Author: Rilek1Corner

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Malays Need To Improve Self-Esteem, Be More Aware Of Discriminatory Policies

    Zulfikar Shariff: Malays Need To Improve Self-Esteem, Be More Aware Of Discriminatory Policies

    A couple of Malays, when informed that the PAP has historically discriminated against the community, tried to play it down by saying these policies are in the past. they further argue that we have to forget the past.

    This is the mistake some make when they discuss politics without understanding the institutional effects of policy formulation.

    When a policy is implemented, it does not simply affect its immediate time. Instead, these policies’ effects and implementation can be found far into the future.

    In institutional policy development, there is a concept known as path dependency. Path dependency refers to the behaviour of policy makers in the preferences of choices. When a specific choice is made at an earlier time, that same choice will be used as a template for future choices.

    The PAP’s policy of excluding Malays from the uniformed services is still in existence today. The values, views, ideologies, the very template that gave validity to those policies are still part of the PAP today.

    That it has changed slightly does not mean the reason the policy was crafted has changed.

    The discriminatory policies, apart from showing how Malays are not valued by the PAP, also reveals a careless attitude to policies that affect the Malay community. They did not care or consider the effects the policy would have on the Malays.

    The policy resulted in thousands of Malay youths being unemployed and unable to be educated between 1967 to 1977 (and it extends in some form until 1984).

    No provisions were made. No alternative pathways were given. These youths did not even get the recognition of being informed they would not be enlisted.

    It shows a government that did not care about what happened to Malay youths.

    The effects of this policy devastated the community. Prior to the exclusion of Malays, we found social and economic mobility in the uniformed services.

    Yet the PAP shut down this avenue. They did not renew the contracts of Malays in these services and new applicants were rejected.

    This depressed the community’s economy. They lost their economic stability. An economically depressed community places stress on its own institutions and potential.

    Marriages were affected because of unemployment and financial difficulties. Because Malays generally could not find proper employment or be educated until they were in their late 20s, many were married before they gained financial stability.

    And the financial stress affected these families.

    Opportunities to attend institutions of higher education became narrowed. Families either could not afford fees, extra lessons required or needed these students to find employment because of the family’s financial distress.

    I know of a lot of Malays who had to leave school because their families needed them to work.

    To assume that the PAP’s exclusion of Malay youths only affected the thousands of males during that period is to disregard the damage it caused to the community as a whole.

    We are products of this policy. The Malay community is still getting out of the effects of PAP’s racism. While other communities have been able to afford excellent tuition the last couple of decades, most Malay families are just getting to that level of ability.

    The forced financial distress caused by the PAP’s policies did not just affect those who were excluded in the 70s.

    The racist policies still affects us now.

    If we want to get out of this mess, we should recognise how the government behaves, what the institutional preferences are, what conditions are in place.

    Yes, there are a lot of things we need to work on to strengthen our community.

    And one of the things we need to improve is our self esteem.

    We are better than what we have been accused of.

    Yes some issues are due to our mistakes.

    A lot are not.

    We are a cultured, intelligent and dignified community.

    Do not allow anyone to abuse us.

    Never again.

    We are strong.

    We are Malays.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Thai Consulate In Istanbul Attacked After Uighurs Deported

    Thai Consulate In Istanbul Attacked After Uighurs Deported

    Turkish anti-Chinese demonstrators stormed the Thai consulate in Istanbul in protest at the deportation by Bangkok of dozens of Uighur Muslims to China, as diplomatic tensions flared Thursday in an increasingly combustible controversy.

    The attack was the latest in a series of nationalist-tinted protests in Turkey during the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan over China’s treatment of the Turkic-speaking, largely Muslim Uighurs in the northwestern Xinjiang region.

    Nine people were arrested after the action at the consulate building in Istanbul late Wednesday organised by a group calling itself the East Turkestan Education Association, the Dogan news agency reported.

    They broke down the doors to the building, pulled down the sign outside and damaged the furnishings inside, television footage showed.

    The Thai flag was pulled down as the building was also pelted with stones. Files and documents were flung outside and littered the street while a man was seen battering a window with a post.

    Shocked consulate workers returned to the office on Thursday to find their workplace upturned, with broken glass and debris littering the floor.

    Thailand said it had deported around 100 Uighur Muslims detained in the kingdom since last year to China, in a move sparking fears for the safety of the asylum-seekers.

    The fate of the Uighurs, who presented themselves to police as Turkish, had been the subject of a diplomatic tussle between Ankara and Beijing.

    Thai government spokesman Werachon Sukhondapatipak told reporters “some 100” Uighurs were deported to China Wednesday after finding “clear evidence they are Chinese nationals”.

    He also revealed that an earlier group of Uighurs, 172 women and children, were sent to Turkey in late June.

    – ‘Without consent’ –

    In an address to Turkish ambassadors late Thursday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan — who is scheduled to visit China later this month — condemned the violence and warned against “any provocations”.

