Sabtu, 25 April 2020

Singapore falls heavily on COVID-19 pandemic due to three flaws, says M'sia Sinchew Daily's Tay Tian Yan - The Online Citizen

There are three flaws in the measures taken by Singapore government when dealing with the COVID-19 crisis, including government’s overconfidence, a lack of crisis awareness and the citizens’ overdependence on government, says Tay Tian Yan, the deputy executive editor-in-chief of Malaysia’s Sinchew Daily.

In an article published by Malaysia’s Sinchew Daily on Friday (24 April), Mr Tay shared his opinion on the reason of Singapore falling heavily on COVID-19 pandemic though Singapore has been recognised as the most efficient and safest country with the top public health system around the world.

As the countries worldwide are dealing with the spread of COVID-19 since March, the Singapore government had encouraged the people to go about their lives, such as working, studying, travelling as normally as possible while asking people not to wear mask if they are not sick, says Mr Tay.

He remarked, “It is good to have self-confidence. But, overconfidence indicates the start of failure.”

Noting Singapore announced its “circuit breaker” measured three weeks after Malaysia imposed Movement Control Order (MCO), Mr Tay however, pointed out that the ministers had chosen to use the rigid “elite language” during the announcement, which in fact reflects the disconnection between government and general society.

He said, “Just by this ‘circuit breaker’, shows the degree of disconnection between the elite government and general public.”

“Despite Singaporeans having adequate knowledge with a good command in English, I believe that the common people would not understand what ‘circuit breaker’ means. They might know the electrical ‘circuit breaker’, but what does it has to do with COVID-19?” he added.

Even the Chinese media had trouble in finding the appropriate words to describe the “circuit breaker”, said Mr Tay.

Citing the word “lockdown”, “movement control order” or “stay-at-home orders” which clearly stated its meaning and purpose, Mr Tay stressed that the important government policies should be conveyed in a way that is easy to be understood for the people.

On top of this, Singapore also has overlooked its large population of migrant workers due to their overconfidence and not being “grounded”.

He noted that the leaders of Singapore government are the “outstanding individuals” who are “carefully selected” from academic elites, adding, “However, they are not ‘grounded’ because they ‘came from the sky, not from the land’.”

Speaking on the second flaws, Mr Tay mentioned that Singaporeans are too dependent on “Cheng Hu” (government in Hokkien language) as they always believe what the government says is right.

“When the Government says that there is no need to be worry, everyone goes on with their life as usual. Similarly, when it asked Singaporeans not to wear masks, the people also heeded its “advice” and furthermore, mocked Taiwanese and Hong Kong citizens for wearing masks,” he said.

He then said that it would be “dangerous” in the case of unforeseen circumstances if the citizens merely obey the government and are deprived of independent thinking and judgment skills.

Singaporeans tend to take for granted as they feel prosperous and safe in the country with the highest GDP in the world, says Mr Tay, adding that this mentality has consequently caused a lack of crisis awareness among the society.

Hence, he said, Singaporeans assumed that the virus is only linked to other countries and has nothing to do with them though the world struggles against COVID-19.

With that in mind, some nightclubs even extended its operation hours the night before circuit breaker started, while the long queues have been seen at bubble tea shops after the food and beverage outlets were asked to temporarily close under the elevated circuit breaker measures.

Mr Tay expressed that there will be blind spots and failures regardless of how successful the country and how capable the government is, noting, “Overconfidence and success are traps on the way forward.”

However, he believed the country would ride out this crisis and learn the lesson from it.

Singapore has reported an additional 618 cases of COVID-19 infection on Saturday (25 April), bringing the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases to 12,693 in the country.

Of the new cases, seven are Singaporeans and permanent residents, while the rest comprises migrant workers living in dormitories.

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2020-04-25 09:33:45Z
52780745905243

618 new Covid-19 cases, taking total to 12,693, Singapore News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The Ministry of Health (MOH) confirmed another 618 new Covid-19 cases on Saturday (April 25), taking the total count of coronavirus cases here to 12,693.

