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Old 04-10-2014, 11:10 PM
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Thumbs up LHL says more Banglas pse

An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2014..._127063364.htm

孟加拉人乘火车返乡迎宰牲节【组图】
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2014年10月04日 08:12:33 | 责任编辑: 刘小军 | 来源: 中国青年网 **



  当地时间2014年10月3日,孟加拉国达卡,孟加拉国民众乘坐火车,返回家乡,与家人一 起度过宰牲节 。宰牲节又叫古尔邦节。



























http://www.themalaymailonline.com/mo...foreign-labour


Singapore doesn’t plan to curb inflow of foreign labour
OCTOBER 4, 2014

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Singapore's prime minister Lee Hsien Loong says no further measures will be need to curb foreign labour inflows, October 4, 2014. — Reuters pic
SINGAPORE, Oct 4 — Singapore probably won’t need more measures to restrain the inflow of foreign workers as a further tightening could deter overseas companies from setting up business in the city, prime minister Lee Hsien Loong said.


The pace of increase for foreign workers has slowed and the country’s economic restructuring is under way, Lee said in a speech yesterday. A drop in investment by overseas companies may also hurt job opportunities for the city’s citizens, Lee said.

The latest “numbers do show that the foreign worker growth has slowed to a more sustainable level, and is about where we want it to be,” Lee said. “I do not expect any further measures to tighten foreign worker numbers further.”

Singapore’s government has tightened rules to curb the hiring of foreigners in recent years after an influx led to voter discontent over infrastructure strains and increased competition for jobs, property and education. Foreign employment growth was the lowest since the third quarter 2009 in the three months through end of June, the government said in September.

Singapore’s economy unexpectedly expanded an annualised 0.1 per cent in the second quarter as manufacturing declined less than initially estimated amid recoveries in advanced countries, the trade ministry said Aug 12.

“If people think that we are not interested in attracting investments, or that talent is not welcome here, or that we have turned inwards—I think that is the end of us,” Lee said. — Bloomberg







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