December 11, 2025 – Singapore Headlines

1Malaysia unveils new ETS service to Johor Bahru after major rail upgrade

Story gist: Malaysia unveiled a new ETS service to Johor Bahru after a major rail upgrade. The service reduces travel time from Kuala Lumpur to Johor Bahru to 4.5 hours.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Malaysia unveils new ETS service to Johor Bahru after major rail upgrade
— The Straits Times
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Right
New ETS3 to slash KL–Johor Baru travel time to 4.5 hours
— NST Online
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Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets absent, omitting potential critiques on costs, delays, or equity issues. Center (Straits Times) frames neutrally, emphasizing factual unveiling post-upgrade without benefits hype. Right-leaning (NST Online) adopts positive tone, highlighting consumer benefits via action words like ‘slash’ and specific 4.5-hour travel time reduction.

2Singapore workers feel trapped over mismatch in expectations amid ‘job-hugging’ trend: Experts

Story gist: Singapore workers report feeling trapped by mismatched job expectations amid a ‘job-hugging’ trend. Experts discussed the issue.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Singapore workers feel trapped over mismatch in expectations amid ‘job-hugging’ trend: Experts
— The Straits Times
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left- and right-leaning outlets provided no coverage, omitting progressive emphases on labor rights or conservative focuses on individual choice and market forces. Center-leaning Straits Times frames the story neutrally via headline, highlighting workers’ entrapment sentiments and expert views on expectation mismatches in prolonged job retention.

3‘I didn’t get to say goodbye’: Australia’s social media ban stirs unease, praise

Story gist: Australia began enforcing a social media ban for teenagers. Teens expressed grief over losing access, while the policy drew both unease and praise.
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Australia has just relieved its anxiety over teens on social media – or has it?
— CNN
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Center
‘This is the end’: Australian teens mourn loss of social media as ban begins
— Reuters
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning CNN frames the ban skeptically, questioning if it truly relieves anxiety over teen social media use. Center Reuters emphasizes teens’ mourning and sense of loss as the ban starts. Right-leaning outlets provide no coverage, omitting potential emphasis on parental relief or child safety benefits.

4‘Near-death experience’: Survivors of Jakarta workplace blaze recall panicked, ‘terrifying’ escape

Story gist: A fire at a Jakarta office building killed at least 22 people, police confirmed. Survivors recalled their escape from the blaze.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Jakarta office fire kills at least 22, police confirm
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left- and right-leaning outlets provided no coverage in this cluster, leaving those perspectives absent. Center outlet BBC framed the story neutrally and factually, leading with the official death toll confirmation and omitting survivor emotions or dramatic descriptors present in the story title’s emphasis on ‘near-death’ panic and terror.

5Singapore calls on Thailand and Cambodia to exercise restraint and resolve differences amid escalating border clashes

Story gist: Singapore urged Thailand and Cambodia to exercise restraint and resolve differences amid escalating border clashes.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Thailand and Cambodia: Why can’t they end their border conflict?
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left- and right-leaning outlets provided no coverage, omitting any framing of Singapore’s diplomatic call or perspectives on regional mediation. Center outlet BBC frames the story solely on Thailand-Cambodia’s enduring border conflict, using a questioning headline (‘Why can’t they end it?’) that emphasizes ongoing failure to resolve without mentioning Singapore’s intervention.