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Singapore's hidden history

Charlie99

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Singapore businessman 'Fatty Loo' found dead in China

AsiaOne
Wednesday, Aug 31, 2011

20110831.134634_bizman.jpg


Singaporean businessman and lawyer Loo Choon Beng was found dead in Guangzhou, China earlier this month.

Sources told The Straits Times that the 57-year-old was found in his hotel room bed on August 3 or August 4.

The former Raffles Institution (RI) student is speculated to have either died in his sleep or from complications from health problems, including diabetes and high cholesterol.

Mr Loo, who won a gold medal in judo in the 1975 South-east Asia Peninsula (Seap) Games, was reportedly behind the first high-tech baccarat casino scam in the Philippines.

Asian media reported that he and three others had allegedly used hidden cameras to cheat at baccarat games in three casinos run by state-gaming firm - Philippine Amusement and gaming Corp (Pagcor).

They cheated the firm of about 160 million pesos (S$4.5 million) in May this year.

The three were arrested and detained but fled the country after posting bail.

The funeral is believed to have been attended only by very close friends and a few family members.

Background on Loo Choon Beng

Mr Loo was well known in horse-riding circles in Singapore as 'Fatty Loo' because of his physique.

In the 1980s he owned more than 50 horses and was a familiar figure at race meetings in Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Ipoh and Penang.

In 2000, the divorcee and father of two daughters was held under Malaysia's preventive detention laws for his alleged involvement in fixing the outcome of horse races at Malaysian turf clubs.

1988
# Allegedly spat in a Singapore Airlines stewardess' face, after she accidentally spilt a soft drink on him during a flight from Hong Kong to Singapore
# Accused of grabbing her arm, turning her around violently and raising his arm and threatening to slap her
# The case was settled out of court

1995
# Suspended from legal practice for three years for misconduct

1996
# OCBC Bank filed a suit against him and a fellow lawyer for an $80.6 million loan which they failed to repay
# Sued by OCBC for not paying back a $4.5 million personal loan

2001
# OCBC moved to declare him a bankrupt

I remember Loo Choon Beng, and his younger brother Loo Choon Hiaw, during our school days.
 

Baimi

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There were 2 primary schools similar to this type of building in Dakota Cresent,
facing each other, one is Mountbatten Chinese School and Mountbatten English School.
They were long gone. Now it is Boarderick Secondary School. Correct?
unknown_school_2.jpg


Once upon a time, all our Primary schools looked like this one! Yes?

The school above can't be identified as all looked the same..... any idea which school is featured above?
 

Baimi

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Last time I went to Prince Edward Bus Terminal to take SBS175 to SAFTI.
If not it will be 11/2 hours journey back to camp, STANDING.
4365322950_780008b4e9_o.jpg


We relied on Green Bus No 175 to get to SAFTI.....

This pic was taken along Bukit Timah Road, outside ChunTin Road, next to the Beauty World and Chung Khiaw Bank across the canal. Bus stops at Rex theatre and 7th mile village were always full of NS men ....
 

Harry Lee

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Loyal
Roots of international law in 1603 incident off Changi


BY NAVIN RAJAGOBAL FOR THE STRAITS TIMES

I would like to take this opportunity to highlight an important historical incident with lasting global repercussions that took place very near our island.

Few residents of Singapore would be aware of this event, and I would not blame them for this, because it occurred in 1603.

This Wednesday, Feb 25, marks the 412th anniversary of the event.

The incident I refer to happened off Singapore's upper east coast, near Changi. The Santa Catarina, a Portuguese merchant ship captained by Sebastian Serrao, was attacked and seized by smaller ships commanded by Jacob van Heemskerk from the Netherlands.

The Santa Catarina and its precious cargo of silk, porcelain, camphor and other spoils were swiftly dispatched to Amsterdam. When these were auctioned, the proceeds amounted to about £300,000, a princely sum in 17th-century northern Europe.

Naturally, the Portuguese wanted their treasure back, while many in the Netherlands were troubled by the legality and morality of the seizure.

The Dutch wished to disrupt Portuguese domination of Europe's trade with Asia as part of their continuing conflict with their former overlord, Habsburg Spain, which ruled Portugal.

But van Heemskerk's mission to Asia, meant to promote trade, was not explicitly authorised to attack Portuguese shipping, and so the assault on the Santa Catarina could be construed as piracy.

In response to the brewing domestic and international scandal, van Heemskerk's sponsor, the United Amsterdam Company, hired an up-and-coming young lawyer named Hugo Grotius (1583-1645) to draft a paper that would defend the seizure of the Santa Catarina.

Grotius shrewdly justified the incident off Changi by claiming that van Heemskerk's action had lawfully challenged Portugal's unfair monopoly on commerce with Asia.

He explained that the Portuguese had not only blocked the Dutch from Asian ports and markets, but also used unlawful force against other Europeans and Asians to maintain their domination of the Asian trade. Hence, by seizing the Santa Catarina, van Heemskerk had engaged in a "just war" to punish Portuguese transgressions and defend freedom of navigation between Europe and Asia.

Grotius' views on the Santa Catarina incident, published as Mare Liberum (The Free Sea) and De Jure Praedae (On the Law of Prize and Booty), and the opposing arguments generated by his views, became the spark that ignited the development of modern international law. Some scholars refer to this as the "Grotian Moment".