    “We have our compatriots all over the world. Whatever happens to them directly concerns us. But we can never approve of what happened in Istanbul, such things don’t befit us,” Erdogan said, declaring all Asians visiting Turkey “our friends.”

    In a statement released Thursday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry condemned Thailand for sending the Uighur Turks back to China, accusing it of “acting against the international laws.”

    Foreign ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic told AFP that Ankara was “saddened” by the attack on the Thai consulate, saying such actions “were not approved” and “do not benefit anyone”.

    The UN refugee agency said it was “shocked” by the deportation to China after the earlier group of Uighurs had “benefited” from being moved to Turkey.

    It is “a flagrant violation of international law”, said Volker Turk of UNHCR in a statement which added the Uighurs “indicated that they did not wish to be deported to China”.

    Turkey last week had summoned the Chinese ambassador to convey its “deep concerns” over alleged restrictions on the Uighur community during Ramadan. Beijing has denied any such restrictions.

    Protests have taken place across the country, dealing a blow to relations between China and Turkey which have noticeably improved over the last few years.

    On Thursday pro-Uighur protesters who gathered outside the Thai embassy in Ankara attacked an Asian tourist, thinking that she was Chinese, news agency Dogan reported.

    The woman, whose nationality was not immediately clear, was rescued by a plain clothes police officer.

    On Saturday, Turkish nationalists attacked a group of South Korean tourists in the heart of Istanbul’s old city, believing they were Chinese.

    The Royal Thai Embassy in Turkey on its Facebook page warned Thai citizens to be on alert.

    Turkish media reported on Thursday that China Philharmonic Orchestra cancelled a performance scheduled to take place in Istanbul in mid-August in the face of the protests.

    Opposition Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) chief Devlet Bahceli added further fuel to the fire by saying the attack on the Koreans was understandable given that both peoples have “slitty eyes”.

    Meanwhile in a possible bid to ease tensions, a report by Turkey’s state Anatolia news agency from Xinjiang said it found there were no special restrictions on Uighur Muslims during Ramadan.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • 36 Arrested In Islandwide Anti-Vice Raid

    36 Arrested In Islandwide Anti-Vice Raid

    The police have arrested 36 suspects in HDB flats suspected to be operating as brothels in an island-wide operation.

    The suspects, comprising two men and 34 women aged between 21 and 48, were allegedly involved in vice-related activities in residential areas, the police said in a statement on Thursday.

    Officers from the Ang Mo Kio Division, Jurong Division and Criminal Investigation Department (CID) raided multiple locations, including Woodlands, Sembawang, Sengkang, Jurong West, Yishun, Chinatown and River Valley, on Tuesday and Wednesday.

    A woman who lives next door to Woodlands flat that was raided said she became suspicious after strange men pacing up and down while looking at their mobile phones on the common corridor.

    The resident, who has young children, said she was shocked such things were going on just next door to them.

    “It’s disgusting and I’m grossed out. I feel unsafe, especially for my kids. I don’t want such people anywhere near them,” she said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 5 Arrested And Heroin Worth $161,000 Seized In CNB Raid

    5 Arrested And Heroin Worth $161,000 Seized In CNB Raid

    The Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) arrested five people on Thursday (July 9) and seized about 2.31kg of heroin during an operation.

    The drugs are estimated to have a street value of more than $161,000.

    The leader of the drug syndicate, a 44-year-old Singaporean man, was among those arrested.

    Here’s how the CNB officers busted the suspects:

    The drug bust has crippled the activities of the syndicate, said the CNB. Investigations into the drug activities of the five men are ongoing

    If charged and convicted, all five may face the death penalty.

    The Misuse of Drugs Act provides for the death penalty if the amount of pure heroin trafficked exceeds 15g.

    That amount of the drug is equivalent to 1,250 straws, which can feed the addiction of about 180 abusers for a week, said CNB.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Odd-Job Labourer Jailed For Sex With 12 Year Old Girl

    Odd-Job Labourer Jailed For Sex With 12 Year Old Girl

    An odd-job labourer was yesterday jailed 12 months for having sex with a 12-year-old girl.

    Xavier Lee Wei Jie, 24, got to know the girl through mutual friends on March 17. The girl, a Secondary 1 student, was meeting her friends at West Mall in Bukit Batok.

    She cannot be named because of a gag order to protect her identity.

    Later that night, Lee invited the girl to his flat, also in Bukit Batok, and she agreed.

    They arrived between 2am and 3am, and spent some time talking in Lee’s bedroom where they started to get intimate.

    Lee suggested that they have sex, but the girl was reluctant. He managed to persuade her to change her mind and they had sex in his room.

    The girl later told her family about the incident and her mother made a police report on March 29.

    When asked by the judge if he had anything to say, Lee said: “I’m sorry”.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

deneme bonusu