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  1. Good evening everybody I would like to know if anybody have been to Sciences Po Paris Campus as a student/post-graduate/exchange, or spend a term there. Would like to find out more about the lodging options there as the university does not provide any lodging. Thanks in advance!
  2. Home > ST Forum > Online Story Retiring abroad: One ex-S'porean's experience I HAVE read many negative comments on the plight of Singaporeans retiring abroad and I would like to share my personal experience. I have been retired for more than 10 years and have and spend my time between Guangzhou in China and Vancouver in Canada. Both these cities are inviting, fun and less expensive than Singapore. In Guangzhou, I live in a penthouse apartment I bought for $150,000 five years ago. It is situated in Tian He district (similar to District 10 in Singapore) and next to the beautiful 400ha botanic garden condo residents can access for free through a side gate. It is a gated community with a clubhouse and first-class facilities, an Olympic-size swimming pool and modern security services. A similar apartment in Singapore would have cost at least $900,000 or more. For about 5,000 yuan or about S$1,000 a month, I live extremely well. A similar lifestyle in Singapore would cost me at least $5,000 a month. One can easily survive in Guangzhou on 2,000 yuan. It is cheaper if one decides to live in smaller cities like Fushan or Chungshan. A Singaporean who speaks proficient English can easily get a part-time job teaching English and earn 3,000 to 5,000 yuan a month. A retired professor from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore lives in the same estate as me in Guangzhou for the past few years. He teaches science at a local university and earns about 10,000 yuan a month. He too can testify to the cost of living in Guangzhou. He is unlikely to return to Singapore as he has liquidated all his assets there. In Vancouver, I live in a 5,000 sq ft waterfront property that costs me less than $1 million. A similar piece of waterfront property in Singapore would cost $3 million or perhaps more. I drive a Honda Civic Hybrid I bought brand new five years ago for $25,000. A similar new Honda Hybrid in Singapore would have cost close to $100,000 if you include COE. If one prefers a more prestigious cars like a new Mercedes 250 or a BMW 325, these cars cost less than C$50,000 (S$67,000). The cost of living for my wife and me, not including housing as it is relative, is less than $2,000 a month. The cost of living for me in Vancouver will drop significantly when I reach the age of 65 when I am entitled to old-age pension from the Canadian government. My wife and I will then receive more than $2,000 a month from the government. This pension is given whether one is rich or poor. If you factor in savings in the cost of buying a house and a car in Vancouver and in Singapore, the difference is more than enough to pay for a happy and comfortable retirement for the rest of one's life. If one is more adventurous and hands-on, the cost of living in Vancouver can be only a few hundred dollars a month. This can be achieved when you fish, catch crabs and prawns, grow your own vegetables, hunt and so on. There are lots of places to fish and hunt. All you need then is to buy rice, sauces, spices and pay for essentials like gas and electricity at home, telephone bills and transport. These items amount to no more than $500 a month. I have tried it and it is fun. It is impossible to find similar possibilities in Singapore where one can survive solely on Mother Nature. Some readers have complained with depressing tales about lack of friends for retired Singaporeans living overseas. To these people, I suggest we shed our introvert and 'kiasu' mentality. If one is an extrovert and willing to engage in and be proactive, one will have lots of friends. I have lots of friends of all races in both Guangzhou and Vancouver. I participate in dragon-boat races in Vancouver, San Francisco, Guangzhou and Hawaii. I am the only Singaporean with the rowing team and the oldest. The rest of the team are from Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, Thailand and some European countries. I play golf with friends of all races. I give free English lessons to Guangzhou university students, as well as local businessmen. I am a member of both the Guangzhou and Vancouver Toastmasters clubs, Guangzhou Canadian Friendship club and Friends of Taiwan club. I am always welcome by friends in Guangzhou and Vancouver. We have activities all year round, such as snow hiking and skiing in winter, fishing, gardening, cruises to Alaska, and barbecues during summer, pot-luck, mahjong and hunting the rest of the year. There is hardly a dull moment. My wife, who is a retired teacher from Singapore, gives free English lessons to doctors and nurses at Chungshan Hospital in Guangzhou. She does volunteer work in Vancouver. Life is so rewarding and there is no time to be depressed. There have been a number of comments that we are treated as second-class citizens in our adopted countries. It is inevitable there will be a small minority of people who are racists and bigots. These people even hate their own kind. It is not the norm and it happens in any country, including Singapore. I have kidney failure and it costs the Canadian government $8,000 a month to treat me at no cost to me. There are nine friends willing to donate a kidney to me. They include a Caucasian, a Taiwanese, a Malaysian, a