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Are they from good schools or lousy schools?

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Vivian Balakrishnan apologises to PSP's Leong Mun Wai after ‘illiterate’ comment circulates online​

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Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan (left) apologised to NCMP Leong Mun Wai for comments he made in Parliament on Sept 14, 2021. PHOTOS: MCI/YOUTUBE
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Rei Kurohi


SEP 15, 2021

SINGAPORE - Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan has apologised to Progress Singapore Party (PSP) Non-Constituency MP Leong Mun Wai for remarks the minister made in Parliament.
Dr Balakrishnan, in a Facebook post on Wednesday (Sept 15), said: "I called Mr Leong Mun Wai today to apologise for my private comments to a colleague in Parliament yesterday.
"I disagree with him on the issue, but I should not have said what I said. Mr Leong has accepted my apology."
During a marathon debate on two motions on jobs and livelihoods in the House on Tuesday, Manpower Minister Tan See Leng and Mr Leong had several exchanges after Dr Tan delivered his speech.
At one point, after Mr Leong had spoken, a voice could be heard saying "he's illiterate".
Later, after another exchange between Dr Tan and Mr Leong, a microphone picked up someone saying: "Seriously, how did he get into RI?... Must have been a lousy school."
It is understood that these remarks were made by Dr Balakrishnan.

Dr Tan is then heard replying: "I'm from Monk's Hill."
RI refers to Raffles Institution, where Mr Leong studied in the 1970s, while Dr Tan studied at Monk's Hill Secondary School. Dr Balakrishnan received his early education at Anglo-Chinese School.
In response to queries from The Straits Times, Mr Leong said he received a call from Dr Balakrishnan on Wednesday and that the minister conveyed his apology for his comments.

Mr Leong said he accepted the apology.
He added: "I am also curious to know who are the other persons who were involved in the conversation and the reason why they held the institution that I attended in contempt."
He also called for everyone to put their time to better use for Singapore and Singaporeans.
PSP, in a Facebook post on Wednesday, made reference to the incident.
It said: "Yes, our maiden parliamentary motion may have been rejected by Parliament. But we believe the public knows and understands why we had to table the motion and get this debate going.
"Unlike some quarters who may find dissenting voices illiterate, we have confidence that our fellow Singaporeans are enlightened and educated, and will not miss the wood for the trees."
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The comments were picked up by a microphone during a debate on two motions on jobs and livelihoods in Parliament on Sept 14, 2021. PHOTO: MCI/YOUTUBE
Video clips of the comments have been widely shared on social media platforms.
Netizens speculated that the voice was that of Dr Balakrishnan, who was sitting next to Dr Tan.
The exchange may have been picked up by the microphone that Dr Tan had used, which he left on after he delivered his speech.
 

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How River Valley High School tragedy unfolded: Student seen holding axe, asking others to call police​

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A police car exits River Valley High School on July 19, 2021. PHOTO: ST FILE
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Ng Wei Kai


JUL 27, 2021

SINGAPORE - On July 19 (Monday), a Sec 4 student at River Valley High School allegedly killed a Sec 1 student on campus.
Speaking in Parliament on Tuesday (July 27), Education Minister Chan Chun Sing outlined the timeline of the incident, adding that not all details can be shared as the case is now before the Court.

11.35am​

- Towards the end of lunch break, a group of students encounters a Sec 4 student outside a toilet. He is holding an axe and asks them to call the police. The students return to their classroom and inform their teacher.
- The Sec 4 student asks another group of students in the classroom next to the toilet to call the police. The students' immediate response is the emergency 'Run-Hide-Tell' lockdown drill - they go into their classroom, lock the doors and call their form teachers for help.
- A teacher arrives at the scene and tells the student to put down the axe. He complies and is escorted away to a meeting room. Other teachers call the police and check the toilet.
- About 10 minutes later, the police arrive and take the 16-year-old Sec 4 student into custody. Police officers and Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) paramedics find a 13-year-old Sec 1 student lying motionless in the toilet with multiple wounds. They pronounce him dead.
- Once the situation is under control, the principal breaks the news to the rest of the staff then speaks to the students. She tells them that a serious incident has happened and asks all students to contact their parents to tell them that they are safe.


- The principal then speaks to the group of students who are most affected by the incident. Parents are also informed via Parents Gateway - a communication app - that a serious incident has happened in school.

3.15pm​

- The school begins to dismiss students and stations teachers at the school gates to speak to parents and students.

Evening​

- Parents are informed that a student has died. The school asks parents to monitor the well-being of their child. Parents who are worried are encouraged to contact form teachers.
- Preliminary investigations by the police show that the two students had not known each other before the incident and that the axe was bought online.

July 20​

- The 16-year-old student is charged in court with murder. He is now in remand for psychiatric assessment.
 

