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Samantha Guo knows how to ask for accountability, organising the residents to ask town council to answer the question why is there a lapse.
She knows the town council well just sweep everything under the rug.
She took the trouble of going door to door and ask for residents to sign a petition to demand for an answer.
Resident Samantha Guo seen holding the microphone asking questions in the second photo.
She knows the town council well just sweep everything under the rug.
She took the trouble of going door to door and ask for residents to sign a petition to demand for an answer.
Resident Samantha Guo seen holding the microphone asking questions in the second photo.
The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on May 21, 2011
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Resident Samantha Guo went from flat to flat to tell her neighbours about a petition to request replacing the water tank in which a body was found. MP Vikram Nair and town council staff are scheduled to hold a meeting with residents this afternoon. -- ST PHOTO: CAROLINE CHIA
http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_671091.html
Woodlands water tank could be closed down
Some residents uneasy despite cleansing of tank where body was found
By Kimberly Spykerman & Yuen Sin
A ROOFTOP water storage tank in which the body of an Indonesian maid was found on Monday could end up being taken out of use, MP for Sembawang GRC Vikram Nair said on Friday.
Spooked residents in Block 686B, Woodlands Drive 73, which has 149 units, remain queasy about drinking water from the tank.
'While the tank has been completely cleansed, some residents are not comfortable psychologically,' Mr Nair added.
He has been in discussion with Sembawang Town Council and national water agency PUB on how viable it would be to depend on the remaining seven water tanks to supply water to the entire block.
'It is being discussed and we are looking to see what we can do about it,' he said, adding that the discussions were still in the preliminary stages.
Currently, one set of four water tanks, including the one in which 30-year-old Ruliyawati's body was found, is still not in use. Bangladeshi cleaner Md Repon Mostafa, 27, was charged on Wednesday with her murder. Her body was flown home to Semarang in Java on Friday.
Read the full report in Saturday's edition of The Straits Times.
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[email protected]
The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on May 22, 2011
IN THE ST NEWSPAPER TODAY
Woodlands residents voice anger
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http://www.straitstimes.com/print/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_671341.html
By Jessica Lim
ABOUT 150 angry Woodlands Drive residents took their town council to task on Saturday for its lack of transparency and failure to keep its water tanks safe.
They had showed up at a dialogue session at the void deck of Block 686B in Woodlands Drive 75 - the block where an Indonesian maid was allegedly murdered and thrown into a water tank last week.
All wanted to know one thing: Why didn't the town council tell them to stop consuming the water immediately?
The police received a call at about 10am last Monday about a body found in the tank. Water supply to the block was cut off an hour later, after which residents were handed notices that said maintenance work was being done. But many said they still consumed the water from the affected tank, the residual amount left in the pipes, till as late as 5pm that day.
'The town council should have told us more. I was still using the water to bathe and rinse my mouth,' said resident Edwin Hong, 40, at the dialogue attended by representatives from the town council, the Public Utilities Board and Sembawang GRC MP Vikram Nair.
'Maybe they could not tell us exactly what happened. But at the very least, they should have told us not to consume the water due to suspected contamination.'
Read the full report in The Sunday Times.