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Posts Tagged ‘Singapore’

Armband Won’t Weigh Heavy On Him

While shocked at Aide’s retirement, Indra says it’s time to focus on
Tajikistan

Cubby Leong
cubby@mediacorp.com.sg

JOHN Wilkinson limped away after the first tackle, but when Gombak
defender Precious Emuejeraye steamed into the SAFFC midfielder the second
time, both players squared off with each other at a Lions’ training match
yesterday at the National Stadium.

While some Singapore fans would be alarmed to hear of the confrontation,
so near the second leg of their Asian Zone World Cup second round
qualifier with Tajikistan, new Lions’ captain Indra Sahdan (picture) was
unconcerned.

“I don’t foresee any problems. They are all good boys in the team,” the
Home United striker said. “They are not hard to manage and are easy to
talk to.

“This team is focused on playing as a unit and it’s not just about the
captain or anyone else in particular. That’s a good sign.”

Indeed, minutes later, both Precious and Wilkinson were already speaking
to each other on the touchline and looked a little sheepish.

After the shock retirement of veteran defender and long-time Singapore
captain Aide Iskandar last Friday, national coach Radojko Avramovic has
named 28-year-old Indra as team skipper.

Which means besides scoring goals, Indra will now have to deal with such
issues as team unity and player bonding.

While some have blamed a rift between Aide and Avramovic for the
defender’s retirement, other members of the public have blasted the
Geylang player for the timing of the submission of his letter – hours
before the crucial home clash with Tajikistan.

The new captain just wants to move on.

“It wasn’t just me, we were all surprised and disappointed by Aide’s
decision to leave,” said Indra. “But we have to move on. There’s a very
important game coming up in Tajikistan and the team must come together and
concentrate on that.”

The Lions leave for Tajikistan tonight and they will take a 2-0 advantage
into the second leg, which will be played at the Central Stadium, in the
capital Dushanbe.

Besides using common sense and instinct, Indra will draw on what he learnt
from watching how Aide performed as captain between 2003 and 2007, to lead
the team.

“I liked how Aide led the team,” said Indra. “He was a very nice man to
begin with. If anyone had any problem, they could speak to him and he
would always be very supportive.

“He never faulted anyone, in any situation. In fact, he was always very
encouraging, especially when things were not going well.”

Indra has always risen to the occasion, coming up with goals against the
likes of Denmark, Uruguay, Japan, Kuwait and Premiership champions
Manchester United.

Could the armband restrict him in any way?

“Of course this is a new experience for me, but I don’t see it as extra
pressure or me having extra responsibilities,” he said. “When I was a boy
watching from the stands, all I wanted was to play for the national team.
Being captain never crossed my mind.

“Now that I am, I will still approach the game the way I have always
done.”

Cook Islands Pip Singapore

The Singapore netball team went down 45-43 to world No 11 Cook Islands
yesterday at the Netball World Championships in Auckland.

The Singapore women led 32-31 after the third quarter and the lead swung
back and forth in the final period, with the Cook Islands side just edging
it in the end.

With the top two from each pool (four pools of four) advancing to the
last eight, Singapore are already out of the running, having lost two
matches.

Singapore go into today’s final Pool C match (11.10am, Singapore time)
against world No 3 Jamaica with only the battle for minor placings in the
tournament (positions 9 to 16) to aim for. – Low Lin Fhoong

The Rise And Rise Of Robinho

After two seasons at Real, Brazil striker is finally showing he is
capable of great things

MADRID – He signed for Real Madrid in the summer of 2005 amid much
fanfare, with the likes of Pele himself hailing the youngster as Brazil’s
next great thing.

The last couple of seasons have been a steep learning curve for Robinho as
he only displayed occasional glimpses of his form and some Real fans began
to question the wisdom of the signing.

But after another five-star performance for the Spanish champions on
Sunday (yesterday morning, Singapore time), the 23-year-old is finally
beginning to realise his enormous potential.

The Brazilian international put on a mesmerising display, including two
goals, as Real downed Real Mallorca 4-3 to stay top of La Liga.

The youngster has already chalked up a double in one previous league clash
this season and Real coach Bernd Schuster acknowledged: “Robinho is in
great form at the moment and he has maintained a very high level for
several matches now. That is what we expect of him.