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S'pore student who had returned from UK convicted of exposing others to Covid-19 risk​

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Esther Tan Ling Ying had lied about her travel history to get medicine from a clinic in Clementi. PHOTO: ST FILE
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David Sun


AUG 16, 2021

SINGAPORE - An undergrad who was studying acting in Britain was convicted on Monday (Aug 16) of exposing others to the risk of Covid-19 infection after returning to Singapore.
Esther Tan Ling Ying, 24, had some Covid-19 symptoms before she flew back from London via Doha. But in breach of her stay-home notice (SHN), she had eaten at a foodcourt at the airport on March 23 last year.
She then went to a clinic in Clementi where she coughed with her mask down and lied about her travel history to get medicine.
Tan began her bachelor's degree in acting course in London in 2017, but returned last year before completing her studies, following an advisory by the Singapore Government to return to Singapore.
Prior to leaving Britain, she had flu-like symptoms and lost her sense of taste and smell.
She did not see a doctor and instead chose to self-isolate until the day of her departure from London.
She still had a blocked nose and no sense of taste and smell when she landed at Changi Airport Terminal 1 on March 23 last year.

She was issued an SHN and told by an Immigration and Checkpoints Authority officer to go home immediately.
She cleared immigration at about 2.40pm.
However, before heading home, she and her parents ate at the foodcourt at Terminal 1, spending about 30 minutes there.

They also took an MRT train to Clementi, before Tan and her mother went to the Clementi Family and Aesthetic Clinic in Clementi Avenue 3, which is near their home.
It was about 5.30pm the same day when she saw the doctor, and Tan lied about her travel history to get some medicine.
The doctor testified about how Tan told her she was studying at a drama school, but claimed to have been back in Singapore since January last year because of Chinese New Year.
She said Tan claimed to not have gone back to Britain because her parents were concerned about the virus, and that she had "dodged a bullet".
The court heard how Tan had also told the doctor that one of her teachers potentially had the virus after returning to Britain from Spain, and how some of her classmates had fallen ill.

A video of Tan coughing with her mask lowered in the clinic was later shown to her by the prosecution.
She tested positive for Covid-19 on March 30.
Tan claimed trial after being slapped with one charge of exposing others to the risk of Covid-19 last year.
She claimed that she did not suspect she had the virus, and that the SHN instructions were confusing.
In his submissions, Deputy Public Prosecutor Nicholas Lim rubbished this, saying Tan was fully aware of the crucial points of the SHN and knew that she was a potential case of Covid-19.
District Judge Ng Peng Hong convicted Tan on Monday, and adjourned mitigation and sentencing to Aug 30.
For exposing others to the risk of infection of Covid-19, Tan can be jailed for up to six months and fined up to $10,000.
 

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ITE student expelled after bullying video spreads online​

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On March 16, ITE had identified the students involved in the incident and suspended one of them while investigations are ongoing. PHOTO: SG.TRENDZZZ/INSTAGRAM
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Ang Qing


MAR 17, 2021

SINGAPORE - An ITE student caught on video bullying a fellow student will be expelled.
ITE said in an update on Wednesday morning (March 17) that it has concluded its investigation into the incident and will dismiss the main aggressor, "as is the norm for assault cases in the college".
"The other students involved in the incident will be counselled and required to perform community service," the Facebook post added.
In a video that spread on social media, the main aggressor is seen restraining a student while repeatedly asking him "what's wrong with you" in a men's toilet at ITE College Central. At least three others look on, including a youth who appears to be blocking the exit.
The main aggressor then rips off the victim's mask, slaps him and hurls vulgarities at him.
Laughter can be heard in the background as the victim apologises to the main aggressor.
Another person tells the group "okay, enough".

The main aggressor then hits the victim on the back of his head and kicks his calf.
It is unclear when the video was taken.
ITE College principal Suresh Natarajan had said earlier that the school takes a serious view of bullying and a firm stance against such behaviour.
"As an educational institution, we strive to provide all our students with a safe, caring and supportive environment," he said.
On Tuesday, ITE had identified the students involved in the incident and suspended one of them while investigations are ongoing.
"Meanwhile, we have reached out to the victim and his family and extended support to them," Mr Suresh added.
In a Facebook post about the incident on Tuesday, Minister of State for Education Sun Xueling said: "ITE's College Disciplinary Committee is investigating and will recommend appropriate actions."
"It is morally reprehensible to bully someone," added Ms Sun, who is also Minister of State for Social and Family Development.
"Even more so, if you pick on a person or child who is in a vulnerable position and unable to defend himself or herself."
 

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Dad files police report over daughter's alleged bullying at Yishun Secondary School​

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Mr Jeffrey Pay filed a police report as a last resort after his 13-year-old daughter was bullied in school over several months. PHOTOS: COURTESY OF JEFFREY PAY
Lydia Lam


OCT 16, 2017

SINGAPORE - A father made a police report as a last resort to stop alleged bullying behaviour by a boy in his daughter's class.
Mr Jeffrey Pay, a 45-year-old security supervisor, had made a series of Facebook posts explaining how his 13-year-old daughter was allegedly bullied by a boy in her Secondary One class in Yishun Secondary School.
Mr Pay told The Straits Times on Saturday (Oct 14) that the problem began in January, escalating in May.
He said it started out with "casual remarks" about the girl's uniformed group - National Police Cadet Corps (NPCC).
The boy, who is from the National Cadet Corps (NCC) uniformed group in school, would drop comments like "I got my uniform, you all slow" or "Your footdrills are lousy". The bullying allegedly happened online too.
However, the last straw for Mr Pay came last week before an examination when his daughter accidentally knocked into the boy while shifting a table.
He claimed the boy yelled a vulgarity at her, which affected the girl for the rest of the day and her performance in the exam.

