Saturday, 28 April 2012

Eighth foreign domestic worker falls to her death-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

A 25-year old foreign domestic worker fell to her death from a Woodlands flat on Thursday. (Yahoo! file photo)
A 25-year old foreign domestic worker fell to her death from a Woodlands flat on Thursday. (Yahoo! file photo)

Eight this year already.

That’s the number of foreign domestic workers who have fallen to their death so far this year, reportedly from cleaning windows.

On Thursday evening, an Indonesian maid fell from the ninth floor of Block 801 Woodlands Street 81. A stool and cleaning materials were found next to the window where the 25-year old worker fell, reported
The Straits Times.

Her death comes amid a growing movement that calls for a total ban on the cleaning of window exteriors in high-rise flats.

Last weekend,
Madam Halimah Yacob, the Minister of State for Community Development, Youth and Sports, issued a strong warning to employers: Bar your domestic workers from opening window grilles and keep the keys to those grilles.

That came after the seventh death of a
foreign domestic worker in her thirties who fell from a Punggol flat last Thursday.

Migrant workers shelter,
Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics (HOME), echoed the same sentiments and called for a total ban on foreign domestic workers cleaning window exteriors.

In an ongoing
Yahoo! Singapore poll, 76 per cent of nearly 6,000 respondents support the move to ban domestic workers from cleaning window exteriors.

Starting next month, all foreign domestic workers will have to undergo a new programme to orientate them about living and working safety in Singapore, announced the Ministry of Manpower recently.

Under-age call girl scandal shakes Singapore elite-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

A gag order has not stopped netizens from spreading photos of the alleged callgirl online. (Getty Images)
A gag order has not stopped netizens from spreading photos of the alleged callgirl online. (Getty Images)

An unfolding scandal over an under-age call girl has shaken Singapore's political and economic elite after businessmen, civil servants and uniformed officers were charged in the case.

Prostitution is legal in Singapore, but 48 men ranging in age from their early 20s to late 40s have so far been charged under a 2008 law making it a crime to pay for sex with a girl under 18.

Singapore has long been perceived as a conservative, even prudish, city-state but it has a thriving sex industry dating back to its beginnings as a key trading port of the then British empire.

The latest case has shone a spotlight on its pragmatic approach, which instead of seeking to close down the sex industry aims to tightly regulate the trade to protect minors and ward off criminal involvement.

An elementary school principal who pleaded guilty to engaging the under-aged girl's services became the first to be punished when a district court on Friday sentenced him to nine weeks in jail for the offence.

Among the remaining accused are five foreigners including Juerg Buergin, a 40-year-old Swiss expatriate who had worked for banking giant UBS.

The most prominent of the Singaporeans charged is Howard Shaw, a high-society figure and grandson of Runme Shaw, co-founder of cinema and property empire Shaw Organisation, which is also active in charity causes.

The gossip mill went into overdrive when it was disclosed that Shaw, a 41-year-old with two daughters from his first marriage, had sex with the teenager just a month before tying the knot with his second wife, a former beauty contestant still in her 20s.

The two appeared on a recent cover of high-society magazine Singapore Tatler as the poster couple for an article on "great romances" among the rich and famous in the city-state.

Singapore websites and social media are swirling with speculation that more men will be charged even as the identity of the girl, only 17 when she had dalliances with the accused, is being concealed by court order.

People have also been sharing purported pictures and salacious descriptions of the girl, described by a defence lawyer as a "hardcore prostitute".

But apart from generating juicy gossip, the high-profile case has also won the authorities plaudits for their rigorous handling of the issue.

"This is the first time that cases of obtaining paid sex from a girl under the age of 18 has been exposed and enforced on such a large scale," said rights group the Singapore committee for UN Women.

Singapore's legalisation of the sex trade makes it a "pragmatic" and "unusual" exception in a region where prostitution thrives but is officially banned, said Reuben Wong, a political scientist at the National University of Singapore.

The under-age prostitution scandal was "an embarrassment for Singapore as a society, because it has such a squeaky clean, puritan image," but reflected well on the state's strict laws on the sex business, he said.

Brothels operate openly in Singapore in the notorious Geylang red light district, and self-declared prostitutes are required to undergo health checks.

