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Napoli star held up at gunpoint, robbed in city centre

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NAPLES, Italy – Napoli striker Lorenzo Insigne was held up at gunpoint and robbed as he was driving through crime-plagued Naples over the weekend, his agent said on Monday.

Insigne was driving with his wife and two friends late on Saturday when he stopped at a traffic light. A gunman on the back of a motorbike pulled level with the car and forced the four occupants to hand over their valuables.

As he drove away, the thief asked Insigne, who comes from Naples, to dedicate a goal to him at Monday night’s Serie A clash with Fiorentina, local media reported.

Italian media said the masked robber got away with a Rolex watch, jewels and 800 euros ($872.48) in cash. “Lorenzo suffered a terrible experience and told me that it was a really bad moment,” said his agent, Antonio Ottaiano.

Despite being shaken up by the robbery, Insigne joined his teammates at a training session on Sunday and is expected to play on Monday. He has scored 11 goals in the Serie A so far this season, with his team lying second in the table.

The Italian government announced earlier this month it was sending additional troops to Naples to help fight an upsurge of violence in the city, with 12 people reported killed this year in murders linked to a mob turf war.

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Monday, February 29, 2016 – 21:11
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Man U boss Louis Van Gaal's fall during match inspires hilarious memes online

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Eighteen-year-old Marcus Rashford may have been credited for helping Manchester United defeated Arsenal 3-2 in their English Premier League match on Sunday (Feb 28), but he had to share the spotlight with his manager, Louis Van Gaal, in the aftermath.

With folder in hand, the Dutchman hilariously threw himself to the ground to make a point to the assistant referee that Arsenal was getting too many fouls.

The Internet has naturally exercised its creative juices, and have come up with numerous memes to remember the bizarre moment.

One of the pictures shows Van Gaal on his back on a bed in a room as he seems to enjoy a pole dance.

Another shows the Manchester United boss on his back with a big bear above him, a reference to the Leonardo DiCaprio film The Revenant. A number of other memes also put him in scenes from popular films, including 300 and The Matrix.

According to the Daily Mail, Van Gaal’s protest proved popular with the Old Trafford faithful, although he admitted after the match that he had been “too emotional”.

Despite becoming the latest subject of the Internet’s collective mirth, Van Gaal will surely not be too disappointed after watching his team win 3-2 to severely dent Arsenal’s title hopes. The game saw a stunning performance by teenage striker Rashford, who scored two and set up another in his debut Premier League appearance.

This is not the first football-related incident to be meme-fied by netizens. In 2012, Chelsea captain John Terry was lampooned online for changing into his full kit to celebrate even though he did not actually play in his team’s Champions League final victory over Bayern Munich. In that episode, netizens digitally edited Terry into various historical events.

seanyap@sph.com.sg

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Monday, February 29, 2016 – 17:20
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IT SHOW 2016 Price List, Brochures & Flyers – Hot Deals, Offers, Promotions & More

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Next IT Fair: IT Show 2016 10 – 13 Mar 2016 at Suntec

IT SHOW 2016 Price List, Brochures & Flyers – Hot Deals, Offers, Promotions & More

Get floor plans, show deals, promotions, price lists, flyer images and more. IT SHOW 2016 is happening from 10 – 13 Mar 2016

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Starring award-winning Hollywood actress Jane Seymour, “The Vortex” is a classic…

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Starring award-winning Hollywood actress Jane Seymour, “The Vortex” is a classic play written by the world famous British playwright Sir Noel Coward.

Book tickets with MasterCard through SISTIC at http://www.sistic.com.sg/events/cvortex0516 before 15 March to enjoy 15% off Cat 1 tickets!

#MondayMasterCardMadness

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Rare sporting hero left all-round legacy

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IN A brief eulogy last week for an unusual man, a relative, V. K. Rajah, made an unusual move.

He asked the audience to rise, not to observe the usual one minute’s silence but to join him in applauding for a minute to celebrate a life not just “well lived but fully lived”.

Dr A. Vijiaratnam, who died this month aged 94, was an unusual man “whose like you will not see again,” said Rajah.

He was not only a sports legend – the only Singaporean who represented the country in four sports (football, hockey, cricket and rugby) – but was also successful in his professional life, as well as being a humanist who extended a helping hand whenever he was asked.

“What distinguished him from many others I have met was his intellectual curiosity and his desire to find out how people were doing, how things were being done and how to make a difference,” added Rajah.

The litany of portfolios that he held in his career, from being the chief engineer of the Port of Singapore Authority (PSA) to being the first pro-chancellor of Nanyang Technological University (NTU), did not prevent him from being a family man who made a difference to many lives and who even had time to tutor his grandchildren in mathematics, said another eulogist.

