March 30, 2016 9:25 AM
SINGAPORE – After recent months of clear skies, it looks like the haze is back in Singapore.
March 30, 2016 9:25 AM
SINGAPORE – After recent months of clear skies, it looks like the haze is back in Singapore.
US reality TV superstar Kim Kardashian sure knows how to throw a good party.
The 35-year-old organised a baby shower for her US model BFF Chrissy Teigen and the latter’s US singer-husband John Legend at Kardashian’s Bel-Air…
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KUALA LUMPUR – Traffic in the capital’s city centre came to a standstill for more than two hours as frustrated taxi drivers mounted an unannounced protest against ride-hailing apps Uber and GrabCar.
The move, involving nearly 100 taxi drivers, reduced the busy Jalan Bukit Bintang to a single lane, causing massive traffic jams in the city.
The cabbies have long been moaning about loss of business to the apps which allow private car owners to pick up passengers. App users say it is cheaper than hailing a taxi.
The protesting cab drivers assembled near Jalan Ampang at 10am before making their way to Jalan Bukit Bintang where they parked their vehicles.
They blocked much of the tourist-belt road in front of the Pavilion shopping centre, causing severe traffic jams in the area.
Dang Wangi OCPD Asst Comm Zainol Samah said yesterday the police had information that a protest would be held on April 4.
“Today, we were told that the protest was going to be held immediately.
“All traffic entering Jalan Bukit Bintang had to be diverted to prevent road users from being stuck in the jam,” said ACP Zainol.
He added that Dang Wangi deputy OCPD Supt Habibi Majinji went to the scene to talk to the representative of the protest group.
“At 11.45am, the police ordered them to disperse within 15 minutes or face action,” said ACP Zainol.
The leader of the group instructed the drivers to disperse at noon, but there were still a few who refused, and continued to obstruct the officers there.
The road was finally cleared at about 12.30pm.
An hour earlier, a small group of taxi drivers were seen in a standoff with dozens of policemen near the Fahrenheit 88 shopping mall.
There was a heated discussion with the police asking the drivers to leave.
When they refused, five of them, including Malaysian Taxi Driver Transformation Association deputy president Kamarudin Mohd Hussain, were arrested.
“We were there to protest against Uber and GrabCar,” Kamarudin later told The Star over the phone, while riding in a police truck.
Kamarudin was also one of the leaders of a November protest that saw more than 250 drivers marching to Parliament.
This time around, he said there was no specific organiser and that those who came were there after messages on Whatsapp or by word of mouth.
Police tow trucks were also seen towing away two taxis.
It was not the first time that the area had seen a taxi protest.
In October 2012, a similar act saw about 200 taxi drivers blocking the road after free-to-ride GoKL bus services were set up here.
Yesterday’s protest comes exactly a week after thousands of cabbies caused traffic chaos in Jakarta with a rowdy protest which saw cabs blocking a central expressway, and men setting tyres alight and jumping on vehicles that refused to join in the protest.
It was reported that drivers surrounded one taxi, forcing its terrified female passenger out onto the road with her luggage.
They, too, were protesting against the ride-hailing apps.

Singapore Airlines and SilkAir have inked a new codeshare agreement with Air China.
SIA operates 21 weekly services to Beijing while SilkAir has 14 weekly services to Chengdu, which is home to the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding (pictured).
Air China schedules 14 weekly services between Beijing and Singapore, and seven weekly services between Chengdu and the Republic.

