Category: Hiburan

  • Dzar Ismail: Jangan Rosakkan Lagi Nama Baik Budak-Budak CD, Hantar Culprits Gi Nepal

    Dzar Ismail: Jangan Rosakkan Lagi Nama Baik Budak-Budak CD, Hantar Culprits Gi Nepal

    Pikirkanlah blood brother korang yg bertungkus lumus bantu mangsa gempa kat Nepal. Jangan sebab segelintir, sebar video rosakkan harta bende, semua nama jadi busuk. Aku pun dulu SCDF jugak.

    Dulu-dulu pakcik-pakcik pandang hina kat aku beb. Nak tackle anak dia, tanya army ker SCDF. Bila sebut SCDF, dia pandang atas bawah.

    Last bila jumpa masa jemputan, cakap dia selalu dengar aku, dan berkenan sangat dengan aku. Well its too late pakcik, sapa suro ko pandang hina kat SCDF! Tapi mungkin selepas hari nih, dia akan senyum! Dia akan cakap, “Aku dah cakap dah!” Aku tau dia tengah senyum! Aku tampar kang. Jadi, hargailah mereka yg mengharumkan nama SCDF. Jangan amek sambil lewa, bila pakai uniform, sebab yg lain, yg tak bersalah, semua akan terbabit.

    Dan kepada SCDF, janganlah sampai buang mereka, tapi, hantarlah mereka ke Nepal, baru mereka tau hargai kehidupan susah, cari mangsa pakai tangan, angkat batu bata, jadi rescuer, jadi medic, baru tahu menilai erti pakai uniform biru tuh.

    Nih dah lemak sangat nih.

     

    Source: Dzar Ismail

     

     

  • Bomoh Loses Appeal In Molest Case

    Bomoh Loses Appeal In Molest Case

    A 52-year-old “faith healer” who molested a teenage girl during an exorcism started serving his one-year jail term yesterday after he lost his appeal to the High Court against his conviction and sentence.

    The lawyer for Mohamed Said Mohamed Sani argued that the prosecution had failed to call an expert witness to testify on the different levels of consciousness a person can experience while possessed by spirits.

    Mr Wendell Wong pointed out that his client’s 17-year-old accuser had testified that she was possessed at the time and had no control over her arms or speech, but was fully conscious.

    The teenager had said it was why she did not scream when she was molested or stop Mohamed Said from touching her.

    Mr Wong argued that an expert should have been called on whether it was possible for her to be in such a state.

    But Justice Tay Yong Kwang disagreed. “Like all matters of faith, it’s almost impossible to quantify, isn’t it?” he said.

    The judge said he did not think anybody would be able to say for sure it was impossible for the girl to be in the state of consciousness she claimed.

    Justice Tay said the issue was whether the girl was to be believed. He concluded that, on the evidence, the district judge had made the right decision.

    Mohamed Said, a technical officer who treats people with “spiritual disturbances”, carried out an exorcism on the girl at her uncle’s flat in June 2011. At the session, he told her mother to sit facing the wall and not turn around. The girl was blindfolded and sat behind her mother.

    She testified that after he started chanting, she felt spirits entering her; she was conscious but unable to control her hands.

    She said she felt him touch her breasts under her T-shirt and bra. He unbuttoned her jeans and tried to slip his hand under her panties, she said.

    She managed to get to her knees and hit her mother’s back with her head, but he pushed her back to a sitting position. He then called her other family members into the room and continued with the ceremony.

    The girl later told her mother what happened, but the woman told her it was all right. Two days later, when her mother told her to continue with the treatment, she confided in an aunt, who encouraged her to make a police report.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Tang Tea House – Serving Halal Dim Sums, Building Prayer Rooms For Diners And Staff

    Tang Tea House – Serving Halal Dim Sums, Building Prayer Rooms For Diners And Staff

    In the last 13 years, the number of halal-certified businesses in Singapore grew to over 2,500. They join the race to tap into the global halal food market, estimated to be worth over $760 billion. JUDITH TAN ([email protected]) speaks to three eatery owners on their forays into this market.

    Tang Tea House

    She wanted to break into the halal market with dimsum.

    An unusual choice since dimsum is usually made with copious amounts of pork.

    “I thought it was an untapped market and there are delicious alternatives,” says Tang Tea House’s boss Sylvia Ler, 58.

    That was eight years ago and that astute gamble paid off. Today, hundreds of baskets of salted-egg custard buns fly off her shelves.

    Nine in 10 of the customers of the restaurant in Bedok Road are Muslims, and they flock to the place on weekends for a dimsum treat. In fact; they have expanded from a corner coffee shop, to taking on three more units. Madam Ler says: “I wanted to introduce good Chinese food to the Malay community and what better way than the traditional dimsum fare.”

    The restaurant now serves more than 300 Chinese dishes, and her staff churn out the dishes that come from her own recipes.

    “It is usually by word-of-mouth,” says Madam Ler.

    “My Malay customers come for lunch. Then they bring their families here for dinner. Their family members tell their friends and so on.”

    To cope with the demand, she expanded across the next three shops and even built a prayer room for her Muslim patrons and staff.

    “This way, they do not have to gulp down their meals and rush to pray. They can pray here and have a leisurely lunch before going back to work,” she adds.

