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  • Killer Of 4-Year-Old Taipei Girl ‘Little Light Bulb’ Begs For Forgiveness From Her Mum

    Killer Of 4-Year-Old Taipei Girl ‘Little Light Bulb’ Begs For Forgiveness From Her Mum

    A murder suspect accused of decapitating a four-year-old girl got on his knees and asked for forgiveness from the victim’s mother in a Taipei court on Thursday (Sept 22).

    Suspect Wang Ching-yu, 33, has been charged with the murder of Liu Yi-jie, in a trial that began in June. The trial is held at the Shihlin district court.

    Wang is accused of killing the girl, nicknamed “Little Light Bulb”, in front of her mother, Claire Wang, on March 28.

    The prosecution is seeking a death sentence for Wang, but his lawyers have asked for a lighter sentence.

    On Thursday, he asked the judge if he could apologise to Ms Wang.

    He then knelt down and said in Mandarin: “I’m sorry, I admit I was wrong. I did not mean it, please forgive me.”

    Ms Wang remained expressionless and ignored him. After 15 minutes, the judge asked Wang to get up, Taiwanese reports said.

    “It’s too early to talk about forgiveness,” she told reporters on exiting the court room, adding that priority should be given to ensuring such crimes do not occur again.

    “We should focus on investigating the cause of the crime, how the motive turned to action, and with this information, figure out what we can do, how we can reduce these incidents in the future.”

    The seemingly unprovoked and gruesome crime shocked Taiwanese society.

    Wang slashed the girl as many as 23 times although he did not know the family. His psychiatric state at the time of the attack has been disputed during the trial.

    When he took the stand, he has given rambling and outlandish answers, and quoted from Chinese folk lore and even wuxia novels during questioning, reports said.

    Prosecutors have asserted that he passed a psychiatric assessment from Taipei Veterans General Hospital. They earlier accused Wang of not showing remorse.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Mohd Khair: Cabaran-Cabaran Yang Dihadapi Masyarakat Melayu

    Mohd Khair: Cabaran-Cabaran Yang Dihadapi Masyarakat Melayu

    Cabaran-cabaran yang dihadapi masyarakat kita sekarang ini dan akan datang bukannya sedikit, berlambak-lambak…(senarai di bawah ini tidak menurut mana-mana keutamaan)

    1. Masalah anak-anak yang tidak mendapat pendidikan agama (jumlah peratusan yang tinggi)

    2. Generasi muda yang tiada atau longgar pegangan agama

    3. Generasi tua yang tidak kesah tentang agama

    4. Keluarga-keluarga yang tiada nilai atau kekontangan nilai

    5. Anak2 muda yang berzina secara selamba macam anjing kat stesen bas

    6. Anak-anak yang dilahirkan luar nikah

    7. Ketidak cukupan keluarga Muslim untuk mengambil anak-anak angkat Muslim (adoption)

    8. Ketidak cukupan keluarga Muslim untuk mengambil anak-anak Muslim sebagai anak titipan (fostering)

    9. Anak-anak yang tidak atau kurang mendapat bimbingan dari ibubapa dan kemudian melakukan pelbagai kesalahan

    10. Institusi keluarga dan struktur rumahtangga yang rapuh mudah roboh

    11. Isu perceraian yang orang kita sudah jadi champion semenjak berdekad lamanya

    12. Isu perceraian di kalangan para datuk dan nenek (ini maslaah baru dalam masyarakat)

    13. Suami atau isteri atau kedua-duanya selingkuh dan berzina sehingga ada isteri yang hamil anak orang lain

    14. Masalah penagihan dan pengedaran dadah yang masih lagi belum selesai

    15. Cabaran pendidikan untuk lebih ramai lagi anak-anak kita yang berjaya

    16. Cabaran untuk mencelikkan sebahagian para ibubapa yang masih lagi rabun akan masadepan anak-anak mereka

    17. Cabaran dayakerja (employability) para pekerja kita dalam zaman globalisasi yang begitu cepat berkembang dan berubah

    18. Cabaran terhadap persaingan dalam peluang-peluang pekerjaan dalam konteks pembanjiran para pekerja asing

    19. Cabaran risiko pembuangan kerja para pencari nafkah kita

    20. Cabaran bagi yang telah hilang pekerjaan

    21. Cabaran akan hilangnya istilah persaraan di masa depan apabila setiap warga perlu kerja sehingga ke liang lahat

    22. Masalah hutang & tailong di kalangan individu dan keluarga

    23. Masalah kesihatan dan pakej penyakit 3-in-1 atau 4-in-1

    24. Cabaran persaraan warga senja

    25. Cabaran muslimin dan muslimat yang masih membujang dan belum mendapat jodoh, terutama di peringkat usia melebihi 35 tahun

    26. Cabaran kos kehidupan yang semakin meningkat

    27. Cabaran membantu keluarga-keluarga dan individu-individu yang kurang upaya atau kehilangan upaya untuk berdikari

    28. Cabaran membantu muslimin dan muslimat yang kebingungan akan identiti jantina mereka (isu LGBT)

    29. Isu tudung (belum selesai lagi semenjak awal tahun 70an lagi)

    30. Isu Autisma dan lain-lain keperluan khas yang semakin meningkat di kalangan anak-anak dari keluarga Muslim .

    …dan banyak lagi cabaran dan masalah tidak tersenarai di sini

    Dan kita sering dipesongkan dan disibukkan dengan isu-isu yang langsung tidak akan membantu kita menyelesaikan cabaran-cabaran dan masalah-masalah yang tersenarai di sini (dan yang lain-lain lagi setentunya).