"We recognise that it is not possible to eradicate it and forcing it underground will lead to the greater likelihood of involvement by triads and organised crime, the trafficking of women, and public health risks," Ho Peng Kee, then a top official of the interior ministry, told parliament in 2009.

Wong told AFP: "Prostitution was legalised to bring this sector under close government control -- for economic, moral, tax reasons.... The main overarching theme is we keep it under government control."

KFC ordered to pay $8.3 million to Australian girl-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

Last week KFC indicated it will appeal the decision
Fast food giant Kentucky Fried Chicken has been ordered to pay Aus$8 million (US$8.3 million) to an Australian girl who suffered severe brain damage and was paralysed after eating a Twister wrap

Fast food giant Kentucky Fried Chicken was Friday ordered to pay Aus$8 million (US$8.3 million) to an Australian girl who suffered severe brain damage and was paralysed after eating a chicken wrap.

Monika Samaan was seven when she suffered salmonella encephalopathy -- a brain injury linked to food poisoning that also left her with a blood infection and septic shock -- in October 2005.

Other family members also fell ill and they claimed Samaan's injuries, which include severe cognitive, motor and speech impairment and spastic quadriplegia, were caused by a "Twister" wrap containing chicken and salad from a Sydney KFC outlet.

The New South Wales Supreme Court ruled in the family's favour a week ago and on Friday ordered KFC to pay the girl Aus$8 million in damages plus legal costs.

In a statement, the family's lawyer George Vlahakis said they were relieved the battle was over.
"Monika's severe brain damage and severe disability has already exhausted the very limited resources of the family," he said.

"Monika is now a big girl and they are finding it increasingly difficult to lift her and to look after her basic needs as well as look after Monika's younger siblings.

"The compensation ordered is very much needed. KFC have to date been determined that Monika does not receive a cent."

Last week KFC said it believed the evidence showed KFC did not cause the tragedy and indicated it will appeal the decision but is yet to do so.

"We feel deeply for Monika and the Samaan family however we also have a responsibility to defend KFC's reputation as a provider of safe, high quality food," KFC Australia's chief corporate affairs officer Sally Glover said.

During the trial, Justice Stephen Rothman said the chicken became contaminated "because of the failure of one or more employees of KFC" to follow proper preparation rules, which he described as "negligent".

Egypt's 'Farewell Intercourse' law allowing sex with dead wives sparks fury-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

London, Apr 27 (ANI): Egypt's new Islamist-dominated parliament is preparing to introduce a controversial law that would allow husbands to have sex with their deceased wives up to six hours after death.

Known as the "farewell Intercourse" law, the measure is being championed as part of a raft of reforms introduced by the parliament that will also see the minimum age of marriage lowered to 14 for girls.

Egypt's National Council for Women is campaigning against the changes, saying that 'marginalising and undermining the status of women would negatively affect the country's human development'.

Dr Mervat al-Talawi, head of the NCW, wrote to the Egyptian People's Assembly Speaker Dr Saad al-Katatni addressing her concerns.

Egyptian journalist Amro Abdul Samea reported in the al-Ahram newspaper that Talawi complained about the legislations, which are being introduced under 'alleged religious interpretations'.he subject of a husband having sex with his dead wife arose in May 2011 when Moroccan cleric Zamzami Abdul Bari said marriage remains valid even after death.

He also said that women have the right to have sex with her dead husband, alarabiya.net reported.
It seems the topic, which has sparked outrage, has now been picked up on by Egypt's politicians.

TV anchor Jaber al-Qarmouty slammed the notion of letting a husband have sex with his wife after her death under the so-called 'Farewell Intercourse' draft law.

"This is very serious. Could the panel that will draft the Egyptian constitution possibly discuss such issues? Did Abdul Samea see by his own eyes the text of the message sent by Talawi to Katatni?," the Daily Mail quoted him as telling the website.

