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Big mouth backdoor ministar Ong Ye Kung speaks yet again

glockman

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The fucker with a face that only his mother could love sure has a lot to say these days. Dispensing wisdom almost everyday, trying desperately to make headline news. Trying to be PM? Fuck him lah!:FU:


COVID-19 has 'decimated' air travel, set back Changi Airport at least 40 years: Ong Ye Kung

Staff Writer, Singapore
Editorial Team
Yahoo News Singapore 14 August 2020

SINGAPORE — The coronavirus pandemic has set back Changi Airport by at least four decades, with strict border measures and health concerns leaving it almost “totally incapacitated”, said Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung.

“We used to record over 1,000 aircraft movements a day, now it is about 150. We were the 7th busiest airport in the world in terms of international passenger traffic, but have dropped to 50,” said Ong, who was speaking at the Ministry of Transport’s (MOT) National Day Observance Ceremony on 7 August.

And while transport authorities have explored various ways of bringing back demand, such as resuming the service of transfer and transit passengers, the picture still looks bleak.

Cargo planes are still using Changi, but comprise only about 5 per cent of total flights pre COVID-19. Furthermore, Changi is serving only a “trickle” of transfer and transit passengers, at 400 passenger movements a day, or 150,000 a year, compared to the pre-COVID 19 volume of close to 20 million a year.

The challenge, said Ong, is to restore passenger volume while keeping virus transmission under control, but the former cannot be turned on and off capriciously. “We need to take sensible measures concurrently, proportionate to the risk profile of each country, and make progressive steps as we become more confident.”

For example, Reciprocal Green Lanes for passengers from certain countries or regions, which have kept the virus under control, can be proliferated for business travel and also expanded for general travel. And as serving a two-week quarantine period is a “major deterrent” to travelers, Singapore may have to consider replacing this with a rigorous testing regime.

Ong declared, “Health and economic considerations are not at odds – we will find ways to revive our air hub and keep Singapore safe.”

Expressing optimism about the recovery prospects of the airport, Ong added, “COVID-19 has decimated air travel and incapacitated one of our lungs, but the Singapore heart – our determination, dynamism and enterprise – is still pumping strong. Changi Airport will one day be full again, SIA planes will once again soar.”

SMRT has ‘turned the corner’
People in face masks seen on a East-West line MRT train on 12 May 2020. (PHOTO: Dhany Osman / Yahoo News Singapore)

View photos
People in face masks seen on a East-West line MRT train on 12 May 2020. (PHOTO: Dhany Osman / Yahoo News Singapore)
Turning to land transport, Ong paid tribute to the SMRT engineers who have “saved the day” again.

“The system used to suffer a breakdown longer than five minutes for every 130,000 train-km travelled. Now, it is clocking over a million train-km between such breakdowns,” said the minister.

And citing figures from SMRT CEO Neo Kian Hong, Ong noted that 70 per cent of maintenance efforts are now devoted to preventive maintenance, and 30 per cent to corrective maintenance. “A few years ago, the ratio was almost flipped the other way around.”

And while Ong pointed to these figures as a “clear sign” that SMRT has turned the corner, he cautioned that this was not a declaration of victory. Maintenance and engineering must remain a top priority.

With new stations and lines opening almost every year over the next decade or so, the MRT network will grow from around 230km today to 360km by then. “The MRT map today is as tight and as comprehensive as many advanced European cities,” said Ong, who added that the government has been spending $2 billion every year to subsidise the running of the public transport system.

Singapore still a transshipment port.
On the maritime front, the Port of Singapore Authority (PSA) is anticipating a drop in volumes this year. But PSA will respond “nimbly”, said Ong, to capture new opportunities in areas such as e-commerce, and investing in its competitive advantage.

And the minister stressed, “It is important to recognise these constants in the midst of change. They offer us a centre of gravity as we adapt to a different future.”

