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Inter airport South East Asia 2021

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Inter airport South East Asia 2021
from Wednesday, February 24, 2021 at 9:00 AM to Wednesday, February 24, 2021 at 5:00 PM

Singapore Expo

1 Expo Drive, #02-10, Singapore, 486150 Singapore

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Widow’s life savings of nearly $55k wiped out by Indian scammers via Viber call

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An elderly woman has had her life savings wiped out in less than an hour after falling prey to a scammer.

According to her daughter Labina Fariah, she is left with only $99 to her name. 

In a Facebook post on Tuesday (Jan 14), Labina spoke of the ordeal that began the day before, when her mother picked up an unknown call via the messaging app Viber.

Claiming to be a representative from DBS Bank, the male stranger told her mother that her account was being hacked, and he would require her bank card number and her Internet banking details, including her user ID and password.

Labina explained that her mother fell for the scam as she was indeed having issues with her online banking app and assumed that the caller would handle the matter. Her mother expressed her suspicion about a DBS employee calling through Viber instead of her phone number, but the scammer managed to brush it off. 

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No cancer cells detected: First major step to recovery for British boy in Singapore for experimental treatment

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SINGAPORE: No cancer cells have been detected in the blood of a British boy who is undergoing experimental treatment in Singapore for an aggressive form of leukaemia that would have killed him in months.

First test results that came in late Wednesday night (Jan 15) show that five-year-old Oscar Saxelby-Lee is now MRD (minimal residual disease) negative, which means there are no cancer cells in him. His mum Olivia told CNA it represents the first major step towards a full recovery.

It is the first time his body has been free of cancer cells since he was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in December 2018.

All forms of treatment in the UK had failed, including intensive chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. He had run out of options there.

But in November, Oscar arrived in Singapore for an experimental treatment at the National University Hospital that only one other child in the world has had.

Oscar Saxelby-Lee (1)

Oscar Saxelby-Lee after an operation at NUH on Jan 15, 2020. (Photo courtesy of Oscar’s family)

Olivia said while it was still “early days” for Oscar, the latest results are hugely promising.

“This is more promising than any other treatment so far because this is the first time he has been (MRD) negative,” she explained.

It was only on Wednesday afternoon that Oscar had gone through yet another surgery.

“We are trembling with pride. Our hearts were torn only yesterday afternoon to then groundbreaking news that patched us up again,” Olivia said on Thursday.

“We are unbelievably proud of everyone who have helped us get here and cannot thank them enough. 

“Oscar is beyond happy! He’s ecstatic that he’s one step closer to being well again.”

The five-year-old will need a bone marrow transplant for his next stage of recovery, his mum said.

“His blood is clear from leukaemia but as his marrow recovers the (cancer) cells can find a way back in so that’s why we are also transplanting him – for a long-term cure,” Olivia said.

“We are staying optimistic because it’s the only thing we’ve got left and we have faith.”

READ: British boy, 5, in Singapore for experimental treatment for “uncontrollable” cancer

OSCAR’S BATTLE

The treatment in Singapore was Oscar’s last hope. All other treatments had failed to rid Oscar of the cancer cells – he was still MRD positive even after a stem cell transplant.

The boy from Worcester, England had flown here after crowdfunding £500,000 (S$885,000) for a new form of treatment, in which immune cells from a patient’s blood is drawn and equipped with a Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR-T).

The receptor binds itself to a specific protein on the cancer cell and activates the CAR-T cells to kill the cancer cells.

This particular form of CAR-T treatment is different and more difficult because the leukaemia cells resemble Oscar’s immunity system, Associate Professor Allen Yeoh, head of paediatric oncology at NUH, explained previously.

Oscar Saxelby-Lee

Oscar is MRD negative. (Photo courtesy of Oscar’s family)

This is compassionate treatment, which means it is not even in the medical trial stage yet.

Oscar was given the new cells on Christmas Eve, and after more than three weeks of gruelling fevers, lethargy, countless injections and blood and platelet transfusions, his family has received their best possible set of results.

“(It has been) one huge rollercoaster that hoops every time things begin to go well,” Olivia said.

“We are on a journey like no other that keeps swinging curve balls but Oscar is smashing it and doing amazingly well.”

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Wrong body cremated: Funeral parlours to lock embalming rooms, tag bodies under stricter NEA rules

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SINGAPORE – Licensed funeral parlours here will be held to higher standards by the National Environment Agency (NEA) after a mix-up at a funeral home late last month resulted in a wrong body being cremated.

Operators are to abide by stricter rules, which include locking embalming rooms at all times with access limited to authorised staff, and using body identification tags bearing details such as the name and gender of the deceased.

