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'Mr Moral Education' Father Robert Balhetchet dies at 76

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SINGAPORE – Dr (Rev) Robert Balhetchet, who is well-known as Singapore’s ‘Mr Moral Education’, died on Tuesday from pneumonia. He was 76 years old.

Dr Balhetchet’s contribution to the education system here began in 1979 when he was tasked by the then Minister for Education Goh Keng Swee, to craft a moral education programme for schools. However, Dr Balhetchet lamented years later in an interview that he failed to create a stronger moral fabric in Singapore.

He had told The New Paper in a 2002: “Sadly, nobody gives a damn about moral education. Yet, the society still bemoans about everything and doesn’t realise it’s due to a lack of moral principles.

“But there was nothing wrong with my programme. A new one can be devised and it will still fail.”

Dr Balhetchet had put the failure down to a stronger emphasis on academic subjects in the education system. He worked with the Ministry of Education up till the 1990s.

“Many grow up to become smart crooks instead, like those CEOs behind all these corporate swindles around the world,” said the former rector of the Cathedral of the Good Shepherd, where he served between 1979 and 2001.

But he also had good things to say about his experience.

He said in the interview: “My 22 years as a civil servant was a very precious experience. I got to know first-hand what it was like to work in a secular place. Suddenly I knew what the man in the street meant by retrenchment, performance appraisal, discipline. As a priest, it helped me understand the lay person’s family problems better.”

Also known as “Father Bob” to his parish, Dr Balhetchet was ordained as a priest in 1964. A brilliant student of St Joseph’s Institution, he passed his A levels at 14. He surprised many with his mastery of nine languages, including Spanish, French and Tamil.

A heavy smoker, he had to rely on an oxygen tank and respirator in his later years.

Mr Alex Yam,MP for Marsiling-YewTee GRC, recalled his first meeting with Dr Balhetchet when he was a primary school pupil at Maris Stella High School, where the priest conducted mass.

“His wonderful singing voice and famous drawl that would fill a hall with wit and wisdom was one of the reasons drawing me to the mystery of the faith,” said the MP in his Facebook post yesterday.

In its obituary note, the Catholic Church acknowledged the role Father Balhetchet played as the overall coordinator for Pope John Paul II’s historic visit to Singapore in 1986.

Archbishop William Goh will preside over his funeral this Saturday (March 19) at 9.30am at the Church of Our Lady Queen of Peace in Tanjong Katong, where his body is resting.

chenj@sph.com.sg

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Newly elected Myanmar president Htin Kyaw hails win as "Suu Kyi's victory"

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Naypyidaw, Myanmar – Myanmar got its first civilian president in decades on Tuesday after lawmakers elected a close aide of Aung San Suu Kyi, who is expected to hold the real reins of power in the formerly junta-run nation.

Htin Kyaw, 69, hailed his elevation to the top post as “Suu Kyi’s victory”, a clear nod to her plan that he serve as a proxy for the Nobel laureate who is constitutionally barred from becoming president.

MPs erupted into applause after the result was announced following a lengthy ballot count by hand in the capital Naypyidaw, in which Htin Kyaw took 360 of 652 votes cast.

Myanmar is undergoing a dramatic transformation from an isolated and repressed pariah state to a rapidly opening aspiring democracy.

The White House hailed his election as “an important step forward” in that democratic transition.

“We look forward to working with his govt,” Ben Rhodes, a senior advisor to President Barack Obama, wrote on Twitter.

Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy won a thumping victory at elections in November, allowing her party to dominate Myanmar’s two legislative houses.

But the military remains a powerful force and has refused to change a clause in the junta-era constitution which bars her from the presidency.

The veteran activist has instead vowed to rule “above” the next leader. Her choice of Htin Kyaw is seen as a testament to her absolute faith in his loyalty.

“This is sister Aung San Suu Kyi’s victory,” the newly-elected president told reporters after the vote. “Thank you.”

Htin Kyaw will be sworn in on March 30, replacing incumbent Thein Sein. It will be the first time Myanmar has had a civilian president since 1962, when the military seized power.

Related: Htin Kyaw: From Suu Kyi’s schoolfriend to Myanmar’s proxy president 

Thein Sein, a former general, led a quasi-civilian reformist government for the last five years that has been praised for moving the nation out of the shadow of outright military rule.

