Home Blog Page 50

The Big Read: Some firms know normalcy is not returning – the sooner everyone else realises it the better

0

SINGAPORE: A rising tide lifts all boats and Lingjack was one of the many companies that blossomed during Singapore’s industrial boom in the 70s and 80s, as the small tooling business quickly gained a foothold producing metal works for firms in the marine industry and elsewhere.

More than a generation later, the company founded by Mr Kenneth Lim’s father is an engineering conglomerate better known for its familiar Combat brand of fire extinguishers still found in many buildings today. Its business has expanded into design and engineering for the offshore industry, and its fire safety products are sold around the world.

“We’re still the only manufacturer of extinguishers to make it all in Singapore,” said Mr Lim as he looks on proudly at a full range of differently sized extinguishers, fire reels and fixtures in his Woodlands office. He now leads his father’s company as its chief executive.

READ: Singapore in ‘stable position’ in COVID-19 fight but must remain vigilant, says DPM Heng

But in recent years, his company has had to navigate choppy waters, as fluctuating oil prices, reduced global industrial production and the United States-China trade war severely hammered the maritime, oil and gas sectors.

Mr Lim said: “As a whole, (these sectors) have suffered for a number of years, but there were still pockets of growth that we could pick up on.”

And then, the COVID-19 storm hit without warning, causing further havoc. Like many others, Mr Lim found his company under siege on multiple fronts as global lockdowns, movement restrictions and a mounting recession gripped Singapore.

Lingjack’s production workers had to stay home during the circuit breaker period. It also operated a foreign worker dormitory business in its Woodlands facility that became a COVID-19 cluster when the infection tore through migrant worker communities in April.

LISTEN: Singapore’s relationship with migrant workers: It’s complicated?

READ: Singapore’s overall unemployment rate in August climbs past global financial crisis’ high

As Singapore and the rest of the world prepare to reboot their distressed economies under the shadow of COVID-19, homegrown businesses such as Lingjack have found themselves at the crossroads.

With the once-rising ride having receded at a record pace, they will have to go back to the drawing board to figure out how to survive in a new normal replete with unknowns.

In a way, Lingjack’s situation mirrors that of Singapore’s economic fortunes over the decades. Official estimates say the economy is expected to contract by up to 7 per cent this year, its worst performance since independence.

Lingjack’s production workers

Lingjack’s production workers had to stay home during the circuit breaker period. It also operated a foreign worker dormitory business in its Woodlands facility that became a COVID-19 cluster when the infection tore through migrant worker communities in April. (Photo: Ili Nadhirah Mansor/TODAY)

It was maritime trade that turned Singapore from a post-colonial backwater to a thriving entrepot. Its openness to the world has brought in investments and talent, and its hub status in aviation, finance, and infrastructure has secured its place in the world and diversified the Republic’s overall economy.

But even the best economic model is not immune to changes and challenges as a shrinking workforce, worsening global economy and now COVID-19 have resulted in structural shifts that are forcing the nation to grapple with a fundamental question: How can Singapore reposition itself in a much-changed world?

Delivering a ministerial statement in Parliament on Monday (Oct 5), Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat stressed that Singapore is now “at a critical juncture in our economic development”.

He highlighted five structural shifts that have impacted Singapore: Weakening support for globalisation, a renewed impetus for digitalisation, the rise in Asia’s economic weight, the growing importance of sustainability and the environment, and the need to raise labour productivity.

READ: Commentary: The biggest restructuring exercise facing Singapore businesses has just begun

READ: 33,100 job seekers placed into jobs, traineeships and training opportunities under SGUnited Jobs and Skills Package

The stakes are high, said Mr Heng, as he announced further plans to refresh an economic strategy based on past industry roadmaps that cover 80 per cent of the economy.

“We must take the actions now that will allow us to not just get through COVID-19, but more crucially, gain ground that will pave the way for our next lap of economic growth in the next five to 10 years,” said Mr Heng, who is also Coordinating Minister for Economic Policies.

The Industry Transformation Maps (ITMs), as these roadmaps are called, were originally designed to help various sectors cope with technological disruption, before geopolitical issues and the pandemic came along.

Four of the six ITM clusters — manufacturing, trade and connectivity, lifestyle and the built environment sector — are under greater strain than in the past. Businesses in these sectors need to pivot quickly, said experts.

As Institute of Policy Studies’ (IPS) senior research fellow Christopher Gee put it: “We have to look beyond the present and identify what are the industries that will need to be revised completely, and what areas of strength Singapore wants to keep.

READ: Commentary: This is the end of business conferences as we know it

READ: Commentary: What the Singapore tourism vouchers are really about

“Essentially, what was 10 to 20 years of change have been compressed into a couple of years. Those who will win are the ones agile enough to transform in these one to two years,” he added.

Over the past week, we visited and interviewed six enterprises which had made decisive moves to retool their businesses and find out how they are positioning themselves for the future.

INNOVATION DURING A CRISIS

Around 64 per cent of Singapore entrepreneurs have tried new business models and learnt to improve their incomes, according to a new study by Sea Insights, the policy arm of Singapore unicorn Sea Group.

The study also found that 29 per cent of entrepreneurs had increased their use of ecommerce selling, reflecting how businesses had shifted online to capture new sources of growth.

READ: Retrenchments in Singapore spike in first half of the year, surpassing SARS peak: MOM

LISTEN: Recovery, restructuring and possibly rebound? The outlook for the Singapore economy

The study, which was conducted in June, polled around 2,000 youths and nearly 100 business owners in Singapore to find out how people are changing their habits and how businesses are turning the crisis into opportunity.

Sea’s group chief economist Santitarn Sathirathai said: “One analogy we can think of is that of a car in the midst of the storm.”

“Some drivers have, on the back of COVID-19, stepped harder on the accelerator, doubling down on their existing transformations. For other drivers, they had to pivot, turning a sharp left or right to head down a new, and unexplored pathway. For some businesses, it is about accelerating existing transformation plans such as digitalisation.”

While some companies chose to reduce their cash burn and hunker down in the pandemic, those interviewed decided not to sit still, and to adjust their business models.

For Lingjack’s Mr Lim, there was no better time, than in the middle of a health crisis, to pivot his business from a fire safety company to one that also deals in technology.

People’s attitudes and the rules of business will have changed permanently even if the crisis were to end today, he said. “There is no way we will all go back to normal.”

Fortunately for Lingjack, Mr Lim had already set the ball rolling before COVID-19 struck.

In 2017, with the help of business development agency Enterprise Singapore, he invested in research which would help him automate 90 per cent of his labour-intensive production lines.

At the time, Lingjack had faced a labour crunch — his attempts to attract Singaporeans to join his company netted zero applicants.

“It was a very agonising time. We had the buyers and overseas export demand was there, but we did not have enough people to deliver the products.”

Instead of hiring more production line workers, he brought on board software and enterprise hardware engineers to aid in the transition.

Mr Lim said this kicked off a tech renaissance in his firm — it soon developed an enterprise resource planning system in-house, which made his operations 60 per cent more efficient in terms of man-hours.

This was done using internet-enabled devices and applications to help monitor production and the maintenance of firefighting equipment.

With remote work becoming the norm in COVID-19, Mr Lim said his enterprise solutions have attracted much interest from other firms interested in streamlining their operations too.

