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  • Thousands Turn Up At Bersih Rally To Demand Reignation Of Najib Razak

    Thousands Turn Up At Bersih Rally To Demand Reignation Of Najib Razak

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Tens of thousands of Malaysians wearing yellow T-shirts and blowing horns defiantly held a major rally in the capital Saturday to demand the resignation of embattled Prime Minister Najib Razak.

    The crowds were undeterred by a heavy police presence after authorities declared the rally illegal, blocked the organizer’s website and banned yellow attire and the logo of Bersih, the coalition for clean and fair elections that’s behind the weekend rallies.

    Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad added momentum to the rally when he made a surprise brief appearance in the city late Saturday with his wife to loud cheers from the crowd, and telling protestors to “carry on.”

    Najib has been fighting for political survival after leaked documents in July showed he received some $700 million in his private accounts from entities linked to indebted state fund 1MDB. He later said the money was a donation from the Middle East, fired his critical deputy and four other Cabinet members as well as the attorney general investigating him.

    Protesters in yellow Bersih T-shirts and headbands converged at five locations and marched to areas surrounding the landmark Independence Square, where celebrations to mark Malaysia’s 58th National Day will be held Monday. Police estimated Saturday’s crowd at 25,000 while Bersih says 200,000 participated at its peak.

    The crowd thinned in the evening, though some protesters pitched tents on the streets to camp overnight. The rally was scheduled to last until midnight Sunday.

    Scores of police sealed off roads leading to the square, which authorities have said is off-limits to protesters. Previous two Bersih rallies, in 2011 and 2012, were dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannons.

    Some activists carried canvas bags with the words “My Prime Minister Embarrasses Me.” Some held placards saying “We will not be silenced,” while others chanted “Bersih” and waved Malaysian flags.

    In one area near the square, a comedian entertaining the crowd poked fun at Najib. Dressed up as an Arab, he pretended to hand over a multi-billion-ringgit check as a donation to a rally participant.

    “Stop treating us like fools, Mr. prime minister,” said businessman Tony Wong. “We deserve to know the truth about 1MDB. Where has the money gone to?”

    Najib slammed the protesters for tarnishing Malaysia’s image.

    “Those who wear this yellow attire … they want to discredit our good name, scribble black coal on Malaysia’s face to the outside world,” he was quoted as saying by national news agency Bernama.

    A nation of 30 million, Malaysia is predominantly Malay Muslim with significant Chinese and Indian minorities. Its ambitions to rise from a middle income to a developed nation this decade have been stymied by slow-paced reforms and Najib’s increasing authoritarianism.

    1MDB, set up by Najib in 2009 to develop new industries, has accumulated 42 billion ringgit ($10.1 billion) in debt after its energy ventures abroad faltered. Concerns over the political scandal partly contributed to the Malaysian currency plunging to a 17-year low earlier this month.

    Support for Najib’s National Front has eroded in the last two general elections. It won in 2013, but lost the popular vote for the first time to an opposition alliance.

    Mahathir, who stepped down in 2003 after 22 years in power, has been quoted as saying earlier that people’s power is needed because the legal system has been violated.

    Apart from Najib’s resignation, the demands being sought are institutional reforms that will make the government more transparent and accountable.

    Worried that authorities may jam communications, more than 41,000 Malaysians have downloaded FireChat — the smartphone application that allows users nearby to communicate with each other when the Internet is down and which powered last year’s Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests, said developer Open Garden.

    Deputy Home Minister Nur Jazlan Mohamed has warned police will take action if the rally turns violent or protesters break the law. He has said that protesters should show their unhappiness with the government at the ballot box, not in the streets.

     

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com

  • More Trouble At Trivelis As Shower Screen Shatters

    More Trouble At Trivelis As Shower Screen Shatters

    Two more residents at premium housing development Trivelis have complained about shattered glass shower panels in their flats.

    Logistics manager Jaime Chen told The Straits Times that her husband found out the shower panel in the common bathroom had shattered when he went to the four-room flat on Thursday to install safety films on the glass panels with several workers.

    The developer, EL Development, had agreed to provide safety films for free to all residents after complaints of shattered glass panels at the Design, Build, and Sell Scheme (DBSS) project.

    Madam Chen said: “We collected the keys in January but thankfully we are not living here yet or someone may have been injured by the shattered glass.”

    The 34-year-old added that the developer will replace the shattered panel but she is worried about its quality. She also complained of other defects including crack lines on the wall, chipped furniture and hollow floor tiles.

    Mr Christopher Tan, 36, said the glass panel in his common bathroom shattered even after the safety film was pasted. He discovered the damage when he went to his four-room unit on Wednesday. Mr Tan, who is self-employed in the food and beverage industry said: “(The film) only prevents the shattered pieces from falling all over the floor. It does not address the quality control of the screens. A lot of us are worried about the possible dangers to old folks and kids when they use the bathrooms.”