"This is unbelievable. It is a catastrophe to give the husband such a right! Has the Islamic trend reached that far? Is there really a draft law in this regard? Are there people thinking in this manner?" he added. (ANI)

Thursday, 26 April 2012

Virginia woman wins $1 million - twice in same lottery-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

U.S. 100 dollar notes are seen at a bank in this picture illustration in Seoul
U.S. 100 dollar notes are seen at a bank in this picture illustration in Seoul September 20, 2011. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won



(Reuters) - A Virginia woman found out on April 7 she won $1 million in a lottery drawing. And then she won again.
Virginia Fike of Berryville, Virginia, had the good luck to buy not one but two lottery tickets from a truck stop that both turned out to be $1 million winners, matching five of the six Powerball numbers. Lottery officials presented her with a $2 million check on Friday.
Fike said she found out that she had won - and won again - while sitting in a hospital room with her mother, according to a statement distributed by the Virginia lottery.
"I saw a scroll on TV about there being two $1 million winners," she said. "I looked at my mom and said ‘Wouldn't it be funny if it was us?'"
She said she planned on using the money to "take care of my parents" and pay bills.
For selling the tickets, the lottery awarded a $20,000 bonus to the Olde Stone Truck Stop.
To win the full Powerball jackpot, which currently stands at $131 million, a ticket must match the numbers on all five white balls in the drawing, plus the red Powerball. The $1 million cash prize is awarded for a ticket that matches the five numbers on the white balls, in any order.
The odds of winning $1 million? One in 5,153,632.65. The drawing takes place every Wednesday and Saturday night.
"I just love the jackpot games and I play when I can afford it," Fike said in the statement.
(Reporting by Paul Thomasch; Editing by Greg McCune and Jackie Frank)

Ferrari Enzo abandoned in Dubai to finally be auctioned off-Yahoo! Singapore(News)



Abandoned Ferrari Enzo in Dubai (Motor Authority)
Remember the poor Ferrari Enzo supercar abandoned in Dubai last August?
Well, it's still sitting in the same police impound lot we last saw it in, but it may have a bright future ahead.
The Enzo, along with several other exotics, is to be auctioned off in what the Daily Mail, via Jalopnik, claims is the most expensive police sale in history.
The person who abandoned the car is believed to be a British citizen who leased the Ferrari and then fled Dubai 20 months ago when they couldn't afford the repayments and traffic fines.
It's not uncommon to face jail time in Dubai for outstanding debts so we tend to see some financed vehicles abandoned, either at airport car parks or even the owner's former place of residence. However, it's extremely rare--and sad--to see something like a Ferrari Enzo left abandoned.
Other cars seized by authorizes in Dubai and set to be auctioned include some that were stolen and others that were abandoned after they were involved in accidents. Under local laws, any car left for more than six months becomes property of the state unless a clear title can be produced and there are no outstanding fines.
Ferrari Enzo supercars, of which only 399 were built for public sale, typically fetch up to a million dollars or more on the open market. It's not clear who much this example will go for, though it should still be a princely sum despite the poor condition the car must be in.
Abandoned Ferrari Enzo in Dubai (Motor Authority)

How To Tell If You're Cheap Or Frugal-Yahoo! Singapore(News)


