Best of our wild blogs: 11 May 08


TeamSeagrass at Semakau
despite the rain, monitoring got done and lots of sightings made on the nature scouter blog and wonderful creations blog and teamseagrass blog

Semakau's cryptic stars
on the wonderful creations blog

Beautiful Cyrene
video clips on the sgbeachbum blog

Cyrene's child
poetry on the flying fish friends blog

What killed the sea urchin?
on the wildfilms blog

Slide show on Greening our Lives
shared on the leafmonkey blog

St John's Island
on the discovery blog

Changi walk
on the manta blog

Feather star at Changi
on the tidechaser blog

Silver-breasted Broadbill swallowing cicada
on the bird ecology blog

Spotted dove sunbathing
on the bird ecology blog


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Participants at youth forum plan to start 'Save Mandai' campaign

Channel NewsAsia 10 May 08;

SINGAPORE: Participants at the National Youth Environment forum, held on Saturday have agreed to start a ‘Save Mandai’ campaign. They hope to raise awareness on the need to protect Mandai's natural beauty when the area is being developed.

Two new ‘nature-themed attractions’ will be built in Mandai to complement the Singapore Zoo and Night Safari.

The Singapore Tourism Board (STB) plans to turn the 30-hectare site into the next luxurious tropical spa retreat and an exotic river-themed development, where visitors can learn about freshwater habitat.

STB aims to turn Mandai into Asia's next top nature spot and double the number of visitors to the area to five million by 2015.

But the people behind the ‘Save Mandai’ campaign have not released details of their action plan yet.

The campaign is just one of the initiatives planned by the over 200 participants at the forum.

The event also encouraged young people to turn their green plans into action. So items such as rhino horns were displayed at one booth by The Singapore Zoo and the Night Safari.

The aim is to bring the message of protecting endangered species closer to the participants at the forum.

That's also the motive of other organisations such as the Vegetarian Society, Nature Trekker, and the Society for the Prevention to Cruelty to Animals (SPCA).

Some displays were more hands-on.

Aaron Yeo, Head, Forum Planning Department, ECO Singpaore, said: "This eco-house that we have erected at the Science Centre is is a prototype of how we should be able to live sustainably with current technologies that we have."

And that ties in with 'Beyond Awareness' which is the theme of this year's National Youth Environmental Forum.

It's organised by ECO Singapore, a non-profit group advocating green lifestyles for youths. This bi-annual event gives youths between the ages of 17 and 30 a chance to speak out on pressing issues.

These include technology, economics, attitude, legislation and the media.

Wilson Ang, President, ECO Singapore, said: "Over the past two years, we've seen a significant increase in the amount of youth involvement in terms of organising it and as well as participating. So we realise that youths do see a value in getting involved with the environment. However, it's more than just awareness, they're starting to take action."

Ong Qun Xiang, ECO Singapore volunteer, said: "The most important thing is that we have provided a platform for the youths in order to present their ideas to everyone and hopefully there will be action plans that follow up so that they may see their actions taking fruit."

And urging participants to take even more initiative in environmental protection is Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Environment and Water Resources, Dr Amy Khor.

Besides youths, the event also brings together experts, non-governmental organisations, as well as government and corporate representatives. - CNA/vm


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Remaking Jurong: From ulu town to romantic lake district

Lee Siew Hua, Straits Times 10 May 08;

Can Jurong with its uncool industrial image be transformed into a romantic lake district that is also rich in jobs? Lee Siew Hua meets the zestful planners behind the new Jurong Lake District and looks at the prospects of success for Singapore's next mini-metropolis

THE Jurong Lake District planners were lamenting to each other that the lakefront appeared so near, yet is so far.

Jurong Lake was integral to their radical plan to transform Jurong, with its colourless factory-town image, into Singapore's only lush lakeside destination for business and leisure.

But it was a plodding 750m away from the heart of activity.

Four words, however, got around the problem.

'Bring the lake closer', architect Fun Siew Leng said in an SMS to her team members.

The intriguing words were to spark an idea that has become a much talked-about feature in Singapore's newest plan to redevelop and rebrand Jurong, an icon in the country's post-independent history.

