| # | Name | Comments |
|---|
| 1 | Mrs. Ivy Singh-Lim | Charity begins at home so help save our countryside for our children - The Kranji Countryside is the only bit of true Singapore left - let's save it! |
| 2 | Eleanor Yap | |
| 3 | Lee Swee Ching | |
| 4 | Serene Chua | |
| 5 | Jiang Zongqi | |
| 6 | Anonymous | May I suggest that some kind of other alternatives be used to stock resources such as granite, maybe some reclaimed land where granite's natural weight could act to strengthen the rcalimed areas. |
| 7 | Seow Hwee Ling | I saw the news report about the storing of granite in Lim Chu Kang. Singapore has very few farms left today and many people of my generation do not have the chance to experience what farm is. It's very rare and valuable. Please preserve it for our future generations. Please stop the destruction. |
| 8 | Magdalene Low | |
| 9 | Anonymous | Please think for the future generations. |
| 10 | Khoo Bee Khim | |
| 11 | Anonymous | The countryside is important for our fauna and flora, and is our heritage. Don't become like the packed cities in other parts of Asia |
| 12 | Prema Somayya | That's a good one....save your own backyard and you will be saving Gaia eventually!
The authorized officers probably need some education on identifying AGRICULTURAL (ALIVE) land and waste land! |
| 13 | Tey Li Li | |
| 14 | Ivy Singh-Lim | charity begins at home. Lets make sure we have our own eggs, chicken, fish, vegetables ... in our own space, the Kranji Countryside! |
| 15 | Irene Toh | I support your cause to gentrify the countryside and make it a viable countryside retreat for Singaporeans and tourists to hang out. |
| 16 | Lynn Ee | We all need to get back to nature. Even PM Lee stated how emotionless and uncompassionate the youth in Singapore have become. I believe that if children are in touch with their natural surroundings i.e. nature ... LIFE ... and are not constantly cooped up in concrete buildings all the time, they will eventually learn to be compassionate and be filled with emotion. The need and want to protect every living thing will be ignited. Do not destroy the only natural & tranquil, escape left in Singapore. Let us be able to produce our own food. Enough of imported 'formaldehyde filled' food we rely so heavily on. If Isreal, being a desert, can produce and export a large percentage of the Worlds main produce, isn't it about time that our Country learns a thing or two on how to keep us sustainable and less reliant on our neighbours. |
| 17 | David Woo Thai Wei | We need natural habitate to ease our stress here in Singapore. A place for nature lover. |
| 18 | Kenny Eng | We are supportive of the Govt's intent of why we need to stock pile but the question is why at the countryside where the farmers have been trying to keep it sustainable and providing a getaway for the busy Singaporeans. This is Singapore's Countryside and the one and only countryside.. SAVE IT! |
| 19 | Kwok Sian Yee | Give nature a chance! |
| 20 | Santha Raman | |
| 21 | Seah Shao Xiong | Please SAVE the only countryside left in Singapore. Granite, granite, GO AWAY!!!!!!! |
| 22 | Morchoo & Titoy | Dear Friends, Please help us SAVE our magical garden and playground. It's our magical HOME and we have lots of friends here! |
| 23 | Christina Gondokusumo | Please retain the agricultural site at Kranji. It can serve as a 'library' for agriculture in Singapore, a tourist attraction or also as an area for agricultural education for our children. Singapore needs places like this. The government might want to consider furthering the support and developing the area into an actual organic food or farming area so that it can supplement Singapore's consumption in an effective manner that maximizes land usage. Similar to the Stockholm Industrial Water contest that Newater won, the new agricultural methods may be another trademark of our beautiful Garden City. Thank you! |
| 24 | Siti Feraqid | Oh dear... One of many beautiful farms that can be found in Singapore. A place where teachers like me would want to bring our students for a short serene getaway... Please save it! |
| 25 | Lee Yu Ching | |
| 26 | Chua Jasline | Let's help to preserve what is little left of our countryside!! |
| 27 | Anonymous | |
| 28 | Woo Yin Chow | Piling heavy loads like granite on top of arable land will cause severe compaction of soil resulting in very poor plant growth or impossible to grow. A better place to store the granite would be the newly reclaimed land where the land is for planting buildings as it helps to stabilizing the foundation by firming it up.
There is always a better alternative.
Arable land is a significantly shrinking resource of Singapore and some percentage of food security is essential for any country in the world.
LimChuKang has a very long history of the early farmers of Singapore and once you destroy it or planting buildings over it or use it to store granite, it is more or less destroyed forever.
Its a pity that none of Singapore's technocrats are agriculture or horticulture trained and therefore will have little empathy and understanding of its importance.
In today's political and economic climate and the climate itself, any country that forsake its ability to produce food for her own people cannot be a wise decision irrespective of its material and monetary wealth.
To all the farmers who once fed Singapore, I take my hats off to them for as far as I understand they have been taken off the very land they once used to feed her neighbours and people. |
| 29 | Lionel Low | |
| 30 | Anonymous | Stop destroying the only countryside left in Singapore! Why not spend more time trying to develop it into a tourist attraction instead of dumping stones into the beautiful land we have here? |
| 31 | Damian SIM | Perhaps the authorities might take this into considerations, and a compromise/balance may be reached. |
| 32 | AndyEng | One of these days, they will need farmers more than they can expect. Than they know whether making $$$ or the farmer is more imporant. |
| 33 | Anonymous | Lim Chu Kang is an education place for children, a nature escape for adults and most importantly nature habitat for many wild animals and birds. With more and more natural places and farms disappearing in Singapore, i doubt children of the next decades know anything about nature, or even not knowing how a live chicken looks like... |
| 34 | James Leong | |
| 35 | Eileen and Jack Bygrave | We are returned Singaporeans, from living in cities abroad. One of the reasons we came back was to find again the garden city we once left. PLEASE, let us keep what's left of the countryside. There are so few places left where a high rise does not break a green horizon and skyline. PLEASE keep the KRANJI countryside as it is. Preserve. please. |
| 36 | dennis chan | Please don't destroy our very last place of natural in SINGAPORE! |
| 37 | Anonymous | Good to be self reliant on green food |
| 38 | goh cheng ze | |
| 39 | Anonymous | |
| 40 | Dixon Chan | |
| 41 | Anonymous | please stop stressing mother nature ! |
| 42 | Aloysius Fong | There are so many built up areas that can be used to site the sand and granite stockpile. Land that is not used for farming. Examples are: Pulau Tekong, Pulau Ubin, some unused army camps. Jurong and Tuas factory sites that have closed down. |
| 43 | Charlotte Wong | |
| 44 | Anonymous | |
| 45 | Sher Maine Wong | |
| 46 | Anonymous | |
| 47 | aa | |
| 48 | Tsang Kwok Choong | Yes we should be saving what ever little countryside our little red dot has.... |
| 49 | Anonymous | Pls don't destroy whatever remaining pockets of greenery we have on this tiny island. We should support these farmers, who knows, through their passion for agriculture and the advancement of technology, we could one day become self-sufficient and not depend so much on food imports. |
| 50 | Billy Teo | |