There is much to laud about the man, but this is not meant to be a catalogue of the accolades he received.

Two examples suffice: In September 1980, when the University of Singapore conferred the honorary doctor of laws on him – he is believed to be the first local engineer so honoured – its registrar Lu Sinclair wrote to say it was in recognition of his contribution to the engineering profession and his distinguished service at the PSA, where he served for 17 years before heading a consultancy subsidiary.

Secondly, after he served for a decade as chairman of Tamil Murasu, then-SPH chairman Lim Chin Beng wrote in 2005 that “under his guidance, TM was transformed from a struggling vernacular paper with a dwindling circulation to one which is profitable and more reader-friendly”.

Three aspects that were key to his success bear mention. Firstly, as son Vijendran remarked, he was a results-orientated man who believed in fast action.

“His office was not layered with documents or papers as expected of an office, because he would clear all papers that came before him promptly. This was his trademark – he had a clear table.

“He made similar speed work of the bills posted home as well.”

Secondly, what he did as a centre-forward in his footballing days he also reflected in his approach to work projects.

“When I shoot, I don’t aim for a precise corner,I just hit between the posts to score,” he once said.

Former PSA operations director Chung Kek Choo, in recalling this, said: “His was a practical approach, not overly optimistic but very realistic.”

Thirdly, he believed in employing people who were better than himself so that they would introduce new ideas and new ways of doing things.

“I always believe in hiring people who know more than I. What is the point of you and your staff knowing only the same thing? I had a very good team of engineers under me at the time,” he said, in Engineered For Success, a book about his life that is due to be published.

Among those he sought to recruit for the PSA was Dileep Nair, who interned there during his engineering undergraduate days in the early 1970s.

Nair, a scholar who studied abroad, went on instead to a distinguished public service career and is now Singapore’s non-resident ambassador to Ghana.

But sports, not engineering, was Vijiaratnam’s first love. By the time he completed his engineering studies in England on a Government scholarship and returned to Singapore, he had decided there would be no more hockey for him.

In his mid-30s, when he thought he was through with the game, he was picked for the Melbourne Olympics in 1956.

Singapore National Olympic Council vice-president Dr Tan Eng Liang said: “I always found him to be extremely friendly, approachable, humble and selfless.

“To be able to represent Singapore in four sports clearly shows what an exceptional athlete he was. He’s certainly a role model for athletes today, in the way he was able to juggle sports and a successful career.”

Role model he was, but the man was more than the sum of the parts. In September 1981, the Asian Wall Street Journal, in a commentary piece by Ian Gill titled Singapore Continues Search For President, said that Vijiaratnam, then chairman of PSA subsidiary Singapore Engineering Consultancy Services, was put forward as a possible candidate, alongside the likes of Wee Chong Jin, E. W. Barker and Punch Coomaraswamy.

vijayan@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on February 29, 2016.
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Shamsul gets top job

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Former World Cup referee Shamsul Maidin has become the first Singaporean to be appointed as the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) director of referees.

The 49-year-old took over his new role from Japanese Yoshimi Ogawa earlier this year, after previously serving as Fifa referee instructor and AFC elite referee assessor.

“I am humbled by this exciting opportunity and I am relishing the chance to deliver on the strong foundation and standards established by my predecessor,” said Shamsul.

“I am very passionate about the education and development of referees in Asia and, together with the AFC member associations and stakeholders, I am confident we can continue to raise the standard of Asian referees.”

Shamsul, who became a referee in 1996 and retired in 2007, enjoyed an illustrious career which saw him officiate at the 2006 World Cup – the second Singaporean to do so after George Suppiah at the 1974 edition.

He was the only non-African referee to officiate at the 2006 African Nations Cup, and won the AFC Referee of the Year twice in 2005 and 2006.

RIGHT MAN

The AFC is convinced it has found the right man for the job, and wrote in a release on its website: “Shamsul’s wealth of experience, not only in Asia but also globally, places him as a leading expert to maintain and enhance the high standards of refereeing in Asia.