Korean, a mainland Chinese (a doctor herself) and four members of my family. It not true to say we are second-class citizens when people like Dr Ron Werb, head of department at St Paul's Hospital, accompanies us in dragon-boat rowing practices twice a week, together with other doctors. As immigrants, we have the same opportunities and rights as other citizens, regardless of race. I remember when I first emigrated to Canada more than 20 years ago, my three children were given C$250 each as 'milk money' until they reached high school. This policy is still on going. There are a lot of support and help organisations for new immigrants of different cultures and race to help them assimilate into Canadian society. I was born without a father, expelled from Outram Secondary School in Secondary 2 and worked for less than $100 a month at the age of 15 years in Keppel Shipyard as an apprentice. With that kind of credentials, I doubt I could achieve much in Singapore. But in Canada, we have a level playing field where we are rewarded by what we can do and not strictly by academic qualifications. Please don't tell me we are treated as second class citizens. The Canadian government pays for my medical treatment when I travel overseas. Health care is very costly and an important factor for retirees. To have access to good free medical treatment during retirement is like striking a million-dollar lottery . The benefits of free health care offered in Canada make Singapore's claim of a lower cost of living meaningless. I welcome any member of the press to visit Guangzhou or Vancouver and stay with me for a month and experience the truth. However, there is one condition. Don't send an introvert or eternal pessimist who engages in self-pity and complains. Retiring overseas is not a bed of roses, but only if one is not prepared to make the necessary adjustments and sacrifices to suit the environment. If one is prepared to work hard, stay positive and stop complaining, it is hard to fail. For me and many others, we are happy immigrants. Life could not be better. There is no shame and we certainly have a clear conscience when immigrating from Singapore. Cheong Wing Lee http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BForum/Onl...ory_275254.html
  3. May 8, 2008 Man jailed 3 weeks for assaulting bus driver By ELENA CHONG A BUS commuter was sentenced to three weeks' jail today for assaulting a bus driver. Muhamad Fairus Abu Bakar, 32, pleaded guilty to punching the head of Mr Wong Hing Keong, 44, and kicking his body along Moulmein Road on June 6 last year. A court heard that several passengers were boarding SBS 124 in front of Hotel 81 when Mr Wong told Fairus, who was smoking and chatting with a friend, to hurry. After the two had boarded the bus, Mr Wong heard Fairus utter vulgarities. When the victim asked Fairus what he had said, the accused stood up and kicked the driver's cabin door. A quarrel ensued. Mr Wong stopped along Moulmein Road and the quarrel continued. Fairus punched the victim on the head and kicked his body. He also pulled his uniform. He could have been jailed for up to one year and/or fined up to $1,000. http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...ory_235295.html
  4. Hit-and-run driver gets jail, driving ban A HIT-AND-RUN driver was sentenced to five months' jail and banned from driving for three years on Friday for failing to stop and remove his vehicle after an accident with a motorcyclist. But 64-year-old Tew Hock Sew is appealing. His bail of $10,000 was doubled pending his appeal. His passport was also impounded. Tew pleaded guilty last month to driving off after his car hit package officer Ghazali Mohamed Noor's motorcycle. He also admitted removing his car without police permission. The offences took place along Airport Boulevard at about 5.45am on Christmas Day in 2006. A third charge of failing to render assistance to the 47-year-old who suffered severe injuries resulting in his death was taken into consideration. A traffic court heard that Tew was driving along the extreme right lane of Airport Boulevard towards East Coast Parkway when he defied a 'No Right Turn'' signboard and made a U-turn into the opposite direction. He ran into Mr Ghazali's path and hit his motorbike. The impact threw the rider off. Tew did not stop to help the injured victim and drove off. He was then sending a Chinese national to the airport to catch a plane. A witness saw the accident and pursued Tew, gesturing to him to return to the scene. Meanwhile, Mr Ghazali was trying to get up when a car, driven by Lim Ah Mui, 59, ran over him. She, too, carried on driving. Lim faces three similar charges and is out on bail. Mr Ghazali was pronounced dead at the scene. After dropping off the passenger, Tew returned to the scene five minutes later. His lawyer, Mr Alfonso Ang, said in mitigation that it was never his client's intention to flee from the scene of the accident. He made an error for not stopping immediately and continued his journey to drop off the passenger. Counsel also pointed out that there was no evidence that the accident involving his client caused serious injuries to Mr Ghazali, and certainly the collision did not lead to the rider's death. But District Judge Salina Ishak said it was clear from the facts that Tew was the one who triggered the unfortunate incident by making an illegal U-turn and driving into the rider's path. http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...76.html?vgnmr=1
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