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Japan marks 2011 earthquake, tsunami, nuclear disaster

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Tokyo – Japan pauses on Friday to mark five years since an offshore earthquake spawned a monster tsunami that left about 18,500 people dead or missing along its northeastern coast and sparked the worst nuclear disaster in a quarter century.

The massive 9.0 magnitude quake unleashed a giant wall of water that swallowed schools and entire neighbourhoods, with unforgettable images spreading around the world of panicked residents fleeing to higher ground and vehicles and ships bobbing in the swirling waters of flooded towns.

The waves also swamped power supplies at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, causing reactor meltdowns that released radiation in the most dangerous nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 and which continues to leave some areas uninhabitable.

Memorial events are expected across the northern coastal region directly hit by the catastrophe – one of Japan’s worst peacetime disasters.

In the capital Tokyo, which also shook violently when the quake struck, Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko as well as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will pay respects at a national ceremony.

A moment of silence will take place at 2:46 pm (0546 GMT) – the exact moment when the earthquake struck under the Pacific Ocean on March 11, 2011.

The situation remain volatile in Fukushima prefecture, where the nuclear plant suffered explosions that spread radioactive material into the surrounding countryside and ocean.

The nuclear crisis forced tens of thousands of area residents to flee their homes, farms and fishing boats and at one point even led to discussions about possibly evacuation the capital area and its 30 million people.

Read also: Japan’s taxi passengers pick up “ghost passengers” in area hit by 2011 tsunami

Since then, authorities have brought the reactors to a state of “cold shutdown” and dispatched work crews to cleanse affected houses, sweep streets and shave topsoil in “decontamination” efforts.

Tokyo Electric Power, the operator of the shuttered plant, admits it has only made small steps in what is likely to be a four-decade battle to decommission the crippled reactors.

Despite growing public opposition to nuclear power as a result of the disaster, the government has pushed to restart idled reactors, saying they are essential to power the world’s third largest economy.

Japan’s entire stable of reactors was shuttered in the aftermath of the disaster but Abe and utility companies have been pushing to get reactors back in operation despite opposition and legal hurdles.

Only this week, a court ordered the shutdown of two nuclear reactors previously declared safe, demonstrating the ongoing battles over Japan’s energy policy.

The disaster had forced resource-poor Japan to turn to expensive fossil fuels to plug the energy gap left by the shutdowns.

Read also: Reviving lost businesses in tsunami-hit Japan

Speaking on the eve of the anniversary, Abe told the nation that it “cannot do without” nuclear power, though vowed to reduce dependence on it.

Abe, along with other political and business leaders, has frequently visited the disaster-struck region and pledged to help rebuild the area and lives of local people.

Expensive infrastructure including giant seawalls are being constructed and many local businesses have managed to rebuild – including factories in the region crucial to auto industry supply chains that suffered major disruptions.

But many young families have moved away, accelerating its depopulation amid the broader greying of society, while those who have evacuated but want to return wonder if they ever can.

“For each and every one of the people whose lives were affected by the disaster, these five years must have been days of hardship and pain,” Abe said Thursday.

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Caught on camera: Massive sinkhole swallows bus in China

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Whoa, this has to be seen to be believed.

A bus plummeted into a massive sinkhole in China yesterday (Mar 10).

The Shanghaiist reports that the bus, which was carrying the driver and two passengers, had been pulling into a bus station in Guiyang, a province in China, when it was – quite literally – swallowed by the crater-sized sinkhole.

The entire incident was caught on closed circuit television at the bus depot.  

In the video, the bus can be seen see-sawing for a second before tipping over into the abyss.

The people in the bus were reportedly trapped for 40 minutes before they were rescued.

The passengers suffered minor injuries, while the driver was taken to a local hospital for a head injury.

The bus was hauled from the sinkhole four hours later.

This incident is similar to an incident in China that occured in August last year where five people plummeted into a sinkhole at a bus stop.

Security footage shows that the ground beneath their feet caved in. The victims managed to climb out of the sinkhole with the help of passers-by. 