For many MPs from Suu Kyi’s party Tuesday’s vote was a vindication of their long years of struggle for democracy under the repressive former junta, which locked up hundreds of dissidents as it tried to stifle criticism.

The NLD is still haunted by its 1990 election victory, which was snatched away by the generals.

Zin Mar Aung, an NLD MP who was involved in 1988 protests and is herself a former political prisoner, termed the vote “very historic”.

She said the election of Htin Kyaw, who was also detained by the former junta, made her think of their long struggle and “the way we have marched to here since more than 20 years ago”.

But others expressed disappointment their leader would not be taking the top post.

“We all want to see Aung San Suu Kyi be the president,” NLD MP Myo Zaw Aung told AFP. “But so far, it is not reality.”

Tuesday’s election also confirmed the two other candidates as vice presidents — retired general Myint Swe, who is seen as a hardliner ally of former strongman Than Shwe and is on Washington’s sanctions list, and ethnic Chin MP Henry Van Thio.

Suu Kyi, 70, enjoys unrivalled popularity both as the daughter of the country’s independence hero and as a central figure in the decades-long democracy struggle.

It is not yet clear what role she plans to take or how she will manage her relationship with the new president.

She is barred from top political office because she married and had children with a foreigner, British academic Michael Aris, who died in 1999 while she was under house arrest.

Months of negotiations with army chief Min Aung Hlaing failed to remove the charter clause that blocks her.

In central Yangon people crowded into teashops to watch the vote live on television.

“He was chosen by Mother Suu. Now he is our president. He will be a good president because he has been working with Mother Suu for many years,” said Daw Mya, 60, a vegetable vendor.

While little known outside Myanmar, Htin Kyaw commands considerable respect inside the country, partly because his father was a legendary writer and early member of the NLD.

Though he has never previously stood for political office, he is married to sitting NLD MP Su Su Lwin, whose late father was the party’s respected spokesman, and he helps run Suu Kyi’s charitable foundation.

A new cabinet, set to be announced at the end of the month, is expected to include figures from across the political spectrum as Suu Kyi tries to promote national reconciliation.

It will face many challenges, including poverty, civil wars in ethnic minority borderlands and decrepit infrastructure.

But one of the most crucial tasks will be to manage the relationship with the military, which retains significant power including control of the vital home, defence and border ministries.

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Wednesday, March 16, 2016 – 12:53
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Former SCDF officer charged with harassment

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A former Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF)  Lieutenant-Colonel was charged with harassment in a district court on Wednesday (March 16).

Goh Wee Hong, 39, who is married with a child, is accused of making sexual advances…

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Haze cost Singapore estimated $700m last year: Minister Masagos

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SINGAPORE – Singapore suffered an estimated S$700 million of losses during the haze episode last year, said Environment and Water Resources Minister Masagos Zulkifli on Tuesday (Mar 15).

He said the haze was caused by forest fires in Indonesia, which were worsened by the severe effect of the El Nino weather phenomenon.

“We know where the hotspots were when the haze occurred. We need to have the co-operation of our counterparts to give us these names officially,” he told Channel NewsAsia (CNA) in an interview in London where he was attending The Sustainability Summit organised by The Economist.

“We cannot have just one approach to address the problem. One of these approaches that we’re trying to commit is the bilateral co-operation between Indonesia and Singapore,” he told CNA.

“In this aspect, we have been asking them to officially provide us the names of the directors of companies, as well as the locations where these fires have occurred, so that the companies can be put to task, particularly if the haze has affected Singapore,” he said.

The haze is caused by smouldering fires, often set to clear land for palm oil plantations on Sumatra and Borneo islands.

Last week, Riau’s governor declared a state of emergency among efforts to prevent a recurrence of the 2015 haze.

Indonesia has said it is expecting drier than normal weather in several fire and haze-prone regions in western and central Indonesia this month and in April, the state weather agency (BMKG) said on Monday, referring to the recent increase in fires and hotspots.

The agency explained that fires were particularly bad in 2015 because of a prolonged dry season caused by the El Nino pattern, with smoke blanketing neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia for weeks and drifting as far north as the Thai capital, Bangkok, reported Reuters.

In October, Indonesian government officials sought to divert blame for the fires and choking smog that had cost the country an estimated US$16 billion (S$22 billion). They pointed fingers at BMKG for failing to predict the severity of the El Nino phenomenon.