Mr Pay said he approached the school in person three to four times to resolve the matter.
"The school said they have taken disciplinary action against him, gave him counselling and informed the parents," he said.
However, the bullying behaviour which came in the form of disparaging remarks did not stop, so Mr Pay went to the NCC in hopes they would discipline the cadet. He also reached out to the Ministry of Education.
He was directed back to the school, Mr Pay said. As a last resort, he made a police report on Thursday (Oct 12).
The police confirmed with ST that a report was lodged. The spokesman added that the complainant was advised on his legal recourse.
Yishun Secondary School principal Ng Shok Yan told ST on Monday that the school has engaged Mr Pay several times "to explain the counselling, discipline and reconciliation actions".
"These actions are in line with our school values, practices, rules and regulations," she said. "Our purpose is always to educate the students involved so that they will learn from the incident, mend relationships and not make the same mistakes in future."
 

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Police investigating after girls filmed fighting in carpark; MOE says students have been disciplined​

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The 30-second video shows two girls throwing punches and kicking a girl in school uniform. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM SG SHARES
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The video has been circulating on messaging platforms WhatsApp and Telegram. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM SG SHARES

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The police confirmed that a report has been lodged and investigations are ongoing. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM SG SHARES

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Isabelle Liew


JAN 18, 2022

SINGAPORE - Disciplinary measures have been taken against the students seen in a viral video fighting in a multi-storey carpark, the Ministry of Education (MOE) said on Tuesday (Jan 18).
The video has been circulating on messaging platforms WhatsApp and Telegram.
In response to queries, an MOE spokesman said: "The school is aware of the incident and has taken educative actions, including counselling the students involved and engaging their parents.”
Giving an update on the actions taken, the spokesman said at around 9pm that this included counselling the students involved and engaging their parents.
MOE declined to reveal which school was involved.
He said the ministry takes a serious view on acts of violence.
“We note that the police are investigating the matter,” he added.

The police confirmed that a report has been lodged and investigations are ongoing.
The 30-second video shows two girls throwing punches at a girl in school uniform.
One of them pulls her hair, resulting in her falling to the ground. The girl then hits the student's head repeatedly and kicks her face.
A fourth girl, also in school uniform, can be seen watching the incident.
The Straits Times understands the incident took place a week ago.
Responding to ST’s queries, CHIJ St Nicholas Girls’ School clarified that the students in the video are not from their school.
 

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18 months' probation for teen who put teacher's upskirt photos on social media site Tumblr​

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Jean Iau

Feb 8, 2022

SINGAPORE - An 18-year-old who was angry with his teacher came across upskirt videos of hers and uploaded edited screenshots of the clips on social media site Tumblr.
In the same post, he also uploaded pictures of the teacher at her workplace and with her family members, and captioned the post: "Upskirt pictures. Can all of you guys, reblog, like and share this... enjoy the pictures."
On Tuesday (Feb 8), the teenager, who cannot be named as he was below 18 when he committed the crime, was sentenced to 18 months of probation.
The secondary school he attended cannot be named as well.
As part of his probation, he must remain indoors from 10pm till 6am, perform 80 hours of community service, and attend psycho-education on healthy sexuality and responsible sexual conduct.
His mother was bonded for $5,000 to ensure his good behaviour.
An offender put on probation will not have a criminal record of the offence.

The teenager had earlier pleaded guilty to a single charge of transmitting obscene images. Two other similar charges were taken into consideration for his sentencing.
The court heard that some time between April and May 2019, the teenager found out that at least two upskirt videos had been recorded of his teacher and got a screenshot of each of these videos from his schoolmates.
Deputy Public Prosecutor Cheng You Duen told the court in an earlier hearing that the boy then edited and altered the colour and orientation of the pictures to create several variations of the screenshots and uploaded them, along with pictures of the teacher at her workplace and with her family, on Tumblr.
On May 21, 2019, the teacher lodged a police report saying these pictures had been uploaded on pornographic websites.
Those convicted of transmitting any obscene material online can be punished with a jail term of up to three months, a fine, or both.
 