“At Real Madrid we need players such as Robinho, Raul, Ruud (van
Nistelrooy) and (Wesley) Sneijder to create problems for the opposition.”

Dutch international van Nistelrooy scored the 73rd minute winner for Real
in a see-saw game that underlined Real’s attacking prowess and their
defensive frailties.

Real’s nearest challengers are Villarreal, just a point adrift after their
sensational 3-2 win over 10-man Sevilla.

Sevilla had beaten Real last weekend and Mallorca looked set to follow in
their footsteps.

Robinho had headed the hosts ahead on 12 minutes but Fernando Varela
equalised two minutes later.

The Brazilian then grabbed his fourth goal of the season on 16 minutes,
dispatching with aplomb after a pass from Raul.

But Real were at sixes and sevens in defence and Varela matched Robinho by
scoring his second of the match with a ferocious 36th minute equaliser.

Guiza then put Mallorca ahead, but Real had too much for the islanders,
with Raul and van Nistelrooy gobbling up chances set up by Robinho to send
the locals into a frenzy.

Said the youngster, after the game: “When I see Ronaldinho once we all
join up for the Brazil games, I’m going to remind him it is Real Madrid
that are leaders.

“I’m very happy with the way I’m playing.

“I’m here to make my dreams come true – to win trophies with Real Madrid.

“We are in great form and I am very happy with the victory because the
three points were very important. We are gradually doing things better and
it means we can be even better.” – Agencies

Uwc Plans New Tampines Campus

Demand at international school spikes with steady influx of foreigners

Teo Xuanwei
xuanwei@mediacorp.com.sg

FACED with the happy problem of overwhelming demand from parents, the
United World College of South East Asia has decided to open a new campus
in Tampines, which will be ready in three years’ time.

“The economy is booming and a lot of people are moving into Singapore. And
the quality of education for their children is an area where parents are
not ready to compromise,” said the college head, Mr Julian Whiteley,
yesterday.

For the last admission exercise in June, the college received more than
1,800 applications for 550 places.

The school also has a waiting list, of between one and three years,
depending on the level. The new 6-ha campus at Tampines Street 73 will be
about half the size of the college’s 11-ha campus at Dover Road but will
have similar facilities.

“It’s basically one college, two campuses. We will offer the same type of
education and curriculum,” Mr Whiteley said.

Like its Dover facility, the teacher-to-student ratio for the new campus -
operational in August 2010 – will be maintained at 11.6 to 1, which means
it will have about 220 teachers eventually.

Mr Mike Price, deputy college head, said the new campus will also continue
with the tradition of not just emphasising academic achievements but also
maintaining a “values-driven education, where students can explore,
inquire and challenge”.

The new campus will also cater to students from Kindergarten 1 to Grade
12 – the equivalent of nursery to junior college education for students
between four and 18 years old – and boarding facilities for about 200
students will also be available.

The school expects to hit its full capacity of 2,500 students five to
seven years after the Tampines campus starts operating, pushing total
numbers to about 5,400.

While the Tampines campus is being built, a transitional primary school
for about 400 students from Kindergarten 1 to Grade 4 will open in Ang Mo
Kio next September.

According to Mr Whiteley, the college chose Tampines for three reasons:
The absence of a major international school in the area,
relatively-cheaper property prices, and the town’s convenient transport
network.

With more foreigners settling down in Singapore – more than 77,000 came
here last year – the college is not the only international school with a
spike in demand.

Two months ago, DPS International School announced it would have a new
campus to accommodate about 2,000 students in the East Coast from next
April. Chairman C P Kabra said that the school has received about 500
enquiries from parents.

Key Is Getting Climate Message Through: Don

Alicia Wong
alicia@mediacorp.com.sg

He may have made winning a Nobel Peace Prize seem easy: One docu-movie and
former United States vice-president Al Gore shared the honours this year
with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

But when it comes to environmental work, the importance of successfully
conveying the issues to the public – which is what Mr Gore did with An
Inconvenient Truth – cannot be understated, according to the coordinating
lead author of the panel’s Fourth Assessment Report, Professor Richard C J
Somerville (picture).