Four were sent to the hospital for minor injuries. 

prabukm@sph.com.sg

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Taking a bus ride down memory lane

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Way before the ubiquitous ez-link card entered Singaporeans’ lives, taking a bus meant coming face-to-face with not just the driver, but also the bus conductor.

With a small satchel slung across his body and armed with a ticket puncher, the conductor would hand out tickets – small pieces of paper printed with rows of numbers – after passengers had paid their fares.

In the 1980s, the bus conductor was phased out and passengers deposited their fares into an automated receptacle upon boarding. Commuters started using the fare card in 1990 and the ez-link card in 2002.

Now, they can relive those memories at the inaugural Singapore Bus Carnival, which starts today and runs till Sunday at Ngee Ann City’s Civic Plaza.

Organised by the Land Transport Authority (LTA), the free roving event will move to VivoCity’s Outdoor Plaza from March 25 to 27, and to HDB Hub in Toa Payoh from April 1 to 3.

The carnival is divided into three zones – past, present and future. Visitors can check out a refurbished green vintage bus from the 1960s and other bus memorabilia such as a 1941 ticket machine and old concession passes, get behind the wheel of a bus simulator and find out about new initiatives such as e-paper displays for bus arrival information.

The exhibition comes during a new chapter for the industry as it transitions to a new contracting model, where the Government owns all bus infrastructure and operating assets.

The carnival celebrates this milestone, says Ms Helen Lim, LTA’s group director of corporate communications, by “giving the public a glimpse of the nostalgic past, showcasing current industry updates and providing a peek at what is to come as we ride into the new chapter”.

The new colour of public buses will also be unveiled today at the carnival after a public poll was conducted to choose between two colours – bright red or lush green.

Bus enthusiast Chris Lee will be at the carnival to share stories.

The 33-year-old laboratory technician is one of 10 bus fans who have loaned the festival organiser some of their treasured memorabilia.

Mr Lee, who has amassed more than 100 items since he started his collection in 1995, is excited to see the vintage bus in its former glory.

“I have seen this bus rotting for years in a scrap yard, so it’s great that the LTA has cleaned it up and put it up for display.”

Visitors can also chat with representatives from public transport operators such as bus captains and vehicle technicians to find out what goes on behind the scenes.

Lawyer Seetha Ramasamy, 40, plans to take her seven-year-old daughter and four-year-old twin boys to the carnival.

She says: “I’m always looking for things to do with my kids and it will be interesting for them to see the buses I used to ride in.”

VIEW IT / SINGAPORE BUS CARNIVAL

1. WHERE: Ngee Ann City, Civic Plaza, WHEN: Today to Sunday, noon to 8pm

2. WHERE: VivoCity, Outdoor Plaza, WHEN: March 25 to 27, 11am to 8pm

3. WHERE: Toa Payoh, HDB Hub, WHEN: April 1 to 3

ADMISSION: Free

INFO: www.facebook.com/ weKeepYourWorldMoving


This article was first published on March 11, 2016.
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Registration and open houses for MOE kindergatens to be held in April

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March 11, 2016 12:09 PM

SINGAPORE – The registration exercise for 2017 admission into Ministry of Education (MOE) kindergartens will be held in April. This is for children who are Singapore citizens or permanent residents, born between Jan 2, 2012, and Jan 1, 2013 (both dates included).



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2 hours to cut safe for $500,000 loot: Vietnamese duo jailed

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The sound of the electric grinder filled his ears as he cut a 20cm by 20cm hole in the safe sitting in the room he had broken into.

Ngo Quang Phuoc, 35, was well prepared. He had experience cutting metal during his previous job as a construction worker.

Anticipating he might need to cut metals during the break-in, he had brought the grinder, a pair of safety goggles and a helmet, while his partner Nguyen Van Nhat, 23, stood watch outside the building.

Almost two hours later, he hit pay dirt.

Bundles of cash were inside the safe.

Ngo was shocked. He called Nguyen and told him the good news. Nguyen told him to take as much money as he could, which he did, bundling them into the bag he had taken along.