The tightened requirements were shared in a circular NEA sent last Friday (Jan 10) to the 22 licensed funeral parlours it oversees. The agency licenses funeral parlours with embalming facilities.

The move comes less than two weeks after the body of 82-year-old Kee Kin Tiong was mistakenly cremated on Dec 30 last year ahead of his funeral rites in what is believed to be the first reported case in Singapore of such a mix-up.

The send-off for Mr Kee was done according to Christian traditions and funeral rites when he was a Taoist.

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Bus and lorry collide at junction of Braddell Road and Bishan Road, 2 taken to hospital

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SINGAPORE: Two people were taken to hospital after an accident in which a bus and a lorry collided at the junction of Braddell Road and Bishan Road on Thursday (Jan 16). 

Police and the Singapore Civil Defence Force said they were alerted to the accident, which also involved a car, at about 3.30pm. 

 

Bisha Braddel lorry Tower Transit bus accident

Photos of the accident at the junction of Bishan Road and Braddell road on Jan 16, 2020 were circulated on social media. 

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A 22-year-old man, who was a passenger in the lorry, and a 46-year-old woman, who was a bus passenger, were conscious when taken to Tan Tock Seng Hospital. 

In videos circulating on social media, a green SBS Transit bus is seen crashing into a lorry bearing the company name Lim Kim Huat Building Construction. The force drives both vehicles across the junction and the lorry hits a car that has stopped for the red light. 

Bisha Braddel lorry Tower Transit bus

Photos shared on social media showed an accident involving a bus, a lorry and a car at the junction of Braddell Road and Bishan Road on Jan 16, 2020. 

In response to CNA’s queries, SBS Transit said that its Service 93 bus was “travelling straight along Braddell Road when a lorry suddenly cut into its lane perpendicularly”. 

SBS Transit’s senior vice-president of corporate communications, Ms Tammy Tan, said a passenger was injured and taken to hospital. 

“We are trying to reach out to her to assist as best as we can,” she said. 

Lim Kim Huat Building Construction declined to comment when contacted by CNA.

Police investigations are ongoing.

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Robinsons' 'broken' Chinese on CNY decorations has people scratching their heads

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Robinsons’ Chinese New Year decor isn’t the only thing that’s red.

The department store chain was also left red-faced after netizens took to Facebook on Wednesday (Jan 15) to call it out for the nonsensical Chinese phrases it had on display as part of its festive decorations.

Photos shared on the Facebook page SinChineseSg showed two banners that appeared to be displayed at the entrance of a Robinsons store at Raffles City.

The banners read ‘Cai Bao Dao Fa’ and ‘Huan Le Dao Xiao’ which loosely translate to ‘Wealth treasure arrives prosper’ and ‘Happiness joy arrives smile’.

Confused? You’re not the only one.

The awkwardly phrased greetings which made little sense left many Mandarin-speaking netizens scratching their heads.

The problem? The wording is grammatically incorrect, “very localised” and may be difficult for foreigners to understand, a Chinese Studies lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic told Shin Min Daily News

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Desmond Tan asking fans for money? Actor warns of Instagram scammers impersonating him

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He’s one of the most popular celebrities here, but has Desmond Tan fallen on hard times, with only his loyal fans to turn to for money?

Some of his supporters have reportedly received messages from Instagram accounts claiming to be his, requesting for money transfers. 

Fact is, it isn’t really him.

Today (Jan 16), Desmond posted on his Instagram Story saying he has only one Instagram account “thedesmondtan”, and advises the public not to send money to anyone posing as him.

In his posts, he said he was alerted to the impersonators’ actions when a concerned fan dropped a message to his real Instagram account.

PHOTO: Screengrab from Instagram/ thedesmondtan

“Hello, do you need money urgently? Do you need me to transfer money to you? Or is someone using your name to scam others?” the messages from the supporter read.

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Iconic analogue flight information boards at Changi Airport to be taken down amid Terminal 2 upgrading

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SINGAPORE: There will soon be no more analogue flight information display boards at Changi Airport, after the the last two of these iconic displays are removed to make way for electronic ones starting from February. 

Also known as Solari boards, after the Italian company that first manufactured them, the displays are being replaced because it is becoming more challenging to maintain them, representatives from the Changi Airport Group told reporters on Thursday (Jan 16). 

Changi Airport ,T2, Terminal 2 departure

Changi Airport Terminal 2 will undergo a major facelift. (Photo: Jeremy Long)

The parts have become increasingly difficult to source for, they said. 

CAG said it intends to repurpose the boards, but was unable to provide more details. 

The two boards have been at the departure hall in Terminal 2 since the terminal opened in 1990 and are the only ones of their kind left at Changi Airport. The other three terminals are already equipped with electronic displays. 

