era.

The postings on Facebook and Twitter by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) come as the family tries to extend its political comeback in elections in May.

“The PCGG will be posting selected jewelry items to show and remind the present generation of the excesses and extravagance of the Marcoses in their two-decade dictatorship,” the anti-corruption agency said on its website.

“The Virtual Jewelry Exhibit” began in mid-March with regular postings showcasing valuables recovered after the dictator was ousted by a military-backed popular uprising in 1986.

Aside from pictures of the jewels uploaded regularly, there are postings explaining what they cost the country.

A picture of a diamond tiara comes with the caption: “can fund… the treatment of 12,052 cases of tuberculosis.” The PCGG, which plans eventually to auction off the Marcos jewels, has previously said that international auction houses have appraised their total value at more than a billion pesos ($21 million).

Marcos and his jet-setting wife Imelda were accused of massively enriching themselves during their years in power while the country sank deeper into poverty.

Imelda was known for her extravagance, amassing jewelry, art masterpieces and a huge collection of shoes.

Although the family fled abroad during the 1986 revolt, they were allowed to return home after the former dictator died in exile in 1989.

Since then the Marcoses have made a startling resurgence, with members not only evading criminal charges but winning election to prominent positions.

Ferdinand Marcos Jnr., previously elected to the powerful Senate, is now running for vice-president. Widow Imelda Marcos is seeking re-election to Congress and her eldest daughter Imee is running for another term as governor of the family bailiwick in the north.

Despite a campaign by victims of the Marcos regime against his candidacy, surveys show Marcos Jnr. is second in the race for the vice-presidency.

Imelda Marcos has previously said she hopes her son will eventually become president.

Critics say the generation that grew up after the Marcos years has no memory of the abuses, setting the stage for the family’s return to power.

Both Imelda and her son have long denied any wrongdoing. Spokesmen for the two could not be contacted for comment.

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Monday, March 28, 2016 – 16:18
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Explosions hit Afghan parliament compound, no one reported hurt

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KABUL, Afghanistan – Taliban militants fired explosives into Afghanistan’s parliament compound on Monday as the top intelligence official and caretaker minister of interior were due to speak, lawmakers and the insurgents said.

Lawmakers said no one was reported wounded. But Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack and said it caused heavy casualties.

The Taliban often claim responsibility for attacks and have been known to exaggerate fatality figures. “Three rockets were fired at the parliament but they did not hit the main building,” said Safiullah Muslim, a lawmaker from Badakhshan province. “It happened when the session was ongoing.” There were conflicting reports as to whether the explosions were caused by long-range rocket artillery or shoulder-fired rocket-propelled grenades.

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Monday, March 28, 2016 – 16:14
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China official says the Dalai Lama is "making a fool" of Buddhism

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BEIJING – Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, is “making a fool” of Tibetan Buddhism with suggestions he may not reincarnate, or reincarnate as something inappropriate, and the faithful are not buying it, a Chinese official wrote on Monday.

China says the Dalai Lama, who fled into exile in India after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959, is a violent separatist. He denies espousing violence and says he only wants genuine autonomy for Tibet.

The animosity between the two sides, and their rivalry for control over Tibetan Buddhism, is at the heart of the debate about reincarnation.

Tibetan Buddhism holds that the soul of a senior lama is reincarnated in the body of a child on his death.

China says the tradition must continue and its officially atheist Communist leaders have the right to approve the Dalai Lama’s successor, as a right inherited from China’s emperors.

The Nobel Peace Prize-winning monk has suggested his title could end when he dies. China accuses him of betraying, and being disrespectful toward, the Tibetan religion by saying there might be no more reincarnations.

Writing in the state-run Global Times, Zhu Weiqun, chairman of the ethnic and religious affairs committee of the top advisory body to China’s parliament, said the Dalai Lama had to respect the religious and historic traditions of reincarnation. “The Dalai Lama continues to proclaim his reincarnation is a’purely religious matter’ and something only he can decide, but he has no way to compel admiration from the faithful,” wrote Zhu, known for his hardline stance on Tibet. “He’s been proclaiming he’ll reincarnate as a foreigner, as a bee, as a ‘mischievous blond girl’, or even proposing a living reincarnation or an end to reincarnation,” he added. “All of this, quite apart from making a fool of Tibetan Buddhism, is completely useless when it comes to extricating him from the difficulty of reincarnation,” wrote Zhu, who was involved in the past in Beijing’s failed efforts to talk to the Dalai Lama’s representatives.

Tibetan exiles worried China will appoint its own successor to the 80-year-old leader can point to a precedent.

In 1995, after the Dalai Lama named a boy in Tibet as the reincarnation of the previous Panchen Lama, the second highest figure in Tibetan Buddhism, China put the child under house arrest and installed another.

Zhu also said China had been successful in getting fewer and fewer foreign leaders to meet the Dalai Lama, because of the anger it draws from the world’s second-largest economy. “Anyone getting ready to offend China must first weigh up the consequences,” he wrote.

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Monday, March 28, 2016 – 16:06
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NHG looks to gaming technology to boost healthcare sector

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The National Healthcare Group officially launches the inaugural Health Innovation Technology Challenge in search of apps that can be used to help patients and staff better understand illnesses and treatment.

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Hello Kitty cafe to open at Changi Airport

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Monday, March 28, 2016 – 15:43
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