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A Plea to the Government of India

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Joined
Sep 11, 2010
Messages
37,281
Points
113
To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Yours very faithfully

Glockman and others
SBF GRC
Republic of Singapore
 
To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Please sign off on the letter. I am certain the Govt Of India will throw an anonymous letter into the dustbin. :biggrin:
 
To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Yours very faithfully

Glockman
SBF GRC
Republic of Singapore
If he still didn't get the memo, tell him to come collect his fucking cuntrymen.
 
Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process
KNN you never cc your letter to his citizens whether they want to be evacuated ? KNN what happened if they leefused :rolleyes: :biggrin: KNN
 
Praise be to Mother India! :thumbsup:


:x3:

image.jpg
 
Jialat leow,the dormitory bosses and construction company bosses and RC-related company bosses will protest cos their companies cannot function without Ah Neh workers.All Singapore economy will come to a standstill ! Have mercy on the big towkays !
 
Jialat leow,the dormitory bosses and construction company bosses and RC-related company bosses will protest cos their companies cannot function without Ah Neh workers.All Singapore economy will come to a standstill ! Have mercy on the big towkays !
Don't like that lah. This is just scare tactics. Just like they tell you if pap loses power, the country will be in shambles. Workers can be sourced from so many 3rd-world shitholes, why must be india? Private enterprises will always find a way. Bosses are more resourceful and imaginative than we give them credit for.

In short, no scared! :biggrin:
 
To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Yours very faithfully

Glockman and others
SBF GRC
Republic of Singapore
I agree bro. SG strain is danger. But u got it back ward. It just mean fly here OK their people choice, fly back to mother India can not be cause an danger others. All so singapore responsiblity if they fall sick. Another good "deal" for PAP. :geek:
 
To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Yours very faithfully

Glockman and others
SBF GRC
Republic of Singapore

The situation in Singapore is fine as far as Covid goes. It is the over reaction of the government to a virus that is no worse than the flu that has caused the country to plunge into crisis mode.

Just vaccinate the vulnerable and move on. I can assure the authorities that everything will be just fine. A few more will die but people die on a daily basis for a variety of reasons and Covid will just be one of the many causes.
 
To the good citizens of Mother India, please do the needful and evacuate this country.

With Sinkapore's critically low levels of cow dung and urine, our health care system is at the brink of collapse.
 
Go fuck yrslf piu kia u... poon pe pe

To the Honorable PM of India

As you are well aware, the covid-19 situation in Singapore is becoming dire. Your Chief Minister as well as your Delhi Health Minister have impressed upon your government and people the dangerous situation we are facing. Your citizens in Singapore are in imminent danger.

Hence, we ask that you evacuate your citizens with immediate effect. Their safety and well being are of utmost importance. We will clear our air space and sea lanes to facilitate this process. Our airports and seaports are well equipped to handle this mass evacuation.

Thank you.

Yours very faithfully

Glockman and others
SBF GRC
Republic of Singapore
 
U Poon pe pe again...

The situation in Singapore is fine as far as Covid goes. It is the over reaction of the government to a virus that is no worse than the flu that has caused the country to plunge into crisis mode.

Just vaccinate the vulnerable and move on. I can assure the authorities that everything will be just fine. A few more will die but people die on a daily basis for a variety of reasons and Covid will just be one of the many causes.
 
The situation in Singapore is fine as far as Covid goes. It is the over reaction of the government to a virus that is no worse than the flu that has caused the country to plunge into crisis mode.

Just vaccinate the vulnerable and move on. I can assure the authorities that everything will be just fine. A few more will die but people die on a daily basis for a variety of reasons and Covid will just be one of the many causes.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 249 tries. All failed

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-57153195

Covid-19: What went wrong in Singapore and Taiwan?​

By Yvette Tan
BBC News, Singapore

Published14 hours ago

They've been hailed as virus success stories - places that have seen virtually zero or single-digit Covid cases since the start of the year.
But this month, Singapore and Taiwan have both seen a sudden and aggressive rise in cases - with Singapore logging 248 new cases just last week, and Taiwan 1,200 local infections.
Both places have gone into a heightened state of restrictions, limiting the size of social gatherings and closing schools.
By global standards, these numbers may seem small - but for these places, these figures would have been unthinkable just months ago. So what exactly went wrong?

A tale of complacency: Taiwan​

Taiwan was among the first places to ban foreign visitors almost as soon as China reported the emergence of the virus - and these tough border restrictions still remain in place.
Locally however, the population started to become complacent - as did its government.

Hospitals stopped aggressively testing people for Covid, even those with a fever - a common symptom of the virus, according to Associate Professor Lin Hsien-ho of the National Taiwan University.

