This is how sinkees should fight MINDEF

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Taiwan protests throw spotlight on Asia's military service
By Peter Shadbolt, CNN
Updated 11:33 AM ET, Tue August 13, 2013

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It could have been a scene lifted straight from the classic Sean Connery film "The Hill" -- a drama in which a military prison erupts into riot after an inmate dies following a repetitive drill on an artificial hill in the blazing desert sun.

But in Taiwan's real life version of the film, 18 army officers have been charged, a defense minister has resigned and the parents of 24-year-old Hung Chung-chiu are still demanding justice after their son died following an arduous punishment drill in Taiwan's searing summer heat.

Corporal Hung was just three days short of completing his military service last month when he was reportedly put in solitary confinement for bringing a mobile phone with a camera onto his military base, normally a minor military transgression.

Later subjected to a series of tough punishment exercises, doctors say he died of organ failure brought on by severe heatstroke.

Since then, Taipei has erupted in protest.

More than 100,000 placard-waving people protested outside the Presidential Palace on the weekend, according to organizers Citizen 1985, and another large protest is scheduled for this weekend.

The protest underscores the increasing unpopularity of military service, not just in Taiwan, but in Asia's other developed economies such as South Korea and Singapore where young people see compulsory military service as an unwelcome interruption to university and a career.

Singapore, with a conscription period of 24 months and further 10 years of reservist obligations, has one of the longest periods of national service behind South Korea and Israel.

"Conscription takes away two years of a citizen's freedom in the name of 'national interests'," said former conscript Gordon Lee in a Singapore political blog. "Unfortunately, in the case of Singapore, where tensions are cool, these 'national' or 'security' interests do not outweigh two years of the lives of every male citizen."

"Even though the government often compares Singapore to Israel, South Korea and Taiwan as being a small and vulnerable state, the fact is, they live in situations of greater tension (than we do in Singapore)."

The Singapore government promotes military service as a cheaper way of building a standing army and as a means of bonding recruits regardless of their backgrounds.

"If anything, Singaporeans are just further trained to blindly obey instructions from their superiors," Lee said in the post. "This culture is detrimental to society as a whole, and seems to affect creativity in the society, which is important for the spirit of free enterprise. Surely two years of a person's life is more important than this 'bonding' that presumably takes place?"

The Singapore government has been criticized for responding to worried parents by making military service safer and softer for recruits -- in one case a conscript was famously snapped making his maid carry his military pack.

For many, these responses are part of the civilianization of military life, throwing a question mark over the effectiveness of a popular -- rather than a professional -- army.

"I would say (these developments) are partly in response to worried parents, but they are probably due in large to a natural evolution of the society in which these institutions are found," Lee told CNN. "For example, there has also been a larger appetite for health and safety measures in, say, the construction sector as well."

Efforts in South Korea to make military service more palatable and popular by making a special unit of celebrity K-Pop recruits was scrapped last month after it was found that too often celebrity lifestyles were inimical to the harsh realities of military life.

Top brass and regular recruits took a dim view of unauthorized dates, drunken trips to massage parlors and other preferential treatment for the celebrity grunts in a country where military service is regarded as a solemn national duty.

"Although we initially formed the unit to promote the military, a number of unfortunate incidents damaged the public image of the military and lowered the morale of all the regular soldiers who are in the service," the ministry's vice spokesperson Wi Yong-seob said at a press conference.

First formed 16 years ago, the celebrity unit acted as the military's public relations office by holding concerts for soldiers or performing at important anniversaries. The issue of celebrities enlisting in the military has long been controversial in South Korea where some argue that K-Pop stars should be exempt from military service because of the substantial foreign revenue they bring to the country.

Psy -- the "Gangnam Style" star -- is perhaps one of the most high-profile military discipline cases, famously repeating his two-year service in 2007 after neglecting his duties by giving private concerts and TV show appearances.

In Taiwan, meanwhile, Hung's death has dealt a severe blow to the public profile of the country's military.

Already, the Ministry of National Defense is falling drastically short in its bid to attract volunteers: its target for 2013 is 17,447 people, but as of July 3 only 1,847 had signed up.

Beijing still claims Taiwan -- which split with China in 1949 following the civil war -- as part of its sovereign territory and says it will take the island by force if necessary.