As he did that, Ngo noticed another compartment in the safe. Using the grinder, he cut into the compartment and found even more money.

Once again he informed his partner, who told him to grab as much as he could.

When Ngo left the room, he was carrying four full bags of cash. He found the three other bags in the room.

The loot: A cool $500,000.

Fast forward to yesterday.

THE PUNISHMENT

Ngo and Nguyen faced the judge in court.

Both pleaded guilty to housebreaking by night to commit theft at the office of fruit wholesaler Loh Ee Seng Trading Company at Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre in the early hours of Jan 5 this year.

Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Sivabalan Thanabal, asked District Judge Samuel Chua, to jail them for five years each.

He stressed they had “meticulously hatched” the plan to carry out the crime and the amount they stole was high.

Ngo’s lawyer, Mr Rajan Supramaniam from Hilborne Law, asked for a “reasonable sentence”, saying Ngo was remorseful and the crime was “out of character” for him.

Nguyen, who was not represented by a lawyer, apologised for his offence.

He said he is the sole breadwinner in his family and has to support his ageing parents back home.

Judge Chua said a “strong deterrent sentence” was needed in this case to deter others from committing a similar crime. He sentenced Ngo and Nguyen to four-and-a-half years’ jail each.

They could have been jailed for between two and 14 years each.

THE PLAN

This was what the court heard earlier.

The two Vietnamese friends arrived in Singapore for a holiday on Jan 1 and went to the Marina Bay Sands (MBS) casino to gamble the next day.

After losing a “significant amount” of money, Nguyen and Ngo found out on Jan 4 that they did not have enough money to buy plane tickets home.

In need of money, Nguyen, who used to work as a packer for fruit wholesaler Loh Ee Seng Trading Company, recalled that his former employer kept cash in his office.

They decided to burgle the place and formed a plan. At around 10am on Jan 4, the pair left their room in Hotel 81 Orchid at Geylang Lorong 8, hopped into a taxi and went to a Still Road hardware store to buy the tools to carry out their crime.

They spent $316.05 on the tools, including a Bosch grinder, a crowbar, screwdrivers, an extension plug and even a small broom and dustpan. (See list above.)

After that, they went back to their hotel.

They made their way to the wholesale centre at around 8.30pm and waited until midnight to carry out their plan.

At around 12.40am on Jan 5, Ngo discovered he could break into the company, which was at Block 25 of the centre, through the roof. He also noticed he could climb up by using some cardboard boxes that were stacked nearby.

Nguyen acted as a lookout.

When he reached the roof, Ngo used a screwdriver to remove a ventilation fan so he could create an opening to enter the premises.

Once inside, he went to the office on the second storey and entered a room after forcing open a closed door with a screwdriver. That was where he spotted the large metal safe.

DPP Sivabalan said Ngo managed to cut the safe open after almost two hours.

He also used a screwdriver and hacked the safe wall before cutting another hole on an inner metal piece.

After stuffing the money into the bags, Ngo climbed out to meet Nguyen and they made their way towards West Coast Highway.

Along the way, Ngo threw the tools into a nearby rubbish bin.

They then took a taxi to MBS before taking another cab to their hotel.

THE SPENDING SPREE

The men divided their loot when they reached their room.

They then went out to have dinner and used some of the stolen money to buy a mobile phone each. They also bought their plane tickets for their trip home.

Because they had a lot of money, they left their hotel at around 5.15am on the same day and checked into two separate rooms at MBS.

They then decided to go shopping.

They splashed the cash, buying $11,838 worth of luxury items, including a Gucci sling bag, Armani Exchange jeans and Louis Vuitton belts.

THE END

The burglary was discovered at 7am, when Mr Loh Yong Kiat, 35, who is a co-owner of the company, arrived for work. He called the police.

According to an earlier report, officers from the Clementi Division acted on a lead from a taxi driver, who recalled picking up the two Vietnamese men at West Coast Highway earlier that day.

Ngo and Nguyen were arrested at MBS at around 10.30am the same day.