Jurong, a swampland turned into industrial town, is to be given a new sinuous waterway, carved to wrap around a to-be-built Lakeside Village that will be dotted with boutique hotels and cafes.

This think-out-of-the-box episode is just one of several sparkling instances that lit the one-year journey taken by a dozen planners and architects at the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) to bring fresh life and vibrancy to a sleepy hollow.

But at the heart of their plan is the lake, reflected in its brand new name: Jurong Lake District.

Unveiled early last month by National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan, the vision will evolve over 10 to 15 years to a mini-metropolis for Singaporeans to live, work and play.

But as it evolves, what are the constraints and assets of the district that the planners have to deal with? What are its chances of success?

Will Jurong be a showpiece or will residents enjoy tangible benefits?

And no less intriguing is the behind-the-scenes work: how did the planners channel their labour and imagination?

Early triumphs

WHATEVER the future, the present, at least, is promising - the project began on a strong note.

One, the URA convinced the Singapore Science Centre to stay. A well-known landmark, the centre was planning to pull up its roots and move elsewhere.

It will now get a new home on the waterfront, and be within easy reach of the Chinese Garden MRT station. Its learning activities can also be taken outdoors to the lakeside.

'We had to hardsell the idea,'' Mrs Koh-Lim Wen Gin tells Insight. Leader of the team responsible for the big picture and the vision, she is the URA's chief planner and deputy chief executive officer (physical planning and conservation and urban design).

The centre was vital as the team had envisioned it anchoring a cluster of four or five edutainment centres.

'Many Singaporeans also grew up with the Science Centre when young,'' points out Ms Fun, the spirited director of urban planning and design who sent out the SMS.

Second, as the URA team tells it, the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) was looking for the next big thing after the Integrated Resorts (IRs).

Says Mrs Koh-Lim: 'We helped identify Jurong Lake as a major tourism cluster that will support edutainment uses for the family.''

Third triumph: The Land Transport Authority plans to improve the Jurong East MRT station and bus interchange to serve a growing population.

The future science centre, the quest for a new buzz after the IRs and the uplifting of transport created a 'confluence of opportunity'', says Mrs Koh-Lim.

To make the most of these possibilities, the team went onsite to size up the strengths and weaknesses of Jurong.

They tramped all over the 360ha site on foot, sometimes taking their families, and at different hours of the day to observe the changing light.

Up the Chinese Garden pagoda they went for a higher perspective. And aerial pictures were snapped from a helicopter.

Facing constraints

AS THEY worked and consulted with 100 developers, professionals and advisers, two big constraints became evident: image and distance.

Indeed, the image was so ulu that the team wondered if the name 'Jurong' should be abandoned.

But feedback from their consultations was a clear 'no'.

'Jurong is a brand known locally and internationally,'' says Mrs Koh-Lim.

Foreign executives knew Jurong and companies across the world had set up shop since the early days of industrialisation in the 60s. Homely factories churned out hair cream and joss-sticks then. But now, electronics and high-tech industries prevail.

Since Jurong had an identity, its image needed a strategic tweak, not dumping.

For that, the planners roamed the world, figuratively. They loved England's scenic Lake District, which is linked with the poetry of William Wordsworth.

Inspiring too was Hangzhou's West Lake, whose beauty is celebrated in Chinese classics, poetry and paintings. Song Dynasty poet Su Dongpo once compared the West Lake to Xi Zi, a famous beauty in ancient China.

And, of course, Jurong too is in the west of Singapore.

In the buzz of brainstorming, the team cleverly tied the 'lake district' concept to Jurong.

Settling on the new name was one breakthrough for the image exercise.

The perception that Jurong is far and isolated, the team felt, was wrong. They tried taking the train and car into Jurong from the city - and zoomed in within 20 to 25 minutes, a swift pace that surprised even themselves.

In future, attractions like the future Singapore Science Centre will be clustered closer to the water or to the three MRT stations that serve the area.

Besides image and distance, is air quality an issue?

Mr Lim Eng Hwee, URA director (physical planning), says the lake district is encircled by homes.

Although there are some industries about 600m northeast of the district, in Toh Guan and Bukit Batok, they are 'mainly clean and light industries'', he adds.