    A spokesman for EL Development confirmed that there were two cases of shattered shower glass panels in August. That makes it a total of 11 cases out of about 5,400 shower screen panels in Trivelis. He added that all shattered panels will be replaced free-of-charge.

    He also said that the safety films does not prevent shattering but improves safety.

    “We have acceded to the residents’ request (for the safety films) as part of the goodwill package to give them a piece of mind.”

    Trivelis made headlines in recent months after complaints about defects surfaced. Around 400 owners, who started collecting their keys in January, found problems from defective stove knobs to rusty dish racks to poor quality laminate flooring. The common corridor along 40 units was also prone to flooding during heavy rain.

    The developer gave a “goodwill package” in May, offering them safety films, a new dish rack and extended the warranty on the laminate flooring from a year to 10 years.

     

    Source: www.thestraitstimes.com

  • Rich Woman Cheats On Taxi Fare And Dares Taxi Driver To Make Police Report

    Rich Woman Cheats On Taxi Fare And Dares Taxi Driver To Make Police Report

    Dear Editors,

    The women in pictures took a taxi on 13 Aug 2015, taxi fare is $12.70. Arrived at her Caribbean condo she said no cash. Taxi driver allow her to money transfer $12.70 via bank account. Today 27 Aug 2015 (2 weeks already) driver still have not receive his payment.

    Driver send her sms that he had made a police report about her non taxi fare payment and she reply looking forward to meet the police officer. And also she give a fake name card to the taxi driver.

    SG Taxi Driver
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Halal Nasi Padang Stall Ran Out of Sambal, PRC Server Tried To Give Me Sambal From Non-Halal Stall

    Halal Nasi Padang Stall Ran Out of Sambal, PRC Server Tried To Give Me Sambal From Non-Halal Stall

    Do you know what Halal Food means?

    Had a rude awakening this morning around 11.15am at Nasi Padang Stall in Seletar Mall Food Court.

    This Miss Foreign Talent Food Server apparently wanted to get me sambal for my Lontong from a Non-Halal stall as apparently their stall running out of sambal. According to her it’s just sambal no need halal. What!? !!!????!!!!

    Hello! Excuse me, Miss!

    You are serving me Halal food and you better make sure your sambal also come from Halal kitchen! Not any non Halal stall! Get it!!

    Mimi Ab Hamid Complaint On Halal Nasi Padang Stall

    I refused the food, and ask for my money back, which I got it back eventually!

    I straight to the Food Manager to complain and got him to teach that Miss Foreign Talent Server how sensitive it is in handling Halal Food.

    It seems that our Foreign Talents here in Sg need to be taught some lessons about what Halal Food means!

     

    Source: Mimi Ab Hamid

  • PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    The Elections Department (ELD) is tweaking the rules again, raising maximum spending limit from $3.50 to $4.00 per voter, tilting the “level playing” field to political parties with deeper pockets. Other changes include new ballot papers featuring candidates’ mugshots “to help the elderly identify the candidates”. Since we only get to see these guys face to face once in fifty five years, we won’t know the purity of their hearts from a brief encounter. What they should include is an accompanying short quote reflective of their true colours:


    “If you’re lazy and work less, you’ll have less Medisave” – Khaw Boon Wan

     

     

     

     

     


    “Without foreign workers, Singapore is likely to become a ‘garbage city’. Cleanliness is a character thing. It shows who you really are.” – Goh Chok Tong on Tokyo has no rubbish even though the Japanese capital has no rubbish bins in public places

     

     

     

     


    “A manpower policy that advocates hiring “Singaporeans first” will not benefit the economy in the long term” – Senior Minister of State for Manpower Amy Khor

     

     

     

     

     


    “We (also) need to reflect, are we the way they described?” – Baey Yam Keng on Sun Xu’s “more dogs than humans in Singapore”

     

     

     

     

     


    “However, it may not be wise to call for the tradeoffs to be tilted further to an extent that it dissuades good people from coming forward in future” – Grace Fu on ministerial pay cut

     

     

     

     


    “Some cardboard collectors treat it (collection of cardboards) as a form of exercise and activity rather than being cooped up at home” – Tan Chuan Jin

     

     

     

     

     


    “Well, everybody has a car, we have two — my wife drives one, I drive one. We are both professionals, we need to travel” – Koh Poh Koon on car ownership

     

     

     

     

     


    “…I regret making the decision because, in the end, the baby continued to be in intensive care, and KKH now runs up a total bill of more than $300,000…”- Lim Hng Kiang on regretting the decision to save a baby’s life.

     

     

     

     


    “If we spent 387 million dollars, will we get value from that expenditure? In my mind, the answer… is yes.” – Vivian Balakrishnan on YOG budget blowout

     

     

     

     


    “Whether a participant perished or survived depended on where he or she happened to be at the time.” Heng Swee Kiat on why 12 year olds died on Mt Kinabalu

     

     

     

    Tattler

    * The writer blogs at singaporedesk.blogspot.com.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

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