The ministry said that Singaporeans and permanent residents make up seven of the new cases, with migrant workers living in dormitories still forming the majority as in recent weeks.

More details of the new cases will be provided later on Saturday.

On Friday, the ministry reported 897 new cases, the first time in five days the daily numbers had fallen below 1,000.

About 3 per cent, or 9,929, of the 323,000 migrant workers living in dormitories have tested positive, putting the spotlight on their living conditions in these dormitories.

The MOH had said that it picked up many more cases in dormitories because of extensive testing. Most of these cases have a mild illness and are being monitored in community isolation facilities or the general wards of hospitals.

Singapore's largest active cluster remains S11 Dormitory in Punggol, which has 2,263 confirmed cases as of Friday - about one-fifth of the country's total.

MOH noted on Friday that the daily number of Singaporeans and permanent residents infected as of Friday noon - 13 - was the lowest since March 29.

Unlinked cases in the community had also decreased from a daily average of 20 two weeks ago to 17 cases in the past week.

As of Friday, 952 patients in Singapore have fully recovered and were discharged. Twelve have died of complications due to Covid-19 and four who tested positive have died from other causes.

Globally, the virus, which began in December last year, has infected nearly 2.8 million people. Some 196,000 have died.

Related Stories: 

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2020-04-25 07:08:44Z
52780742711431

Jumat, 24 April 2020

The Big Read: From 'gold standard' to 'cautionary tale' — dissecting the first 3 months of S'pore's Covid-19 response - TODAYonline

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. The Big Read: From 'gold standard' to 'cautionary tale' — dissecting the first 3 months of S'pore's Covid-19 response  TODAYonline
  2. Circuit breaker tough on special needs children, but parents find creative ways to cope  CNA
  3. Youth concerned about their mental well-being during COVID-19 circuit breaker: Poll  CNA
  4. Increased screen time during circuit breaker bad for kids? Use chance to learn, bond  TODAYonline
  5. The Big Read in short: 3 months on, a stock-take of S'pore's response to Covid-19  TODAYonline
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-04-25 05:09:45Z
52780745905243

Singapore's migrant workers are suffering the brunt of the country's coronavirus outbreak - CNN

In recent weeks, the Asian city-state has had a dramatic spike in coronavirus infections, with thousands of new cases linked to clusters in foreign worker dormitories. To control the spread, the government has attempted to isolate the dormitories, test workers and move symptomatic patients into quarantine facilities.
But those measures have left hundreds of thousands of workers trapped in their dormitories, living cheek by jowl in cramped conditions that make social distancing near impossible.
Singapore is home to about 1.4 million migrant workers who come largely from South and Southeast Asia. As housekeepers, domestic helpers, construction workers and manual laborers, these migrants are essential to keeping Singapore functioning -- but are also some of the lowest paid and most vulnerable people in the city.
Rubel, who goes only by one name, came to Singapore from Bangladesh six years ago to work in construction and earn money for his family. Now, with his health and safety at risk, he's worried for those who depend on him.
"I'm scared of this coronavirus, because if I catch it I cannot take care of my family," he said.
In the first three months of the coronavirus pandemic, Singapore was praised for its response and apparent ability to suppress infections without resorting to extreme measures.
Then, in April, the number of cases exploded. Since March 17, Singapore's total cases grew from 266 to 12,075, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
Even as the number of new cases surged past 1,000 a day, only a dozen or so per day were Singapore citizens of permanent residents; the rest were all migrant workers.