Cash amounting to $79,813 was found hidden in a false ceiling of Ngo’s hotel room, while another $353,240 was found hidden in different parts of Nguyen’s room.

MBS also refunded the money that the men used to book their rooms.

DPP Sivabalan said $464,467.04 was recovered.

ashaffiq@sph.com.sg

Victim: He was a good employee

His former employers were shocked when they found out Nguyen Van Nhat had returned to burgle his former workplace.

Mr Loh Yong Kiat, 35, who is a co-owner of Loh Ee Seng Trading Company, described Nguyen, 24, as a diligent worker who hardly complained.

He said yesterday: “He was very quiet and always did his job well. He did a lot of labour-intensive work such as packing items and delivering them.”

Though he was a good worker, Nguyen could not be rehired after his work permit expired because of his inability to read, Mr Loh said.

Mr Loh Yong Kiat, co-owner of the burglared Loh Ee Seng Trading Company, described former worker Nguyen as a diligent man who hardly complained.

After the incident, Mr Loh said he now makes it a point to deposit all his money in the bank.

He added: “Now I pay my suppliers with cheques instead of cash. I know I should have done it a long time ago, but before the burglary, I thought keeping money in the safe was a good idea.”

Though he does not plan to use a safe again, he is increasing the number of closed-circuit television cameras installed in the premises.

He also vets his staff carefully to avoid a similar incident.

“I trust almost all of the staff that I have now. All of them have been working for me for at least two years and I know each and everyone’s character,” said Mr Loh.

He considers himself lucky as he managed to recover most of the $500,000.

“People with bad intentions will never get their way. I’m especially grateful to the officers at Clementi Police Division for their quick investigation,” said Mr Loh.

When told about Nguyen’s and his partner Ngo Quang Phuoc’s sentences, Mr Loh said: “I hope other shop owners will take this incident as a lesson and not repeat the same mistake.”

fnawang@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on March 11, 2016.
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新加坡河的船事

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新加坡河的驳船在高峰期有3000多艘。当年的驳船业分别由印度人、福建人和潮州人垄断。这类交通与运输工具成了

他们养家活口的主要收入来源。驳船的诞生与结业,经营者的经历与生活形态,构成新加坡河历史的重要组成部分。

《联合早报·现在》今年1月25日刊登了余经仁君的《忆述驳船业兴衰》。十年风雨几番新,河边的酒店、百货商场和餐饮业顶替了旧货仓和朴素人家,驳船码头、克拉码头和罗拔申码头取代了原来的一百多个小码头。喧嚣的驳船业就这样度过了一个空前的时代。

牵动驳船业的新加坡河又名黑水河,但河水并不全然是咖啡乌般的色调,涨潮时清翠如绿茶,滂沱大雨时将奶茶般的山泥冲出大海。

我自小在新加坡河边生活,涨潮时跟同学跳入河中嬉戏,曾经在桥墩旁坐落许多个黄昏。熙熙攘攘间驳船苦力年华渐老,起重机逐步取代人力,街坊纷纷搬迁,陡然间人事全非,自是一番滋味在心头!

在国家博物馆见识了法国人用第一代相机拍摄出来的陈年旧照,原来早在1845年,新加坡河畔的货仓已经鳞次栉比。3.2公里的河流为离乡背井的先民提供生活的空间,打造了一百多年的繁华。

印度人垄断舯舡业

外行人看驳船,除了船身黝黑,由印度人操纵的船只外,就是红头船和青头船,而且习惯性地统称它们为舯舡(Tongkang)。实际上驳船分成大舟古、舯舡和舢舨,后来有些载货的船只装上”摩哆”,称为”电船”,载人的摩哆船则称为”摩哆弄”(motor launch)。

一般的大舟古、舢舨和摩哆弄业主都是华人,印度人则垄断了早期的舯舡业。舯舡承载量大,加上船身安稳,经得起风浪,许多商家都喜欢雇用,从印度尼西亚运载木柴土产到新加坡。大舟古与舢舨没有水密舱,遇到大风浪容易沉没,只适宜沿海运输(coastal craft)。