This article was first published on Feb 29, 2016.
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Pizza Hut 1-for-1 Lunch Dining Deals (Weekdays) 29 Feb – 15 Mar 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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Pizza Hut 1 for 1 lunch dining deals are BACK (11am to 5pm weekdays)

Pizza Hut 1-for-1 Lunch Dining Deals (Weekdays) 29 Feb – 15 Mar 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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Twelve Cupcakes Buy 3 Get 1 FREE 1-Day Promo 29 Feb 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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Twelve Cupcakes buy 3 get 1 FREE today, 29 Feb only

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Twelve cupcakes celebrates the Leap Day with a special Buy-3-Get-1-Free promotion

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McDonald’s New Food Icons X Nanoblock From 22 Feb – 3 Apr 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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LAUNCHING TODAY (29 Feb) @ 11AM: McDonald’s Food Icons X Nanoblock French Fries till 6 Mar

Also available: McCafé Cup (Exclusively available at McCafé outlets). Hit the link for more info

McDonald’s New Food Icons X Nanoblock From 22 Feb – 3 Apr 2016 | SINGPromos.com

What do you get, when you combine McDonald’s best-loved menu items, with a toy brand famous for nano-sized building blocks? McDonald’s Smallest Meal. No bigger than your palm, this limited edition collector’s series is available only for a limited time, and while stocks last.

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Singapore’s PAP continues to penalize critics – Amnesty International report

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SINGAPORE’S People’s Action Party (PAP) “continued to penalize government critics for exercising their right to freedom of expression,” said Amnesty International in its annual report [PDF].

“The media and human rights defenders were tightly controlled through revocation of licences and criminal charges. Judicial caning and the death penalty were retained,” it added.

Amnesty International identified four issues of concern: freedom of expression, the death penalty, cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment, and counter-terror and security.

On freedom of expression, Amnesty raised three examples.

One, the imprisonment of Amos Yee, a 16-year-old blogger, for wounding religious feelings in a video that also criticised Lee Kuan Yew. It also highlighted Singapore’s failure to adhere to its obligations under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. (See also: this, this and this.)

Two, the suspension of The Real Singapore for inciting anti-foreigner sentiments and the prosecution of its editors, Yang Kaiheng and Ai Takagi, for sedition. (See also: this.)

Three, the suspension of human rights lawyer M Ravi, “ostensibly on health grounds.”

“There were concerns this may have been politically motivated,” said Amnesty.

On the death penalty, Amnesty said: “Death sentences continued to be imposed, including as mandatory punishment for murder and drug trafficking.”

On the use of cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment, Amnesty pointed to the continued use of caning, especially as a mandatory punishment “for cases such as drug trafficking and immigration offences.”

“The Supreme Court has also ruled that caning is not unconstitutional,” Amnesty added.

On counter-terror and security, Amnesty highlighted the use of the Internal Security Act to detain without trial two individuals suspected of planning to join the Islamic State.

Analysis

During Dr Chee Soon Juan’s defamation trial in 2008, Mr Lee Kuan Yew argued that the integrity of his government was beyond doubt. He said he had received an award by Transparency International (a claim Dr Chee countered). He also said that his government was judged favourably by “IMD, World Economic Forum and a whole host of other rating agencies.”

In response, Dr Chee said:

“Good. Are you including International Commission Jurists? Are you including Human Rights Watch? Are you including Amnesty International? Are you including Committee to Project Journalists? Are you including International Federation for Free Exchange? Are you including Southeast Asia Press Alliance? Are you including World Movement for Democracy? Are you including Human Rights Defenders? Are you including World Forum for Democratisation in Asia? Are you including National Endowment for Democracy? Are you including Liberal International? Tell me you cited four, I cited you at least 10, Mr Lee. So do me a favour, let us not pick and choose at what endorsements you get because overall if you’re trying to show me that your standing in the world is that high you wouldn’t be clutching at straws.”

Dr Chee’s point was that Mr Lee Kuan Yew was being selective about the international organisations he relied on to prove his government’s integrity. Dr Chee’s point remains valid. If the PAP wants to rely on international benchmarks to emphasise its success in areas such as education, healthcare and integrity, it cannot pick and choose—or at least if it does, it must provide good reasons why some benchmarks are more reliable and relevant than others.

With human rights organisations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, the PAP has constantly brushed aside accusations of failing to respect universal human rights. It pleads a form of cultural relativism, and says that Singapore has a different culture, different needs, and its people have different priorities. Whether it is Asian values or communitarian values, some contorted ideology is always upheld as proof of Singapore’s exceptionalism—an exceptionalism that cannot be subjected to international standards, except of course, when it suits us.

In education, healthcare and freedom from corruption, then, we are exceptional because we are not an exception (from the international standards in these areas). But in human rights, we are an exception because we are exceptional (by virtue of enjoying some Frankenstein-ideology more imagined than real).

Is this a coherent explanation? Perhaps only to those who insist on their own exceptionalism.

The post Singapore’s PAP continues to penalize critics – Amnesty International report appeared first on Asian Correspondent.

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