READ: Emerging Stronger Taskforce will identify global risks, seize economic opportunities for Singapore: Desmond Lee

READ: Commentary: Soon you may be competing with talent globally. The Fortitude Budget is a wake-up call

“Since our accounting, procurement and delivery work could be digitalised and handled over the internet, it meant we could do nearly all our work off-site … which turned out to really help us during the circuit breaker,” said Mr Lim.

He is now seeking to make industry technological solutions a core part of Lingjack’s business model, using the downtime during the pandemic to prepare marketing pitches and demonstration kits for its technologies.

Just like Lingjack, local start-up Mdesign Solutions also charted a new path during COVID-19, moving from being a design consulting firm for external clients to becoming a full-fledged manufacturer of its own product.

It was COVID-19 that gave them this opportunity, said co-founders Cheong Siah Chong and Jean-Luc Fringeli.

When surgical masks were in short supply back in February, the firm came up with the idea of a reusable respirator, tapping their past experience designing a snorkeling mask for another project.

Mdesign Solutions

Local start-up Mdesign Solutions also charted a new path during COVID-19, moving from being a design consulting firm for external clients to becoming a full-fledged manufacturer of its own product. (Photo: Nuria Ling/TODAY)

Called Gill Mask, the firm went through multiple prototypes before coming up with a cartridge-based design that allowed less surgical mask material to be used each time the mask was worn.

But its greatest challenge was not product design, which it had expertise in. Rather, what was new to them was owning, producing and marketing the final product on their own, something the company had not done before.

Mr Cheong said: “We had to be open-minded. We had partners whom we had a relationship with as a supplier, but we had to tweak our whole relationship with them because they had to be co-investors in this product. We had a lot to learn.”

In the midst of COVID-19, they created a new standalone company Gill Labs, hired new staff and fast-tracked design and production, shipping its first batch of masks less than a month after they came up with the idea in February.

In comparison, it typically takes up to a year to create a product of this sort, said Mr Fringeli.

The team has sold around 300,000 units of the Gill Mask, 85 per cent of which is exported to other countries.

READ: Commentary: Singapore’s almost in our new normal. Don’t be the dud who jeopardises that

GROWING A BUSINESS AMID COVID-19

Mr Alvin Tan, founder of The Mind Cafe, described how his business started to decline when his young customers shifted away from the idea of cafes, which meant that he had to transform his business strategy to target corporate clients some time after the cafe was founded in 2005.

“Due to various challenges along the way and the ever-changing retail landscape, we have had to pivot our business model many times,” said Mr Tan.

Then, the pandemic affected cafe operations in the most severe way, since safe-distancing regulations heavily restricted large, prolonged gatherings in food and beverage establishments, especially ones that involved people interacting with each other over board games.

So, he transformed the business yet again by setting up a shop on online marketplace Shopee to sell board games.

But as a result of the move, sales of board games have surged since the pandemic began — Mind Cafe saw a tenfold increase of sales for the popular board game Monopoly in the first few weeks of the circuit breaker alone.

Instead of retrenching staff or downsizing his business, Mr Tan bucked the general trend facing companies: He had to hire extra hands to help manage its online product listings and to coordinate with the Shopee team on its marketing and promotional strategy.

“My team and I have decided to adapt as best as we can given the circumstances,” said Mr Tan.

While most businesses are trying out new solutions during the pandemic, a minority — 36 per cent according to Sea’s study — have not.

Dr Sathirathai said it is not uncommon to see entrepreneurs “playing defence” during a crisis situation so that the business can survive.

However, as they overcome the initial shock, some entrepreneurs will start to rethink their businesses, and may also face frictions that prevent them from adjusting, he added.

“A lack of digital skills is the most binding constraint for Singapore youths, including for entrepreneurs … Funding is also a key challenge for many entrepreneurs, with more than 20 per cent (of respondents) highlighting that they faced cash flow problems during the pandemic,” said the economist.

READ: Commentary: The future economy has arrived. It’s mostly digital and contact-free

READ: Commentary: Singapore’s Sea is world’s best performing stock. And it can do better

HOW SINGAPORE CAN TRANSFORM

While structural changes — especially of the digital kind — are inevitable, everyone from top to bottom in a company must be persuaded to come on board for the much-needed transformation to succeed.

Ms Evelyn Teo, group head of marketing at nutrition supplement retailer ONI Global, said one of the learning points from its transformation journey from a brick-and-mortar company to an ecommerce retailer was that resistance from any one department in the company could hamper the transformation process.

Ms Selena Ling, OCBC head of treasury research and strategy, said the realisation by businesses, government agencies and Singaporeans in general that much can be done online or digitally is the silver lining in the pandemic.

Among the chief priorities laid out by Mr Heng in his ministerial statement is the need to remake Singapore as a Global-Asia node of technology and innovation, whereby new ideas are born and nurtured into globally competitive enterprises.

He also highlighted how investing in economic resilience and environmental sustainability could be possible growth engines for the future economy.

Such moves are needed given the significant structural changes affecting Singapore, said Mr Heng, such as the weakening support for globalisation today.

READ: Commentary: The rise of the digital economy and tech-driven inequality

READ: Commentary: The brewing discontent with trade and one step to restoring faith in globalisation

For businesses, this means having to “de-risk” supply chains that have been hampered by geopolitics and the ongoing trade frictions between the US and China, said those interviewed.

It also means finding opportunities in this increasingly bifurcated world – the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, for example, could deepen regional supply chains and benefit from spillover effects of the global conflict.

Asked about these difficulties, Mdesign’s Mr Cheong said finding the right suppliers to partner for the Gill Masks was a challenge. They also had to rely on local universities and polytechnics to help produce the early prototypes needed.

However, it was also due to these trade tensions that the Gill Masks became a real proposition in the first place. The idea for a Singapore-designed respirator came about due to the global shortage of masks and the export restrictions when the pandemic hit, said its creators.

With governments imposing lockdowns and movement restrictions due to COVID-19, the pandemic has severely impacted industries that depend on the free movement of people, such as the tourism, transport and the meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions (MICE) sector.

Much attention has been placed on the tourism and aviation sectors, but businesses interviewed said the damage to the MICE industry also has a significant knock-on effect on innovation and international expansion plans in the long term.

READ: Digital venues and virtual booths: How hybrid MICE events can be piloted

Lingjack’s Mr Lim cited how he had intended to exhibit his industrial solutions at the Industrial Transformation Asia-Pacific event later this month, which is now a virtual event.

Enterprising companies such as his also rely on these conferences as springboards to the global market and to showcase their prowess, whereas those in bigger countries rely more on their track records in their domestic markets.

“We only have a small market (in Singapore). We aren’t like the tech companies in China or Silicon Valley who can simply point to their (domestic) success if they want to expand elsewhere,” said Mr Lim.

Another key structural shift is the rise in Asia’s economic weight. By 2030, South-east Asia could become the world’s fourth-biggest economy after China, the US and Europe.

When asked how such a grand vision of a Global-Asia node can succeed, Ms Ling said it is important for Singapore to achieve a first-mover advantage against its rivals.

“(There must be) policy adaptability, business innovation, worker agility and skills nimbleness, in addition to increased connectivity and openness to capital, talent and ideas,” she added, noting that the concept had been mooted in previous Budgets.