    Going halal means her expenses also go up by 10 to 20 per cent, yet she manages to keep prices at Tang Tea House “affordable for HDB heartlanders”.

    “For instance, our seafood hor fun, which is an all-time favourite, remains at only $4.80,” Madam Ler says.

    She continues to “absorb the goods and services tax and we don’t charge for service either” to ensure that her restaurant remains popular in the long run.

    *Article first apeared in The New Paper, 12 Oct 2014.

     

    Source: www.soshiok.com

  • Osman Sulaiman: Apa Dah Jadi Dengan Adat Dan Budaya Perkahwinan Orang Melayu?

    Osman Sulaiman: Apa Dah Jadi Dengan Adat Dan Budaya Perkahwinan Orang Melayu?

    Adat dan budaya perkahwinan orang melayu sudah jauh melencong dari asal. Unsur-unsur barat sudah banyak menyerap. Hilang nya adat dan budaya orang melayu, hilanglah identiti kita sebagai orang Melayu di Singapura.

    Ramai anak2 muda sekarang sudah tidak cenderung kepada adat istiadat perkahwinan orang melayu. Di anggap kuno katanya. Amalan kita hari ini akan menjejas generasi yg akan datang. Kalau bukan kita yg menjaga warisan dan budaya orang melayu, siapa lagi?

    Dapat kita lihat bagaimana budaya barat telah menyerap masuk dipraktikkan oleh anak2 muda kita apabila mereka bersanding.

    1. Joget2 barat ala the wedding planner.
    2. Pengapit ditukarkan kepada pengiring yg memakai kostume2 seperti star wars
    3. Mempelai mesti memakai baju ‘western’
    4. Malam berinai semakin kurang dipraktikkan
    5. Merenjis sudah jarang dibuat
    6. Pembacaan berzanji semakin pupus malahan ditukarkan kepada music2 pop
    7. Makcik2 bertudung berjoget dangdut
    8. Sekarang, lion dance pula.

    Tanggung jawab memelihara warisan dan budaya terletak pada generasi muda. Ibu-bapa pula memainkan peranan penting supaya budaya dan warisan tidak pupus. Hang tuah berkata: “Takkan hilang melayu di dunia.”

    Mungkin tidak di dunia. Tapi di Singapura kot?

     

    Source: Osman Sulaiman

  • FAS Set Football Final Target, Coach Aide Out With Dengue

    FAS Set Football Final Target, Coach Aide Out With Dengue

    The goal was to end all confusion over player movement between the Singapore Under-23 team and the LionsXII, as the country enters the final straight of its preparations for the 28th South-east Asia (SEA) Games, which it will host from June 5 to 16.

    In a shock development, however, it was announced at a media briefing by the technical team of the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) yesterday that Under-23 head coach Aide Iskandar had been warded for dengue fever.

    It is not known how long Aide (below), 39, will be out, but the FAS stated that assistant coaches Kadir Yahaya and S Subramani will lead the team while he recovers.

    Despite the setback, national teams head coach Bernd Stange said in no uncertain terms that the SEA Games target was a place in the final, which will be played at the National Stadium on June 15.

    Speaking to The New Paper, the German said all parties – the players, coaches and the FAS – are convinced it is an achievable target.

    “We cannot say we don’t have a high objective; we want to deliver at the SEA Games, and that is to play in the final,” he said.

    “That target is important for the fans, the players, the whole country.

    “This Under-23 team are the base of our future, and so we need a top performance from them.”

    Stange, along with Aide and LionsXII coach Fandi Ahmad, have agreed on a strategy involving four players that are wanted by both teams.

    A 30-man Singapore Under-23 squad will enter centralised training on Friday and the SEA Games team will then head to Japan on May 10 for a week-long tour which includes two friendly matches.

    LionsXII players Faris Ramli, Sahil Suhaimi, Christopher van Huizen and Zakir Samsudin will be made available, though, for the Malaysian Super League’s side FA Cup semi-final first leg against Terengganu on May 9 at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

    They will leave the Under-23s camp on May 7 and return to the fold before flying off for Japan three days later.

    The quartet will not be available for the second leg of the Malaysian FA Cup semi-final on May 16 in Kuala Terengganu, but will be released again should Fandi’s side qualify for the final on May 23.

    Subramani said it was important to have all 30 players together for Japan – the squad will be reduced to 20 upon the team’s return – but the coaches recognised the psychological boost the four players would gain playing in the first leg of the semi-final, and possibly the final.

    Fleet-footed attacker Faris, 22, had been prepared to miss the cup-ties, and is over the moon over the decision.

    “As players, we always give our best to whichever team we are playing for, so I was prepared to miss out on the FA Cup.

    “But now, I hope to do all I can to ensure the team carry a good result into the second leg.”

    Similar to the 2013 campaign, Stange will play an active role in the make-up of the final 20-man squad.

    The football tournament will begin almost a week before the opening ceremony on June 5, with the hosts kicking off Group A action against the Philippines on June 1 at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

    The Young Lions will also play Indonesia, Myanmar and Cambodia in the group stage, and Stange warned that they could not afford to underestimate any opponent.

    “Other than playing on home ground, it is a small advantage to be in a group which has one less team (from Group B),” he added.

    Group B features reigning champions Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Laos, Brunei and Timor Leste.