Wednesday 19 March 2014

Little India Riot COI: Day 17

Language barrier in transport 'may be cause for concern'
Permanent shelters and areas for queueing to be built for workers
By Lim Yan Liang, The Straits Times, 18 Mar 2014

BUS shelters and queueing areas will be set up in Little India for workers waiting for a ride back to their dormitories, the public hearing into the Dec 8 riot heard.

These permanent facilities will replace temporary pick-up points that have been used there since 1999, a Land Transport Authority (LTA) officer told the Committee of Inquiry (COI) yesterday.



The upgrading works will be completed in phases starting next month, said group director for public transport Yeo Teck Guan.

They will include signs in languages that foreign workers understand, added Mr Yeo, who acknowledged that the language barrier between employees of bus service operators and the workers who use the service on Sundays "may be a cause for concern".

Since bus services resumed a fortnight after the riot, private buses have no longer been allowed to wait at pick-up points along Tekka Lane and Hampshire Road.

Instead, buses are now summoned from a holding area to the pick-up point only when the queue reaches 80 per cent of the bus' capacity. This was meant to improve traffic flow and safety, said Mr Yeo.

"What we intend to do is to operate more like a traditional bus stop," he said. "So... we need structures, waiting areas, perhaps shelter and also queue facilities so that the foreign workers can queue in an orderly (manner) and they can board the bus easier so that the bus can go off faster."

Asked by committee chairman G. Pannir Selvam if more buses could be provided to eliminate wait times completely, Mr Yeo said there will always be at least some waiting time, but that the LTA will try to minimise it.

Bus operating hours, reduced after the riot from 2pm till 11pm to 2pm till 9pm, was also a strategy to "clear the area for residents" earlier, said Mr Yeo.

He said the authority has also been keeping tabs on unlicensed transport operators. It has sent enforcement officers to Little India "almost every week" and worked with the bus associations to identify unlicensed lorries and buses.

Sixty such cases were uncovered in 2012 and last year.

COI member John De Payva asked whether the crowd of workers remaining after the cut-off time of 9pm was a problem waiting to erupt - an issue raised by witnesses last week.

"Be careful how you answer this, because you are going to be held personally responsible if anything happens," said Mr De Payva, a former National Trades Union Congress president.

Mr Yeo estimated that about 200 to 300 last-minute passengers streamed in just before 9pm most Sundays, and that buses continued to arrive regularly, with the crowd cleared by 9.15pm.

This estimate varied from the evidence of representatives of the Singapore School Transport Association (SSTA), one of two associations that run the service, who testified that the crowd could swell to as many as 800 people after 9pm and take up to 9.45pm to be cleared.

The SSTA witnesses said the sizeable crowd could grow agitated owing to longer waits, and called for their fleet size to be fully reinstated.

However, a representative of the Singapore School and Private Hire Bus Owners' Association - the other association that offers the weekly bus service - provided the same crowd numbers as LTA, and said the crowd has been manageable.

"(LTA) has on three occasions given us more buses, and things are quite fluid," said the association's committee member Michael Tan, with more buses allowed to run on the Sunday after workers' payday and for the return leg from Little India to the dormitories.

"Whether it is 9 o'clock or 10 o'clock, they will always be overshot, because human beings... they have the tendency of turning up at the last minute."





Cisco manager says officers 'firm but fair' to foreign workers
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh, The Straits Times, 18 Mar 2014

A MANAGER from security firm Certis Cisco told the Committee of Inquiry into the Dec 8 riot that its auxiliary police officers have not drawn any complaint for mistreating or wrongfully fining foreign workers in Little India.

This after the COI had been told earlier during the public hearing that these officers have been harsh on foreign workers while on their patrols in the ethnic enclave.

Certis Cisco deputy operations manager Lin Shunzhong, who was testifying before the committee yesterday, said his firm would take disciplinary action against officers guilty of abusing their powers.

He said that he has seen his officers engage foreign workers in Little India in a "firm but fair manner". "I have never seen any of my officers verbally or physically abusing the foreign workers," he added.

When a foreign worker is caught for littering - which carries a $300 composition fine for first-time offenders - urinating or spitting in public, they usually try to deny it or plead for a second chance. Some, he said, even cry due to the hefty fines.

He and Certis Cisco officer Malini Naidu said they have noticed drunk workers in the area.

In contrast, former Nominated MP Shriniwas Rai - who frequents Little India at least once a week - told the COI that drunk workers are not a problem in the area.

"I have never, in the last 20 years, come across somebody drunk (in Little India)," he said initially. But after grilling by COI chairman G. Pannir Selvam, Mr Rai later said he had seen workers urinating and vomiting in public.

"I will concede that, having heard drunkenness is a problem, my little experience may be (an) exception," he said.


Related
Little India Riot COI: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 11, Day 12, Day 13, Day 14, Day 15, Day 16

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