<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR>Mindef: Why waiting period varies for pre-enlistees
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I REFER to Mr Michael Lee's letter on Monday, 'Son back from US hit by 'capacity constraint''.
Enlistment for full-time national service takes place every quarter. This enables the Singapore Armed Forces, the Singapore Police Force and the Singapore Civil Defence Force to maintain their operational readiness, and to accommodate more than 20,000 pre-enlistees who are due for enlistment each year.
The assignment of pre-enlistees to their respective enlistment intakes is based on various considerations, such as the individual's medical fitness, the type of Basic Military Training intake he will be enlisted into as well as training and operational resource requirements.
Hence, the waiting time for enlistment for each individual will vary and depend on the intake the individual is scheduled for.
Similar to pre-enlistees studying in Singapore, pre-enlistees returning from overseas studies will also have to wait their turn for enlistment.
The Ministry of Defence (Mindef) works on the principle that males from the same school cohort enter university in the same calendar year. Based on the current assignment plan, Mr Lee's son is likely to be enlisted in the intake starting this December to next February with others of his age cohort who are taking their A levels in schools in Singapore.
Mr Lee's son will be able to enter university in the academic year of 2012, no later than his local male peers from the same age cohort.
Colonel Darius Lim
Director Public Affairs
Ministry of Defence
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I REFER to Mr Michael Lee's letter on Monday, 'Son back from US hit by 'capacity constraint''.
Enlistment for full-time national service takes place every quarter. This enables the Singapore Armed Forces, the Singapore Police Force and the Singapore Civil Defence Force to maintain their operational readiness, and to accommodate more than 20,000 pre-enlistees who are due for enlistment each year.
The assignment of pre-enlistees to their respective enlistment intakes is based on various considerations, such as the individual's medical fitness, the type of Basic Military Training intake he will be enlisted into as well as training and operational resource requirements.
Hence, the waiting time for enlistment for each individual will vary and depend on the intake the individual is scheduled for.
Similar to pre-enlistees studying in Singapore, pre-enlistees returning from overseas studies will also have to wait their turn for enlistment.
The Ministry of Defence (Mindef) works on the principle that males from the same school cohort enter university in the same calendar year. Based on the current assignment plan, Mr Lee's son is likely to be enlisted in the intake starting this December to next February with others of his age cohort who are taking their A levels in schools in Singapore.
Mr Lee's son will be able to enter university in the academic year of 2012, no later than his local male peers from the same age cohort.
Colonel Darius Lim
Director Public Affairs
Ministry of Defence