Referring to the province on the central eastern coast of Sumatra, BMKG climatology chief Mulyono Rahadi Prabowo had told the media “Riau in March and April has the potential for low rainfall, so the potential for fires is high. Eastern Kalimantan (on the east of the island of Borneo) also needs to be on the alert for forest fires.”

Another official at the weather bureau told Reuters there was a 50 per cent chance of a La Nina weather pattern affecting Indonesia in the fourth quarter of this year, potentially resulting in a wetter than usual “dry” season and heavier rainy season.

Related:

What subsidies you can get for haze-related illnesses

chenj@sph.com.sg

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Wednesday, March 16, 2016 – 12:26
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China parliament approves five year plan, charity law

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BEIJING – China’s Communist-controlled legislature approved an economic roadmap for the next five years and a charity law among a series of measures Wednesday at the close of its annual meeting.

As the balloting started in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing a voice boomed over a loudspeaker asking delegates to press the voting device. Thousands of arms in suit jackets reached across the tables simultaneously.

Votes at the National People’s Congress are normally overwhelming approvals of measures decided long in advance by the ruling Communist party.

There were 2,778 ‘yes’ votes for the 13th Five Year Plan, or 97.27 per cent of the total, the official Xinhua news agency reported, and 2,636 in favour of the charity law – 92.49 per cent.

The five-year plan, a blueprint for economic and social development, pledged to grow the world’s second-largest economy by an average of at least 6.5 per cent a year over the 2016-2020 period.

Such plans are a legacy of China’s command economy era but still guide policymakers at all levels of government.

Gross domestic product (GDP) is set to go from 67.7 trillion yuan ($10.4 trillion) last year to more than 92.7 trillion yuan in 2020, according to the plan.

The plan also seeks to significantly reduce poverty by 2020. Officials have declared charitable organisations essential to achieving the goal and hope to encourage more giving with the charity law.

As the country’s economy has grown to the world’s second-largest, charitable giving has lagged, with the country ranking 144th out of 145 countries for giving, according to a study last year by the Charities Aid Foundation.

Chinese citizens donated just $16 billion in 2014, according to the most recent data from the China Charity Information Centre – less than 0.2 per cent of annual GDP.

China’s official news agency Xinhua said the new law was intended to “recruit help from good Samaritans in realising the 2020 poverty alleviation target”.

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Economists cut 2016 Singapore growth forecast for 2016 to 1.9%: MAS survey

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"Hometown Glory" for Adele as debuts tour in London

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Adele made a triumphant London debut to her music tour on Tuesday, kicking off a series of concerts in the British capital that saw one couple get engaged during the singer’s performance.

Talking about makeup, burps, pimples and taking selfies with the audience, the singer-songwriter won over thousands of fans at London’s O2 arena with her stage chat as she belted out her chart-topping hits.

The 27-year old opened the show with “Hello” – the single that marked her successful return to the music scene late last year following her 2011 album “21”.

In a simple production that saw the London-born singer perform just alongside her musicians, Adele sang her popular singles including James Bond theme tune “Skyfall” as well as chart-toppers “Someone like You” and “Rolling In The Deep”. “Hometown Glory” sang against a black and white video of the British capital’s main sites won rave applause from the London crowd. “To finally be here is amazing,” Adele said during the concert where she invited fans of all ages on stage.

When one couple got engaged during her performance of “Make You Feel My Love”, they too were invited to stand beside the award-winning songstress, who told the audience of the proposal:”(It’s) one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever witnessed at one of my shows”.

Adele began her sell-out “Adele Live” tour on Feb. 29 in Belfast and will go on to perform around Europe before heading to the United States.

She sang a mix of hits from her albums “19”, “21” and “25”, which has topped charts worldwide since its November release. “I love the fact that she swears. She’s funny, she tells stories. She’s just a laugh,” fan Jordan Potts said. “You know it’s a massive show … but it’s so intimate as well. She really connects with the audience.”

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Is second time the charm for some celebrities?

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BEN AFFLECK (DAREDEVIL/BATMAN)

As Daredevil in the 2003 film, Affleck drew ire from Marvel fans who cried foul over his lacklustre portrayal of blind lawyer Matt Murdock.

Heck, he even won a Razzie for Worst Actor for Daredevil, along with his other flops that year, Gigli and Paycheck.

