The officer confided in Yeo that he was traumatised by his military tours in Afghanistan.Yeo asked the officer to write reports for clients in Korea and other Asian countries, but did not say it would be given to a foreign government.The officer wrote a report on how the withdrawal of US military forces from Afghanistan would impact China, and was paid S$2,000 or more for the report.
Jairus’ education is listed on their profile.
He is an alumnus of Victoria School and Jurong Junior College.In a statement yesterday, the RI board of governors said it is confident that "given Mr Yeo's disposition, wealth of experience, extensive networks and leadership in education, he will be able to build upon the legacies of his predecessors and lead RI to serve the needs of society and Singapore".It also thanked the current RI principal, Mr Chan Poh Meng, who is retiring after 35 years in the education service. LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Create account via Email We will not share your email with anyone. View Frederick Yeo’s profile on LinkedIn, the world's largest professional community. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Jairus’ connections and jobs at similar companies.
"But we want them to not just excel in their own right, but be more community-oriented... to connect with people from all walks of life," said Mr Yeo, who has been in the education service for 20 years.A priority in his new role will be to "expand the common space for interaction and understanding between RI students and people from more diverse backgrounds", he said.He is not completely new to RI, having been its deputy headmaster (development) in 2006, before serving as principal of Bowen Secondary School from 2008 to 2011.He first taught geography in Jurong Junior College in 1998, and also had a stint in the Ministry of Education, reviewing the A-level curriculum. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Frederic’s connections and jobs at similar companies. The 60-year-old is also an RI alumnus.SPH Digital News / Copyright © 2020 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn.
Show or Hide the password you are typing. More than 400 resumes were sent in, with 90 per cent of them from US military and government personnel with security clearances.Yeo would send the resumes to Chinese intelligence service operatives if he believed they would find the person’s resume interesting.A “professional networking website” that was focused on career and employment was used by Yeo to find individuals with resumes and job descriptions that suggested they were likely to have access to valuable “non-public” information.After he contacted potential targets online, the website began suggesting additional potential contacts.“According to Yeo, the website’s algorithm was relentless,” court documents said.“Yeo checked the professional networking website almost every day to review the new batch of potential contacts suggested to him by the site’s algorithm.“Later, Yeo told US law enforcement that it felt almost like an addiction.”After he identified his potential targets, he worked to recruit them to provide information and write reports.He received guidance from Chinese intelligence contacts on how to recruit potential targets, including asking whether the targets were dissatisfied with work, were having financial troubles, had children to support, and whether they had a good rapport with Yeo.The court was told of three people he managed to recruit to provide him with information.In and around 2015, he spotted a civilian working with the US Air Force on the F-35B military aircraft programme. One of the operatives told Yeo that he and his boss worked for the PRC’s main intelligence unit.”During one of Yeo’s trips to China, he met this operative and two others in a hotel room. 198402868E.
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