此外,”电船”是民间俚语,所安装的是柴油机而不是发电的”摩哆”。这些柴油机类似大货车的引擎,用来取代拖船与风帆。

红头船与青头船具有特别的含义。雍正年间,清朝加强船只的管制,为各省的商船和渔船定下规格,船头、船尾和桅杆用漆料涂上不同的颜色,方便辨认。自此,下南洋的帆船都油上官方指定的颜色,广东省(包括潮州)出洋的先民乘坐红头船,福建出洋的则乘坐青头船。

帆船在南中国海飘荡,海天一色,方向莫辨,于是在船头漆上鱼眼好认路回航。广府人士称这些活像公鸡头的红头船为”大眼鸡”。

先民的习俗就这样世代延续,今天新加坡河上的驳船改装成游船,船头都是青色的,表示船主是福建人。

加文纳桥”催生”驳船

驳船在阴差阳错下盛行百年。约150年前,殖民地政府决定在新加坡河上兴建加文纳桥(Cavanagh Bridge),桥面让车辆行走,特定时间将桥”吊”起来,让船只川行。可是组装之后,桥面竟然打不开。体型较大的帆船只好停在海面,卸货到驳船上,再由驳船将货物运输入河,造就了驳船业兴旺的景观。

后来蒸汽船日增,即使没兴建加文纳桥,蒸汽船一样无法驶入河内,全靠驳船来运输。

驳船业发达的年代,新加坡有约三分之一的贸易是在河上进行的。上世纪50年代的全盛时期,新加坡河的驳船多达3000多艘。

1983年,丹戎巴葛的箱运码头全面运作,河上的驳船锐减,只剩下200多艘。迁移至巴西班让后,逐渐退出卸货的行列。

不同族群分地盘

驳船业由潮州人和福建人垄断,福建地方大,行船人主要来自同安、惠安、晋江和金门。新加坡河口的吻基(驳船码头)和上游的后巴窑(罗拔申码头)是福建人的天下,中游的柴船头(李德桥)则是潮州人的落脚处。源自不同地区的驳船人士为了维护谋生的地盘,容易发生磨擦和打斗,后来大家思想都比较开明后才相安无事。

来自不同地区的族群都会设立自己的”估俚间”,也就是工人宿舍,多数设在直落亚逸、文达街、丝丝街、柴船头等靠近码头工作的地方。例如福建同安县马巷井头村的林姓村民来到新加坡,都会先到宝兴理学堂(宝兴联谊社)寄宿,金门烈屿护头村的方姓村民组织了文山(联谊)社,金门官澳的杨姓和李姓村民则成立官山社。这些估俚间本身就是”堂口”,跟其他靠码头吃饭的会社和在河边收保护费的08、24、海陆山等私会党抗衡.

驳船业主的经历

或许我从小跟驳船接触多了,无心插柳下修读船舶工程,结识了前海军军官李子长。李子长回忆起不久前往生的父亲李昭财,本来跟着四叔公跑舯舡,清晨到红灯码头外的货船载货,运送到新加坡河畔的货仓,有时则从河边的仓库运货到大船。

后来父亲自己创业,买了一艘电船。生意上轨道后,添多一艘可载12人的摩哆弄。李子长还清楚记得这两艘船的列号为SC7807和SC962A。

李昭财一家人住在丝丝街94号的官山社三楼,底下两层是估俚间。要管理好这些容易动气,说没几句就比拳头的苦力,必须比他们更强悍。李昭财就是以强悍但公平的作风来管理这群苦力,一同维护着生计。

在散货船发达的年代,李昭财一帆风顺,分得一杯羹。纵使夜夜笙歌,依旧千金散尽还复来。上世纪80年代中,集装箱船取代散货船后,驳船业一落千丈,李昭财的生意大不如前,将摩哆弄卖了。电船没人要,干脆拖到公海,心情跟相依为命多年的电船一起沉到海底。李昭财的经历,也是许多行船人的共同体验。

李子长看着驳船走入夕阳,决定加入新加坡海军。那时候父亲的驳船每天可赚取400元收入,他成为职业军人,月薪只有400元,还因此被父亲讥笑。谁知道日后海军的收入维持了一家的生计。

20余年间,新加坡河从驳船货仓发展为商业旅游,再迅速转型为中央集水区。新加坡河的流水不长,河水不深,河面不广,却像一道灌溉生命的泉源,延续着新加坡人的命脉.