For example, in the 1970s, Singapore was the second largest port in the world by cargo volume, after Rotterdam. And while Rotterdam has now dropped to No. 11, Singapore remains at No. 2 as it is a transshipment port: an interchange of the world, where cargo arrives and reconnects to other shipping lines.

“As a transshipment port, Singapore has been the biggest in the world, by volume. That is in turn due to the importance of the Straits of Malacca and Singapore, which has not diminished from the time I was in primary school.”

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/covid-19-...-at-least-40-years-ong-ye-kung-084910318.html
 
Somore, they build so many airport terminals for what and cpf money was gone to waste lol! Sg also dont have domestic flight! lol! Dumbass!
 
The new transport minister, unlike his predecessors, seems obsessed with air travel and aviation hub and airshows.

Here's an idea: fuck off from politics, and go enjoy yourself at Changi Airport Group or CAAS. :rolleyes:
 
Singapore may have to consider replacing 2-week COVID-19 isolation with 'rigorous testing regime' for travellers: Ong Ye Kung
In wake of COVID-19, Changi Airport has seen less human traffic. Terminal 3's transit area on Mar 30, 2020. (Photo: Jeremy Long)Bookmark
SINGAPORE: Singapore may have to consider replacing the two-week isolation period with a "rigorous testing regime" for arriving travellers, as part of efforts to "revive" the country's air hub, said Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung.
In a Facebook video on Friday (Aug 14), Mr Ong said that the decline in international air travel due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has seen Singapore drop from its position as the 7th busiest airport in the world in terms of international passenger traffic.
It is now in 50th place, with just 150 aircraft movements per day, compared to more than 1,000 a day previously.
"We have tried to bring back demand in various ways. Cargo planes are still using Changi, but they are only about 5 per cent of total flights pre-COVID-19," said Mr Ong.
"We have started to serve transfer and transit passengers, but even at its peak, they accounted for at most a third of total Changi passenger traffic. Today we are serving only a trickle of that, at 400 passenger movements a day, or 150,000 a year, compared to our pre-COVID 19 volume of close to 20 million a year," he added.
"Our challenge is to restore passenger volume, while keeping virus transmission under control," he said.
Mr Ong's National Day speech to the Ministry of Transport (MOT) was delivered last week.
Singapore needs the "same hunger and enterprise" as it did in the early 1980s when Changi Airport first opened and the country went "all out" to attract airlines to fly here, he added.
International travel could start with other countries and territories where virus transmission risk profiles are "similar to or better than" Singapore's, he said, noting such locations made up about 40 per cent of the country's pre-pandemic passenger volumes.
"But passenger volumes cannot be turned on and off capriciously," he added. "We need to take sensible measures concurrently, proportionate to the risk profile of each country, and make progressive steps as we become more confident."
READ: Singapore and Japan agree to resume essential business travel; officials tasked to finalise agreement by September: MFA
These could include "unilaterally opening up" to passengers from countries and regions that have kept the coronavirus "under control", as well as the proliferation of reciprocal green lanes for business travel and expanding them to include general travel as well.
"Serving 14 days isolation is a major deterrent to travellers, and we may have to consider replacing this with a rigorous testing regime," he said.
"Health and economic considerations are not at odds – we will find ways to revive our air hub and keep Singapore safe."
He said Singapore has to keep its borders open "to survive", and needs to "connect to the world" to thrive.
"To prosper, we have to be a hub of the global economy," he added.
READ: Business and official travellers on Singapore-China 'fast lane' arrangement must get COVID-19 swab tests
Changi Airport 29
Changi Airport's Terminal 3's transit area during the COVID-19 outbreak. (Photo: Jeremy Long)
In his speech, Mr Ong also thanked MOT, as well as the Land Transport Authority and operators SMRT and SBS Transit for the "vast improvement" in train service reliability in recent years.
"The system used to suffer a breakdown longer than five minutes for every 130,000 train-km travelled. Now it is clocking over a million train-km between such breakdowns," he said.
He added that SMRT chief executive Neo Kian Hong had told him during a visit to Tuas Depot recently that the rail operator now devotes 70 per cent of its maintenance efforts to preventive maintenance and 30 per cent to corrective maintenance.
"A few years ago, the ratio was almost flipped the other way around. This is a clear sign that we have turned the corner," said Mr Ong. "As they have done so many times in Singapore, engineers here have saved the day."
"Still, this is not a declaration of victory, but a cautionary bell. What we have today is hard won. We must continue to place maintenance and engineering as a top priority."
Mr Ong also pointed to the cost of operating and maintaining the rail network, as well as renewing ageing assets, noting the country's MRT network would expand to 360km over the next decade, up from 230km today.
"Fare revenue is insufficient to cover these operational expenses," he said, adding that the Government spends S$2 billion every year to subsidise the cost of running the public transport system.
"But an attractive public transport system brings about a greener, fairer and better Singapore, and help us move towards a car-lite nation," he said.
The MOT will work with the Ministry of National Development and the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment to develop a "comprehensive sustainable development plan" for Singapore, he added.
 