For example, Grotius' affirmation that the high seas were international territory and that any country was free to use it for maritime trade became a cornerstone of international law relating to oceans.

This principle was eventually codified in the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos), which is widely recognised as a "constitution" for oceans and seas.

In addition, Grotius' assertion that war is justifiable only when it serves a right (just war theory) became a guide for international law relating to the use of force and self-defence. This was later enshrined in the United Nations Charter. The charter justifies use of force by states only for self-defence or if endorsed by the UN Security Council in the interest of international peace and security - in other words, for the right reasons rather than for aggression.

Not surprisingly, Grotius is considered to be the "father" of international law or at least one of its earliest pioneers.

The connection to Singapore initially appears to be a case of incidental geography. But there is more to this story, because van Heemskerk did not act alone. The resident population helped him.

The Santa Catarina, which was sailing from Macau to Malacca, was anchored off eastern Singapura. The local authority at the time, Johor-Riau, had been founded by evacuees fleeing the Portuguese conquest of Malacca in 1511. Therefore, Johor-Riau was happy to ally with van Heemskerk and provided intelligence, combatants and rowing yachts to carry out the raid.

In fact, Raja Bongsu (later Sultan of Johor-Riau) had sought out van Heemskerk in Pattani and invited him to sail to Singapura to set a trap for the Portuguese. He and other native leaders were probably on the Dutch flagship, the White Lion, during the raid on the Santa Catarina.

The battle began at about 8am on Feb 25, 1603. The raiders focused on the Santa Catarina's sails so as not to damage the cargo or sink the ship. Even so, the confrontation was fierce, with at least 70 casualties.

By 6pm, the Portuguese surrendered the Santa Catarina in return for safe passage to Malacca, which was granted.

The Netherlands' alliance with the local authority was a major plank of Grotius' legal justification for the seizure of the Santa Catarina. By supporting the locals in their struggle against Portuguese Malacca, van Heemskerk was not a pirate, but an agent of Johor-Riau.

Singapura, of course, went on to become a major international hub for trade and shipping. Freedom of navigation, access to global markets and free trade - concepts that would have been familiar to Grotius - are now key elements of Singapore's foreign policy, as they have been crucial for the island-state's economic success.

Recent developments such as the South China Sea territorial and maritime disputes have also highlighted the importance of international law relating to the seas.

Some observers have suggested that China's "nine dashed lines" map, which seems to enclose the busy sea lanes of the South China Sea, harks back to the mare clausum (closed sea) principles favoured by the Portuguese in the 1600s.

This would be contrary to the mare liberum (free sea) principles championed by Grotius after the Santa Catarina incident and subsequently encapsulated in Unclos.

I am therefore of the view that Independent Singapore, as it turns 50 this year, should remember the 412-year-old Santa Catarina incident, since it spurred the development of international law, and it happened just off Changi.

[email protected]

The writer is director, faculty affairs, at Yale-NUS College and former deputy director of the National University of Singapore Centre for International Law.

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/op...incident-changi-20150223#sthash.qkrrN81V.dpuf
 

Victory2016

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That Raffles Hospital guy is Dr Loo Choon Yong, brother of Fatty Loo

(Thread revived after 2 years, thanks to suggestion by Ralders )
 

Ralders

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Very interesting thread.
Just can't stop to think where moonlight affairs harrylee bus64
N others
 

Ralders

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Many world wars 2 japanese soldier are chinese . You all maybe dont believes it , but some of the japanese soldier speaked to us in hokkien and hainanese. Where they come from , how and why they ends up as japanese soldier is a mysterys.
For so many years I wish to hears one of their storys but no one dare to declare he is a hanjian.

This is a shock .ww2
 

Harry Lee

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Hey, I am back.... You can't keep a good story teller down.....


Also, a few old timers here promised to reveal everything once the Old man LKY passes away....... Hope everyone returns and contribute....
 

eatshitndie

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hidden sg stories. can remember that my form teacher in primary school wore pink undies. didn't carry a mirror. dropped a pencil when teacher walked by and bent down to retrieve it. did it 6.9 times in 6.9 months and everytime she wore pink. it was a challenge among boys to find out and share the intell. peer pressure, may be some pleasure.
 

Ralders

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Hey, I am back.... You can't keep a good story teller down.....


Also, a few old timers here promised to reveal everything once the Old man LKY passes away....... Hope everyone returns and contribute....

Oh....U back.....How about the rest
 

Victory2016

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A Taiwanese Imperial Japan Serviceman (Chinese: 台籍日本兵; Japanese: 台湾人日本兵) is any Taiwanese person who served in the Imperial Japanese Army or Navy during World War II whether as a soldier, a sailor, or in another non-combat capacity. According to statistics provided by Japan's Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, during the Second Sino-Japanese War and the subsequent World War II, a total of 207,183 Taiwanese served in the military of Imperial Japan and 30,304 of them were declared killed or missing in action.

Additionally, 173 Taiwanese who served in the Imperial Japanese military were found guilty of Class B and C war crimes. 26 Taiwanese servicemen were sentenced to death, although only two sentences were carried out.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwanese_Imperial_Japan_Serviceman
 
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