Heavier industries are more than 5km away in Jurong Island, and in Tuas which is more than 10km away.

The air quality in the western part of Singapore is safe, he says, based on monitoring by the National Environment Agency (NEA).

Meanwhile, the failed Tang Dynasty Village theme park and dispirited landmarks like the Chinese Garden are reminders that success is not always easy in Jurong.

The $100-million Tang Dynasty Village was built in 1991. It was shuttered in 1999 when it failed to attract enough visitors.

The 12ha attraction will be torn down by next year.

What's next?

Mr Lim, the director of physical planning, says: 'The site will be reconfigured and released for a new development concept.'' Investors will have flexible use of the waterfront site.

Chances of success

ON THE probability of success, Dr Tan Cheng Bock, president of the Jurong Country Club and former MP for Ayer Rajah says: 'Jurong is no longer boring and ulu.''

More importantly, the lake district and its west coast environs has a population base of one million people, he notes. The critical mass is there, and improved transport will bring in visitors.

He knows Jurong intimately and is near-poetic as he thinks about its underplayed appeal. 'It's a beautiful town, especially around Jurong Lake. It's a jewel,'' he says.

'Jurong Island is like a Cinderella City, all lit up at night. The new Lakeside Village will be like Clarke Quay.''

So optimistic is Dr Tan that even before he knew of the Jurong Lake District blueprint, he was planning to build a hotel within the golf club.

It will possibly be a four-star hotel of 200 to 300 rooms, for foreign executives who fly in to work in the industries or petrochemical complex on Jurong Island.

The hotel idea was prompted by visitors frequently dropping in at the club to ask if it has rooms, says Dr Tan.

The URA and MPs interviewed say that what is new this time is that the area has been planned 'holistically''.

Says Mr Lim, the URA director: 'It merges the strengths of a new regional centre comprising some 750,000 sq m of commercial space, with the beautiful greenery of Jurong Lake.'

Also, Singapore needs to introduce new tourist attractions to build on the momentum of the IRs, Singapore Flyer and new events like the Formula One race, he adds.

The lake district is a candidate with its buzz and brand-new image, he reckons

Jurong GRC MP Grace Fu says her residents are excited about the overhaul. 'The commercial development around Jurong East MRT will bring more jobs and economic opportunities to the area.'

Adds Mrs Fu, also the Senior Minister of State for National Development: 'The hotels and family resorts will also give that added touch of vibrancy and glamour.''

Desirable homes

HER fellow MP in Jurong, Dr Ong Chit Chung, also cites jobs and adds: 'Residents can easily access attractions from their doorstep. People from neighbouring areas such as Hong Kah, Bukit Batok and Jurong West will visit by MRT.

'Housing along the lake will be very desirable.''

The plan to transform Jurong is anchored in the bigger story of the URA's drive to spread business and jobs beyond the city, and to grow the national economy.

At another level of detail, the plans for Jurong mesh with URA ideals to deepen identity and to proliferate parks and water features island-wide.

This future Jurong is a world apart from the days when the swampland was dubbed 'Goh's Folly''.

In the early 1960s, Dr Goh Keng Swee, Singapore's economic architect, flagged his idea of creating a prime industrial estate there.

Mr Ngiam Tong Dow observes with a smile: 'Goh's Folly is now Goh's Blessing.' The pioneer policymaker was designated the Estate Officer for Jurong in the 1960s, when he worked at the Economic Development Board.

In a sense, the lake district is a fulfilment - and refinement - of Dr Goh's vision.

Its eco-city aspects, lush greenery and natural beauty now and in future have their roots in Dr Goh's concepts.

Mr Ngiam says even in those austere days, Dr Goh had an eye for the environment. 'He said Jurong is an industrial city and the skies will be grey all day long. He said we ought to have a spot or little oasis where the workers can go out and look at the birds.

'And that's how the Jurong Bird Park started.'

So Jurong has its charms too.

Mrs Fu says residents have an affection for 'Yuhua' - the name of the Chinese Garden in Mandarin and also the name of her Yuhua ward.

It is the 'softer appeal' of Jurong that moves her. She highlights her friendly, down-to-earth residents, and the hours she spent ice-skating at Fuji Ice Palace with her children.