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Slow bowlers could hold the key

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IN AN open World T20, with matchwinners strewn around like flowers on a tree in bloom, there is one factor that could well cast its influence over the entire tournament.

In shorter games, the pitch tends to play a relatively smaller role but I believe the propensity of the tracks to spin, or otherwise, will be the single biggest factor at the World T20.

If pitches are dry, if the ball grips and turns, and 140-150 become very good scores, it will be interesting to see how teams stack up.

India will probably benefit the most because Ravichander Ashwin is in the form of his life, and with Ravindra Jadeja, they can bank eight overs. But M.S. Dhoni will be able to call upon two or three more from Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina and, if it comes to that, can play Pawan Negi as well (though Dhoni is loathe to change too many things!).

More crucially, the batsmen will be better equipped to handle opposition slow bowling than some other teams. With Ashish Nehra and Jasprit Bumrah, and Hardik Pandya as enthusiastic back-up, India could be a force on seaming tracks as well but expecting those at the World T20 is like searching for a turner on Day 1 in New Zealand. It won’t happen.

Interestingly the other Asian teams won’t be as well placed.

We saw in the Asia Cup that Pakistan is very thin in that area with Shahid Afridi now a support bowler and Mohammad Nawaz appearing to be raw.

For Sri Lanka, Sachithra Senanayake doesn’t hold the mysteries he did and while Shehan Jayasuriya and Milinda Siriwardene can pitch in, there won’t be a lot of support for Rangana Herath who is a fine cricketer but gives his team only one skill.

Bangladesh could call upon Arafat Sunny to support Shakib al Hasan and while Mohammad Mahmudullah and Nasir Hossain are worthy support cast, their top five bowlers include four seam and swing bowlers in Al Amin Hosain, Mashrafe Murtuza, Taskin Ahmad and Mustafizur Rahman who I expect to become one of the bowlers of the tournament.

England will, strange as it might seem given their history, be reasonably well placed too.

This is due to their investment in Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid, both of whom bat reasonably well.

Add the fact that they have a seam bowling all-rounder in Ben Stokes, a back-up spinner in Joe Root and a wicket-keeper in Jos Buttler in the top six and you realise why they have a great balance to their team.

New Zealand might well be defined by the absence of Brendon McCullum but they have Mitchell Santner who can bat, as can Nathan McCullum if it comes to that, and with 2-3 seam bowling all-rounders in the top six might even be able to contemplate playing Ish Sodhi if needed.

I am not sure where Kane Williamson stands with his off-breaks but if he can provide two over support, like Root who he so closely resembles in his basket of offerings, New Zealand might be reasonably placed.

Australia is probably the team that will be affected the worst because they have just one front-line spinner in Adam Zampa, who will surprise many in this tournament.

On a good day, Glenn Maxwell can give them a few overs but Ashton Agar has bowled far too little to be considered a dangerous asset.

Given that their wicket keeper doesn’t bat in the top six, playing Agar could mean leaving out James Faulkner or Mitchell Marsh. But there is so much top order batting pedigree there that it could overcome a potential slow bowling weakness.

To some extent that is true of South Africa too but they will struggle to play Imran Tahir and Aaron Phangiso together because neither bats and with David Wiese and Chris Morris needing to play as all-rounders, they might have to choose between Morne Morkel, Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada, something they wouldn’t want to do.

The West Indies have many seam bowling, big-hitting batsmen but Samuel Badree and Suleiman Benn, their lead spinners, don’t bat and that will be a concern.

Sunil Narine will be badly missed.

