Wednesday 30 November 2016

Singapore, Malaysia have made very good progress on high-speed rail agreement

Singapore, Malaysia have made very good progress on high-speed rail agreement: PM Lee



PM Lee in an interview with the chairman of Malaysian state news agency Bernama Azman Ujang on Monday (Nov 28).

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong says Singapore and Malaysia have made very good progress on a bilateral agreement on the Singapore-Kuala Lumpur High-Speed Rail (HSR), and hopes both sides can sign the agreement when he and Prime Minister Najib Razak meet at the Leaders' Retreat.

"It is a very ambitious, very complicated and a very expansive project, in terms of scale. We have to try our best to anticipate what the likely issues are, when we build it, when we operate it, and have a clear understanding on how we will deal with it if a situation arises," Mr Lee said in an interview with the chairman of Malaysian state news agency Bernama Azman Ujang on Monday(Nov 28).

"The first thing is to have a sound agreement between the two countries on the basis of how the project is structured, how it is going to be executed, and how it is backed by the two governments," said Mr Lee in the interview, the transcript of which was released by the Prime Minister's Office today (Nov 30).

"That is the first requirement, that we have a very good agreement which sets out clearly a sound basis to build and operate the system."

Singapore, KL 'working towards' inking High Speed Rail pact on Dec 5

Both countries have been discussing the agreement for more than a year, Mr Lee noted.

"We are almost there, and I hope that when I meet Prime Minister Najib at the next retreat, we will be able to sign the agreement," he said.

On Tuesday (Nov 29), Malaysian Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Abdul Rahman Dahlan met Coordinating Minister for Infrastructure and Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan, and Mr Abdul Rahman said on Instagram they met "to harmonise last minute details of the Bilateral Agreement on Malaysia-Singapore High Speed Rail project before signing ceremony in December".

A memorandum of understanding for the HSR project was signed in July this year by Mr Khaw and Mr Abdul Rahman, and it was witnessed by the two prime ministers.

Construction for the project is expected to begin in 2018, with trains running in 2026.

Secondly, Mr Lee noted that the project's execution will be very important - designing it, calling for tenders, evaluating the proposals.

"Several high-speed rail systems in the world have been lobbying very hard to get this contract - the Japanese, the Koreans, the Chinese high-speed rail," he noted.

"Each has its strengths, and we will have a very difficult decision evaluating the bidders who come along and deciding which one is the best overall."

Asked about the cost-sharing of construction, PM Lee said things like that had to be clearly specified, and it was one of the items that made the project complicated.

"When you have two authorities involved, you have to decide how to partition, where the line is drawn. I build my part, you build your part, and we have to meet at the same point," he said. "If it does not meet then we have a big problem."

PM Lee added: "It is complicated but there is a will. And there is a good will, and we would like to make it succeed."

He was also asked if a third bridge between Singapore and Malaysia - which some in Malaysia had suggested recently - is necessary with the HSR project.

Mr Lee said there are currently no plans for it.

"We are not currently planning for a third bridge," he said. "I have seen some statements in Malaysia suggesting one, but the high-speed rail is a very ambitious project. I would focus all my energies doing that one before we launch a new big project."

~News courtesy of Straits Times~

Monday 7 November 2016

Maxwell Food Centre tops local food haunts for third year running

Maxwell Food Centre tops local food haunts for third year running

Maxwell Food Centre has emerged as the favourite food haunt of locals at the annual City Hawker Food Hunt for the third year running.

During the ceremony for the ninth edition of the awards at Ayer Rajah Food Centre on Sunday (Nov 6), 37 hawkers from more than 100 hawker centres islandwide were also recognised.

They include this year's top prizes for ngoh hiang which went to China Street Fritters (中国街五香胃肠) at Maxwell Food Centre, sambal stingray which went to Lucky Seafood (好运烧烤海鲜) at Pasir Panjang Food Centre, and fried rice which went to Tien Kee (新记) at Block 22 Toa Payoh Lorong 7.

The committee behind the food hunt rotates between various categories each year. Apart from the top stall from each food category, other stalls in the top 10 also received prizes.



China Street Fritters receiving its award from MOE and MTI Parliamentary Secretary Low Yen Ling. (Photo: Chan Luo Er)

More than 15,000 people voted online for their favourite hawker centre and the above three categories online at the City Hawker Food Hunt website between June and September.

Three new special award categories were also introduced this year to cover innovative hawker fare, economical dishes and environmentally-friendly practices.

Those on a budget can check out Xian Jin Mixed Vegetable Rice at Bedok North Street 1 Market and Food Centre, which sells any three meat items with rice for just S$2. They also serve bak kut teh at the same price.

The sole Green Hawker Stall award went to Ho Peng Coffee Stall at Maxwell Food Centre. The drinks stall owner has been recycling milk tin cans for customers who order takeaway for 60 years.

There are around 107 markets and hawker centres in Singapore, many of which are located in the heartlands.

City Hawker Food Hunt is jointly organised by City Gas and Shin Min Daily News and is supported by the Health Promotion Board, National Environment Agency and Singapore Tourism Board.

~News courtesy of Channel News Asia~