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Tanjong Katong Secondary Technical School
Victoria Junior College

Lawrence Wong to lead PAP's 4G team: 8 things to know about him​

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Finance Minister Lawrence Wong with his parents, in a photo posted on his Facebook page in 2015. PHOTO: LAWRENCE WONG/FACEBOOK
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Justin Ong
Political Correspondent

PUBLISHED

APR 14, 2022

SINGAPORE - Finance Minister Lawrence Wong was on Thursday (April 14) endorsed as the leader of the ruling People's Action Party's fourth-generation (4G) team, concluding months of speculation over the identity of Singapore's next prime minister.
Here are eight things to know about the 49-year-old, who is now heir apparent to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

1. Marine Parade boy…​

Mr Wong grew up in what he has described as an "ordinary family" in the Marine Parade Housing Board estate.
His father, who died in August last year at age 86, was born in China's Hainan Island and left for Ipoh in Malaysia as a young boy. After completing his secondary education, the elder Mr Wong moved to Singapore to work in sales for Sime Darby.
It was also here where he married Mr Wong's mother, now 82 years old.
She started work at the age of nine - helping to wash neighbours' clothes and look after their babies - while pestering her initially reluctant parents to let her go to school, against the gender bias of the time. She eventually became a teacher and taught for 40 years.
Mr Wong also has a brother, older by two years, who is an aerospace engineer at DSO Laboratories.

2. … and neighbourhood schoolboy​

Mr Wong attended a PAP Community Foundation (PCF) kindergarten in Marine Parade before going to Haig Boys' Primary, where his mother taught.
He remembers her as being a disciplinarian both in school and at home, and how that gave him "a strong sense of responsibility". It also ingrained in him the ethos of making sure he does something well once he commits to it.
In school, Mr Wong was more bookish than sporty. He would hang out at the old Marine Parade library to borrow science fiction books and guitar tomes.


After Haig Boys', he went to Tanjong Katong Secondary Technical School. Mr Wong has spoken of people asking him why he did not go to an "elite" school such as Raffles Institution instead.
He said it was only natural to continue his education in a school near home, where all his friends were and where he ultimately enjoyed himself.
Mr Wong went on to Victoria Junior College, where he got a government scholarship to study in the United States. He obtained bachelor's and master's degrees in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, and also has a Master in Public Administration from the Harvard Kennedy School.


3. Becoming PPS to PM Lee​

After he returned to Singapore, Mr Wong was posted to the Ministry of Trade and Industry and did economic modelling.
He then rose through the ranks in the finance and health ministries. As director of healthcare finance at the Ministry of Health, he implemented reforms to MediShield to provide Singaporeans with better protection against large hospital bills.
Mr Wong then became principal private secretary (PPS) to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in 2005.
Three years later, he was appointed chief executive of the Energy Market Authority. After a 14-year career in the public service, he left to contest the 2011 General Election and was elected as an MP for West Coast GRC. He is currently an MP for Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC.
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Finance Minister Lawrence Wong with fellow Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC MPs Alex Yam, Zaqy Mohamad and Hany Soh during a recent event at An-Nur Mosque. PHOTO: LAWRENCE WONG/INSTAGRAM

4. Reputation as policy wonk​

Early in Mr Wong's career, he rebuffed offers from the private sector, and stayed on in the Government, which he felt allowed him to do different projects and shape schemes that could help Singaporeans.
He said he found it meaningful going down to the ground to explain policies - which could be why he has garnered a reputation for being a policy wonk, or someone with a particularly keen interest in the finer details of policy.
When pressed on the label in an interview with The Sunday Times in 2020, he said: "It's partly what I was brought up with… That when you do anything, you have to put everything into it, you have to really want to excel."
He added: "Whatever you do on a day-to-day basis, if you do it well, if you take responsibility, that in itself is a testimony of how you as a person are an example, you know, a light for the world."
SPH Brightcove Video

5. Thrust into the Covid-19 spotlight​

In 2020, then Health Minister Gan Kim Yong had an idea to assemble a group to lead Singapore's fight against an emerging pandemic. Mr Wong was his pick to co-chair what would eventually be the multi-ministry task force on Covid-19.
Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat, who was acting prime minister while PM Lee was away, called Mr Wong to tell him about his appointment.
Mr Wong's response was "Okay, if you think I can help, I'll be happy to support and I will do my best".
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In 2020, then Health Minister Gan Kim Yong picked Mr Lawrence Wong to co-chair what would eventually be the multi-ministry task force on Covid-19. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
In the book In This Together: Singapore's Covid-19 Story written by The Straits Times, he acknowledged that the role was not something that would naturally fit into his portfolios at the time - National Development Minister and Second Finance Minister - even though those ministries would have to be involved in managing the unfolding crisis.
Publicly, he was not seen as the most obvious choice as well.
But Mr Wong would go on to make his mark at media briefings for his calm, clear explanation of policies, grasp of detail and steadying presence overall.
Mr Gan and Mr Wong have both used the same word - enjoyable - to describe what it was like to team up.
Speaking in Parliament in March 2020, the usually dispassionate Mr Wong was overwhelmed and had to choke back tears as he paid tribute to the front-liners.

