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Upside-down national flag seen at Tampines CC
my paper
Wednesday, Aug 24, 2011
By Shaun Tan
THE Tampines Central Community Centre (CC) has come under fire from irate netizens, after a photograph of a national flag hung upside down outside its premises was posted online.
The flag was among others hoisted correctly on metal poles outside the premises in Tampines Street 83.
Mr Christopher Chia, who waited in the CC's office last Saturday, while his daughter attended ballet class, snapped the photo and posted it on citizen-journalism website Stomp.
Mr Chia, 43, a sales manager, said: "A man went into the CC's office to notify the staff that the flag was upside down. He was pretty peeved, and demanded that the issue be attended to immediately."
He added that the staff member confirmed that the flag was upside down, before getting the caretaker who raised it to rectify the mistake.
Netizen pyjstein said: "Flying flags upside down is an internationally recognised signal of distress."
In a statement to my paper, the People's Association (PA) confirmed that the incident took place last Saturday.
A PA spokesman said: "The Singapore flag should be treated with utmost respect at all times."


my paper
Wednesday, Aug 24, 2011
By Shaun Tan
THE Tampines Central Community Centre (CC) has come under fire from irate netizens, after a photograph of a national flag hung upside down outside its premises was posted online.
The flag was among others hoisted correctly on metal poles outside the premises in Tampines Street 83.
Mr Christopher Chia, who waited in the CC's office last Saturday, while his daughter attended ballet class, snapped the photo and posted it on citizen-journalism website Stomp.
Mr Chia, 43, a sales manager, said: "A man went into the CC's office to notify the staff that the flag was upside down. He was pretty peeved, and demanded that the issue be attended to immediately."
He added that the staff member confirmed that the flag was upside down, before getting the caretaker who raised it to rectify the mistake.
Netizen pyjstein said: "Flying flags upside down is an internationally recognised signal of distress."
In a statement to my paper, the People's Association (PA) confirmed that the incident took place last Saturday.
A PA spokesman said: "The Singapore flag should be treated with utmost respect at all times."
