http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/news/story/0,4386,220282-1069019940,00.html?Aiming for safety Reforms in the SAF announced yesterday are part of the most comprehensive review of safety practices since 1997 By David Boey
- SAFETY HOTLINE: For soldiers to report safety breaches and bad practices, expected to start in six months
- AUDIT: External agencies may be engaged to audit army's effectiveness of its safety and audit systems
- LIFE SAVERS: Plans to buy many automated external defibrillators, equipment used to revive those who get heart seizures --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXTERNAL agencies may in future audit the effectiveness of the Singapore Armed Forces' safety and audit systems to spot practices that may be unsafe, the SAF said yesterday.
A safety hotline will be set up in every formation. This means, for example, that artillery gunners will be able to report safety breaches and bad practices directly to artillery headquarters. It should be up within six months.
Also, a full review is continuing of the combat survival training course that led to the death of a national serviceman after he had his head forced under water four times by his commando instructors.
That course remains suspended. When it resumes, 'neutral officers' from non-commando units will be deployed 'to guard against safety violations' in certain parts of the course.
The SAF is taking all these measures to ensure that training for national servicemen is tough and professional but safe, said Defence Minister Teo Chee Hean.
At a briefing yesterday, he gave an update on what has been accomplished since he promised a complete overhaul of military training practices last month, after the deaths of three soldiers in separate training tragedies.
The SAF, he said, will buy a large number of automated external defibrillators to revive people who suffer from heart seizures.
The reforms are part of the most comprehensive review of SAF safety practices since 1997.
And that was also triggered by a training tragedy, but in New Zealand. A shell had exploded in an artillery gun during a live-firing exercise, killing two full-time national servicemen and injuring several others.
Yesterday, the Chief of Defence Force, Major-General Ng Yat Chung, apologised on the SAF's behalf for the three recent training deaths.
He said that he has directed the Army, Air Force and Navy to pay special attention to reviewing training lesson plans to ensure they are current.
They must ensure instructors are qualified and kept current on techniques and methods, and do not deviate from lesson plans and training safety regulations.
Colonel Hugh Lim, Assistant Chief of General Staff (Operations), revealed that army wide, all high-risk activities have already been thoroughly reviewed. Moderate- and low-risk activities are still being reviewed.
'This review will help us to ensure that our training control and safety measures are appropriate and adequate,' he said.
It will be matched by efforts to reinforce the General Staff Inspectorate, the army's inspection arm, allowing it to audit military training more often and make more surprise inspections on military training.
NSmen welcomed the news, but stressed that SAF servicemen should not follow orders blindly. Mr Sean Chua, an anti-tank gunner from an armour unit, said: 'It could be a couple of months down the road before inspectors appear after you call the hotline. Soldiers must act more like thinking soldiers rather than go through the motions or blindly follow what is dished out to them. Soldiers must be alert enough to protect their own safety.'
Mr Mike Yeo, a vehicle mechanic with an NS unit, argued that the hotline may not be effective as most NSmen do not know what's permitted and what's not under training safety regulations.
He added: 'It's hard for the military culture to allow people to speak up there and then on the spot. They've already knocked it into our heads that they are boss and you are not.'
Maj-Gen Ng said callers to the new safety hotline can't be completely anonymous because 'we need enough specifics to know how to act'. But its aim, he said, is to encourage a 'safety culture in the SAF'.
The SAF chief also had this to say of the commandos, who train soldiers in combat survival: 'I have had the opportunity to visit the new chief of commandos and he's said he's determined to make sure the review is done properly.
'He's determined to make sure that the course will continue to be tough and realistic but safe.'