Of course, the tracks might be flat and it might then come down to bat vs bat but I just have a hunch, the quality of slow bowling will occupy a lot of time at team meetings.

tabla@sph.com.sg


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Friday, March 11, 2016 – 11:28
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Football: Juve boss Allegri wary of Napoli title ambush

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Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri has warned that any slip-ups over the next 10 games could hand Napoli their first Serie A title in 26 years.

The Italian champions sit just three points ahead of Napoli ahead of a crucial meeting with giant-killers Sassuolo on Friday and Allegri says now is the time to focus.

“It’s a race against the clock, now we’re on the downhill section and it’s the most dangerous part. We have to be careful of any slip-ups,” said Allegri.

“We’ve got 10 games remaining but from Sassuolo (on Friday) to Torino (next week) a fairly big chunk of the league title will be at stake. A fifth consecutive title would be extraordinary and it remains our primary objective.” Juventus, who last won a fifth title on the trot in 1935, host Sassuolo on Friday to allow adequate rest ahead of their trip to Munich next week when the Italians will look to upset Bayern and qualify for the quarter-finals of the Champions League for the second successive year.

Allegri led Juventus to their first league and Cup double in 20 years and their first Champions League final since 2003 in what was his first season in charge but overcoming Pep Guardiola’s men after fighting their way back to level 2-2 in the last 16 first leg over a fortnight ago looks a tall order at the Allianz Arena.

With an incredible Napoli side – for whom Argentinian Gonzalo Higuain has hit 26 league goals so far – keeping Juve on their toes in Serie A, Allegri appeared to admit that the pressure of repeating their European feats of last season is becoming just a little too much.

“The Champions League remains within our grasp, but we can’t treat it as an obsession,” added the Italian. “I would sign right now for two trophies (league and Cup), but it won’t be easy because Napoli are having an extraordinary championship.” Now in his second season with the Turin giants, Allegri has recently played down reports that he has been negotiating with Chelsea with a view to taking over at Stamford Bridge next season.

With Napoli expected to account for Palermo on their trip to Sicily on Sunday, Juventus can ill afford to drop points on Friday when Sassuolo, in seventh at seven points behind Inter Milan in fifth spot, will be aiming to keep alive their faint hopes of Europa League football next season.

The visitors travel north amid reports that their coach Eusebio Di Francesco could take over from Sinisa Mihajlovic at AC Milan next season, but Di Francesco is far from cowed.

“It’s always nice to be linked to big clubs, but I believe I still have a lot of room for improvement and I feel very happy where I am,” he said. “We’ll be going to Turin in great condition and with the objective of playing our game and trying to beat Juventus.” Milan are only four points behind Inter in sixth place but Mihajlovic’s men will realistically have to win every game if they are to fulfil their objective of finishing third and giving themselves a chance of Champions League football for the first time in three seasons.

The Rossoneri are away to Chievo on Sunday, when Roma – now in third at eight points behind Juventus and nine ahead of Milan – face a potentially tricky trip to Udinese.

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Friday, March 11, 2016 – 11:29
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Stellar line-up marks SIFAS Fest

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THE prestigious SIFAS Festival of Indian Classical Music and Dance will be held between March 24 and April 10.

Organised by the Singapore Indian Fine Arts Society (SIFAS) in collaboration with Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, the festival is a much-awaited annual feature in the Singapore cultural calendar attracting an audience of over 8,000 and showcases the best talent, both international and local, in the field of Indian performing arts today.

The 14th edition of this festival will comprise five programmes at the Esplanade featuring artistes of international repute and Kala Vaibhavam, with daily performances at the SIFAS Auditorium featuring more than 50 upcoming local and regional artistes.

International artistes include Carnatic vocal artiste Sudha Ragunathan, bharatanatyam dancer Meenakshi Srinivasan and Hindustani classical vocalist Jayateerth Mevundi.

Lalgudi G.J.R. Krishnan and Sriram Parasuram, both illustrious violin players, will play a violin duet in the Carnatic and Hindustani styles and Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy are Odissi danseuses from the well-known Nrityagram school of dance in Bengaluru.