The hope is that a thousand such little, familiar emblems of Old Jurong will not change too much during the revamp.


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Shucks, no fin? Discussion in Singapore

Tan Yi Hui, Straits Times 11 May 08;
Discussion is heating up on the levels of mercury in shark's fin and the cruel ways of netting them from the oceans. But while some nature lovers avoid the dish, others continue the tradition of serving it at wedding dinners

Something will be missing from Cynthia Sng's wedding later this month, but it's neither a runaway groom nor a misplaced diamond ring.

The 29-year-old civil servant will not be serving shark's fin, long considered a main attraction and status symbol on the menu at Chinese weddings. She faced little opposition, thanks to an understanding husband and family, in-laws included.

She says: 'We know about some of the things that happen to sharks when they are caught, and it's just another dish to us.'

She and other young professionals have jumped on the eat-ethical bandwagon for their banquets, in the wake of graphic images portrayed around the world of live finning.

This is where fishermen cut off the fins of sharks that are still alive, tossing the carcasses back into the sea for a slow, agonising death. However, there is some dispute over whether this is, in fact, that widespread a practice.

Celebrities like Chinese basketball player Yao Ming and global corporates like HSBC bank have put their weight behind the flap over fins. The bank excludes the dish at functions, in line with its stance on sustainable development.

Out of 15 hotels that LifeStyle contacted, more than half report a rise in the number of Chinese weddings where the hosts have chosen not to serve the pricey dish.

Senior marketing manager Belladonnah Lim of the Fairmont Singapore says shark's fin is off the menu for 30 of the 280 weddings scheduled for this year at the hotel. The figure was 'nil a couple of years back'.

A Singapore Marriott Hotel spokesman says non-shark's fin weddings comprise over 10 per cent of nuptial celebrations this year, compared with just 3 per cent last year.

Over at the Shangri-La, director of events management Hon Ooi Lee says that figures for non-shark's fin weddings are as high as 30 per cent this year. It was about 20 per cent in 2006.

All hotels say couples who give shark's fin the chop at weddings are usually nature or animal lovers, or conservation-conscious divers.

LifeStyle spoke to 10 couples who scrapped the dish from their wedding banquet menus.

One is Mr Edward Kwek, 32, and wife, Angeline Yip, 30, who had a diver-themed wedding last year.

He and his wife entered the banquet hall by walking beneath surface-marker buoys - inflatable 2m floats that divers use - that some of his guests held up.

Because most of his guests were fellow divers, they had no problems with a wedding without shark's fin.

'If we had it, we would be in hell,' quips the account manager.

The fact that some people are avoiding shark's fin like the plague is a welcome sign for non-government organisations like the Singapore Environment Council.

Chief executive officer Howard Shaw says: 'It's fantastic. We applaud any couple who does it.'

The council takes part in projects to raise conservation awareness. Just last week, together with international conservationist group WildAid, it announced that three out of 10 per cent of shark's fin samples tested here contained unsafe levels of mercury.

Alternatives are as good

Tutor Julia Khoo, 32, and husband Ricky Soh, 36, can be considered pioneers of the anti-shark's fin wedding movement. Seven years ago, they decided not have it at their wedding.

She says: 'It was very rare and quite bold. At that time, the campaign not to serve shark's fin was only just starting.'

She admits she and her husband faced some disapproval from family members who were worried that guests might think they were cheapskate.

Her husband, an IT professional, even toyed with the idea of showing an Animal Planet trailer of live finning at the wedding, but decided it was 'too much'. In the end, only one of their guests complained about the absence of shark's fin soup.

'We didn't care what people thought. It was our wedding,' says Ms Khoo who, together with her husband, still abstains from eating shark's fin cooked in any form.

Instead of the dish, hotels offer substitutes like braised lobster soup, bird's nest soup with scallops, winter melon and crab meat soup, seafood with abalone broth, and even shark's fin soup base without the fins.

The hotels LifeStyle spoke to say the shark's fin dish is the most expensive on the menu and can cost up to $50 per person. That's $500 for a table of 10 for just one dish.

But doing away with the dish doesn't mean a cheaper dinner.