In his speech, Mr Heng also underscored the potential for the green sector to be “a growth industry in its own right” that can power Singapore’s economy.

This need arises from a growing shift towards industries that are resilient in the face of future crises, since COVID-19 is unlikely to be the last.

AgriProtein

AgriProtein’s chief operating officer Ray Deidrick told TODAY that the company picked Singapore — despite the absence of a large agriculture industry here — due to its ability to attract a diverse and high quality technical team that can support the deployment of the firm’s technology globally. (Photo: AgriProtein)

He highlighted how one of the world’s leading insect protein companies,  AgriProtein, decided to set up its global research and development centre in Singapore to create sustainable animal feed solutions.

Its chief operating officer Ray Deidrick said AgriProtein picked Singapore — despite the absence of a large agriculture industry here — due to its ability to attract a diverse and high quality technical team that can support the deployment of the firm’s technology globally.

Its centre hires 21 full-time scientists and engineers, as well as four interns as part of an SGUnited traineeship programme.

“The ability to partner with local universities as well as government agencies in the development of both people and the technology is also a positive aspect of being here. We believe that Singapore’s ‘30 for 30’ vision is a good match for stimulating innovative thinking for new solutions — in which we believe AgriProtein has a big role to play,” he said.

READ: Commentary: Clean meat – the next big thing in Singapore’s push towards agriculture?

The 30 by 30 goal is Singapore’s push to produce 30 per cent of its nutritional needs locally by 2030, an increase from 10 per cent today.

RELOOKING FUNDAMENTALS

The unprecedented crisis has meant policymakers, including those in Singapore, questioning the fundamentals and challenging their assumptions.

After decades of pursuing a diversified economy, could Singapore — facing structural limitations including the severely impeded flow of capital and human resources — instead focus on its competitive advantages and specialise, just as how Hong Kong’s economy is built primarily on trade and finance industries?

It potentially could, said Mr Gee, arguing that there should be some reckoning as to how certain diminished industry sectors, such as the marine and offshore sector and less productive industries such as real estate, can be cast aside in the new normal.

For example, the marine and offshore sector has not only faced economic headwinds in recent years but is also in dire straits due to its heavy reliance on low-skilled foreign workers.

Mr Gee wondered if this particular industry could pivot towards something greener, such as producing offshore wind turbines rather than offshore oil rigs.

“It has been a key pillar for Singapore’s growth in the past. But going forward, how does it fit into the main priorities for the country right now?” said Mr Gee.

However, a more specialised economy entails greater volatility and risks. After all, it was Singapore’s diversified economic structure that had given it resilience during the pandemic, Mr Heng had noted in his ministerial statement.

“No one industry accounts for much more than 20 per cent of our gross domestic product, so we do not put all our eggs in one basket,” he said.

READ: Commentary: Forces of climate action are reshaping finance in Singapore and around the world

WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN FOR THE SINGAPORE WORKER

As businesses and industries undergo structural shifts, it is also imperative for the workforce to evolve in step with the transformation, or it would end up as a bottleneck for Singapore’s aspirations, said analysts.

Upgrading skills and raising productivity is also paramount since Singapore faces a slowing resident labour force growth in the years ahead, on top of new pressures to recalibrate the Republic’s workforce mix of locals and foreigners.

“Future economic growth will come from raising productivity across the economy,” said Mr Heng.

The goal towards upgrading skills and raising productivity is already part of the existing ITMs.

READ: Commentary: When Singapore homes become workspaces – huge changes in the house and beyond

READ: IN FOCUS: The wage debate – how to lift the salaries of those earning the least?

But the recent job situation report from the Manpower Ministry showed a large mismatch between expectations and skills. There were 117,500 job and training opportunities at the end of August, but only 33,100 jobseekers had been placed in these positions.

Some chalked it up to an unwillingness to accept unfamiliar roles or lower salaries, while other analysts said it could indicate that people are still in denial of the stark economic reality today.

Dr Sathirathai said Singapore workers first need important soft skills, such as critical thinking and creativity, in order to carve out new paths in the changed environment.

“They need empathy and leadership skills to carry their teams forward with them. They need a growth mindset and resilience, so they can experiment and constantly improve themselves in a world filled with more unknowns than ever before,” he said.

Sea’s study found a correlation between possessing digital literacy skills and being able to cope with the new ways of work and study that have emerged due to COVID-19. Around 76 per cent of youths polled who lacked digital skills also struggled with remote working.

Nevertheless, despite the glut in training and reskilling opportunities, well-performing local businesses must continue to lead the way in providing such opportunities for the rest of the industry, said experts.

Local robotics company PBA Robotics, for example, has been running a training academy for non-employees and people outside the industry since 2017. It has trained more than 700 people in robotics, automation and digital manufacturing skills.

During the COVID-19 crisis, the academy is also part of the SGUnited Mid-Career Pathways Programme to provide mid-career individuals with traineeships and training opportunities.

PBA Robotics Amrin Amin

Local robotics company PBA Robotics has been running a training academy for non-employees and people outside the industry since 2017. It has trained more than 700 people in robotics, automation and digital manufacturing skills. (Photo: Ili Nadhirah Mansor/TODAY)

PBA Robotics strategy director Amrin Amin, a former Member of Parliament, said the academy’s graduates could also come from PBA’s competitors, but the company does not mind.

“We believe that Singapore needs an ecosystem. No man is an island, so the more people who understand technology and robotics, the easier it is for us to find talented engineers and design professionals too.”

For Singapore’s ambitions to be a Global-Asia innovation node to come to fruition, Mr Amrin believes that it starts with people having the right skills, the drive to challenge existing norms, and the understanding that technology is meant to improve lives rather than replacing livelihoods.

“The reality is that there’s a shortage of manpower. We’re recalibrating our foreign manpower workforce, but we also have to accept that Singapore is a small country and our birth rates are not exactly something to shout about,” he said.

Robots are one solution to meeting manpower needs for critical functions, such as cleaning and medical roles, said Mr Amrin.

In a different example of the big telcos, these large industry players should not think of themselves as traditional telecommunications service providers, but as “digital champions” in the changed landscape too, said Mr Gee.

THE GREAT BIG HOPE, BUT VACCINE IS NO PANACEA

Instead of waiting for the uncertain arrival of a viable vaccine, it is vital that Singapore has a headstart in industry and business transformation, experts said.

Mr Gee said: “If you just say that you are hoping for a vaccine and everything will go back to normal after that, it’s just harkening to the past. It’s saying that you want to protect the old business model, and that everything will be fine. In reality, that is unlikely to be true.”

Sea’s Dr Sathirathai said that the reality could well be an extended “new abnormal”, in which there is a gradual reopening of the economy, safe distancing measures continue to apply, but a vaccine is not yet available.

“Uncertainty about the duration of this period means it may not be optimal to just ‘wait it out’. And when societies have the pandemic under control, the world that awaits us will be different from the pre-COVID-19 era,” he said.

Hence, while it is understandable that businesses may be hard pressed to invest more in digital transformation while in a crisis, not doing so will hurt more in the long run, said Lingjack’s Mr Lim.

Mr Amrin agreed that the faster companies adapt, the better prepared they will be for a future crisis.

“Just looking at cloud computing, for instance, this COVID-19 crisis has shown that companies that did not invest in remote working and did not prepare their staff to have access to documents remotely, they suffered a great deal. Those better prepared could function close to normal, and that is going to be the story of tech,” he said.