Yup, in the rollercoaster ride that is Affleck’s career, that was widely considered his lowest point.

In fact, Daredevil was so damaging to his reputation and image, it was almost 10 years later in 2012 that he regained his cred with the award-winning Argo.

“By playing a superhero in Daredevil, I have inoculated myself from ever playing another superhero,” Affleck famously once said at the premiere of his 2006 film Hollywoodland, in which he ironically portrayed real-life actor George Reeves, best known for playing Superman on TV in the 1950s.

“Wearing a costume was a source of humiliation for me and something I wouldn’t want to do again soon.”

Well, he’s eating his words in a major way now and has a lot to atone for as he takes up the mantle of DC Comics icon the Dark Knight in Batman v Superman: Dawn Of Justice (BvS), which opens here on March 24.

When he was announced as the new Bruce Wayne/Batman, the Internet reacted in horror, given how he was seen to have ruined Daredevil.

While Affleck, 43, has stayed mostly silent on anything Caped Crusader-related for the last two years – he appeared at San Diego’s Comic-Con in 2014 to promote BvS but did not speak. He is finally revealing more.

And he appears to be unfazed by the online negativity.

The father of three, who split from his US actress-wife Jennifer Garner last year after 10 years of marriage, told Los Angeles Times: “In my experience, the truth is, if your work is good, people are going to like it. If it’s bad, people won’t. The rest of it is just speculation. It’s like when a team drafts a player: Fans can speculate, but you’ve got to wait until the season starts to see how they play.

“I’m pretty grown up about this stuff. If I had my feelings getting hurt about stuff that was said on the Internet, I would have been gone a long time ago.”

On his change of heart and decision to play a second superhero after Daredevil, Affleck said: “I just thought (Daredevil) wasn’t a good fit. But I went in and met with (BvS director) Zack (Snyder) and saw this kind of visual 360 of posters and drawings and action figures and animatics – and I was totally blown away.

“All of a sudden I saw something I’d never seen before and hadn’t even imagined…

“And just for me personally… I thought, ‘I want to be in one of these movies that works’.”

Still, Affleck admitted at the movie’s news conference in Beijing last week that the “biggest challenge” going into BvS was the “daunting aspect of playing a character who’s got such a fixed place in people’s minds already”.

He said: “I didn’t get to create the character. I had to sort of recreate something and hope that it fit into people’s, our idea of who Batman was already and hope that they would accept my nuances on it.”

Twice as nice?

There is nowhere to go but up.

Based on the BvS trailers, Affleck has a real sense of gravitas – closer to the best Batman actors like Christian Bale and Michael Keaton and less campy than the universally panned George Clooney – and may be able to carve out his niche.

But whether we like Affleck or not, he’s signed on for two Justice League movies, so we’re stuck with him for a while.

CHRIS EVANS (HUMAN TORCH/CAPTAIN AMERICA)

Evans made his first foray into superherodom as the flame-covered Johnny Storm/Human Torch in 2005’s Fantastic Four and its 2007 sequel, Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer.

The 34-year-old US actor went from supporting character to lead as Steve Rogers/Captain America in Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) and Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), as well as its Marvel follow-ups The Avengers (2012) and Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015).

Twice as nice?

Despite Human Torch providing the cheeky charm and eye candy, Evans couldn’t save the Fantastic Four films. But his Captain America, sporting an even more impressive physique and boy-scout charm, won more hearts. And with Captain America: Civil War coming up on April 28, he’ll get to prove his mettle going up against Iron Man.

HALLE BERRY (STORM/CATWOMAN)

Playing weather-controlling mutant Ororo Munroe/Storm in four X-Men movies – X-Men (2000), X-Men 2 (2003), X-Men: The Last Stand (2006) and X-Men: Days Of Future Past (2014) – was a huge break for Oscar-winning US actress Berry, 49. Even it did take some time before stylists got her hair to look edgy, not scary.

She left her ensemble player status behind by taking the lead as slinky thief Catwoman in the 2004 film of the same name, but was let down by a rotten script and won a Razzie award for Worst Actress.

Twice as nice?

Storm will always be Berry’s first and most beloved superhero character. Her failed attempt at being Catwoman is more than compensated for by her many great turns as Storm.