There's a fine line between frugal and cheap. Frugal people understand that paying more doesn't necessarily mean a better value. People labeled as cheap wouldn't pay a premium price regardless of the value. Billionaire investor Warren Buffett is often labeled as frugal. Your neighbor, whose claim to fame is the fact that of all of his or her belongings were purchased at a garage sale, is probably cheap. Here's how to avoid being labeled cheap.
Frugal People Know When to Pay upCheap people only look at price. They believe that the only way to achieve value is to pay less but they fail to take in to account other factors. Frugal people know that sometimes, it's best to pay up. A quality mattress may cost more, but the added support and ergonomics may help somebody with back pain. Paying the extra money for a pair of timeless jeans from a premium store may result in longer life and less signs of wear.
Cheap people may not be skilled at managing their money as frugal people are. Let's assume that acheap person and a frugal person head into an appliance store to purchase a dryer. The cheap person would look for the lowest priced model where the frugal person would evaluate the energy efficiency and compare gas versus electric. He or she may research the model and read customer reviews Before a purchase is made, he or she will look for rebates and sales at other stores. The better use of his or her money may be a higher-priced model, but the cheap person may not see a need to research when the lowest price, basic model is in front of them.
Cheap People Think Everything Is OverpricedYou've been with this person. This is the person that complains to everybody about the cost of everything. If you go to a restaurant, they don't understand why a burger is $10, if you take them to a baseball game, they complain about the price of the ticket. Even the candy bar at the gas station is too much. Frugal people may be thinking the same thing but they understand that voicing it makes them sound cheap. Instead, frugal people don't purchase the candy bar.
Frugal People Put People Above SavingsHave you ever gone out with somebody who uses coupons to save on the price of a dinner? That's frugal and most people wouldn't see that as cheap, but how about the person who uses the coupon and then tips based on the amount after the coupon instead of the original price? Frugal people love to save a buck, but they won't take money away from others to do it.
Cheap People Don't Buy NecessitiesHave you ever met somebody who won't go to the doctor because it costs too much? How about somebody who doesn't plan to help their child with college expenses because of the price? Those may be extreme examples, but cheap people may not even pay for the basics of life where frugal people look to get the best price they can.
Frugal People See the Higher PurposeFrugal people love to save a buck, but that doesn't mean that they aren't generous with their money. They believe in giving to worthy causes, but will exhaustively research charities to find ones that don't have high administrative costs. Or they might forgo organized charity and give only to family and friends with a real need. Warren Buffett believes that giving kids too much money does more harm than good and because of that, has promised most of his fortune to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation instead of his children.
Cheap people may have a different mindset. They see their money as theirs and they may hold it for the rest of their life. Their children may speak of them as somebody who would rarely gave a gift or helped when help was needed. This may lead to a strained relationship with that parent. Money appears to mean more than the relationship with others.
The Bottom LineWe admit, there is no scientific way to distinguish between cheap and frugal people. There are cheap people we love and frugal people we dislike, but perhaps the best distinction comes from understanding value. Just because something is less expensive in price doesn't necessarily make it cheaper once other costs are included.

7 ways to beat your worries-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

Can’t stop worrying? Try out our seven ways to beat the bother and boost your happiness. Whilst worrying is necessary for spurring us on to achieve our goals, chronic worrying can disrupt the balance in our nervous system and be detrimental to our health. Here are seven ways to wash away your worries:

How to stop worrying, tip 1: Forget the things you can’t change
If you’re worrying about something that’s happened in the past, you need to stop. The power of your mind isn’t strong enough to solve problems through panic, so it’s important to beat your worries by thinking logically and tackling them head-on. Bad memories from the past are toxic to our health and highly counterproductive so you must bury the burdens of your past and move on.

How to stop worrying, tip 2: Write a worry list

Write down everything you’re worried about; the bills, your job, the car MOT – everything. Then rate them on a scale of one to 10, with 10 being the things that are concerning you most. You can then turn your worry list into an action list. Take action on the worries that you rated the highest first, and then work through the rest of the list. You will feel a sense of relief each time you tick a worry off, and this is a sure-fire way to boost your happiness and relieve your worries.

How to stop worrying, tip 3: Discipline your thoughts
If you’re a chronic worrier, you need to learn to take control of your thoughts rather than letting them take control of you. To do this, every time you think a negative thought, you must turn it into a positive. Every time you worry, think “is this really helpful?” If the answer is no, turn the thought into a positive or forget it completely. Whilst this may seem difficult at first, it will eventually become second nature and you will find that turning a negative into a positive is a much more constructive way of dealing with your thoughts.

How to stop worrying, tip 4: Distract yourself through relaxation

When we’re worried – particularly about a number of things at once – our brains don’t tend to find a logical solution to our problems. In order to think logically, we must take the time to relax and unwind. Breathe in through your nose, and out through your mouth. After a couple of minutes of relaxation, the tension will leave your body and you will be in a better position to tackle the problem from a fresh perspective.Woman relaxing in bath with candles

How to stop worrying, tip 5: Talk to friends and family

A problem shared is a problem halved. Talk to your family, your friends, or a doctor if you have a good relationship with them. Sometimes saying your problems out loud can get your thoughts straight in your head and if you’re worrying about something useless, saying it out loud can make you realise that it’s just not worth the worry. With those close to you, you can laugh, cry, and moan as much as you like without being judged and this is a healthy way to relieve stress.