6. Budget debut​

After nearly two years of frequent appearances as co-chairman of the multi-ministry task force on Covid-19, Mr Wong put on a different hat in February 2022, delivering his first Budget statement since assuming the portfolio of Finance Minister in May 2021.
It was a significant Budget, packed with progressive tax measures aimed not only at generating revenues to fund major programmes needed over the next few years, but also at addressing social inequalities.
It fell on Mr Wong to outline the Government's vision of a "fairer, more sustainable, and more inclusive society" and he did so in his usual unruffled way.
"Looking back at what we have been through during these Covid-19 years, we have nothing to fear. We will always overcome. We will always prevail," he concluded. "We will chart a new way forward together. We will see through the pandemic today, and build a better Singapore tomorrow."

7. Music and dogs​

Mr Wong's Instagram bio still reads "bookworm, guitar player and dog lover".
His father gave him a guitar when he was eight, and he still speaks about music with real enthusiasm.
Where schoolmates had pictures of their favourite celebrities in school files, he had a picture of Eric Clapton's guitar.

Mr Wong loves rock, blues and soul, and jazz singers such as Nina Simone and Ella Fitzgerald.
He picked the US to further his studies because it was home to his favourite musicians.
At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he even went busking with his American roommate.

Mr Wong's other great love: dogs. His 16-year-old golden retriever, Summer, died in July 2020.
In 2011, he wrote about his "golden girl" in a Facebook post, saying: "There's something wonderful about the way dogs behave - they eat with gusto, play with exuberance, and love extravagantly. In many ways, they help to restore our own sense of wonder, inspire us to look at things from new perspectives, and enable us to better appreciate the many simple blessings of life."
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Mr Lawrence Wong with his golden retriever, Summer, in 2017. PHOTO: LAWRENCE WONG/INSTAGRAM

8. Fronting major speeches​

After the 2020 General Election, it was Mr Wong who helmed a press conference to share preliminary findings from the PAP's post-mortem.
He is a member of the party's top decision-making central executive committee, and adviser to the PAP Policy Forum, which organises regular dialogues for rank-and-file party members to engage government leaders on policies.
"I'm doing it today but it could have been any one of us. I don't think you need to read too much into who is the spokesperson," he said then, reiterating that the Government's focus was on getting Singapore through the Covid-19 crisis, and that the question of political succession would be dealt with later.

In January 2021, Mr Wong delivered a speech at the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) think-tank's flagship Singapore Perspectives conference, touching on the key themes of inequality and meritocracy; sustainability; and social solidarity.
He would then appear as keynote speaker at forums on race and racism in June and tribalism and identity politics in November, in a year where these issues came to the fore in Singapore through a spate of widely publicised incidents.
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Mr Lawrence Wong speaking at a forum on race organised by the Institute of Policy Studies and S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies on June 25, 2021. PHOTO: INSTITUTE OF POLICY STUDIES
His June speech in particular was lauded in some circles for presenting a more forward-thinking and progressive approach than usual, to an often contentious topic.
Then, he pledged that the Government would continue to engage Singaporeans and update its policies on race and racial harmony.
"No community has gotten everything it wanted, but collectively, we have achieved more together than what we would have otherwise by just focusing on our individual agendas," said Mr Wong.
 

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President and Prime Minister from Tanjong Katong.
Halimah Yacob - Tanjong Katong Girls' School
Lawrence Wong - Tanjong Katong Secondary School
So are TKGS and TKSS good schools?
 

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President and Prime Minister from Tanjong Katong.
Halimah Yacob - Tanjong Katong Girls' School
Lawrence Wong - Tanjong Katong Secondary School
So are TKGS and TKSS good schools?

During my time, TKGS had many chiobus. Used to go Parkway Parade to sian them.
 

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Young man throws tray at Sengkang coffee shop hawker, hawker hits him repeatedly with ladle​

You get what you give.
Ashley Tan | April 25, 2022
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An argument broke out between a hawker and a customer at a Sengkang coffee shop on Apr. 24, leading to items being thrown and some blows exchanged.

Whacked by a ladle​


A video of the aftermath of the incident first circulated on social media on April 24, showing the hawker and a woman locked in a standoff.
Social media users had apparently criticised the hawker, which led one person to share CCTV footage to Facebook of what allegedly occurred before the verbal altercation.
The video shows a hawker at the Block 455 Sengkang West Avenue coffee shop cooking noodles.
He can be seen engaging a customer in a black shirt in a conversation, which appears to become progressively heated.
As the conversation progresses, he slams the utensil he is using to stir the noodles onto the counter, and the customer can be seen gesturing aggressively, pulling down his mask and pointing at the hawker.
The customer then flips a tray across the counter, sending utensils flying.
The hawker snatches his ladle and steps out of the stall to confront the customer, and starts to repeatedly hit the customer over the head with the ladle.
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Other people at the coffee shop can be seen rushing over to intervene.


As the video has no sound, it is uncertain what the pair were arguing about and how the dispute started.