Singapore was built by migrants

Singapore's first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, is often credited as the visionary who helped transform the city-state into the developed metropolis it is today. But much of Singapore, including iconic sites like the gleaming Marina Bay Sands, was built by imported labor.
Forty years ago, Singapore was less economically developed, with a per-capita income of $4,071 a year, according to the International Labor Organization. Without much land or natural resources, the government instead focused on investing in education, especially in the STEM subjects and vocational training, and creating an export-oriented economy that would obtain wealth through industrialization.
Singapore had a model coronavirus response, then cases spiked. What happened?
But Singapore had -- and still has -- a small population, presenting the problem of manpower. So the government turned to foreign labor, and has been doing so ever since. Of the city's 5.7 million residents today, nearly a quarter are foreign workers, according to government figures.
The ambitious plan to develop Singapore worked -- at least, for Singaporeans. The cheap foreign labor fueled growth, raising Singapore's average income to $56,786 by 2019 and making it one of the wealthiest places in the world in GDP per capita.
But critics say that foreign workers have been sidelined, left mostly living in tougher conditions with fewer benefits or protections than their Singaporean neighbors -- meaning when a crisis like Covid-19 arrives, they are the first and hardest hit.

The dormitories were a 'time bomb'

Singapore started seeing its cases spike around April 4, with 75 new cases -- its biggest single-day jump at the time.
Authorities traced clusters back to the dormitories, which were built specifically for migrant workers and subject to government regulations. About 200,000 workers live in 43 dormitories in Singapore, according to Minister of Manpower Josephine Teo.
Conditions are usually cramped, with about 10 to 20 workers sharing each room. Government regulations require the rooms provide 4.5 square meters (about 48 square feet) per occupant, meaning the rooms typically range from 45 to 90 square meters (484 to 968 square feet).
Videos sent to CNN from one dormitory show workers lying in a line of bunk beds, where they sleep just a few feet away from each other. The workers, the majority of whom are male, and from less economically developed countries, share toilets, shower stalls, laundry clotheslines, storage spaces, and line up together to receive food.
Residents at Cochrane Lodge 2, a dormitory for migrant workers in Singapore.
There's simply no way to self-isolate or avoid close contact, which may be why the coronavirus spread so fast and far here.
There's also the fact that authorities seem to have overlooked this risk and didn't alert the migrant worker community until it was too late, said Alex Au, vice president of the Singaporean non-profit organization Transient Workers Count Too (TWC2).
"When the government of Singapore, governments all over the world, issued safe distancing advice, I think they overlooked the fact that safe distancing cannot be possible when construction workers and other blue-collar workers are housed ten men, 20 men, in a room," he said. "The failure, I think, to see clearly the risks and to take measures to mitigate the risks, left us with a very bad situation right now."
The balcony of a migrant worker dormitory, now locked down, in Singapore on April 17.
As the number of new daily cases spiked, the government locked down dorms, stepped up hygiene measures inside, and closed recreational common spaces, said the Ministry of Manpower. They also tried to space out residents more, and moved some workers into military camps, floating hotels, and vacant government apartments.
In some dorms, workers say the government measures have reassured residents. Zasim, a 27-year-old worker from Bangladesh, said he had been provided with face masks, hand sanitizer, cleaning supplies, soap, and fresh fruit by the government. Authorities had also supplied free WiFi and extra phone cards so Zasim and his dorm-mates could spend their days under lockdown talking to friends and family, he said.
Cochrane Lodge 2, the dormitory where Zasim and other migrant workers are now living under lockdown.
Like Rubel, Zasim's main concern was the shutdown's financial impact -- but he feels less worried now that the government has said migrant workers should get paid, even if they can't work, and subsidized employers to make that possible.
Rubel, too, said his living spaces are now clean and the workers are provided with food -- but the mood at his dorm remains tense. Even with the additional protective measures, people are still sharing close quarters, and workers worry they may be living among asymptomatic carriers.
"It's extremely stressful for anybody to be confined in these conditions," said Desiree Leong, the casework executive at the Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics in Singapore. "You're being kept in there all day, or most of the day. It's causing a lot of anxiety and stress, a lot of tension."
A migrant worker rests on a staircase at a dormitory in Singapore, on April 22.
Tommy Koh, a Singapore lawyer and former diplomat, was more blunt in a widely-shared Facebook post earlier this month.
"The dormitories were like a time bomb waiting to explode," he wrote. "The way Singapore treats its foreign workers is not First World but Third World. The government has allowed their employers to transport them in flat bed trucks with no seats. They stay in overcrowded dormitories and are packed likes sardines with 12 persons to a room."