How to stop worrying, tip 6: Confront the problem head-on

Some worries can’t be tamed through talking to others or relaxation. A problem that won’t go away until you physically do something about it needs to be confronted head-on. Sometimes, we have so much on our mind that we don’t know what to deal with first. Make a decision on which problem you want to solve and how you will go about it, and then stick to it. You will probably find that once you resolve the problem, you’ll wish you’d done something about it sooner.

How to stop worrying tip 7: Put things into perspective

Don’t be overwhelmed by small things; try and see the bigger picture. Is your problem really as bad as you’re making it out to be? The chances are there will be many people worse off than you. Instead of zoning in on certain things and panicking about them, put everything into perspective. Does this problem affect your entire life? Will you still be panicking about this in a few weeks or months time? If the answer is no, then it’s really not worth the worry.

Madeleine McCann could still be alive: UK police-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

Police have released a computer-aged image (right) of how Madeleine McCann might look today
A combination of images shows a picture of missing British girl Madeleine McCann taken when she was three-years-old and a computer generated image released by the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) on Wednesday showing how police believe she would look today, aged 9



British police reviewing the disappearance of Madeleine McCann said Wednesday they believe she could still be alive five years after she went missing in Portugal and urged authorities there to reopen their search.
The Scotland Yard team sifting through a wealth of material relating to the youngster, who vanished in 2007, said they had identified 195 "investigative opportunities" that could be followed up.
They also urged the Portuguese judiciary to allow the case to be reopened, saying Portuguese police also wanted to re-start the search.
Scotland Yard renewed their appeal for information as they released a computer-generated image, created by experts, of how Madeleine might look now approaching what would be her ninth birthday on May 12.
Madeleine, who was almost four at the time, disappeared from the family's holiday flat in Praia da Luz on the Portuguese south coast on May 3, 2007 while her parents were at dinner.
Gerry and Kate McCann have spent almost five years searching for missing Madeleine
Gerry and Kate McCann, whose daughter Madeleine went missing from her family's holiday flat in the Algarve in 2007, appear on the "Beckmann" TV in Hamburg, Germany, last September. British police said Wednesday it was possible that Madeleine was still alive
"We genuinely believe there is a possibility that she is alive," said Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood from Scotland Yard's Homicide and Serious Crime Command, who is leading the investigative review.
"And we are currently developing material which we believe represents genuinely new information," he told reporters.
"We are working on the basis of two possibilities here: one is that Madeleine is still alive; and the second that she is sadly dead.
"Our drive on both scenarios is in equal measure."
He said the review, launched last year, was a quarter of the way through its work.
Redwood said his 37-strong team had at least 40,000 pieces of evidence to go through, containing around 100,000 pages -- some needing time-consuming translation.
"We believe that is the only way that we can properly establish what has happened to Madeleine McCann and ultimately bring closure by solving this case," he said.
Investigations showed what appeared to be "gaps" in the forensic timeline which led to the possibility of her still being alive.
"I am satisfied that there are opportunities there for Madeleine McCann to have been taken as part of a criminal act," Redwood said.
"Within that, we can see unanswered questions."
Among the 195 potential leads, "some of those are to do with sightings", he said.
Redwood said if they found something "red hot", then pan-European procedures were in place for action.
He added: "Our aspiration is to get this case reopened. My colleagues in Portugal want to reopen the case... they are completely engaged and totally committed."
Redwood's team has been working on material from the Portuguese investigation, enquiries in Britain and the work of private investigators.
He urged the public to come forward with any information.
The British investigation has so far cost around £2 million ($3.2 million, 2.4 million euros).
Madeleine's parents Gerry and Kate McCann have never abandoned their high-profile campaign to find their eldest daughter.
They are "encouraged" by the review, their spokesman Clarence Mitchell told reporters.
"They have drawn great strength from this whole process. They feel that, finally, a proper investigative procedure is now being applied to the search," he said.
"A hundred and ninety-five potential leads, five years on, is still quite substantial and it only takes one of those to be the key to unlocking this.
"The answer lies somewhere in all of that mountain of information. It feels like there still is momentum in the case."