Even if an antidote to COVID-19 could be found, infectious diseases expert Leong Hoe Nam was sceptical that it would mark the true end to the pandemic, especially since he expects there to be logistical issues for a number of years.

Besides the sheer volume of vaccines needed to be transported around the globe, it will also be a mammoth task since COVID-19 vaccines will likely require extensive cold chain logistics. Early vaccine candidates appear to need storage at sub-zero temperatures, said Dr Leong.

LISTEN: The COVID-19 vaccine will be the biggest product launch in history. Can we pull it off?

Some vaccines also seem to require two doses to complete the vaccination, which doubles the challenge, he said. Many people could end up reluctant to be vaccinated for COVID-19 due to unfounded fears over its side effects.

“Even if we have a vaccine, COVID-19 will be a virus with us for the rest of our lives. We will never be able to vaccinate everyone and COVID-19 will probably circulate continuously for some time, just like many other viruses,” he said.

For Singapore companies and workers, that leaves them with little choice but to swim with the tide brought upon by a pandemic-imposed new order, rather than continue to resist it.

For more news like this, visit todayonline.com

Source link

Singapore’s foray into space: Boldly going where no little red dot has gone before

0

SINGAPORE: Over the past four years, Singapore-based start-up Transcelestial has made a device called Centauri, about the size of a shoe box. Its aim: To provide internet connectivity that is around 1,000 times faster, or more, than now.

It just needs to connect to a satellite using laser communications — no, make that a global satellite network the company wants to put into space.

Working from home at the speed of light, however, “isn’t even scratching the surface of the capability” of laser-linked satellites, says Transcelestial co-founder Rohit Jha.

He is looking into connecting “roughly three and a half billion people” — about half the world who have no internet connectivity or have “very basic 2G-level phone services”.

“All you have to do is position a satellite above (them), drop a laser link, and you can power high-bandwidth internet to everyone,” he tells the programme Why It Matters.

Why It Matters host Joshua Lim with Transcelestial co-founder Rohit Jha. Centauri is mounted behind.

Why It Matters host Joshua Lim speaking to Rohit Jha. Behind them, Centauri is mounted on an office pole.

Transcelestial is still doing research and development for its global space network, and eyeing a roll-out by the end of 2024.

The start-up is not alone in aiming high. There are more than 30 firms and over 1,000 people in Singapore’s budding space industry.

And the effort they are putting into space technology is giving the nation a larger stake in the space race than many people may think.

Since 2004, investors have put US$135 billion (S$183 billion) into the global space sector. Singapore, though a little red dot, accounts for 7 per cent of the global share.

By 2040, the global space industry could generate revenue of US$1.1 trillion, according to Morgan Stanley estimates. It is a race for big money, even as Singapore’s foray into space could help to solve world problems too.

WATCH: Singapore’s ‘space force’: Entrepreneurs blasting their way into outer space (3:58)

‘LOW-HANGING FRUIT’

For space superpowers and private companies with deep pockets, going into space also means attempting missions to the Moon and beyond.

But that is not the kind of breakthrough that Singapore Space and Technology Association president Jonathan Hung thinks the Republic needs.

Size is a consideration here — the Kennedy Space Centre, where such missions blast off in the United States, occupies a site that is 80 per cent of Singapore’s land area.

“We’ve got to pick and choose what we want to do. Right now, Singapore’s play is very much within the satellite domain. Now, satellites can do quite a lot. Specifically, we cover telecommunications. We also cover advanced navigation,” says Hung.

These are some of the “low-hanging fruit” he believes should not be underestimated. “There are good jobs. We can create … advanced manufacturing activities. All these things will help regenerate and spur the economy on.”

Singapore Space and Technology Association president Jonathan Hung speaks to Why It Matters.

Jonathan Hung has been wooing government players, research foundations and international partners for the past 14 years to make Singapore a bona fide space hub.

Without satellites providing location tracking, smartphone apps that people take for granted, like ride-hailing services and Google Maps, would stop working. There are now more than 2,500 satellites orbiting the earth, and experts say there will be more.

These go as far as 35,000 kilometres away, which is the orbital altitude of geosynchronous satellites transmitting television and other signals to the ground. There are also satellites orbiting at lower levels.

Transcelestial, for example, plans to put its satellites at around 1,000 km above ground, which is a reason its signals would be faster — taking “less than five milliseconds” instead of a delay of “almost a second”, says Jha.

Another benefit of its satellite technology, especially to a city like Singapore, could be the cheaper and thus faster roll-out of 5G.

“If you’re building fibre networks, a kilometre of fibre is roughly around US$100,000 to US$150,000 … Our device usually comes in at one-tenth of that price,” cites Jha.

Transcelestial says its Centauri device can help roll out 5G more affordably and faster than fibre.

Centauri up close.

EYE IN THE SKY

Satellite products and services are driving more than half of space-related commercial activities worldwide. In Singapore, the first commercial remote sensing satellite built here — called TeLEOS-1 — was launched in 2015 by Singapore Technologies (ST) Electronics.

The satellite gave the Republic an eye in the sky to see what was going in the region, with geospatial analysts studying its pictures to provide insights for organisations willing to pay for them.

READ: ST Engineering, DSO joint venture to offer data analytics based on satellite imagery

For example, satellite imagery can give “a picture of how the oil volumes change in the various oil storage tanks around the world”, cites geospatial solutions architect Leow Hua Sheng from ST Engineering Geo-Insights.

Within Singapore, TeLEOS-1 can capture images of Pulau Bukom’s oil storage facilities, which have tanks with floating roofs that move up and down depending on the volume of oil.

The satellite TeLEOS-1 can capture images of Pulau Bukom’s oil storage facilities.

A full tank has hardly any inner shadow; an empty tank’s inner shadow is about the same length as the outer shadow. (Source: ST Engineering Geo-Insights)

Such information can be fed into a model to “make a more accurate prediction” about oil prices, says Leow.

The satellite has also been tasked with capturing images of vessels in Singapore’s Western Anchorage, as “we know that certain vessels would participate in illegal activities, like illegal oil bunkering, illegal ship-to-ship transhipments, human trafficking or illegal smuggling of goods”.

Then there was the earthquake and tsunami that hit Palu, Indonesia, in 2018. The satellite’s images revealed the extent of the damage.

“If there were any road networks that were affected, if there were any buildings that collapsed, we were able to identify (them),” recalls Leow. “We could … tell (the authorities) where they should assign their search and rescue.”

Image of Palu captured by the satellite TeLEOS-1 five days after the first tremors hit the city.

Image of Palu captured five days after the first tremors.

There are just two problems with TeLEOS-1: It cannot see through clouds, and is blind at night.

So engineers are putting together something with a more powerful vision: TeLEOS-2, which is now undergoing testing. It will carry radar that can capture images day or night, and no matter what the weather condition.

But it may be a couple of years before the satellite is launched.

A team of 70 engineers took five years to develop TeLEOS-1, considering the space environment a satellite must operate in “compared to our everyday electronics”, as systems engineer Tan Chek Wu puts it.

For example, it alternates between heat and cold “14 to 15 times a day” in orbit, cites Tan, who is with ST Engineering’s satellite systems. It also travels at “more than 7 km per second” — even airplane speeds do not come close.