Calls for reform

The crisis unfolding in the dormitories has led activists to call for broader reforms on living and working conditions for migrant workers beyond the coronavirus pandemic.
Working in a city without a minimum wage, they earn a fraction of the salaries of white-collar employees. The average migrant worker earns about $400 to $465 a month, compared to the average Singaporean monthly salary of $3,077, according to data from TWC2.
Some employers also don't provide medical care or paid sick leave to migrant workers -- the consequences of which became clear during the pandemic. Even as late as March, some employers discouraged their migrant workers from going to the doctor when they felt unwell, or docked their pay for taking the time off, said Leong.
Singapore's migrant workers struggle to get paid
And workers don't have many avenues to address these issues; their visas are tied to their employers, who can terminate work permits at any time, so filing a complaint against your boss could jeopardize not only your job but your migration status.
"This present crisis actually reflects a far bigger systemic problem of the state being relatively fine or not so concerned about the welfare, the well-being, and the rights of migrants," said Au, the NGO vice president.
Singapore's Ministry of Manpower has previously said that it prosecutes employers who willfully refuse to pay workers, and has taken action against dormitory operators who fail to follow regulations. An operating company and its director were prosecuted last year after their dormitories were found to have broken lights and shower taps, and "filthy" living conditions.
In light of the coronavirus outbreak, however, some government leaders are acknowledging there is still much work to be done in improving migrant workers' rights and standards of living.
Most Singapore foreign domestic workers exploited, survey says
"Should standards in foreign worker dormitories be raised? There's no question in my mind, answer is 'yes'," wrote Minister Teo on Facebook in early April, as the first few dormitories were being locked down.
"I hope the Covid-19 episode demonstrates to the employers and wider public that raising standards at worker dormitories is not only the right thing to do, but also in our own interests," she wrote.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong also thanked migrant workers for their contributions to Singapore and their cooperation during the pandemic in a press release on Tuesday.
"To our migrant workers, let me emphasize again: we will care for you, just like we care for Singaporeans," he said. "We will look after your health, your welfare and your livelihood. We will work with your employers to make sure that you get paid, and you can send money home ... This is our duty and responsibility to you, and your families."

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2020-04-25 02:24:58Z
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Singapore's migrant workers are suffering the brunt of the country's coronavirus outbreak - CNN

In recent weeks, the Asian city-state has had a dramatic spike in coronavirus infections, with thousands of new cases linked to clusters in foreign worker dormitories. To control the spread, the government has attempted to isolate the dormitories, test workers and move symptomatic patients into quarantine facilities.
But those measures have left hundreds of thousands of workers trapped in their dormitories, living cheek by jowl in cramped conditions that make social distancing near impossible.
Singapore is home to about 1.4 million migrant workers who come largely from South and Southeast Asia. As housekeepers, domestic helpers, construction workers and manual laborers, these migrants are essential to keeping Singapore functioning -- but are also some of the lowest paid and most vulnerable people in the city.
Rubel, who goes only by one name, came to Singapore from Bangladesh six years ago to work in construction and earn money for his family. Now, with his health and safety at risk, he's worried for those who depend on him.
"I'm scared of this coronavirus, because if I catch it I cannot take care of my family," he said.
In the first three months of the coronavirus pandemic, Singapore was praised for its response and apparent ability to suppress infections without resorting to extreme measures.
Then, in April, the number of cases exploded. Since March 17, Singapore's total cases grew from 266 to 12,075, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
Even as the number of new cases surged past 1,000 a day, only a dozen or so per day were Singapore citizens of permanent residents; the rest were all migrant workers.