Marketing manager Frances Koh from the Hilton Singapore says the alternatives are as good as shark's fin, and the 'costs of the ingredients are the same'.

Hotels like Shangri-La even provide cards on the dining table that explain the exclusion of shark's fin to guests.

Such cards are also available from US-based group Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which prints individual cards for guests. In return, couples give a token donation to the group.

Sea Shepherd member Grant Pereira, who also works for the Singapore Environment Council, says it supplies cards to about two weddings a month, and has seen a 5 per cent increase every year since it started the initiative five years ago.

Still, the fascination with shark's fin soup is rooted deep in tradition, and industry players say the overall trend is not about to change anytime soon.

This is borne out by consumption figures. Statistics released by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore show that while there has been a steady decline in the consumption of shark's fin since 2003, there was a jump last year when numbers went up to 472 tonnes, almost three times the figure in 2006.

The spike is attributed to a boom in the economy and greater consumer spending power, according to industry insiders.

On the consumer end, wedding planner Esta Giam, 37, says three to four out of 10 couples who go with shark's fin at weddings do so mainly because of their relatives.

She says: 'At the end of the day, clients don't really choose. It's usually for the parents.'

Telecommunications executive Lew Wei Qing agrees. The 25-year-old, who will hold her wedding next year, is against consuming shark's fin, but says: 'Traditional Chinese wedding dinners are typically the parents' event so if they want it, anything goes. I'm not about to get into trouble with my in-laws because of this.'

The kitchen director at Dragon Phoenix restaurant, Mr Chris Hooi, explains: 'There is a Cantonese saying: A menu without shark's fin is not considered as a banquet.'

Restaurants here say they have not seen any significant decrease in orders for shark's fin.

Mr K. Vee, 27, a sales executive, probably speaks for most people when he says: 'It is the same for the other animals you eat. If you see people killing chickens at the market by splitting them at the neck, do you stop eating KFC?'


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Two new bridges: a 9km scenic walk in Singapore

Telok Blangah Hill Park now linked with Mount Faber, Kent Ridge Park
Teo Cheng Wee, Straits Times 11 May 08;

The wet morning yesterday did not dampen the excitement of Telok Blangah resident Habib Ismail.

He was among 500 residents who watched Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong officially open two pedestrian bridges - Henderson Waves and Alexandra Arch.

With these bridges, Telok Blangah Hill Park is now linked to Mount Faber on one side and Kent Ridge Park on the other.

An avid walker, Mr Habib, 44, a father of two, joined Mr Lee and the other residents on a tour of the bridges.

The bridges complete a 9km chain of greenery in the Southern Ridges, which consist primarily of three large hill parks - Mount Faber, Telok Blangah Hill Park and Kent Ridge Park.

Henderson Waves, at a height of 36m, is Singapore's highest pedestrian bridge. A wave-shaped, steel-and-timber structure, it spans 274m across Henderson Road. The other bridge, Alexandra Arch, spans 80m across Alexandra Road.

The parks were previously separated by roads and wooded vegetation. Now, one can walk ridge-to-ridge, starting from HarbourFront MRT and ending at West Coast Park.

In 2002, the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) said it would link up parks in the Southern Ridges as part of the Parks and Waterbodies and Identity Plans.

The project, which took two years to complete, cost $25.5 million.

Apart from the two bridges, the Southern Ridges now also boast the Forest Walk, a 1.3km-long elevated walkway that cuts through secondary forest at Telok Blangah Hill Park; and Marang Trail, which links HarbourFront MRT to Mount Faber.

Mr Lee also officiated the opening of the $13 million Horticulture Park - or HortPark for short.

With 20 theme gardens, HortPark is South-east Asia's first one-stop gardening and lifestyle hub.

The 23ha park, which has been open since December last year, took two years to build and also serves as a park connector between Telok Blangah Hill Park and Kent Ridge Park.

In his speech, Mr Lee noted that such projects 'provide a first-class living environment for all Singaporeans'.

He also announced upcoming plans to link the Southern Ridges to the Keppel Waterfront as part of a broader plan to develop a recreational and leisure hub in the south.

This includes having a park connector from Alexandra Arch to Labrador Park, building a mangrove boardwalk at Berlayer Creek and having a waterfront boardwalk that connects Bukit Chermin to VivoCity, with waterfront views along the entire stretch of Keppel Bay.