Structural models of the ST Engineering satellite, TeLEOS-2, being built for testing.

Structural models of the satellite being built for testing.

And to ensure that a satellite can “survive the vibrations of the journey” on a rocket launched into space, his team must “put it on a big shaker” first.

NANOSATELLITES AND 18-METRE ROCKETS

While the TeLEOS-1 is a 400-kg satellite, former defence engineer Ng Zhen Ning thinks the start-up he co-founded in 2017, NuSpace, has a winning edge with satellites weighing less than 10 kg.

These nanosatellites can do almost anything conventional satellites can, like monitoring weather conditions or tracking internet data.

“It’s all thanks to miniaturisation of technology,” says Ng, citing the mobile phone as an example. “That has shrunk to the size of an iPhone. The same thing has happened for nanosatellites.”

There may be a vast expanse of space, but budgets are limited. “Building such satellites is roughly 50 times cheaper,” points out the 30-year-old, who expects the cost to go down further, together with the mass manufacturing of satellites.

“We’re working with contract manufacturers to figure out how we can streamline the entire assembly process. And hopefully by 2024, we should be able to have this assembly line here in Singapore.”

NuSpace's satellites each weigh up to 4.5 kg.

NuSpace’s satellites each weigh up to 4.5 kg.

Small satellites have some downsides, however. Big satellites get priority on rockets because they take up most of the space. So if their production schedules are delayed, then everyone else must wait.

Rocket makers are now coming up with smaller spacecraft so small satellites can have a dedicated ride to space. In Singapore, 29-year-old Simon Gwozdz is looking into this, starting with a research rocket as a prototype for something more powerful.

His dream rocket would be 18 metres high, or six storeys. This would still be six times smaller than some of the largest rockets ever made, as high as 110 metres.

His grander plan, however, is to launch rockets from locations nearer to Singapore.

“Being close to the equator is very, very helpful in launching a rocket. It can go into any kind of orbit. (It) means you can get into any kind of market niche,” says the founder of Equatorial Space Systems.

WATCH: Inside Singapore’s quest to outer space — the full episode (22:36)

Compared with the polar regions, an equatorial launch would also save fuel, as the surface at the equator moves faster, giving a rocket an extra push.

“We don’t have much land in Singapore … but there’s a lot of sea. And sea launching has also been done for a number of years,” notes Gwozdz.

“All you have to do is take a barge, retrofit it a little bit, install some extra equipment, and you can use it.”

The ideal location to him would be the Indian Ocean, “because we won’t be overflying anybody’s territory. He is also looking at the South China Sea, “not very far from the coastline of Johor”.

“We’re currently exploring the possibility of conducting launch operations from that site,” he says, while noting that co-ordination with Malaysia and also Indonesia is “absolutely necessary” in any rocket launch.

His research rockets won't reach a full orbit in space, but Simon Gwozdz is focused on the horizon.

His research rockets will not reach a full orbit in space, but Simon Gwozdz is focused on the horizon.

He thinks it is worth investing in sending a rocket to space, because “in 20 years’ time, a country with no sovereign launch capability will be … like a country that doesn’t have its own airline”.

“Why should we invest in pretty (much) anything, in Changi Airport in the first place?” he adds. “Space is becoming a ground for doing business, on top of the exploration of more lofty ideas of course.”

Watch more episodes of Why It Matters here.

Source link

With clubbing off the table, Zouk is turning its dance floor into spin studio by day, cinema by night

0

[ad_1]

Zouk nightclub will be transforming its dance floor into a spin studio by day and cinema by night, as it pivots to stay afloat with clubbing off the cards for the foreseeable future.

Zouk Group’s chief executive Andrew Li told The Sunday Times that the tie-up with spin studio Absolute Cycle will allow the club to better utilise its space, and help its partner cater to excess demand as safe distancing rules have forced fitness studios to reduce their capacity.

Zouk can accommodate 50 bikes across two floors, Mr Li said, adding that classes will run seven days a week, starting tomorrow. “We have all this space, and the sound system, lighting and smoke machines make for the perfect setting.”

The club is also awaiting final approval to start screening films, with plans to offer themed movie nights four times a week.

“We can set up spaced-out tables of up to five and decorate the club to match the theme of the month. We’re also working on food programming to complement the movie experience,” Mr Li said.

[ad_2]

Source link

Catch life-sized dinosaurs along new cycling track from East Coast Park to Changi Airport

0

[ad_1]

A new path connecting Changi Airport and East Coast Park is now open, allowing visitors to cycle or jog to the airport for the first time.

The main attraction along this 3.5-km route is a permanent outdoor display of more than 20 dinosaur models – from a towering Tyrannosaurus Rex to a trio of velociraptors.

New facilities are also available at pit stops; bicycle rental, pay-per-use showers, washing bay, and a new cafe.

Changi Airport Group (CAG) said on Sunday (Oct 11) that the new link will offer an alternative route to get to the airport and a new recreational option for Singaporeans.
Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Transport Baey Yam Keng (in red) at the opening of the Changi Airport Connector. PHOTO: The Straits Times / Lim YaohuiWith the opening of the Changi Airport Connector, the airport is now connected to the larger Park Connector Network in the east, to places like Changi Beach Park and Bedok Reservoir.

[ad_2]

Source link

New 3.5km path linking Changi Airport and East Coast Park opens, featuring dinosaur exhibits

0

SINGAPORE: Here’s another one to add to your list of day trips – 22 “life-sized” dinosaur models along the Changi Airport Connector, a new 3.5km path that links the airport to East Coast Park.

The cycling and walking path, which starts at Terminal 2, opened on Sunday (Oct 11). It runs parallel to offices providing ground handling services, Terminal 4 and Tanah Merah Country Club.

The Changi Jurassic Mile – a permanent outdoor display of 22 dinosaurs from nine species – is located between the Terminal 4 pit stop and the entrance to East Coast Park.

dinosaur exhibit

The Changi Jurassic Mile near Terminal 4 is housed within the 3.5km Changi Airport Connector linking the airport and East Coast Park. (Photo: Hanidah Amin)

Information panels have been put up to educate visitors about these prehistoric animals along the 1km path, and speakers playing safari-themed music add to the experience.

The park connector will make it possible for people working at the airport to cycle to their office, as well as give “a new way of entering the cities” when travel reopens, Changi Airport Group’s managing director for airport operations management Jayson Goh said.

“Hopefully this whole project will help inject a new energy for the Changi Airport experience and continue to strengthen Singapore’s offering as an air hub,” he added.

info panels dinosaurs

Information panels describing the “life-sized” dinosaurs on display along the Changi Jurassic Mile. (Photo: Rachel Phua). 

READ: Air travel bubbles, more green lanes part of plans for Singapore to ‘revive’ Changi Air Hub amid COVID-19: Ong Ye Kung​​​​​​​

The opening of the connector was pushed back “by a couple of months” due to the pandemic.

“We don’t want people to worry about coming down to this place while COVID is still going on,” Mr Goh said.

ong ye kung dinosaur

Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung (middle) at the launch of the Changi Airport Connector. (Photo: Hanidah Amin) 

READ: Reviving Singapore’s air hub safely is transport ministry’s ‘top and immediate priority’

Between Oct 16 and Jan 3, visitors will have to reserve a slot on Changi PlayPass to visit the Jurassic Mile on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays between 9am and midnight due to safe distancing concerns. Capacity has been capped at “a few hundred”, a Changi Airport Group spokesperson said. 