Prof Somerville, a climate scientist and distinguished professor emeritus
at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told reporters yesterday that
people needed to “tell their governments that these issues are important
to them”.

“Polling data show this is not an overpowering No-1 priority Â… but I think
governments are responsive,” he said, citing western Europe’s several
centre-right governments that made the environment a “high priority”
despite a pro-business philosophy.

The refusal, on the other hand, by the US to move on environmental
policies until developing countries do so is frustrating for the American
on a personal level. Prof Somerville, who is in Singapore as a Lee Kuan
Yew Distinguished Fellow and was speaking in his capacity as a scientist,
called doubters of the effects of global warming “professional
contrarians”.

It is like smoking. It took 50 years to prove that smoking causes health
problems, and he expects environmental education to take time, too.
“Sceptical people are simply not well-informed about science,” he said.

But “people listen to their physicians and that’s all we are”. As
“planetary physicians”, he said, scientists tell governments and people
“there are different ways to behave and there are consequences”.

While climate science, like medical science, is imperfect, “it’s good
enough to be a valuable ingredient to policymaking”, added Prof
Somerville, who will be giving two public lectures today and on Friday at
the National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University.

6 Key Steps To Meet S’pore’s Energy Needs

Lin Yanqin and Esther Fung
yanqin@mediacorp.com.sg

SPIRALLING oil prices, growing global demand for energy, limited and
uncertain supplies from oil-producing countries, climate change from
greenhouse gas emissions – these are the challenges faced by a Singapore
dependent on imports for energy needs.

But even if Singapore has to be a “price-taker” in meeting its energy
needs, it can still turn “energy challenges” into “energy opportunities”.

To help make this happen, a master plan – outlined in the National Energy
Policy Report – was unveiled by the Minister for Trade and Industry Lim
Hng Kiang yesterday, with six strategies mapped out for Singapore’s energy
future.

Steps will be taken to improve energy security by diversifying energy
sources and the mix of fuels currently used to generate electricity. Plans
are also in place to grow the value-add of the energy industry, now worth
$20 billion, into a $34-billion industry by 2015, and triple the number of
jobs to 15,300.

“There’s very little we can do to affect worldwide demand and supply,”
said Mr Lim after unveiling the details of the energy policy at the
Singapore Electricity Roundtable. “The best solution is a long-term one,
towards efficiency, conservation and a competitive market.”

Traditional strengths like oil- refining and trading would continue to
grow, while others like renewable energy and the trading of energy
products have been identified as growth areas.

More than $300 million has been committed to boost Singapore’s energy
research and development capabilities, such as the Economic Development
Board’s $17-million Clean Energy Research and Test-bedding Programme.

A clean energy scholarship programme to fund some 130 Masters and PhD
students over the next five years for study and research in local and top
foreign universities was also announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong
at the opening of a separate event, Global Entrepolis, yesterday.

Diversifying Singapore’s energy supplies was a key strategy of the
framework, Mr Lim said.

Currently, more than three-quarters of Singapore’s electricity is
generated from piped natural gas (PNG) from Malaysia and Indonesia. But
rising domestic demand means that these countries might not be able to
continue PNG exports to Singapore.

Thus, developments, such as the liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal on
Jurong Island, where construction will begin in 2009, will allow Singapore
to source further for LNG, which can be transported over long distances,
to meet energy needs by 2012.

Singapore will continue to rely on natural gas for energy, Mr Lim said.
“Hydro, geothermal and wind power are not available in Singapore, while
nuclear energy is not feasible due to (Singapore’s) small size.” Solar and
coal power, on the other hand, have potential, but face cost and
technological barriers.

The framework also aims to improve Singapore’s energy efficiency, promote
competition in the energy market, boost international cooperation and get
all government agencies involved in shaping energy policy.

The energy industry regulator, Energy Market Authority, will take on a
more developmental role in policy planning and develop cooperation with in
ternational organisations.

The Energy Studies Institute, which was launched yesterday, will conduct
research in energy economics, energy security, and the environment.

Also underway is the pilot-testing of the Electricity Vending System,
where consumers can choose how much electricity they want to buy.

Trade-offs between the objectives of economic competitiveness, energy
security and environmental sustainability are inevitable, but where they
converge, they should be exploited, said Mr Lim.