Quick Cures/Quack Cures: When to Clean the Sheets-Yahoo! Singapore(Finance)


No matter your relationship status, you never go to bed alone. Nestled within your sheets are countless intruders. For an explanation, we turned to Philip M. Tierno Jr., director of clinical microbiology and immunology at New York University's Langone Medical Center.

How often do most Americans change their sheets?

It varies. Most people have a standard of once a week. But many people go three weeks, a month or more. "Younger people seem to leave their sheets on the bed longer," Dr. Tierno says.

How often should they change their sheets?

Wash sheets and pillowcases once a week, and you'll eliminate that debris that has accumulated in the bed for that week. You'll be safer from breathing in that material.

Debris? How can sheets possibly get that dirty?

Human skin cells become food for dust mites. That is one of the biggest problems associated with bedding. Mites accumulate, along with their feces. But there is also animal hair, dander, fungal mold, fungal spores, bodily secretions and bacteria. Also: dust, lint, fibers, particulates, insect parts, pollen, soil, sand and cosmetics. "One person can perspire as much as a liter in a night—even more if you have a lot of covers," he says. And, of course, people eat in bed as they watch TV.

All this stuff is yucky, but is it a health risk?

It is mainly a threat to respiratory tracts and not an infectious source. If you have allergies or asthma, this matter can exacerbate it. If you don't have an allergy, you could develop one because you're constantly challenged.

Is there an ideal way to wash bedding?

The water should be 130 to 150 degrees Fahrenheit, typically the washing machine's hot-water cycle. Then dry using a hot drying cycle. That is germicidal; it actually kills and destroys a lot of vegetative material. It also kills the dust mites. For extra protection, "bleach is excellent. It is probably the cheapest germicide and can be used in a low concentration." Cold water non-bleach bleaches use peroxide, so they're also germicidal.

Once a week, hot water. Then I'm safe?

No. To protect the mattress, I use an impervious outer cover. If you look at a mattress, it collects debris by gravity. All kinds of things collect on it that are absorbed into its core. Without the impervious cover, your mattress is a "zoological and botanical garden," he says. The outer covers are made of pliable, plastic vinyl and are commonly used by people with asthma and allergy symptoms. The covers should also go on pillowcases. "If you put an impervious outer cover over the mattress and mattress pad, your mattress won't harm you.

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Would you accept a transgender as Miss Singapore Universe?-Yahoo! Singapore(News)


A transgender as Miss Singapore Universe?

That could happen next year as the Miss Universe organisation confirmed its controversial rule change to allow transgender women to vie for their respective countries’ crowns.

And the rule will apply for Miss Singapore Universe, which is set to have their last natural-born female-only competition this August.

While Singapore has become more accepting of homosexuality and even sex change, the latest push of social boundaries has raised many eyebrows.

Singaporeans have expressed mixed views, with some insisting the competition should only allow  “naturally-born females” while others believe transgender women deserve a fair chance and that a more open mindset should be adopted.

So are you willing to accept a transgender as Miss Singapore Universe?

Malaysia among the worst for Internet connection speed-Yahoo! Singapore(News)

Internet search giant, Google, has just confirmed what most Malaysians have suspected for the longest time - our Internet speed really does suck.
Malaysia was listed among the slowest countries in the world for loading Web pages on desktop computers as well as mobile computers, according to a study by Google.

Malaysia, with an average Web page loading speed on desktops of 14.3 seconds, was named the world’s fifth slowest, even more plodding than the connection speeds of nations like Colombia, Argentina and Peru.

The only countries that performed worse, according to a Bloomberg report which cited Google's study, were Venezuela and India as well as Asean neighbours Philippines and Indonesia, which came out rock bottom.

The country deemed to have the fastest loading speed was a surprise. Averaging a blazing fast 3.3 seconds, the Slovak Republic outraced developed nations like South Korea (3.5 secs), Netherlands (3.9 secs), Japan (4 secs) and Denmark (4.3 secs). 

However, the Koreans still set the best time in loading Web pages using mobile devices with an average loading time of only 4.8 seconds.

However, if phone browsing is your thing, stay out of the United Arab Emirates, where it takes a glacial 26.7 seconds to load an Internet page.In the category of the 10 slowest countries for mobile web page loading, Malaysia was the best of the worst, with a loading time of 12.7 seconds.