Singapore was built by migrants

Singapore's first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, is often credited as the visionary who helped transform the city-state into the developed metropolis it is today. But much of Singapore, including iconic sites like the gleaming Marina Bay Sands, was built by imported labor.
Forty years ago, Singapore was less economically developed, with a per-capita income of $4,071 a year, according to the International Labor Organization. Without much land or natural resources, the government instead focused on investing in education, especially in the STEM subjects and vocational training, and creating an export-oriented economy that would obtain wealth through industrialization.
Singapore had a model coronavirus response, then cases spiked. What happened?
But Singapore had -- and still has -- a small population, presenting the problem of manpower. So the government turned to foreign labor, and has been doing so ever since. Of the city's 5.7 million residents today, nearly a quarter are foreign workers, according to government figures.
The ambitious plan to develop Singapore worked -- at least, for Singaporeans. The cheap foreign labor fueled growth, raising Singapore's average income to $56,786 by 2019 and making it one of the wealthiest places in the world in GDP per capita.
But critics say that foreign workers have been sidelined, left mostly living in tougher conditions with fewer benefits or protections than their Singaporean neighbors -- meaning when a crisis like Covid-19 arrives, they are the first and hardest hit.

The dormitories were a 'time bomb'

Singapore started seeing its cases spike around April 4, with 75 new cases -- its biggest single-day jump at the time.
Authorities traced clusters back to the dormitories, which were built specifically for migrant workers and subject to government regulations. About 200,000 workers live in 43 dormitories in Singapore, according to Minister of Manpower Josephine Teo.
Conditions are usually cramped, with about 10 to 20 workers sharing each room. Government regulations require the rooms provide 4.5 square meters (about 48 square feet) per occupant, meaning the rooms typically range from 45 to 90 square meters (484 to 968 square feet).
Videos sent to CNN from one dormitory show workers lying in a line of bunk beds, where they sleep just a few feet away from each other. The workers, the majority of whom are male, and from less economically developed countries, share toilets, shower stalls, laundry clotheslines, storage spaces, and line up together to receive food.
Residents at Cochrane Lodge 2, a dormitory for migrant workers in Singapore.
There's simply no way to self-isolate or avoid close contact, which may be why the coronavirus spread so fast and far here.
There's also the fact that authorities seem to have overlooked this risk and didn't alert the migrant worker community until it was too late, said Alex Au, vice president of the Singaporean non-profit organization Transient Workers Count Too (TWC2).
"When the government of Singapore, governments all over the world, issued safe distancing advice, I think they overlooked the fact that safe distancing cannot be possible when construction workers and other blue-collar workers are housed ten men, 20 men, in a room," he said. "The failure, I think, to see clearly the risks and to take measures to mitigate the risks, left us with a very bad situation right now."
The balcony of a migrant worker dormitory, now locked down, in Singapore on April 17.
As the number of new daily cases spiked, the government locked down dorms, stepped up hygiene measures inside, and closed recreational common spaces, said the Ministry of Manpower. They also tried to space out residents more, and moved some workers into military camps, floating hotels, and vacant government apartments.
In some dorms, workers say the government measures have reassured residents. Zasim, a 27-year-old worker from Bangladesh, said he had been provided with face masks, hand sanitizer, cleaning supplies, soap, and fresh fruit by the government. Authorities had also supplied free WiFi and extra phone cards so Zasim and his dorm-mates could spend their days under lockdown talking to friends and family, he said.
Cochrane Lodge 2, the dormitory where Zasim and other migrant workers are now living under lockdown.
Like Rubel, Zasim's main concern was the shutdown's financial impact -- but he feels less worried now that the government has said migrant workers should get paid, even if they can't work, and subsidized employers to make that possible.
Rubel, too, said his living spaces are now clean and the workers are provided with food -- but the mood at his dorm remains tense. Even with the additional protective measures, people are still sharing close quarters, and workers worry they may be living among asymptomatic carriers.
"It's extremely stressful for anybody to be confined in these conditions," said Desiree Leong, the casework executive at the Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics in Singapore. "You're being kept in there all day, or most of the day. It's causing a lot of anxiety and stress, a lot of tension."
A migrant worker rests on a staircase at a dormitory in Singapore, on April 22.
Tommy Koh, a Singapore lawyer and former diplomat, was more blunt in a widely-shared Facebook post earlier this month.
"The dormitories were like a time bomb waiting to explode," he wrote. "The way Singapore treats its foreign workers is not First World but Third World. The government has allowed their employers to transport them in flat bed trucks with no seats. They stay in overcrowded dormitories and are packed likes sardines with 12 persons to a room."