A 2011 report by Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense states the Chinese People's Liberation Army has 10 times as many troops as Taiwan and a military spend of roughly US$78 billion, compared with Taiwan's US$9 billion.

"Yet, the People's Republic of China's actual military funding is somewhere between two to three times the figure it has disclosed. Therefore, the actual difference in defense budget on the both sides may reach up to 21-fold," the report stated.

The Hung incident is being taken seriously by Taiwan's military whose plans to raise an all-volunteer force by the end of 2014 may be receding in the current hostile climate.

"There will certainly be an impact," Col. Hu Zhong-shi, director of the ministry's Recruitment Center of National Armed Forces, told a news conference. "We are continuing to observe the extent of what that impact might be."
 
If sinkee parents protest ...a few generals could face the chop, the officers responsible charged and even the Defence Minister be forced to resign.

Rise up, parents. Do you love your son enough to protect him from the brutality of MINDEF?
 
Rise up, parents. Do you love your son enough to protect him from the brutality of MINDEF?

I think you are being schizophrenic. Lazy & daft sinkies prefer to stay at home to watch their favourite soap operas. Your dead son is none of my business.
 
If sinkee parents protest ...a few generals could face the chop, the officers responsible charged and even the Defence Minister be forced to resign.

Rise up, parents. Do you love your son enough to protect him from the brutality of MINDEF?

They luv PAP more than their Sons.
 
I think you are being schizophrenic. Lazy & daft sinkies prefer to stay at home to watch their favourite soap operas. Your dead son is none of my business.

Aiyah ...everyone has a limit ...maybe this is the straw that breaks the camel back?
 
If parents don't protect their sons, then the sons should protect themselves. If 1,000 refuse to go to NS, will MINDEF lock the 1,000 up?

If 1000 agree not to go NS, only 1 person will be locked up, because 999 ownself decide to "go first then see how." Such is the sinkie way. :cool:
 
wishful thinking. so long when sinkies have kopi and kaya plus khalwat in kwaylang everything will be ok.
 
If sinkee parents protest ...a few generals could face the chop, the officers responsible charged and even the Defence Minister be forced to resign.

Rise up, parents. Do you love your son enough to protect him from the brutality of MINDEF?

yes if only singaporeans could protest,then everything could be fine and dandy.
 
Aiyah ...everyone has a limit ...maybe this is the straw that breaks the camel back?

sinkies have shown theres no limit when it comes to abusing them,illtreating them,degrading them and punching and slapping and underpaying them like the $500 intern,no matter how many times u push them beyond the limit,they will simply sit there and take the punishment,its like the switch inside them to fight back has been turned off,a neutering of testicles from birth.the sky's the limit when it comes to soixante-neuf behaviour between sinkies and their masters.
 
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sinkies have shown theres no limit when it comes to abusing them,illtreating them,degrading them and punching and slapping and underpaying them like the $500 intern,no matter how many times u push them beyond the limit,they will simply sit there and take the punishment,its like the switch inside them to fight back has been turned off,a neutering of testicles from birth.the sky's the limit when it comes to soixante-neuf behaviour between sinkies and their masters.

that's cos' from young,our mind have already been engineered to obey PAP, only PAP are good, the rest of the pple who go against PAP are bad.
 
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There will be an awakening.

*yawn* for how long? another 50 years?

you, diehard oppos, the disenfranchised, the lunatic fringe, imh patients, gaylords, loser returnees from overseas, and a bunch of so called high powered civil service alumni with "insider" info incessantly attempt to embarrass the pap and claim major political damage on them cum every election cycle. well........a big f*cking yawn. nothing happens, nobody cares. in fact, the pap gets stronger and a larger mandate. sinkies don't care one jack shit of any supposedly tok kong "embarrassment" bs here no matter how deep inside or outside the source is. even a fully publicized embarrassing episode on overt media doesn't cause a dent. it is worthless, it's not working, and it is not appreciated. give up.

like i've said countless times, sinkies will only care to go all out and kpkb and run riot in the streets when there's no water and no food. they will probably tahan a few days without water and food and stay home, but bengs will certainly protest and riot en masse in less than a day when there are no kopi, kaya and kway from kwaylang. ;)
 
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