Details of these plans will be released soon, the URA said.

About 1 million visitors to the Southern Ridges are expected annually, and with the bridges open 24 hours a day, lovebirds might be expected to make a beeline for them after dark, especially as Henderson Waves offers panoramic views of the city and southern islands.

Mr Habib, a senior research supervisor, had stopped his daily jogs at Telok Blangah Hill Park due to work commitments. He is digging out his sneakers again.

'I'm making plans to walk along the new walk with friends,' he said with a smile.

PM Lee opens new pedestrian bridges and Hort Park at Southern Ridges
Channel NewsAsia 10 May 08;

SINGAPORE: You can now take a 9-kilometre walk from Mount Faber to Telok Blangah Hill and Kent Ridge Park. The three hills are collectively known as the Southern Ridges and they are linked by two new pedestrian bridges and a walkway, which were opened on Saturday by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

PM Lee said the Southern Ridges is part of the country's effort to transform itself into a city of gardens and water.

As Singapore's economy and population continues to grow, Mr Lee assured that the government will strive to provide the highest quality of life possible for all residents.

PM Lee said: "I think quite a lot of Singaporeans worry that our quality of life will suffer, that there won't be enough space for all of us. And they ask, “Is our little island getting too crowded, will we lose our sense of comfort of space and greenery?” My answer is we will continue to provide a first class living environment for all Singaporeans. We have done quite well in this respect and we will build on this to do better."

That means making water ways and greenery more accessible to the public.

Mr Lee continued: "We will build a park connector from the Alexandra Arch, along Alexandra Road to Labrador Park. We will link up to a mangrove boardwalk at Berlayer Creek, with its rich biodiversity. And eventually connect to a waterfront broad walk from Bukit Chermin all the way to Vivocity."

Cheong Koon Hean, CEO, Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), said: "You are literally walking on the boardwalk with the sea on your right and you can see Sentosa and it will go all the way in front of Labrador Park and also Reflections and then you reach VivoCity. With that, the entire southern ridges will be fully connected. It will be a totally different experience."

The URA first announced its plans to link the Southern Ridges to the parks as part of its Identity Plan in 2002.

And it was widely supported, garnering a 93 per cent endorsement from Singaporeans in a survey.

An online public poll was conducted earlier this year to decide on the names of the two bridges. And Henderson Waves and Alexandra Arch were selected from among 11 options.

Mr Lee later toured the US$13 million horticultural park or HortPark off Alexandra Road.

The 23-hectare park is Southeast Asia's first one-stop gardening and lifestyle hub. It plans to attract one million visitors a year. -CNA/vm

Three new linkways at Southern Ridges cost S$25.5m
Channel NewsAsia 10 May 08;

SINGAPORE: The three new linkways at the Southern Ridges cost the Urban Redevelopment Authority S$25.5 million to build.

To enjoy the view on foot, one must be prepared to spend at least two and half hours to cover the entire attraction. Harbour views in the day and city lights at night are some of the sights one can enjoy while strolling along the Henderson Waves bridge.

At a height of 36 metres or 12 storeys from the road, it's the highest pedestrian bridge in Singapore. The 300-metre bridge links up the parks at Mount Faber and Telok Blangah Hill.

The bridge is constructed using steel and all-weather timber which can be found in Southeast Asia. As a lot of wood was used in the decking, the National Parks Board (NParks), which is maintaining the structure, said smoking will be prohibited for safety reasons.

Beyond the Henderson Waves Bridge and a one-kilometre hilltop walk, you also get to experience the meandering forest walk and earth trails. But NParks assures that these are harmless.

The 1.3 kilometre raised walkway, with heights ranging from three to 18 metres, brushes the canopy of the secondary forest of Telok Blangah Hill.

And NParks said the trees are inspected regularly. It has also made sure that there are no overhanging branches over the forest walk.

While this will help prevent visitors from being hurt by fallen branches, NParks hopes people can be responsible for their own safety and avoid the trail during thunderstorms.

It's also keeping an eye on security.