Calls for reform

The crisis unfolding in the dormitories has led activists to call for broader reforms on living and working conditions for migrant workers beyond the coronavirus pandemic.
Working in a city without a minimum wage, they earn a fraction of the salaries of white-collar employees. The average migrant worker earns about $400 to $465 a month, compared to the average Singaporean monthly salary of $3,077, according to data from TWC2.
Some employers also don't provide medical care or paid sick leave to migrant workers -- the consequences of which became clear during the pandemic. Even as late as March, some employers discouraged their migrant workers from going to the doctor when they felt unwell, or docked their pay for taking the time off, said Leong.
Singapore's migrant workers struggle to get paid
And workers don't have many avenues to address these issues; their visas are tied to their employers, who can terminate work permits at any time, so filing a complaint against your boss could jeopardize not only your job but your migration status.
"This present crisis actually reflects a far bigger systemic problem of the state being relatively fine or not so concerned about the welfare, the well-being, and the rights of migrants," said Au, the NGO vice president.
Singapore's Ministry of Manpower has previously said that it prosecutes employers who willfully refuse to pay workers, and has taken action against dormitory operators who fail to follow regulations. An operating company and its director were prosecuted last year after their dormitories were found to have broken lights and shower taps, and "filthy" living conditions.
In light of the coronavirus outbreak, however, some government leaders are acknowledging there is still much work to be done in improving migrant workers' rights and standards of living.
Most Singapore foreign domestic workers exploited, survey says
"Should standards in foreign worker dormitories be raised? There's no question in my mind, answer is 'yes'," wrote Minister Teo on Facebook in early April, as the first few dormitories were being locked down.
"I hope the Covid-19 episode demonstrates to the employers and wider public that raising standards at worker dormitories is not only the right thing to do, but also in our own interests," she wrote.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong also thanked migrant workers for their contributions to Singapore and their cooperation during the pandemic in a press release on Tuesday.
"To our migrant workers, let me emphasize again: we will care for you, just like we care for Singaporeans," he said. "We will look after your health, your welfare and your livelihood. We will work with your employers to make sure that you get paid, and you can send money home ... This is our duty and responsibility to you, and your families."

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2020-04-25 02:04:00Z
52780742711431

Singapore's migrant workers are suffering the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic - CNN

In recent weeks, the Asian city-state has seen a dramatic spike coronavirus infections, with thousands of new cases linked to clusters in foreign worker dormitories. To control the spread, the government has attempted to isolate the dormitories, test workers and move symptomatic patients into quarantine facilities.
But those measures have left hundreds of thousands of workers trapped in their dormitories, living cheek by jowl in cramped conditions that make social distancing near impossible.
Singapore is home to about 1.4 million migrant workers who come largely from South and Southeast Asia. As housekeepers, domestic helpers, construction workers and manual laborers, these migrants are essential to keeping Singapore functioning -- but are also some of the lowest paid and most vulnerable people in the city.
Rubel, who goes only by one name, came to Singapore from Bangladesh six years ago to work in construction and earn money for his family. Now, with his health and safety at risk, he's worried for those who depend on him.
"I'm scared of this coronavirus, because if I catch it I cannot take care of my family," he said.
In the first three months of the coronavirus pandemic, Singapore was praised for its response and apparent ability to suppress infections without resorting to extreme measures.
Then, in April, the number of cases exploded. Since March 17, Singapore's total cases grew from 266 to 12,075, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
Even as the number of new cases surged past 1,000 a day, only a dozen or so per day were Singapore citizens of permanent residents; the rest were all migrant workers.

