MINDEF appoints PR partner for Total Defence

The Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) has appointed Asia PR Werkz for the management of public relations and Online Engagement for Total Defence 2016.

Total Defence 2016 is a campaign organised to raise Singaporeans’ awareness of Total Defence and encourage them to play a part in making Singapore strong and secure. Asia PR Werkz will be developing and executing an integrated communication strategy that includes media management and will oversee the campaign’s online engagement effort. Creative agency formul8 is working with Asia PR Werkz to develop the visual identify for the campaign and designing and production of campaign collaterals.

Total Defence 2016 aims to reaffirm everyone for their contributions towards Total Defence, which in turn, is crucial in keeping Singapore safe and strong. As part of the efforts, there will be a Total Defence 2016 Exhibition which will feature the inspiring stories of people who have contributed in their own ways towards Total Defence.

The campaign will also be refreshing the Total Defence song which was created back in 1984. A music video produced by the Asia PR Werkz team will be released as part of the campaign.

 

Singapore By-election at Bukit Batok SMC

BukitBatokIt is a disappointment as a resident of Bukit Batok been into position for choosing again which is not even 1 year ago (General Election). Our choice for me and my neighbourhood are clear to which political party we choose and support base on their plan of pushing our nation forward in the midst of poor economic performance, as compare to political party who just interest in democracy without responsibility who hide behind so call constructive opposition.

As a voter, I am not interested about all sort of politics that the opposition claims about. All I need is to see the progressive of my family lifestyle and my children been educate and brought up with the right knowledge so as to live as who they should be, as part of our nation and our community. Singapore success and proud among the world is all because we live as one in community. With policy maker who makes law set direction base on society as a whole, not according to individual right and freedom higher than others, believes and promote freedom without considering the consequences, forgetting reason and root of what make Singapore the miracle of the world.

I do agree that Singapore ruling party, the PAP, can do or must do better in many ways towards what we want and hoping for, I also agree that Singapore need of alternative political party, non-PAP representation to voice out in the different prospective, but Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) is definitely not my choice and I won’t even consider choosing them to represent me or my neighbourhood. It is unacceptable to consider choosing an option with an agenda that directly conflict with our social value and ethics of Singaporean. I will consider voting for other political party if any other political party representative who is able to bring up good ideas and proposal beside the PAP, but definitely not for SDP.

For the sake of my family and Singaporean, I sincerely hope that residents of Bukit Batok SMC never vote for SDP so as to send a strong message to them that Singapore never agree with opportunist and extreme politician.

Chee Kiang
Bukit Batok resident

 

North Korea fires ballistic missile into sea

1035815720They say the missile, launched off the east coast, flew about 800km (500 miles) and fell into the water. North Korea has not commented on the report.

US President Barack Obama earlier imposed new sanctions on Pyongyang, after its recent “illicit” nuclear test and satellite launch.

His executive order freezes North Korean government property in America.

It bans US exports to – or investment in – North Korea and also greatly expands powers to blacklist anyone, including non-Americans, dealing with North Korea.

The 6 January nuclear test and 7 February satellite launch were violations of existing UN sanctions.

Amid the heightened tensions, the North sentenced a US student to 15 years hard labour on Wednesday for “severe crimes” against the state.

The US demanded North Korea immediately release Otto Warmbier, 21, who was arrested for trying to steal a propaganda sign from a hotel while on a visit in January.

The US and South Korea are also holding their biggest annual military drills this month, which routinely generate tension.

But this year North Korea threatened to launch a “pre-emptive nuclear strike of justice” against the US and South Korea.

The Chosen Media Strongly Against Agenda of Reporters Without Borders

1913979_1086641841356140_1656935546083868113_nReporter Without Borders provokes freedom of Information with agenda of anti-ethics of reporters. Exist of such movement for journalist promoting freedom of spreading fake and unverified information without shame is an insult to human man kind of responsibility and dirt to human right movement.

Putin Orders Start of Syria Withdrawal, Saying Goals Are Achieved

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Monday ordered the withdrawal of the “main part” of Russian forces in Syria, a surprise move that reflected what he called the Kremlin’s achievement of nearly all its objectives in the war-torn country.

The news upended expectations in Western capitals and among ordinary Syrians, setting off fevered speculation about Russia’s intentions, much as Mr. Putin’s unexpected military plunge into the Syrian battlefield five months ago changed the course of the war.