This chap talks as much crap as Cotton Chan..n to think the voters are that retarded to vote for such an idiot just shows the type of idiots singkies are
 
First this CB Kia as the Minister of Transport need to stop the infected CECA Nehs from returning back to Singapore. So many imported cases involving these Ah Nehs and yet the Pappies are allowing them to return back!
 
First this CB Kia as the Minister of Transport need to stop the infected CECA Nehs from returning back to Singapore. So many imported cases involving these Ah Nehs and yet the Pappies are allowing them to return back!


india is exporting diseases indians all over the world now!
One-year-old boy among imported coronavirus cases announced on Friday

SINGAPORE - A one-year-old boy was among the four imported coronavirus patients, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said on Friday (Aug 14).

The boy, an Indian national and a dependant's pass holder, arrived in Singapore from India. He was asymptomatic when tested, and tested positive on Wednesday.

Another dependant's pass holder, also an Indian national, was among the imported patients.

The last two imported cases arrived from India on Aug 2. They are work pass holders who are currently employed in Singapore.

MOH said all of them had been placed on 14-day stay-home notices upon arrival in Singapore, and had been tested while serving their notices.

No cases in the community were reported on Friday, for the first time since June 1.

Migrant workers living in dormitories made up the remaining 79 new coronavirus patients announced on Friday, taking Singapore's total to 55,580.

Six clusters in dormitories were closed as the dorms have been cleared by the Inter-agency Taskforce, and now house only recovered individuals and those who have recently tested negative for Covid-19 infection.

The number of new daily cases in the community has remained stable at an average of two cases per day in the past two weeks, said MOH.

The number of unlinked cases in the community has also remained stable at an average of one case per day over the same period.

With 313 cases discharged on Friday, 51,034 patients have fully recovered from the disease.

A total of 79 patients remain in hospital, while 4,425 are recuperating in community facilities. None are in intensive care.

Singapore has had 27 deaths from Covid-19 complications, while 15 who tested positive have died of other causes.
 
This backdoor MP farker again. Cannot even handle the covid-19 pandemic,want to talk big only.Sinkees like this backdoor farker.Shake head ?!
 
If the virus is as deadly as the way the media makes it out to be. Why are the borders not shut n these ah nehs allowed to enter the country? N since the virus is no different to the flu. Why dont the borders b open n things back to normal? All these are half hearted BS controls for flu which are causing more problems for the people than the virus itself
 
Less air travel is a good thing. It is all this international jet setting that caused the spread of Covid-19 in the first place.

If China had preserved the Mao era system which prevented their citizens from traveling abroad Covid-19 would not have left China's shores in the first place.
 
Some gahmen fucker should have thought of this before building the Jewel and the 4 terminals with 1 in tow.
 
Changi i think is no 3 in asean. After jakarta and bangkok.
Jakarta and KL has 3 runways.
Bangkok has two international airports, that means 4 runways.
 
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