Kong Yit San, Director, Parks, NParks, said: "We do have interconnecting staircases, exits and entrances clearly marked, while the forest walk goes through a secondary forest. It's also quite near to HDB areas and certain residences. So we don't feel that there is a high security concern. But nevertheless, this is a new thing, we will be sending so-called maintenance crew on a daily basis to check out in case some naughty kids (who) decide to mess with it (or) add something to it. Just challenge us in maintenance."

According to NParks, the other new bridge, the Alexandra Arch will be easier to maintain.

It spreads out like an opened leaf over Alexandra Road and will lead visitors to Hort Park and on to Kent Ridge Park.

To commemorate the event, the Monetary Authority of Singapore has launched the Singapore Identity Plan (Southern Ridges) Coin.

These limited collections will be sold by the Singapore Mint. - CNA/vm


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Litter index not linked to conservancy charges

Shuli Sudderuddin, Straits Times 11 May 08;

The air has been cleared over the litter index. Residents in Aljunied GRC need not worry about having to pay higher conservancy charges if their estate is deemed dirty.

Netizens were abuzz over a supposed link between the charges and the index after Aljunied Town Council chairman Cynthia Phua mentioned on May 3 that a litter index was being considered to find out which estates were the dirtiest.

It was reported that the index would be based on the cleanliness of lifts, condition of public property and how large pieces of rubbish were disposed of, and that the town council would consider raising conservancy charges for the dirtiest precincts to cover the extra work involved in maintaining them.

Clearing the air yesterday, Madam Phua told The Sunday Times: 'I mentioned that the litter index and conservancy charges can be linked in terms of dollar amount because there will be an increased cost to cleaning dirtier estates.

'However, that does not mean that the Aljunied Town Council intends to link them. I would like to make it very clear that the Aljunied Town Council never had the intention of punishing the residents with higher conservancy charges.'

She added that the town council may use the index to identify the dirtiest precincts. The staff can clean them and residents encouraged to maintain cleanliness. The index has not even been drafted.

Aljunied GRC resident Raymond Chew, 30, is relieved.

Said the systems engineer: 'I'm happy my fears turned out to be unfounded, but our concerns should have been allayed from the outset.'


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Expert warns that next epidemic could be avian flu

Channel NewsAsia 10 May 08;

SINGAPORE: An expert on epidemics said that the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) which appeared five years ago is unlikely to recur.

But he warns that the new wave of epidemics could stem from human-to-human transmission of avian flu.

This is according to Dr Zhong Nan Shan, who was one of the doctors at the frontline, when China was battling SARS.

Dr Zhong, who is in Singapore, shared his experience with participants at the Singapore Medical Association's annual lecture on Saturday. The decorated doctor is an expert in respiratory diseases.

He warned that if avian flu is not controlled, it could be the next epidemic.

Dr Zhong urged governments to exercise more effective quarantine and surveillance procedures. He also called on the public to exercise better hygiene.

He said: "At the moment, the pandemic of avian flu still exists in the world. For example, in Korea now, it is not under control of avian flu in poultry. In other parts, human flu still exists. If this cold exists, then it will be more possible to develop human avian flu." - CNA/vm


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Afghan northwest hit by plague of locusts

Reuters 10 May 08;

KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan authorities are examining the extent of an unprecedented locust infestation that has prompted local officials in some areas to offer wheat as a reward to residents for killing the insects.

Some 300 tons of locusts have been killed by people in the northwestern province of Badghis alone in recent weeks, Abdul Ghafar Ahmadi, a senior official from the agriculture ministry, said on Saturday, citing provincial officials.

Local officials in Badghis and neighboring Herat have promised residents 7 kgs (15 lbs) of wheat in return for killing 1 kg of locusts, amid a global surge in food prices that has hit Afghanistan hard, Ahmadi said.

"The infestation of locusts has been unprecedented in Afghanistan. It is pretty bad here in Badghis which is also suffering from drought," he told Reuters from Badghis.

"I have heard from local officials that residents have killed 300 metric tons of locusts."

He could not say how many hectares of cultivated land had been destroyed by the infestation, but said a mechanical campaign to kill the insects has been going in several parts of the region, which border Turkmenistan.

"This is a regional problem and is not limited only to Afghanistan," he said.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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