Here’s the complete list of the top and bottom 10 countries both in desktop and mobile speeds for loading Web pages according to Google:

Top 10 in Desktop Speeds (in seconds)
Slovak Republic (3.3)
South Korea (3.5)
Czech Republic (3.7)
Netherlands (3.9)
Japan (4)
Denmark (4.3)
Switzerland (4.3)
Sweden (4.5)
Belgium (4.6)
Norway (4.8)

Bottom 10 in Desktop Speeds (in seconds)
Chile (10)
Colombia (10.2)
Peru (11.7)
Brazil (11.8)
Argentina (12.8)
Malaysia (14.3)
Venezuela (14.9)
India (15.1)
Philippines (15.4)
Indonesia (20.3)

Top 10 in Mobile Speeds (in seconds)
South Korea (4.8)
Denmark (5.2)
Hong Kong (5.9)
Norway (6)
Sweden (6.1)
Estonia (6.2)
Czech Republic (6.3)
Japan (6.4)
Romania (7.5)
Slovak Republic (7.6)

Bottom 10 in Mobile Speeds (in seconds)
Malaysia (12.7)
Indonesia (12.9)
Singapore (12.9)
Mexico (14.1)
Brazil (15.8)
Argentina (16.3)
India (16.4)
Thailand (17.4)
Saudi Arabia (21.2)
United Arab Emirates (26.7)


The report noted that the United States was somewhere in the middle. “On the desktop, it took an average of 5.7 seconds. On a mobile device it took 9.2 seconds to load, which for many folks here, feels like an eternity,” it said.

However, before you begin looking up immigration options, consider this. According to the Bloomberg report, Google measured Web page load speeds on desktop computers and mobile devices in 50 countries with the fastest Internet connections. 

So, it's probably fairer to say that Malaysia isn't slow, but merely among the less fast. 

Immigration crucial in baby-scarce Singapore-Yahoo! Singapore(News)


Singapore's population will start to shrink by 2025 if no new citizenships are granted to immigrants and the fertility rate remains low, a government paper said on Tuesday.
The paper said that without immigration and if the fertility rate remains at 1.2 babies born per woman -- among the lowest in Asia -- deaths among the ageing population will outstrip births by 2025.
"At that point, our citizen population will start to decline," said the paper released by the National Population and Talent Division, which is under the prime minister's office.
Singapore's total fertility rate (TFR) is well below the 2.1 babies per woman needed for the population to replenish itself naturally.
A shrinking population will also impact on the labour situation, said the paper, which is aimed at generating public discussion on the issue.
By 2030, "Singapore will experience an unprecedented age shift as over 900,000 baby boomers will retire from the work force and enter their silver years", the paper said.
The addition of new citizens is vital to ensuring an adequate number of working adults to support the elderly, it added.
"An inflow of 25,000 new citizens per year would keep the size of our working-age citizen population relatively stable," the paper said.
The number suggested is a 33 percent jump from the 18,758 new citizens accepted in 2010.
Singapore had a total population of 5.2 million in 2011, comprised of 3.26 million citizens and 532,000 permanent residents. The rest -- over one million -- are foreign workers on employment passes and their families.
The government's more open immigration policy was a hot issue during last year's general elections in which the ruling People's Action Party suffered its worst setback in the polls, winning an all-time low of 60 percent of the vote.
Singaporeans complain that the high number of foreign workers are giving them competition for jobs, housing, medical care and even for space on the train.
The government has tightened the hiring of foreign workers and sharpened the difference in benefits between permanent residents and citizens in a bid to appease public sentiment.
But the paper said immigration remains crucial to Singapore's long term survival.
If the fertility rate stays and no immigrants are granted citizenship, the citizen population could fall to around 2.5 million by 2060, said the paper, which set out five hypothetical population scenarios.
It cited 2012 as a "demographic turning point", as the country's first cohort of post-war baby boomers born between 1947 and 1965 start turning 65 years old.
The paper said the scenarios it drew were not predictions or forecasts, but illustrations of the growth and change expected if certain assumptions about future demographic trends continue over a certain period.