Singapore was built by migrants

Singapore's first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, is often credited as the visionary who helped transform the city-state into the developed metropolis it is today. But much of Singapore, including iconic sites like the gleaming Marina Bay Sands, was built by imported labor.
Forty years ago, Singapore was less economically developed, with a per-capita income of $4,071 a year, according to the International Labor Organization. Without much land or natural resources, the government instead focused on investing in education, especially in the STEM subjects and vocational training, and creating an export-oriented economy that would obtain wealth through industrialization.
Singapore had a model coronavirus response, then cases spiked. What happened?
But Singapore had -- and still has -- a small population, presenting the problem of manpower. So the government turned to foreign labor, and has been doing so ever since. Of the city's 5.7 million residents today, nearly a quarter are foreign workers, according to government figures.
The ambitious plan to develop Singapore worked -- at least, for Singaporeans. The cheap foreign labor fueled growth, raising Singapore's average income to $56,786 by 2019 and making it one of the wealthiest places in the world in GDP per capita.
But critics say that foreign workers have been sidelined, left mostly living in tougher conditions with fewer benefits or protections than their Singaporean neighbors -- meaning when a crisis like Covid-19 arrives, they are the first and hardest hit.

The dormitories were a 'time bomb'

Singapore started seeing its cases spike around April 4, with 75 new cases -- its biggest single-day jump at the time.
Authorities traced clusters back to the dormitories, which were built specifically for migrant workers and subject to government regulations. About 200,000 workers live in 43 dormitories in Singapore, according to Minister of Manpower Josephine Teo.
Conditions are usually cramped, with about 10 to 20 workers sharing each room. Government regulations require the rooms provide 4.5 square meters (about 48 square feet) per occupant, meaning the rooms typically range from 45 to 90 square meters (484 to 968 square feet).
Videos sent to CNN from one dormitory show workers lying in a line of bunk beds, where they sleep just a few feet away from each other. The workers, the majority of whom are male, and from less economically developed countries, share toilets, shower stalls, laundry clotheslines, storage spaces, and line up together to receive food.
Residents at Cochrane Lodge 2, a dormitory for migrant workers in Singapore.
There's simply no way to self-isolate or avoid close contact, which may be why the coronavirus spread so fast and far here.
There's also the fact that authorities seem to have overlooked this risk and didn't alert the migrant worker community until it was too late, said Alex Au, vice president of the Singaporean non-profit organization Transient Workers Count Too (TWC2).
"When the government of Singapore, governments all over the world, issued safe distancing advice, I think they overlooked the fact that safe distancing cannot be possible when construction workers and other blue-collar workers are housed ten men, 20 men, in a room," he said. "The failure, I think, to see clearly the risks and to take measures to mitigate the risks, left us with a very bad situation right now."
The balcony of a migrant worker dormitory, now locked down, in Singapore on April 17.
As the number of new daily cases spiked, the government locked down dorms, stepped up hygiene measures inside, and closed recreational common spaces, said the Ministry of Manpower. They also tried to space out residents more, and moved some workers into military camps, floating hotels, and vacant government apartments.
In some dorms, workers say the government measures have reassured residents. Zasim, a 27-year-old worker from Bangladesh, said he had been provided with face masks, hand sanitizer, cleaning supplies, soap, and fresh fruit by the government. Authorities had also supplied free WiFi and extra phone cards so Zasim and his dorm-mates could spend their days under lockdown talking to friends and family, he said.
Cochrane Lodge 2, the dormitory where Zasim and other migrant workers are now living under lockdown.
Like Rubel, Zasim's main concern was the shutdown's financial impact -- but he feels less worried now that the government has said migrant workers should get paid, even if they can't work, and subsidized employers to make that possible.
Rubel, too, said his living spaces are now clean and the workers are provided with food -- but the mood at his dorm remains tense. Even with the additional protective measures, people are still sharing close quarters, and workers worry they may be living among asymptomatic carriers.
"It's extremely stressful for anybody to be confined in these conditions," said Desiree Leong, the casework executive at the Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics in Singapore. "You're being kept in there all day, or most of the day. It's causing a lot of anxiety and stress, a lot of tension."
A migrant worker rests on a staircase at a dormitory in Singapore, on April 22.
Tommy Koh, a Singapore lawyer and former diplomat, was more blunt in a widely-shared Facebook post earlier this month.
"The dormitories were like a time bomb waiting to explode," he wrote. "The way Singapore treats its foreign workers is not First World but Third World. The government has allowed their employers to transport them in flat bed trucks with no seats. They stay in overcrowded dormitories and are packed likes sardines with 12 persons to a room."