Perhaps the most urgent questions were how the move would affect the war’s outcome and what it meant for President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, whose rule had been increasingly threatened by a string of military losses before Russian forces backed him up.

The Russian decision could signal a new confidence in Mr. Assad’s stability or an effort to pressure him to negotiate with his political adversaries — or both.

Mr. Putin has made his move at a particularly critical moment, as the upheaval in Syria enters its sixth year and a United Nations mediator in Geneva tries to revive peace talks to stop the war, which has displaced millions and created a humanitarian catastrophe.

A Russian military pullback will not leave Mr. Assad’s forces completely alone, because he also has support from Iran and from Hezbollah in Lebanon. And the Kremlin made clear it was keeping its new air base in the coastal Mediterranean province of Latakia, in addition to the naval refueling station it has kept nearby in Tartus since Soviet times.

Mr. Putin has a history of unpredictability and is known for public statements that do not always align with Russia’s actions. In eastern Ukraine, for example, fighting by Moscow-backed rebels has continued even though Mr. Putin has pledged to honor a peace treaty.

But Russia is also facing deepening economic problems caused by the collapse in global oil prices, and the announcement may reflect Mr. Putin’s desire to declare victory and extricate his country from a costly military venture.

The Kremlin declared its plans hours after the United Nations mediator, Staffan de Mistura, met with the Syrian government delegation in Geneva.

There have been growing signs of differences between Russia and the Syrian government over the Geneva talks, which Moscow has pressed hard for, along with Washington. And for Mr. Assad, the prospect of Russia’s leaving him to fend for himself is sure to focus his mind on following its lead — advice that Russian officials have publicly offered him in recent days.

“I seriously doubt Moscow is breaking with Assad,” said Andrew J. Tabler, a scholar on Syria at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Rather, he said, the Russian announcement appeared to be “putting the military burden back on Assad so as to soften up his negotiating position.”

Moscow has recently evinced a measure of frustration. Three times in the past two weeks, Mr. Assad and his advisers have made public statements noticeably out of sync with Russia’s declared goal of substantive talks — most recently on Saturday, when Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem of Syria declared that Mr. Assad’s rule was a “red line” and that there would be no discussion of presidential elections.

Speculation about Russia’s announcement grew so intense, including among Syrian government loyalists on social media, that by Monday night, Mr. Assad’s office issued a statement to dispel rumors that the president had been caught flat-footed. It blamed “partners in Syrian bloodshed” for the conjecture and said that the announcement had been made “with full coordination” after “extensive study” of recent military successes and that “Syria and Russia are, as always, together fighting terrorism.”

The Russian move may also be a reflection that Mr. Putin is now supremely confident in Mr. Assad’s renewed stability and can afford to step back a bit and play statesman.

Mr. Putin has achieved many of his main goals: bringing Russia back to center stage as a global power; preventing, on principle, regime change by outside powers, particularly Western ones; gaining a stronger foothold in Syria; picking off Russian jihadists on the Syrian battlefield; and strengthening Mr. Assad.

The Syrian leader appeared more threatened last summer than he had been in years, as American-backed and Islamist insurgents coordinated more effectively and began to threaten his coastal strongholds. But the Russian intervention turned the tables.

Now, many of those insurgent gains have been reversed, and Russian air power helped cut off critical opposition supply lines into Turkey, isolating the rebel-held portion of Aleppo, Syria’s largest city. That does not put Mr. Assad in a position to retake the entire country, but it does, at least, restore the deadlock that he had maintained through 2014.

And it can be argued that Mr. Putin has little to lose: Russia can easily resume strikes from its base at will, and it can keep supporting the Syrian military and Mr. Assad’s other allies on the ground — Iranian-backed militias from Hezbollah, Iraq and elsewhere — with Russian weapons while floating cash to the Syrian government.

“The goal was to preserve the regime in some form and guarantee that Russia will keep its presence in the region, in terms of a naval facility and now also with an air base,” said Aleksei Makarkin, the deputy head of the Center for Political Technologies in Moscow.

But Russia remains mindful of its history of getting bogged down in a long war in Afghanistan in the 1980s — and of the $3 million daily cost of its involvement in Syria while collapsing oil prices and economic sanctions are harming Russia’s financial health.

Initially, Russia said it was intervening in Syria to take the fight to the Islamic State militant group. But it soon came under criticism for concentrating on other insurgents — groups fighting Mr. Assad that do not belong to the Islamic State and sometimes clash with it, including some that were supported by the West. Russian officials said any groups coordinating with the Qaeda-linked Nusra Front, as many of those groups have done, were fair game.