Changi Airport ,T2, Terminal 2 mcdonalds

Changi Airport Terminal 2 McDonald’s. (Photo: Jeremy Long)

The board between check-in rows 9 and 10 will be decommissioned in February. The other board will follow suit as part of upgrading and expansion works at the 30-year-old terminal.

The works, which are scheduled to begin after the Chinese New Year Holidays, will also see the closure of the 16-year-old McDonald’s outlet at the Terminal 2 arrival hall. The outlet will close on Jan 31, while the nearby Starbucks will cease operations in April. 

Other restaurants in the public areas of the terminal will remain open until later phases of the upgrading works, CAG said. 

TERMINAL 2 UPGRADING AND EXPANSION

The works are meant to boost the airport’s capacity and improve passenger experience. 

When upgrading is completed in 2024, Terminal 2 will have 15,500 sq m more space, boosting the airport’s total capacity by 5 million passengers annually and allowing it to handle up to 90 million passengers a year.  

Works will start with check-in rows 9 to 12 at the departure hall, which means some airlines will be shifted to alternative check-in rows. 

Changi Airport Terminal 2 Rows 9 to 12

Terminal 2 Rows 9-12 FAST Check-In have already been closed off for renovation works that will start after Chinese New Year. (Photo: Jeremy Long)

The revamped departure hall will feature a more spacious common-use self-service check-in area with more automated check-in kiosks and bag drop machines. This is expected to increase the passenger handling capacity in the departure hall by up to 20 per cent. 

Both the departure and arrival immigration halls will be expanded to allow for more automated immigration lanes.

To handle a higher volume of bags, two new baggage belts will be added, bringing the total number of belts to 10. Two existing baggage belts will be lengthened. 

Changi Airport ,T2, Terminal 2 woman walking at immigration

A traveller walks past the baggage arrival conveyor belt at Changi Airport Terminal 2 (Photo: Jeremy Long)

The early baggage storage system, where bags that are checked in early or where transfer bags with long connection times are stored, will be upgraded from a semi-automatic system to a fully automatic one, allowing about 2,300 bags to be stored at a time. 

The upgrades will also see more greenery incorporated at various parts of the terminal – including the arrival, departure and transit areas – while the Orchid Garden at the departure transit area, which has been in place since 1997, will make way for a new garden with more plant species.

Changi artist impression Departure Transit

An artist’s impression of the Terminal 2 Departure Transit Hall. (Image: Changi Airport Group)

A duplex food and beverage area will be introduced at the north end of Terminal 2, leading to Jewel Changi Airport, while a new cluster of food kiosks will be introduced at the south end of the arrival hall. 

Meanwhile more lounge-like waiting areas, similar to those at Terminal 4, will be included at the arrival hall. 

The main contractor for the expansion works is Japanese firm Takenaka Corporation, which  constructed Terminal 4 and is responsible for other upgrading works at the airport, including a S$323 million upgrade of Terminal 1 that began in 2015. 

6B Arrival Hall - Waiting in a Garden

An artist’s impression of the Terminal 2 Arrival Hall. (Image: Changi Airport Group)

The project was designed by J H Boiffils, together with a panel of consultants led by RSP Architects Planners & Engineers. 

CAG did not say how much the upgrading of Terminal 2 would cost.

Mr Tan Lye Teck, CAG executive vice-president of airport management, noted the terminal would still be operational even as works were ongoing. 

He noted the different phases of upgrading would have to be coordinated to ensure passengers still had “a very nice passage” while travelling through Terminal 2. 

“We’re going to take care to ensure safety, avoid disruption and minimise inconvenience,” he said.

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This atas Peranakan 'cai png' is so good, you can forget about your keto diet

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Get Out!! is a bi-weekly video series where our hosts go out and discover new things around Singapore.

This week, Le En and Marcus visit Belimbing Superstar where they get their fill of authentic Peranakan cuisine from a true-blue Baba himself. 


Come noontime, the humble cai png (economic rice) stall never fails to attract a snaking queue of hangry people wanting a warm and affordable meal to get them through the rest of the day.

While requests for “less rice” or even “no rice” are common because of the low-carb diet fad, here’s one place that’ll have you begging for a second helping of grains due to how good their dishes are.

Introducing Belimbing Superstar — one of the most expensive ‘cai png’ eateries in Singapore with a Peranakan twist that has been capturing stomachs (and hearts) since August 2019.

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Police seeking man involved in case of voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous means at Pasir Panjang

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The police are looking for a man to assist with investigations into a case of voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous means reported along Pasir Panjang Road on Dec 26, 2019.

Anyone with information is requested to call the police Hotline at 1800-255-0000 or submit information online via www.police.gov.sg/iwitness.

All information will be kept strictly confidential.

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