Calls for reform

The crisis unfolding in the dormitories has led activists to call for broader reforms on living and working conditions for migrant workers beyond the coronavirus pandemic.
Working in a city without a minimum wage, they earn a fraction of the salaries of white-collar employees. The average migrant worker earns about $400 to $465 a month, compared to the average Singaporean monthly salary of $3,077, according to data from TWC2.
Some employers also don't provide medical care or paid sick leave to migrant workers -- the consequences of which became clear during the pandemic. Even as late as March, some employers discouraged their migrant workers from going to the doctor when they felt unwell, or docked their pay for taking the time off, said Leong.
Singapore's migrant workers struggle to get paid
And workers don't have many avenues to address these issues; their visas are tied to their employers, who can terminate work permits at any time, so filing a complaint against your boss could jeopardize not only your job but your migration status.
"This present crisis actually reflects a far bigger systemic problem of the state being relatively fine or not so concerned about the welfare, the well-being, and the rights of migrants," said Au, the NGO vice president.
Singapore's Ministry of Manpower has previously said that it prosecutes employers who willfully refuse to pay workers, and has taken action against dormitory operators who fail to follow regulations. An operating company and its director were prosecuted last year after their dormitories were found to have broken lights and shower taps, and "filthy" living conditions.
In light of the coronavirus outbreak, however, some government leaders are acknowledging there is still much work to be done in improving migrant workers' rights and standards of living.
Most Singapore foreign domestic workers exploited, survey says
"Should standards in foreign worker dormitories be raised? There's no question in my mind, answer is 'yes'," wrote Minister Teo on Facebook in early April, as the first few dormitories were being locked down.
"I hope the Covid-19 episode demonstrates to the employers and wider public that raising standards at worker dormitories is not only the right thing to do, but also in our own interests," she wrote.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong also thanked migrant workers for their contributions to Singapore and their cooperation during the pandemic in a press release on Tuesday.
"To our migrant workers, let me emphasize again: we will care for you, just like we care for Singaporeans," he said. "We will look after your health, your welfare and your livelihood. We will work with your employers to make sure that you get paid, and you can send money home ... This is our duty and responsibility to you, and your families."

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2020-04-25 00:24:52Z
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Trump says his remarks on using disinfectant in people's bodies were sarcastic - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - US President Donald Trump said on Friday (April 24) that he was being sarcastic when he raised the possibility of using disinfectant inside people's bodies to fight the coronavirus.

Trump said at a Thursday news briefing that scientists should explore whether inserting light or disinfectant into the bodies of coronavirus patients might help treat the respiratory illness caused by the virus.

At an Oval Office event on Friday, Trump sought to walk back those comments while also seeming to continue to advance his theory that disinfectants and sunlight might ultimately help within the body.

"I was asking a question sarcastically to reporters like you just to see what would happen," he told journalists on Friday.

His remarks on Thursday, directed at doctors in the room on his coronavirus task force, did not come across as sarcasm.

Pressed repeatedly about the issue on Friday, Trump said he was not encouraging people to ingest disinfectant.

Health professionals have been encouraging people for some time to wash their hands thoroughly with soap or to use hand sanitiser to help stop the spread of the virus.

"I do think that disinfectant on the hands could have a very good effect," he said. "Sun and heat, and humidity wipe it out. And this is from tests - they've been doing these tests for ... a number of months. And the result - so then I said, 'Well, how do we do it inside the body or even outside the body with the hands and disinfectant I think would work.'"

Trump's initial comments about the issue raised concerns that anxious people might poison themselves to try to fight the virus, prompting an international chorus of doctors and health experts to urge people not to drink or inject disinfectant.

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2020-04-24 19:03:08Z
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