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View Full Version : "Singapore Wages High-Tech War on Rats"



baggio248
03-24-2004, 11:07 AM
They really need something better to do. It's like Ghost Busters for rats.


SINGAPORE (AP.org) -- Armed with thermal-imaging devices, closed-circuit television cameras and ultraviolet urine detectors, Singapore authorities are preparing for an eight-month war against rats.

An estimated 12,950 rats are being targeted in the $165,950 campaign, which begins next week in five neighborhoods across the city-state, the National Environment Agency said in a statement Wednesday.

More than 40 people were infected last year with typhus and leptospirosis, a bacterial disease that causes fever, the agency said. Both illnesses are spread by rats.

Environment officials will be prowling the island's neighborhoods, sewers and garbage cans in an attempt to trap and kill two-thirds of the 12,950 rats believed to be inhabiting exactly 8,631 rat holes identified across the island, the statement said.

Rodent hunters will position cameras and thermal-imaging devices outside the rat holes and anywhere else rat activity might be taking place, the agency said. The ultraviolet urine detectors will be used to track the rodents.

Five pest-control companies have been enlisted to trap and poison the rats, and then destroy and seal the rat holes.

Food stall operators and shop owners will be fined $89 if they fail to cover trash cans or leave food in the open, the agency said.

It denied that the campaign had been prompted by any dramatic rise in the rat population.

Singapore has stepped up hygiene measures since the outbreak a year ago of severe acute respiratory syndrome, which crippled the country's economy and killed 33 people in the city-state.

Showtime
03-24-2004, 11:23 AM
The ultraviolet urine detectors.... Now thats something I bet even Apex doesn't have yet. :D

I like the precautions they are taking, but it seems like a lot of money for only 13,000 rats.... Good thing they dont have those NY rats cuz the way they multiply it would be more like 1.3 million rats by now.

-jel:halo:

Paymaster
03-24-2004, 11:47 AM
Originally posted by the jello is jigglin
I like the precautions they are taking, but it seems like a lot of money for only 13,000 rats....

Actually, their goal is 2/3 of the 13,000 rats.

You have to understand the culture of Singapore, though. This is a country where chewing gum has been outlawed. I spent a day there, and could not find a single piece of garbage anywhere on the street. These people really value cleanliness.

Burzhui
03-24-2004, 02:09 PM
Originally posted by Paymaster


Actually, their goal is 2/3 of the 13,000 rats.

You have to understand the culture of Singapore, though. This is a country where chewing gum has been outlawed. I spent a day there, and could not find a single piece of garbage anywhere on the street. These people really value cleanliness.

spitting gum out is illegal no chewing.

tupacboy
03-24-2004, 02:39 PM
hmm... i have a cheaper way... catch them.. and export to africa... its considered the best kind of meat there... gets top dollar!..

bachviet
03-24-2004, 03:45 PM
Originally posted by Burzhui


spitting gum out is illegal no chewing.
I think the fine is either $500 or $1000. Kula Lumpur in Singapore is the cleanest city in the world.

kimchicowboy
03-24-2004, 08:05 PM
getting rid of 2/3 of the rats won't make a difference because that 2/3 will be made again in no time. well, according to my experience with mice, they have a litter on average of 4 mice. the wean cycle is 3 weeks. you do the math. hehe.

Nija
03-24-2004, 08:52 PM
Originally posted by bachviet

I think the fine is either $500 or $1000. Kula Lumpur in Singapore is the cleanest city in the world.

Kula Lumpur is in Singapore? I thought it was in Maylasia...

Apex
03-24-2004, 08:57 PM
Originally posted by the jello is jigglin
The ultraviolet urine detectors.... Now thats something I bet even Apex doesn't have yet. :D

-jel:halo:

You're quite right. Sadly, I detect urine the old fashioned way, sniffing the diaper.

Paymaster
03-24-2004, 09:25 PM
Originally posted by Burzhui

spitting gum out is illegal not chewing.
When I went to Singapore in 2001, chewing gum was illegal. the penalty for smuggling gum into the country was a year in jail, and a 10,000 Singapore dollar- ($5,500-) fine.

I did a quick search, and it appears that they now allow nicotene gum with a prescription, but they still do not allow recreational chewing gum.

Source (http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/03/15/world/singapore_gum040315)

Showtime
03-24-2004, 10:54 PM
Originally posted by Paymaster

When I went to Singapore in 2001, chewing gum was illegal. the penalty for smuggling gum into the country was a year in jail, and a 10,000 Singapore dollar- ($5,500-) fine.

I did a quick search, and it appears that they now allow nicotene gum with a prescription, but they still do not allow recreational chewing gum.

Source (http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/03/15/world/singapore_gum040315)

Amazing... I consider myself pretty worldly and I'd of never thought...

-jel:halo:

ShawnLee
03-25-2004, 12:02 AM
12,950 rats. I want to know the methodology used to come up with that figure.

Ok, 100 rats per capita in the 2000 census... multiplied by reproductive capability... factor the average death fatality rate of rats... 12,950! Not 12,900. Not 13,000. 12,950! No wonder we're exporting math and comp sci jobs to them asian countries.

Merlin
03-25-2004, 04:12 AM
On the surface it sounds pretty ridiculous but I wouldn't mind living in a place where getting rid of vermin and overall cleanliness was important. Kudos to them for setting high standards.

bachviet
03-25-2004, 07:20 AM
Originally posted by Nija


Kula Lumpur is in Singapore? I thought it was in Maylasia...
I guess I'm wrong. What's the capital city of Singapore?

ShawnLee
03-25-2004, 11:05 AM
Singapore is a city-state. Like the Vatican or Monaco. Except people actually care about Singapore.

Edit: Me and my big mouth. Apparently there are cities. Singapore itself is the city capital, but there are smaller "cities" on the island. CIA-Singapore Info (http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/sn.html)