Family defended son and confronted hawker​


The video of the incident's aftermath shows a woman, who appears to be the customer's mother, confronting the hawker about hitting her son.
Behind her, a girl can be seen tending to the male customer's face as he stands there silently.
The woman can be heard screaming at the hawker in Hokkien: "Why you beat my child? Why??"
She continues: "You start the fight first, means you're in the wrong, don't talk so much."
Meanwhile, the man filming the situation remarks off-camera in Hokkien: "Clearly it was the [young] man who started the fight first."
Another man wearing black adds: "You whack his head! He will bleed from his head!"
The man filming reiterates: "It was clearly the son who started it, this kind of father and mother also have."
The altercation then ends with the woman asking for the hawker to call his manager, and claiming that she would be calling the police.


A video that has been taken down from social media allegedly shows the customer picking up the ladle the hawker used, and throwing it at the hawker during the confrontation involving his family. The man in black then allegedly turned around and asked him to stop.
Mothership understands from a person who knows the hawker that the police allegedly went down to the coffee shop, and the customer was sent to the hospital for a "check-up".
The hawker was also allegedly brought in to the police station for further investigation.
The person claims that the hawker also regrets his actions.
 

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Six trainee lawyers who cheated in 2020 Bar exam have their admissions to the profession delayed​

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The six had mostly trained in big and renowned firms. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: PEXELS
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Selina Lum
Senior Law Correspondent


APR 18, 2022

SINGAPORE - Six trainee lawyers here had their applications to be called to the Bar adjourned after they cheated in the professional Bar examination in 2020 - including on a paper on ethics and professional responsibility.
In the spirit of "second chances", a High Court judge directed that the six not be named in the hope that they will not be prejudiced in the long run.
"In a profession in which every member must be like Caesar's wife - beyond reproach - dishonesty is a big problem. But it would also be harsh to have one's professional career ended before it has even begun," said Justice Choo Han Teck.
The six had mostly trained in big and renowned firms. Five of them are currently working as legal executives.
Five, who had shared answers in six papers through WhatsApp, had to retake the papers after they were found out.
The remaining one, who colluded with another person taking the exam and cheated in three of the papers, had to retake the entire preparatory course for what is known as Part B of the Bar exam.
They have all since passed the required exams, but their applications to be called to the Bar have been postponed - six months for the five and a year for the other.

Law graduates have to go through a six-month course and pass the Bar exam, known as Part B, as well as complete a six-month training contract with a law firm. They then qualify to be called to the Bar, which means they can practise as lawyers.
Graduates from approved foreign universities also have to take another exam known as Part A.
Applications have to be accepted by the Attorney-General (AG), the Singapore Institute of Legal Education (Sile) and the Law Society.


Twenty-six applicants to the Bar, including the six, had their Bar admissions hearings before Justice Choo last Wednesday (April 13).
The AG objected to the six applications because they had cheated in the Bar exam.
On Monday, the judge issued the grounds of decision to explain why he had agreed to a proposal by the AG for the applications to be adjourned.
Justice Choo said: "The AG was of the view that the applicants lacked honesty and integrity, and should not be admitted to the Bar, at least not for a while, since it is questionable whether they can presently swear the oath on admission which requires them to declare that they will 'truly and honestly conduct (themselves) in the practice of an advocate and solicitor according to the best of knowledge and ability and according to law'."
The one who was required to retake the entire course had denied any wrongdoing, unlike the five who admitted what they had done as soon as the institute began its inquiry.
She filed an affidavit apologising for her conduct only on April 11, two days before the admission hearing.
She explained that her answers were the same as the other person because they studied together and shared study notes.

The Sile, which conducts the exam and the preparatory course leading to the exam, rejected her explanation because her answers in the three papers were not just similar, but contained the same pattern and errors.
"They were not just similar but the same - warts and all. The Sile, however, gave her the benefit of the doubt in three other papers," said Justice Choo.
She was required to retake the entire Part B course, which comprises seven compulsory subjects, such as civil litigation practice, criminal litigation practice, family law practice and ethics and professional responsibility.
There are also electives such as mediation advocacy, the law and practice of arbitration, and wills, probate and administration practice. According to the Sile website, the Part B course and exam fees for 2021 were $6,420 for Singaporeans, $7,490 for permanent residents and $9,095 for foreign candidates.
Justice Choo said this incident has raised many questions about whether there is a culture of cheating.
"When so many applicants cheated in a professional qualifying examination in so many papers, including one for 'ethics and professional responsibility', then something is wrong somewhere," he said.
"Does the mode of present-day examinations make it more conducive for cheating? Have the examinees cheated because the modes of examinations in the law schools are similarly conducive for cheating?
"Furthermore, when a person cheats in a course meant to instil ethics and professional conduct, it raises the question, how is it that they had learnt so poorly from the course?"
Justice Choo noted that a lawyer who has acted dishonestly will be disciplined according to the process under the Legal Profession Act.
There is, however, no disciplinary process for a qualifying applicant to the Bar, except that the court hearing the application may refuse to admit the applicant.

