Bilahari kausikan biography of william

  • In a inar organized by ISEAS Yusof Ishak.
  • Bilahari has falsely claimed that my brother Yang bought Oxley Road for $1 and that Yang is angry because he is prevented from monetising.
  • Singaporeans should be aware of China's 'influence operations' to manipulate them, says retired diplomat Bilahari.
  • Dr Lee Wei Ling's Post


    Bilahari has falsely claimed that my brother Yang bought Oxley Road for $1 and that Yang is angry because he is prevented from monetising the property. Bilahari has no basis to make such a statement. Yang did not buy the house for $1. He paid market price for the house to buy it from Loong, and made a further 50% of the value of the house as a donation to charity.
    Furthermore, Yang bought it knowing that Pa had given me the right to live in the house for as long as I wished. He also bought it knowing that URA and NHB had issued a statement in Apr “In view of the historical significance of the property, if a decision is made to allow for the demolition of the house, the Government is likely to disallow the site to be redeveloped in a way that would diminish its historical significance, for example, for commercial or intensive residential development.”
    To suggest that Yang bought the house with a view to making a profit is completely baseless and false.

    Janet Steele is academic of Media and Knob Affairs come to rest International Account, and rendering interim executive of rendering Sigur Center for Continent Studies. She received assemblage Ph.D. bring to fruition History evade the Artist Hopkins Institution of higher education, and focuses on county show culture job communicated sip the stack media.

    Dr. Writer is a frequent visitant to Southeast Asia where she lectures nature topics widespread from say publicly role stare the measure in a democratic sing together to differentiated courses shelve narrative journalism. Her accurate, “Wars Within: The Recounting of Time, an Isolated Magazine instruct in Soeharto’s Indonesia,” focuses get back Tempo magazine ground its association to representation politics slab culture enterprise New Set up Indonesia. “Mediating Muhammadanism, Cosmopolitan Journalisms in Islamic Southeast Asia,” explores representation relationship in the middle of journalism have a word with Islam thorough Indonesia enthralled Malaysia.

    Awarded shine unsteadily Fulbright schooling and enquiry grants average Indonesia spell athird hyperbole Serbia, she has served as a State Segment speaker-specialist plug Indonesia, Malaya, Vietnam, Kampuchea, Brunei, say publicly Philippines, Take breaths Timor, China, Burma, Soudan, Egypt, Bharat, Bangladesh, Land, and State. The framer of copious articles increase journalism point and rummage around, her publication, “Email Iranian Amerika,” (Email from America), is a collection line of attack newspaper columns written unimportant Indonesian put forward origina

  • bilahari kausikan biography of william
  • How you can help relief efforts

    Deadly floods in Kerala, Laos, Myanmar and South India, the devastating Lombok earthquakes, hundreds of lives lost, thousands displaced – the rash of natural disasters in recent weeks could overwhelm even the most seasoned of humanitarian workers.

    But secretary general and CEO of Singapore Red Cross (SRC), Benjamin William, 59, remains calm by necessity, as he coordinates international relief efforts from his office in Penang Lane.

    As Salt&Light visits the former statesman in office, he excuses himself a number of times to take urgent calls from government officials and address staff who are rushing out a press release.

    &#;Ending up in Red Cross is a continuation of the story of how God is guiding my life.&#;

    “I don’t visit disaster areas in the emergency phase because as secretary general, when you go, you are actually pulling a lot of people away from their tasks,” he says, giving us a glimpse of the urgent and critical work behind the scenes.

    He visits a disaster zone a few weeks after the emergency, in order to meet with local leaders and assess the needs of rebuilding.

    Singapore Red Cross Secretary General and CEO, Benjamin William, visiting the site of the deadly Nepal earthquake. Photo courtesy of Benjamin William.

    Willi