Visitors will be admitted every 30 minutes, and are allowed to stay for up to one hour within the exhibit. Bookings are not required for weekday visits.

Next to Terminal 2 is a place called Hub & Spoke, which has a colonial-themed cafe, a bicycle store run by GoCycling and pay-per-use shower facilities.

cycling shop

A cycling shop ran by offering bicycle rentals and repair services at HUB & SPOKE. (Photo: Hanidah Amin)

Visitors who want to cycle from the airport to the park can rent their bicycles from the store and return them at any of GoCycling’s other nine outlets around Singapore, including one at East Coast Park. The shop also sells bicycle equipment and offers bicycle repair services.

Hub & Spoke also provides cyclists with free bicycle parking – there are 80 racks available – and bicycle lockers for S$5 a day, up to 10 days each time.

Koh Zhen Hao, GoCycling’s rental team head, said his company plans to offer guided cycling tours to tourists to East Coast Park and the city once leisure travel resumes.

Source link

'Every day I pray that I can see them soon': Malaysian man who could only see his family across Johor Strait

0

[ad_1]

By mid-September, homesickness and depression was eating away at Malaysian Mohd Izwan Sarip.

The 32-year-old, who works in Singapore, had been away from his wife and children since March, when Malaysia decided to close its borders to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

“When I was told to come to Singapore I had only brought two pairs of underwear, two shirts, and two pants — I thought this was only for a few weeks,” said the warehouse assistant for online supermarket RedMart.

“My family means so much to me. I am so close to my four-year-old (daughter) and when I left, my toddler had only just started to crawl, and now she’s already 18 months,” he told The Straits Times.

Mr Izwan’s brother-in-law, Mr Muhamad Faiz Roseman, who also works in Singapore for the Automobile Association of Singapore, hatched an idea to cheer him up.

Last Monday (Oct 5), Mr Faiz asked their wives to take their children and drive to Johor’s border facing Woodlands while he and Mr Izwan went to the jetty at Woodlands Waterfront Park so they could catch a glimpse of each other across the Johor Strait.

[ad_2]

Source link

Vaccine for fatal rabbit disease available in Singapore

0

SINGAPORE: A vaccine for the fatal and highly contagious rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) is now available in Singapore.

Detected in Singapore last month, RHD has a fatality rate of between 90 and 100 per cent. However, it is only transmitted between rabbits and does not affect humans or other animal species.

Up to 11 rabbits were affected in the cluster identified in Singapore last month, at least eight of which have died. No new cases have been detected since Sep 17, said the National Parks Board (NParks) on Saturday (Oct 10) in response to CNA queries.

The vaccine, FILAVAC VHD K, was made available to veterinarians in Singapore on Friday, veterinary health company Ceva Santé Animale said.

Vaccination at select veterinary clinics cost between S$76 and S$85.

READ: Fatal disease affecting rabbits detected in Singapore: AVS

The vaccine takes effect within a week, and is “the only certain way to protect rabbits from this deadly disease” as there is currently no known treatment for RHD, according to Ceva Santé Animale, which owns vaccine manufacturer Filivie Laboratory.

“The vaccine will protect for at least one year with annual re-vaccination recommended,” it said.

However, the vaccine will not work if the rabbit is already infected with the RHD virus, said distributor DKSH Pet Supplies.

RHD Vaccine

Rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) vaccine FILAVAC VHD K. (Photo: DKSH Pet Supplies)

OWNERS ENCOURAGED TO GET PETS VACCINATED

The spread of the disease has been very limited in Singapore due to veterinarians’ vigilance and safety measures within the pet rabbit community, said NParks’ Animal & Veterinary Service (AVS).

The risk of RHD is low for rabbits that are housed indoors with minimal exposure outdoors and to rabbits from other households, said Dr Chang Siow Foong, AVS’ Group Director for Professional and Scientific Services. 

“Notwithstanding this, vaccination of healthy rabbits can help to reduce the risk of infection. Pet owners are advised to consult their veterinarian on whether their rabbits can receive this vaccination,” he said.

READ: Vets, pet groomers take steps to prevent spread of fatal rabbit disease while awaiting vaccine

Two veterinary clinics that CNA spoke to said they are encouraging owners to get their rabbits vaccinated. 

Owners should not avoid vaccinating their pets in hopes of a natural immunity developing, due to the extremely high fatality rate of RHD, said Dr Cathy Chan from The Animal Doctors. Herd immunity can only be achieved if the vast majority of rabbits are vaccinated, she added.

Dr Grace Heng from The Joyous Vet said if a rabbit owner assesses that their pet is vulnerable or at high risk of exposure, they should consider the vaccine.

The Animal Doctors allocates time slots daily to administer the vaccine, with some on standby for higher priority cases or those that require medical care or surgery.

“We will discuss the pros and cons of the vaccination in a rabbit with concurrent illness with the owner and will make a risk assessment together with the owner. We recommend the vaccination for all healthy rabbits,” said Dr Chan. 

Dr Heng said pet owners should practise good hygiene and avoid bringing their rabbits to mingle with other rabbits, at least until the end of the year.

Pet rabbit (1)

A pet rabbit in Singapore. (File photo: Vera Ang)

UNEASE ABOUT VACCINE PRODUCTION

However, some pet owners CNA spoke to have expressed unease about the vaccine, citing the need for a rabbit to be euthanised as part of the production process.

“I feel bad that a bunny has to die to reduce the fatality risk of my own bunnies in case they do get RHD,” said one rabbit owner who wanted to be known as Ms Teo. She is considering not having her two pet rabbits vaccinated.

Comments on a Facebook post by rabbit welfare group Bunny Wonderland with details on the vaccine referred to the process as “morally wrong”. “We are killing rabbits to save rabbits,” said a commenter.

The vaccine is produced by infecting a rabbit, and then euthanising it to collect the virus in its natural form before processing it – according to the Filivie Laboratory, this is the only way to preserve the antigenic structure of the virus, with all other methods failing so far.

In a Facebook response to a question in May about how the vaccine is made, a spokesperson from Filivie said that the vaccine’s manufacturing process has been reviewed and approved by an external ethics committee and by the French Ministry of Research, in accordance with the EU’s ethics rules in the use of animals.

The spokesperson declined to provide details about production numbers, but said that “one laboratory rabbit allows the production of several thousands of vaccine doses”.

Source link

Only 14% of Singaporeans feel negatively against foreigners, survey finds

0

[ad_1]

More Singaporeans feel positive than negative about the presence of foreigners here while most do not care one way or the other, polling by government feedback unit Reach has found.

A majority also agreed that Singapore should remain open to foreigners.

About half of the more than 2,000 people surveyed said they were neutral about non-citizens in Singapore, while 35 per cent felt positive and just 14 per cent were negative towards them.

[ad_2]

Source link

Commentary: When it comes to insurance, less is more for young adults starting out

0

SINGAPORE: Over the last two weeks, I came across several online posts about Singaporeans with multi-million dollar life insurance policies.

This got me thinking: How much is too much? How do we decide on what type of insurance policy to buy and when?