Mr Jeyendran Jeyapal, representing the AG, had proposed the adjournment of the six's applications - not as a punishment, but for the six to "reflect on the error of their ways".
Justice Choo said: "He would be right because this is not a disciplinary proceeding before me."
Mr Christopher Daniel, counsel for the Law Society, and Ms Dew Wong, counsel for the institute, agreed with Mr Jeyendran, as did the six applicants, added the judge.
Justice Choo said: "(Judges) loath to shut the door on a wrongdoer with no prospects of redemption. But they also have a duty to prevent a repeat of the wrong, and to do so without breaking young backs in the process."
Justice Choo said Mr Jeyendran's proposal was fair and appeared to be the most viable option in the circumstances.
The judge said he was redacting the names of the applicants in the hope that they will not be prejudiced in the long run.
He directed that the court file be sealed, which means third parties cannot get documents filed in respect of the admissions.
"Second chances are for those who seize them. If ever they were to plead for a third, I wish them good luck."
Justice Choo warned that future cases may not be redacted, and the applications may be adjourned indefinitely.
 

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5 more trainee lawyers cheated in 2020 exam; A-G says it shows lack of honesty, integrity​

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The Attorney-General is considering applications for admission to the Bar by the five candidates. PHOTO: ST FILE
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Selina Lum
Senior Law Correspondent

APR 19, 2022

SINGAPORE - The number of trainee lawyers who cheated in their 2020 Bar examination has grown from six to 11.
On Tuesday (April 19), a spokesman for the Attorney-General's Chambers told The Straits Times the Attorney-General is considering five other applications by candidates who cheated in the 2020 Part B of the Bar exam.
No further details were given by the spokesman.
ST had reported on Monday (April 18) that six trainee lawyers who cheated in the exam have had their admissions delayed.
The spokesman said this was the first time the Attorney-General has objected to applications for admission to the Bar for cheating in the Bar exam.
She added the Attorney-General felt such applicants would not be currently fit to be admitted as advocates and solicitors of the Supreme Court of Singapore.
Their misconduct had showed they did not embody the key qualities of honesty and integrity that every lawyer must possess, she said.

The spokesman added: "At the end of their respective adjournments, the applicants would each be required to file an affidavit, showing why he/she is a fit and proper person to be admitted as an advocate and solicitor of the Supreme Court of Singapore as of the date of that affidavit."
ST understands the Bar exam was held online in 2020.
The cases of cheating were first revealed in written grounds by High Court judge Choo Han Teck on Monday.


Five candidates, who had shared answers in six papers through WhatsApp, had to retake the papers after they were found out.
The remaining one, who colluded with another person taking the exam and cheated in three of the papers, had to retake the entire preparatory course for what is known as Part B of the Bar exam.
They have all since passed the required exams, but their applications to be called to the Bar have been postponed - six months for the five and a year for the other.
The Attorney-General had objected to the application by the six, who had mostly trained in big and renowned firms, to be admitted to the Bar.

Justice Choo had agreed to the Attorney-General's proposal that their applications be adjourned.
Law graduates have to go through a six-month course and pass the Bar exam, known as Part B, as well as complete a six-month training contract with a law firm.
They then qualify to be called to the Bar, which means they can practise as lawyers.
Applications have to be accepted by the Attorney-General, the Singapore Institute of Legal Education and the Law Society.
 

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Forum: Crack down on sites offering ghostwriting services to student​

July 12, 2022

I have been a lecturer at various educational institutions for more than 20 years.
Ghostwriting services that offer to assist students in cheating in their assignments and online examinations have become easily accessible, and many students in both public and private institutions appear to be making use of these services.
These service providers openly tout their "success stories" on their websites. Past assignment questions and other materials from various institutions are available for viewing, likely infringing the copyright of the authors.
I find it appalling that these websites claim to have helped nursing and medical students to cheat.
The authorities should look into blocking these ghostwriting websites or at least put in place some measures to deter students from making use of such services.
They make a mockery of our education system.

Ong Kim Heng
 

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Jaya Primary School
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Meet the Singapore stylist to stars around the world​

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Alvin Goh with Kendall Jenner (left) and Michelle Yeoh. PHOTOS: COURTESY OF ALVIN GOH
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Jeanmarie Tan
Senior Correspondent

JUL 14, 2022

SINGAPORE - Meet the home-grown fashion stylist to the stars many Singaporeans may not have heard of.
Hong Kong-based make-up artist and creative director Alvin Goh, 44, has worked with a who's who of international celebrities in the last 15 years.
They include reality television star-model Kendall Jenner and Hollywood actors Margot Robbie, Milla Jovovich, Uma Thurman, Emma Watson, Luke Evans, Henry Cavill, Tilda Swinton, Rebel Wilson and Dakota Johnson.
He has also teamed up with Asian superstars such as T.O.P from K-pop boy band Big Bang, Japanese pop diva Ayumi Hamasaki and Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh.
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But his proudest achievement by far is being the first Singaporean to style an Oscar winner. He was responsible for the looks sported by South Korean actress Youn Yuh-jung when she won Best Supporting Actress in 2021 for immigrant drama Minari and returned to the Oscar stage earlier this year to present the Best Supporting Actor category.
Goh tells The Straits Times: "Coming from Bedok, I think that's quite big, right? I'd never expected to do the Oscars, not in my wildest dreams."
His achievements in the fashion and beauty industry overseas have led him to be featured in publications such as Forbes China, the South China Morning Post and Elle China.