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Star Wars fans, you can lay your hands on that cool leather jacket Han Solo wore in last year’s movie Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
US actor Harrison Ford, who played the role, is auctioning off the signed dark brown apparel…
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A small fire occurred at a Carl’s Jr outlet, located on the first floor of Marina Square mall around 6pm yesterday. No one was injured in the incident.
The Marina Square mall fire safety officers put out the fire immediately before the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) personnel arrived, said a spokesman for Marina Centre Holdings.
The cause of the fire is under investigation. Only the kitchen equipment in the restaurant was damaged. Other parts of the mall were unaffected.
Ms Chew, a patron of the mall, said she was shopping on the second floor of the mall when she detected a burning smell.
“I went down to look around and there were fire engines parked and a few fire fighters. The area was being cordoned off so I left.”
The SCDF said there were 16 fires along the Orchard Road shopping belt last year, and 19 in 2014.
veenavin@sph.com.sg
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The power to be supplied will be produced by Sembcorp’s upcoming power project in Myingyan, Mandalay.
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To cope with rapidly rising kidney failure numbers here, the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) is building its largest dialysis centre – a $12 million complex in Jurong with 24-hour dialysis and dedicated to kidney care.
The new facility, 10 times the size of regular centres, is expected to have 200 dialysis stations, and will cater to 2,000 patients a week, taking the load off the foundation’s 29 other centres, particularly those in the west, which are nearly full.
Adding a night dialysis slot enables centres to expand capacity, and also makes going for dialysis more convenient for patients with busy day jobs.
NKF is the main dialysis provider in Singapore, and nearly all its 3,800-odd patients have high blood pressure, while three-quarters have diabetes. Both conditions are on the rise here, and are also leading causes of kidney failure.
According to the latest Singapore Renal Registry Report, there were 5,521 people on dialysis in 2013, up from 5,244 the year before. It is the only option apart from a transplant, and patients must do it for life.
Apart from dialysis, the Corporation Road complex, which will likely open in phases starting next year, will also teach patients how to carry out peritoneal dialysis – a special form of dialysis they can do at home.
Plans for the centre were announced by Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam yesterday, at the opening of the NKF’s first 24-hour dialysis centre in Jurong West, which gives patients more flexibility to choose when they want treatment.
Of the yet-to-open facility, he said it “will greatly expand access to subsidised haemodialysis services to the renal patients in the Western region”.
He noted too that NKF must go beyond offering dialysis services and tackle the problem at its roots through better education and prevention programmes to curb the onset of kidney diseases.
Peritoneal dialysis, which is more convenient and just as effective as dialysis done in the centres, is not common in Singapore, according to NKF chief executive Edmund Kwok, and the new centre will try to change that.
“One of the reasons that people have shied away from it is they are not very confident that they can do it themselves,” he said.
“Those who are not very sure, you can come to the (new) centre and we will train you for as long as you need. As you get better, more independent, you will be able to do it yourself.”
A third of the funding for the new centre will come from the Sirivadhanabhakdi Foundation, which is based in Thailand and supports medical, religious and educational causes.
The centre will also focus on preventing kidney failure.
“We must redouble our efforts on preventive care,” Mr Tharman said.
“One in nine adult Singaporeans has diabetes, and the number is growing.”
linettel@sph.com.sg

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Taron Egerton’s likeability will only soar higher with this sweet dramedy.
He plays Michael “Eddie” Edwards,…
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The lift in Ang Mo Kio that malfunctioned in early March was likely to have had brakes that were “not functioning well”, investigations have found.
The authorised examiner appointed by Ang Mo Kio Town Council to inspect the lift concluded that the brakes “could not hold the lift car in a stationary position”, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) said yesterday.
The examiner, who submitted his investigation report to BCA on Thursday, said this could have been due to “jammed mechanical parts of the brakes, oily brake drum and worn-off brake liners”.
On March 7, domestic worker Evi Lisnawati, 36, fell and hurt her back after the lift shot up 17 storeys suddenly.
The machine, Lift A at Block 317, Ang Mo Kio Street 31, later stalled and trapped her for over an hour before she was rescued.
The lift was subsequently suspended from use while investigations were carried out by an authorised examiner appointed by Ang Mo Kio Town Council.
BCA said its own independent inspections concur with the examiner’s findings.
It added that Ang Mo Kio Town Council’s lift contractor has since completed the “required rectification works” and that BCA had allowed the lift to resume operation on Monday after it was certified safe for use.
As an additional safety measure, the examiner has also recommended Ang Mo Kio Town Council to engage an authorised examiner to conduct brake tests on the problem lift every quarter for the rest of this year.
This is to “verify that the brakes are functioning normally” and are “over and above” the brake tests the lift contractor is required to do during the lift’s monthly maintenance, said BCA.
The authority added that it takes a “serious view” on any non-compliance of its safety regulations, and will take enforcement action where appropriate.
It said: “Lift owners, including the town councils, are required by law to engage registered lift contractors to maintain their lifts and lift contractors should do so with due diligence.”
yeosamjo@sph.com.sg

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