In my parents’ time, insurance was a simple affair: In most cases, because disposable incomes were lower, many went without them.

If they did get insurance, they had one advisor they trusted to recommend a handful of plans that covered basic needs.

Today, the environment looks vastly different. There is insurance for health, business, travel, homes, even retrenchment. There are new plans covering cyber risks, your pets and even events like your weddings, too.

READ: Pandemic-proofing: Insurance may never be the same again

According to the Life Insurance Association, the number of life policies has more than tripled over the last 20 years, and we pay almost four times more in annual premiums for life insurance compared to 10 years ago.

Financial blogs and social media have also driven interest in personal finance and insurance.

With young people getting their information from social media, insurance agents have also taken to Instagram and Facebook to market their products.

Many produce and share bite-sized infographics to artfully illustrated case studies. While these tidbits can be useful, they also can be potentially misleading when read without context.

Want to stalk your partner after a break up? Don’t

Social media has become a big way financial information is consumed. (Photo: Unsplash/Leon Seibert)

An OCBC survey last year found Singapore millennials are keen to invest and buy insurance policies, but less than half feel knowledgeable enough to do so. The sheer variety of information sources out there can be challenging for someone starting out.

MITIGATING HEALTH RISKS

Insurance is important. One useful approach is to think about it as outsourcing your biggest financial risks to a third party.

Instead of taking on the risk of a potential financial setback, you pay the insurer to bear that risk instead so you can have peace of mind.

In the event that something happens to you, the insurer pays a sum of money to you or your loved ones. If nothing happens, then the insurer gets to keep the premiums you paid.

Unless it’s an investment-linked product or a life-term policy, where you get a payout after the tenure is over. Given the high medical cost in Singapore, unexpected medical bills should be the first risk you may want to outsource.

My sister – a fitness instructor – was recently hospitalised for a sudden bout of appendicitis, and the hospital bill for such a treatment can easily set you back by at least S$20,000.

READ: MediShield Life premiums may rise by up to 35% for some, higher claim limits proposed as part of review

We do have national insurance plans like MediShield Life which provides protection against large hospitalisation bills in Class B2 and C wards in public hospitals.

Singaporeans can also use MediSave to pay for such bills, there are also withdrawal limits of S$450 a day for hospitalisation costs, and a variable surgical limit based on the complexity of your procedures.

SGH

In an emergency, you may want to skip the queues at a public hospital and head to a private one. Here is where you will need an Integrated Shield Plan so you can pay the difference.  

Large bills can be stressful and savings may not be enough. Even if you are young and healthy, a good medical insurance plan should be high on your list.

ADDING ON RIDERS

The statistics are depressing but one in four in Singapore are expected to develop cancer. This is where a Critical Illness (CI) plan can come in – to cushion the financial impact of a long drawn expensive illness.

A CI plan can be bought either as a rider (think of a rider as an additional benefit) to a base-life plan or you can purchase this as a standalone plan, increasingly offered by more insurers in recent years.

If you get a CI rider on top of your life plans for protection, ensure that you find out exactly when payments kick in – some payouts only happen when the disease is diagnosed at a later stage – that is, you don’t get a payout if you are diagnosed at Stage 1.

Early Critical Illness (ECI) plans start payouts after you’ve been diagnosed at the very early stages but typically cost more.

FORCED SAVINGS WITH PROTECTION

There are products that double up as protection as well as savings. Some parents buy an endowment policy for their children so that they can draw out the cash for their child’s university fees in the future.

With two in five millennials struggling to stick to their saving plans, endowment policies could help enforce this discipline.

READ: Commentary: How much should young couples spend on their first home?

Many insurance agents also recommend investment-linked plans for both protection and for building your nest egg. But these can come with administrative costs. I cancelled my investment-linked policy after realising how much I was really paying.

These were for sales and distribution charges (agent commission, fund management charge, administration charges, fund switching charges) and my  investment units were also sold (on a monthly or yearly basis) to pay for insurance charges and policy fees.

BALANCE AND BEST PLANS

One question I often get is, “what is the best plan”? A better question to ask yourself should be, which is the best plan for me?

Insurance is highly personal – what someone else does or buys may not necessarily be the best solution for you.

Someone who has ageing parents and multiple children to look after may require a life plan with greater coverage, whereas another without dependents may not need it at all.

Think about your personal circumstances and work out your goals – do you want to take a break from employment to study or you want a comfortable nest egg by a certain age?

As a young working adult in the early years of your career, you may not be drawing a sizeable income just yet, so there’s no rush to buy everything.

Calculating bills, invoices with calculator

Your needs will change so your insurance coverage should change too. (Photo: Unsplash/rawpixel)

Your needs will also evolve as you get married, have children, and when your parents retire. One strategy is to layer your insurance policies to ensure you get the protection during these prime years, and pare it down in your later years once you have fewer dependents.

Each insurer offers plans with different benefits, payment terms and premium levels. Think about which ones you prioritise and are willing to pay for.

Most agents will insist the plans they offer are the “best”. If you talk to someone from Prudential, they will recommend you Prudential policies –that’s the only ones they can sell you.

Ask the same question to an AIA agent and you will likely get a completely different answer. 

Many financial advisors advocate spending no more than 10 to 20 per cent of your monthly income on insurance. But I would say, even that is not a hard and fast rule

If you are starting out with a lower income, you may want to stagger your insurance purchases. Focus on the policies you need the most right now.

READ: Commentary: COVID-19 will reshape the Singapore office property market outlook

When I was single, I only had life insurance. After I got married, I increased the amount of coverage on my life through additional term plans.

When my baby was born, I bought more life insurance and added critical illness and early critical illness plans. The more you pay for insurance, the less you have for retirement or just extra cash for holidays or other life events.

Ultimately, it is helpful to think of insurance as something that moves and changes with your own life.

Most importantly, avoid simply signing up with a policy without looking carefully at what you really need and how much you can afford to pay for.

Dawn Cher, otherwise known as SG Budget Babe, runs a blog on personal finance.

Source link

Commentary: Goodbye to those days, when women were ‘pieces of meat for men to slice’

0

SINGAPORE: Women in our society are like pieces of meat put on the table for men to slice, declared Chan Choy Siong in a fiery speech in the Legislative Assembly in April 1960.

Choy Siong, the People’s Action Party (PAP) Member for Delta and a passionate champion of women’s rights, was speaking in support of the Women’s Charter Bill. 

She said it would bring about “a revolutionary change in society” as men would no longer be able to “take women as pieces of merchandise”.

The bill, which became law in 1961, was indeed remarkably progressive for the times. It gave women and men equal standing in marriage and banned polygamy for non-Muslims.

Female PAP candidates in 1959 election.

The five female PAP candidates for the 1959 elections. Left to right: Oh Su Chen, Che Sahorah binte Ahmat, Chan Choy Siong, Ho Puay Choo and Fung Yin Ching. (Photo: Voices and Choices: The Women’s Movement in Singapore. Used with permission from Singapore Council of Women’s Organisations)

FIGHTING AGAINST POLYGAMY AND MUCH MORE IN 1950S

This ban on polygamy was what another pioneering feminist, Shirin Fozdar, campaigned for relentlessly during the 1950s.