Yet, for all his eye-popping accolades, Goh - who has 114,000 followers on Instagram - remains curiously overlooked and anonymous on his home turf.
"Every time I do interviews in Hong Kong and China, the first thing I tell them is that I'm from Singapore. I've been doing so many things abroad, so coming back and doing this interview for the first time, it's so special."
However, being back in Singapore for the past two months - the longest period since he packed his bags for Hong Kong in 2005 to pursue his dream - has stirred up mixed feelings.
For one thing, it reminds him of why he desperately needed to leave.
These days, he feels displaced, almost like a tourist.
Goh laments: "I cannot blend in with the environment. I get lost in MRT stations. Even on the streets, I use Google Maps. I just feel like I'm not connected with my home country and that makes me very sad."
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The stylist, who describes his family as toxic, had a traumatic childhood and adolescence. Theintroverted and insecure boy with low self-esteem was not only bullied at Jaya Primary School and Loyang Secondary School, but also suffered abusive treatment by his unemployed father, who was a gambler. His mother used to make a living doing odd jobs.
Loansharks often came calling, threatening bodily harm and splashing paint and hanging things on the door of their flat.
"I felt a lot of resentment, shame and disgrace."
He says wryly: "I was exposed to so much drama. It was like a TV series."
Escaping into the world of cosmetics helped him cope with the harsh reality - especially when he thought he looked "very ugly, like E.T.".
At 12, he started using a tweezer to fix his patchy eyebrows and an eyebrow pencil to draw and shape them.
He was also fascinated with his mother's make-up and started practising on himself.
"After doing it, I felt good. That's how my passion came about."
At 19, he left home and rented a room outside. He then spent three years studying hospitality at Temasek Polytechnic, which he hated.
After graduating, he followed his heart and worked as a freelance fashion stylist and make-up artist. He cut his teeth doing makeovers for aunties.
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But his efforts to make his mark in the local industry came to naught as he was shunned by the reigning rival cliques at the time.
And 20 years later, he feels that the politics and power play remain.
Goh says: "Singapore is already so small, yet you have the old guard trying to control the scene, not letting newcomers and youngsters in.
"That's also why I left. Why would I fight to do Zoe Tay or Fann Wong? It didn't make sense at all."
He adds: "A lot of people did not want me to shine, but the more they want to dim my light, the more I will shine for myself."
When he was 27, he hightailed it to Hong Kong, but ended up being jobless for nine months and burning through his savings.
He spoke no Cantonese and stayed in a shoebox apartment where the toilet was just three steps from the bed.
"I was taking my portfolio to every magazine, knocking on doors. It was the most torturous period of my life. I was so miserable and felt unworthy. I started doubting myself and wondering if I should go home."
He is glad he had the courage to step out of his comfort zone.
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The hard work and persistence paid off. In 2006, he got his first proper gig with American actress Maggie Q for a Louis Vuitton project in Asia, and suddenly his name and work were seen on more than 40 magazine covers.
His big break came in 2008 - a Christian Dior x Alvin Goh solo exhibition and crossover project.
Soon, more brands such as Versace, Cartier, Gucci, La Perla and Cle de Peau Beaute came calling, and his celebrity clientele expanded organically. Swiss luxury skincare brand La Prairie also appointed him as one of its three Complexion Artistry Ambassadors, representing the Asia-Pacific region.
He says: "When I look back, I understand why I wanted to be famous so badly. Coming from that kind of negative family background made me yearn for validation."
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Unfortunately, Goh says bitterly, even until today, his loved ones "don't exactly know" what he does for a living and will never think of him as successful, as "their definition of success means having money and property".
His mum would remind him to get a nine-to-five job and be more "realistic and stop dreaming".
"I remember I would always mail clippings of interviews I've done to my mum, but I've stopped trying to show and tell... so I pat my own back," he says with a laugh.
"I've learnt to turn the pain around and use it as fuel for empowering myself. Honestly, I'm still suffering - just not as much as before."
He shares his mental struggles not to elicit sympathy, but to encourage others in the same boat.
"Being vulnerable is a superpower that also feeds our creativity."

And now that he is at the top of his game, he wants to connect with the masses and spread the use of make-up, styling and aesthetics as empowering tools. He is in talks with a local live-streaming platform to achieve that.
Goh says: "I am given the gift to transform and beautify, and I would like to provide this service to more people - real people.
"My purpose and calling in this lifetime is to teach men and women how to look and feel good. Everyone deserves that confidence."
He is also at a career crossroads and pondering his next move - like setting up his new base in South Korea.
He says: "I have very high expectations of myself and I'm someone who will not stop. I always need to push the boundaries and am not afraid of failing.
"I'm very excited to be growing older, to see how my journey unfolds."
 
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