According to online publication Our World in Data, Taiwan was administering just 0.57 virus tests per 1,000 people in mid-Feb. This compared to Singapore's rate of 6.21 and the UK's rate of 8.68 at around the same period.
"There was a general assumption even with people showing symptoms that the probability of having Covid-19 was essentially zero," Dr Lin told the BBC, adding that it stemmed from a belief that the virus could not break through Taiwan's strong borders.
"Doctors were not taking it seriously, hospitals were not alert, they were not doing a lot of contact tracing. There was definitely a certain sense of complacency."
This was especially highlighted when Taiwan relaxed its quarantine requirements for non-vaccinated airline pilots from an initial 14-day period, to five days - and then, just three days.
Shortly afterwards, a cluster broke out connected to a handful of China Airlines pilots who had been staying at a Novotel near Taoyuan Airport. Many of those linked to this cluster were later found to have contracted the UK variant, known as B.1.1.7.

The virus then spread through the community, eventually making its way to Taiwan's "tea houses" - adult entertainment venues.

You had people singing, drinking, coming into frequent contact in an indoor setting. It was not just one teahouse but many on the same street - it was a very large super spreader event," said Dr Lin.
Professor Chen Chien-jen, an epidemiologist and former vice-president of Taiwan, says the fact that many who tested positive were unwilling to declare they had visited such adult entertainment venues made contact tracing even more difficult.
"It just reminds us that even when a very small proportion of the population breaks the rules, it will lead to leakages," said Dr Chen.
He also adds that Taiwan failed to look at Japan's adult entertainment industry - which at one point was also a hotbed of infections - before it was ordered shut.
"We didn't learn the lesson from Japan and reflect that Taiwan might have these same issues," he said.

According to Associate Professor Alex Cook of the National University of Singapore (NUS), Taiwan's situation is a "a reflection of the constant risk of a strategy that puts too much emphasis on border control and not enough on measures to prevent within country spread".

Cracks in the wall: Singapore​

In Singapore however, it was a different story.
Measures here have always been stringent despite low cases - public gatherings were kept to a maximum of eight, clubs have not been allowed to open and there is still a cap on mass gatherings like weddings.
But there were still gaps in its vaccine playbook, and by late May, Singapore's Changi Airport - which also boasts a popular shopping centre - had turned into the country's biggest Covid cluster this year.
Authorities later found out that a number of infected airport staff had been working in a zone that received travellers from high-risk countries, including those in South Asia.
Some of these workers then went on to have their meals in the airport's food courts - which are open to members of the public - further spreading the virus.
Singapore has now closed its passenger terminals to members of the public temporarily as a result.

Many of the infected were later found to have a highly contagious variant that first surfaced in India - known as B.1.617.
Singapore has now also announced that it would segregate flights and passengers from high-risk countries and regions from those arriving from lower-risk places. Staff will also be ring-fenced and segregated by zones.
Some online are asking why such measures were not taken earlier, noting potential loopholes were pointed out up to a month ago.
But one expert said he thinks it was "inevitable" that the new variant would have found its way into Singapore.
"I understand why people are feeling frustrated because the majority of Singaporeans have been extremely compliant," said Prof Teo Yik Ying, dean of the NUS School of Public Health.
"But we are not like China which can keep its borders completely shut. Our reputation as a country, our economy, is linked to our position as a trade hub.
"[Also] if we look at the US last year, its worst virus cases came in not from China, but from travellers that went to Europe. So how many countries can Singapore close its borders to? We have to understand it's never just closing off one country."
But Prof Cook says the country is still in a "very good position" to rein in its outbreak.
"I'm hesitant to say that 'things went wrong', since Singapore is still, despite the stepping up of measures, in a very good position," he said.
"If we compare it to the UK, the typical daily cases is around 10% of the UK's level after adjusting for population size. In other words, Singapore is tightening measures to pre-empt getting to a point where the virus can run amok."

A slow vaccination drive​

There is one problem that's plaguing both Singapore and Taiwan: vaccines.
Many in Taiwan didn't want to take the vaccine when things were going well, with fears around the AstraZeneca vaccine - the main one Taiwan currently stocks - further adding to this hesitancy.
The current rise in cases however, means that people in Taiwan are now flocking to get the vaccine. The only problem is - there isn't enough to go around.
Taiwan has to date received just 300,000 vaccines - for a population of 24 million.

"We have tried our best to purchase vaccines from international companies but we didn't get much. The only way to sustain our supply is to manufacture ourselves, this is very important for Taiwan," said Dr Chen.
Taiwan is currently working on producing two local vaccines, which could be available as quickly as the end of July.
It's a similar tale in Singapore.
Around 30% of people have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to Our World in Data, the highest vaccination rate in South East Asia. But the country is limited by its vaccine supply - though the government expects to vaccinate its entire population by the end of the year.
"Ultimately we are limited by the supply. In countries like the UK, US, China, they have the capabilities to produce their own vaccines," said Prof Teo.
"We anticipate that the need for vaccines is going to be long term, so that's why we are moving towards having our own manufacturing capabilities. Then we will no longer be reliant."
Prof Teo adds that the spike in both places is a lesson for countries that may now be seeing a dip in cases.
"When we see countries in Europe, or the US starting to relax measures, I think they should be very cautious and look around the world to see what is happening," he said.
"What's happened in Taiwan, Singapore - it's a sign that we should not let our guard down."
 
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