Shirin, who began making speeches about women’s rights when she was a schoolgirl in India, came to Singapore in 1950 with her husband to spread the Baha’i faith. She soon discovered that many of the men she and her husband met at social events were there not with, as she had presumed, their one and only wife, but with their second, third or fourth wife.

Horrified that polygamy was so rife and that women and children had so little legal protection, Shirin got together some of the leading women in Singapore and formed the Singapore Council of Women (SCW).

Shirin and the SCW wrote letters, gave talks, and met with political and community leaders throughout the 1950s.

Shirin Fozdar, women's rights activist

Shirin Fozdar made public speeches on social and women’s issues even when she was a student in India. (Photo: Facebook/Connexion.sg)

Following the 1955 Legislative Assembly general election, which was Singapore’s first political election and which saw David Marshall of the Labour Front becoming the Chief Minister, Shirin wrote an open and angry letter to Mr Marshall.

“Before the elections, the Labour Front and the PAP promised to work for the uplift of the underdog and see that justice and equality prevailed. The women in this country were praying for the election of courageous and just men, who would remove the inequalities between the sexes in this country,” she said.

But “political rivalry and immature statesmanship have plunged this country into turmoil and unrest,” Shirin said.

“How much better it would be if instead of making the Legislative Assembly an arena for politicians to indulge in verbal bouts, the elected representatives would unite together on this one important issue of removing the injustices done to women. This would be repaying to some extent the debt of gratitude that you each owe to your mother, who happened to be a woman.”

The SCW’s open letter had, however, little effect on the politicians. It was only during the campaigning for the 1959 General Election that women’s rights made an appearance, and the issue was only raised by the PAP.

Voting had become compulsory in 1959, and with women forming half of the electorate, the PAP, then an opposition party, went all out to secure the female vote.  

Its The Tasks Ahead manifesto spoke of monogamous marriage laws, jobs for women, equal pay for equal work, care of widows and orphans, and of encouraging women to be active in politics.

Chan Choy Siong and others from the PAP’s Women’s League spoke rousingly at PAP rallies about how women needed to be freed from being the playthings of men. 

Even Kwa Geok Choo, the wife of PAP leader Lee Kuan Yew, joined the fray.

Lee Hsien Loong and his parents.

Mr Lee Kuan Yew, Mdm Kwa Geok Choo and their first son Lee Hsien Loong. (Photo: Mrs Lee Kuan Yew’s collection, Mr Lee Hsien Loong’s Facebook

In her first and only political speech, Mrs Lee argued the case for equal pay for equal work, saying: “Our society is still built on the assumption that women are the social, political and economic inferiors of men. This myth has been made the excuse for the exploitation of female labour.”

Having convincingly won the 1959 election, the PAP government set out to deliver on its promise to the women of Singapore and in 1960 it tabled the Women’s Charter Bill. 

At the final reading of the Bill in Parliament in March 1961, Choy Siong declared that the law would “give the women’s movement a very flat and level road on which to travel”.

THEN THE WOMEN’S MOVEMENT DISAPPEARED FOR A LONG TIME

The Women’s Charter indeed was a “landmark legislation”, as Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam noted in his recent speech about women and gender equality – a speech that is itself likely to become another landmark in the women’s movement here.

READ: Review on women’s issues goes beyond the law, aims to ‘deeply ingrain’ gender equality in society: Shanmugam

But the road for women has not been quite as flat and level as Choy Siong anticipated and as the rest of us would have liked.

The lively women’s movement of the 1950s all but disappeared in the 1960s. With the Women’s Charter in place and polygamy banned, the SCW had little else to campaign for.

Shirin moved in 1961 to Thailand to work with destitute women and girls. Without her galvanising presence, SCW’s membership dwindled and it was dissolved in 1971.

Meanwhile, the PAP’s interest in getting more women into politics also seemed to dwindle. Most of its women MPs left when the Barisan Socialis faction split from the party, leaving just Choy Siong in Parliament.

Choy Siong, a passionate champion of women’s rights.

Choy Siong, a passionate champion of women’s rights. (Photo: Voices and Choices: The Women’s Movement in Singapore. Used with permission from Singapore Council of Women’s Organisations)

When Choy Siong retired from politics in 1970, the House became an all-male affair. It would remain without the benefit of women’s views and voices for 14 years, until the general elections of 1984. The opposition parties did have some women candidates, but none got elected.

When in 1979 the Government announced a quota on the number of women admitted to medical school, there was no woman in Parliament to argue against this blatantly discriminatory move.

There was no woman in the nation’s highest policy-making body to take issue with statements like that of Health Minister Toh Chin Chye who said it was difficult for a woman to be a good doctor because “she had to be a wife and a mother besides performing night duty in government hospitals”.

The quota, which meant women could only make up a third of each intake of medical students, would remain in place until 2003. It was one of several discriminatory laws and policies that AWARE campaigned against for many years, and which were only rectified about 15 years ago.

READ: Commentary: How do we raise sons who will never hit women?

READ: Commentary: Here’s what women really want regarding gender equality

A “PROPER ROLE”

The problem was that while the Women’s Charter was, at that time, a progressive law in making women and men equals in a marriage, it was not legislation that established gender equality as a fundamental value for Singapore. 

Polygamy was banished, but patriarchy persisted.

Singapore Parliament House

File photo of Parliament House. (Photo: Hani Amin) 

It was evident in the all-male Parliament we had for 14 years, and in sexist statements such as “girls should be girls” that emerged in the wake of Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew’s controversial 1983 National Day Rally speech.

The late Mr Lee’s remarks sparked what became known as the Great Marriage Debate that led to a slew of sexist, elitist, and eugenicist comments and schemes designed to get graduate women to marry and have lots of children.

Shortly after this speech, Minister of State for Education Tay Eng Soon called for girls’ schools to cater to “feminine” interests and activities so that the girls would grow up better prepared for their ‘natural and proper role in life’ as wives and mothers.

READ: Commentary: What’s wrong with being a single woman?

READ: Commentary: Burden of caring for ageing parents weighs heaviest on unmarried daughters

The following year, it became compulsory for lower secondary girls to do home economics, which meant they would not be able to opt for technical studies. 

Educational and other policies have flip-flopped over the years, sometimes seriously affecting the options open to women (and men). 

While we have adopted as fundamental values – which are enshrined in our Constitution – non-discrimination on “the grounds of religion, race, descent or place of birth”, we have made no commitment to the principle of gender equality.

GENDER EQUALITY AS A FUNDAMENTAL VALUE

AWARE was set up 35 years ago because of this.

We believe gender equality should be a fundamental value. We consider it vitally important to remove the gender-based barriers that can and do limit the ability of people to explore and develop their full potential.

People in reusable face masks in Singapore (10)

Women wearing reusable masks at Raffles Place. (Photo: Gaya Chandramohan)

We have been able to contribute to the removal of some of these barriers, but the goal of a national commitment to the principle of gender equality has proved elusive.

It was thus astonishing to hear, on a Sunday (Sep 20) morning in September, Mr Shanmugam argue a passionate case for precisely this. Astonishing but encouraging and energising.

Sixty years ago, Singapore took a step ahead of many countries, including those much more developed than us, when the Women’s Charter became law. Singapore today is among the most developed countries in the world.

We take pride in appearing at or near the top in all manner of global rankings and indexes. It is time to take pride in being a leader in gender equality.

Margaret Thomas is President of AWARE and a former journalist.

Source link