AARON TAYLOR-JOHNSON (KICK-ASS/QUICKSILVER)

The 25-year-old English actor went from obscurity to stardom playing the lead Dave Lizewski – an ordinary teen who develops great resilience and a knack for his twin batons – in cult superhero flick Kick-Ass in 2010.

He later downgraded to supporting player as speedy mutant Quicksilver, twin brother of Scarlet Witch and Avengers team member, in Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015).

Twice as nice?

Johnson made for a charmingly naive Kick-Ass, but really grew into his own as Quicksilver, who was more complex and nuanced than Evan Peters’ younger version in X-Men: Days Of Future Past (2014). At the moment, Quicksilver looks pretty dead, but hey, in the comic book-turned-movie world, anyone can be brought back to life.

RYAN REYNOLDS (GREEN LANTERN/DEADPOOL)

Other than Affleck, nobody else needed more redemption from a bomb heard all over the world than Reynolds.

In the much-ridiculed Green Lantern (2011), the 39-year-old Canadian hunk played DC test pilot Hal Jordan, who is inducted into the Green Lantern Corps with a power ring to construct solid green objects and control them telekinetically.

Still, fans were excited to see Reynolds put his own spin on Marvel mutant mercenary Wade Wilson/Deadpool – after an initial botched attempt at the character in 2009’s X-Men Origins: Wolverine – in this year’s film, especially after the trailer was released.

Twice as nice?

All is forgiven. Reynolds earned his stripes playing Deadpool for the second time and the film was a big hit, earning a whopping US$673 million (S$930 million) worldwide.

lisat@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on March 16, 2016.
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Ben Affleck isn’t the only star who has twice played different superheroes, sometimes even from different comic book universes. But for those who received second chances, did they crush it or blow it? -TNP
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Tennis: Nadal topples Verdasco to advance at Indian Wells

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Rafael Nadal saved five set points to finish off a two-set victory over Fernando Verdasco 6-0, 7-6 (11-9) on Tuesday in the third round at Indian Wells.

Nadal, the nine-time French Open champion who turns 30 in June, avenged his first-round loss to fellow Spaniard Verdasco at the Australian Open in January.

He moved a step closer to a fourth trophy in the California desert, where he took the title of the hardcourt ATP and WTA event in 2013, 2009 and 2007.

The fourth seeded Spaniard next faces German Alexander Zverev who defeated Gilles Simon in straight sets 6-2, 6-2.

Nadal roared through the first set without dropping a game, but Verdasco came to life in the second, eventually forcing it to a tiebreaker.

Nadal fought off five set points before clinching it when Verdasco hit a backhand long to end the one hour, 41 minute third round match.

“It was a tough match, but I resisted,” Nadal said. “I lost a few matches this year that I had a chance to win so I need to play more matches like this.” Nadal improved to 15-3 overall against Verdasco but they have had some memorable contests since their first encounter in 2005 in Doha.

They played a brilliant three tiebreaker match at Cincinnati in 2011, went five sets in the semis of the 2009 Australian Open and earlier this year they played another five setter in Melbourne with Verdasco handing Nadal just his second ever first-round defeat in a Grand Slam.

Japan’s Kei Nishikori won his third round match Tuesday defeating Steve Johnson 7-6 (8/6), 7-6 (7/5).

World number six Nishikori next faces ninth seeded American John Isner who beat France’s Adrian Mannarino 6-4, 7-6 (7/4).

Nishikori needed two tiebreakers and almost two hours to eliminate a stubborn Johnson.

“I thought I was patient today,” Nishikori said. “Obviously, it’s not easy. But I played some good tennis. So I’m looking forward to my next match.” Spain’s Feliciano Lopez defeated Roberto Bautista 7-6 (7/5), 6-7 (10/12), 6-4.

On the women’s side, defending Indian Wells champ Simona Halep moved on to the quarter-finals when her opponent Barbora Strycova retired in the second set with a respiratory problem, third seed Agnieszka Radwanska defeated Jelena Jankovic 6-3, 6-3, and eighth seed Petra Kvitova defeated Nicole Gibbs 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.

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Fire breaks out in Bukit Panjang coffee shop; residents evacuated, no one injured

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March 16, 2016 12:05 PM

SINGAPORE – A fire broke out at a Bukit Panjang coffee shop below a HDB block on Wednesday (March 16) morning, with the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) evacuating residents living on the second and third floors as a precautionary measure.



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