A treat is in store for dance connoisseurs as two diverse forms of Indian classical dance will be showcased at the festival. Meenakshi Srinivasan, a consummate bharatanatyam dancer with a dynamic stage presence, will present her unique interpretation of Sita, the heroine of the ancient epic Ramayana.

The audience can also expect to be enthralled by Songs Of Love And Longing, an Odissi dance presentation based on poet Jayadeva’s 12th-century romantic ballad Gita Govinda.

Danseuses Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy have researched and expanded the dance vocabulary of the Odissi dance form and have developed a style that is unique to the Nrityagram School.

The presentations at Kala Vaibhavam will be a diverse mix of classical vocal music, instrumental music and dance for the listening and viewing pleasure of critics, connoisseurs and the general public alike.

SIFAS Festival Of Indian Classical Music & Dance 2016 will be held from March 24 to April 10.

lMadhur Vani – A Musical Interlude: A Hindustani vocal recital by Jayateerth Mevundi.

Tickets: $25 (Sold Out)When: March 26, 7.30pm Where: Esplanade Recital Studio

Anahata – Mystical Sounds Of Music: A Carnatic vocal recital by Sudha Ragunathan.

Tickets: $40, $25

When: April 2, 7.30pm

Where: Esplanade Concert Hall

Sita – Daughter Of The Earth: A solo bharatanatyam recital by Meenakshi Srinivasan.

Tickets: $40, $25

When: April 3, 8pm

Where: Esplanade Theatre

Swar Samhita- A Coming Together: Violin jugalbandi by Lalgudi GJR Krishnan and Sriram Parasuram.

Tickets: $25 (Sold Out)

When: April 8, 7.30pm

Where: Esplanade Recital Studio

Hari Shringara – Songs Of Love And Longing: An Odissi dance performance by Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy.

Tickets: $30

When: April 10, 8pm

Where: Esplanade Theatre Studio

Tickets are available at SISTIC (charges apply). For online booking, log on to www.sistic.com.sg


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Friday, March 11, 2016 – 11:21
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Tennis-Forthright Murray says Sharapova should be banned

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World number two Andy Murray says Maria Sharapova should be banned after her positive test for meldonium and questioned the Russian’s use of the drug for medical purposes.

The Briton also chided his own racket manufacturer Head after the company said it would continue to support Sharapova in the wake of her admission that she had taken the banned substance.

“It’s not up to me to decide the punishment, but if you’re taking performance enhancing drugs and you fail a drugs test, you have to get suspended,” Murray told reporters at the Indian Wells tournament in Palm Springs on Thursday. “If you’re taking a prescription drug and you’re not using it for what that drug was meant for, then you don’t need it, so you’re just using it for the performance enhancing benefits that drug is giving you. And I don’t think that that’s right.”

The drug, produced in Latvia but unavailable for purchase in the United States where Sharapova is based, was only added to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) list of banned substances in January, shortly before her positive test at the Australian Open.

Manufactured for people suffering from heart problems, it can also increase blood flow and improve exercise capacity.

Sharapova, who will be provisionally suspended by the International Tennis Federation from this weekend and faces up to a four-year ban, told a news conference in Los Angeles on Monday that she had been taking the drug for 10 years.

She said she was first given it by a family doctor after she frequently became sick, had irregular electrocardiogram results, a magnesium deficiency and a family history of diabetes.

“I read that 55 athletes have failed tests for that substance since January 1,” said Murray. “You just don’t expect high-level athletes at the top of many different sports to have heart conditions.”

The highest-paid woman in sports, Sharapova has already lost support from some sponsors, with Swiss watchmaker TAG Heuer cutting ties this week, while Nike and Porsche have distanced themselves from her.

Murray said Head’s announcement that it had extended its contract with the five-times grand slam champion was “a strange stance” given the events of the last few days.

“I don’t really know what else to say on that, but that’s not something I believe,” he added. “I think at this stage it’s important really to get hold of the facts and let things play out, like more information coming out before making a decision to extend the contract like that, in my view. I personally wouldn’t have responded like that.”

(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Ian Ransom)

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Friday, March 11, 2016 – 11:25
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