By declaring, in effect, mission accomplished, Russia is in a way acknowledging that destroying the Islamic State was never the primary goal; the group is still deeply entrenched in much of northern and eastern Syria.

Yet Russian airstrikes are pummeling Palmyra, a historic city held by the Islamic State. If government troops manage to retake it, Mr. Putin could claim to have saved an archaeological treasure by preventing the extremist group from further destroying some of the world’s most significant ancient ruins. (Some antigovernment activists there say, however, that the airstrikes are endangering the ruins, as well as civilians.)

Russia has been accused of targeting noncombatants and civilian infrastructure, like hospitals, which it has denied; opposition groups said Russian airstrikes had accounted for over half of civilian casualties since September.

Singaporean confidence on PAP government remains unshaken

According to our public feedback online and on site survey of those who know about this two cases, where the majority pro-liberal online media criticize on ministry response, it is surprise that up to near 80% majority of the public are in favour to the stands and response of the ministry and their following action, despite of many online criticism. The survey also reflect that the ministry and public service organization can still be improve but consider the reason of government explanations.

This reflect that pro-liberal self-create media support does not seem to shake the public confidence on conservative government, after the controversy of attempt to emotion stirring and unverified news posted by The Online Citizen (TOC). Have the online social media revolution effect as successful as what the liberate opposition and pro-liberate journalist claim to be? Are these media journalists happily singing their own song and continuously self-denial of how public has lost confidence and trust on them?

 

U.S. sends 3 B-2 bombers to Asia-Pacific

The U.S. Air Force has sent three of its B-2 stealth bombers on a deployment to Asia and Pacific, the service announced in a press release Wednesday.

The $1.15 billion bombers, which operate out of Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, “will integrate and conduct training with ally and partner air forces, and conduct a radio communications check with a U.S. air operations center,” said a release from U.S. Strategic Command.

The deployment comes amid heightened tensions with North Korea, which tested two short-range missiles on Thursday and earlier this week claimed it has miniaturized nuclear warheads to fit on ballistic missiles. North Korea’s actions come as U.S. and South Korean forces conduct annual military drills involving thousands of troops.

It also comes at a time of tensions with China as Beijing asserts its claims over disputed areas in the South China Sea by building infrastructure, including harbors and airstrips on islands in the sea and upping its military presence.

“Recent events demonstrate the continued need to provide consistent and credible air power throughout the Indo-Asia-Pacific region,” the commander of U.S. Pacific Air Forces, Gen. Lori J. Robinson, said in the press release.

“Strategic bomber deployments ensure our ability to project power at a time and place of our choosing and develop strong interoperability with our regional allies and partners,” Robinson said.

During an appearance in Australia on Tuesday, Robinson called on that country and others in the region to assert their rights to fly over the South China Sea.

“We would encourage anybody in the region and around the world to fly and sail in international air space in accordance with international rules and norms” the U.S. general was quoted as saying by Australia’s ABC News online. “We would encourage all nations in the region to do just that, just as the United States is doing.”

Earlier this month, the U.S. Navy sent the aircraft carrier USS John S. Stennis and its strike group into the South China Sea, where Chinese ships operated close by, according to the carrier’s commander.

The Air Force did not say where in the Asia-Pacific region the three B-2s would be operating or how long they would stay in the region.

B-2s have made deployments to Andersen Air Force Base on the Pacific island of Guam in recent years, including last August. And in March 2013, a B-2 flew from Missouri and dropped inert munitions during training exercises over South Korea.

The U.S. Air Force has 20 B-2 bombers in its fleet. The four-engine bombers are flown by a crew of two pilots and can carry both conventional and nuclear weapons. They became operational in 1997.

Former President Election Contestant Dr Tan Cheng Bock confirms he will run again in the next Presidential Election that will be held latest on the year 2017 if he is still qualify.

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Dr Tan, 75, made the announcement at a press conference at the MHC Asia Healthcare building in Commonwealth. His wife Cecilia is chairman of the healthcare company. His various achievements in his 26 years as an MP: as the first backbencher in years to be elected to the PAP exco in 1987; as an MP who pushed for measures such as the use of Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings for education and free parking on Sundays; as the chairman of the Feedback Unit and the first town council; and as leader of the group of MPs tasked to build links with counterparts in Europe and later South-east Asia.

He lost the 2011 election to President Dr Tony Tan who is currently the president by 0.35 percentage points.