    Tidak ada orang lain melainkan kita yang boleh selesaikan masalah dan cabaran ini semua.

    Kalau kita hilang fokus, maka hilanglah kita.

    الله المستعان

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • Satisfaction Level Up For MRT Service: Survey

    Satisfaction Level Up For MRT Service: Survey

    Despite reports of MRT service disruptions from time to time, consumers have grown more satisfied with the MRT as well as the overall land transport sector in the past year.

    The MRT had a customer satisfaction score of 66.4 in the latest Customer Satisfaction Index from April to July. This was up from its score of 62 for the same period last year.

    In April, commuters taking the North-South Line suffered at least three service delays in the space of a week, including an April 25 disruption that affected services along three MRT lines and an LRT line.

    “From the data, train reliability and helpfulness of staff were key drivers of quality,” said Mr Chen Yongchang of the Institute of Service Excellence at Singapore Management University (ISES), which publishes the index, at a press conference yesterday.

    “And for the operators, we do see them working in the right direction by trying to fix these issues through initiatives like adding more trains, (and) replacing the signals and sleepers,” he said, adding that they had also stationed customer service officers at train stations during peak hours.

    A total of 13,355 respondents were polled for the survey.

    Overall, consumers were more satisfied with the land transport sector, which had a score of 66.8 out of 100, up from 63.3 last year.

    Taxi services, for instance, scored 70, up from 65.9 last year.

    For the first time this year, participants were asked to rate their satisfaction levels with land transport booking apps. Uber ranked first with a score of 69.7, followed by Grab and ComfortDelGro.

    “Given the recent increase in the availability and adoption of mobile apps within the land transport space, we found it timely to introduce, for the first time, a new sub-sector that tracks customer satisfaction in this area,” said Ms Neeta Lachmandas, executive director of ISES.

    She added that security and factors associated with ease of use of the apps were key factors in the perceived quality of the apps.

    The study also found that customers have grown more satisfied with the air transport and public education sectors over the past year.

    Changi Airport scored 81.4 points, up from 75.1 last year.

    Customer satisfaction with budget airlines increased from a score of 68.3 last year to 69.5 this year, with tourists being more satisfied than local passengers.

    Tourists cited factors they liked, such as cleanliness of the cabin, and food and beverage options, while local passengers were more concerned with the ability of the budget airline to accommodate their needs.

    Also seeing an improvement was the public education sector, which improved from a score of 74.1 last year to 75.7 this year.

    Meanwhile, postal services, represented by SingPost, saw a decline in customer satisfaction, from 71.5 last year to 67.9 this year. Mr Chen said this was due to its lack of ability to meet customer expectations and a decline in quality.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Data Page Missing From Dead Man’s Passport

    Data Page Missing From Dead Man’s Passport

    The family of a national softball player who died in an accident in Malaysia last week suspect that a page in his passport with key personal information might have been stolen. They worry that it might be used for unlawful purposes.

    Leonard Sim, 26, who represented Singapore in softball at the SEA Games in 2007 and 2011, died in an accident on the North-South Expressway near Kluang in the early hours of Sept 13. He had been riding a motorcycle on his way to Singapore from Penang.

    His father Jack Sim, 62, who is in between jobs and was previously a manager, yesterday showed The Straits Times his son’s passport, which had the first page with information that is scanned at immigration checkpoints cleanly cut out.

    He said: “We are concerned that his biometric data is used for terrorism and unlawful purposes.”

    The younger Mr Sim, a softball coach, was travelling with his friend and fellow motorcyclist Lee Ren Yuan, 24, when the accident took place at around 3.45am.

    Mr Lee, a sales executive, told The Straits Times that Mr Sim was travelling behind him and the road ahead was clear. But Mr Lee later felt “a huge impact from behind”. He rolled onto the ground and felt a car going past him.

    After he picked himself up, he found his friend lying face down and breathing heavily.

    Mr Lee said he looked around for a passer-by to call an ambulance. After he found someone, he went back to check on his friend, and found him still gasping for breath.

    Mr Lee then looked around for his phone, and found it smashed up. He went back to check on his friend and but could not hear any breathing from him.

    He went around looking for people to borrow a phone to call his friends and Mr Sim’s family. He continued to check on Mr Sim intermittently, and noticed on one occasion that his friend was lying face-up but did not think too much of it then.

    After walking a few metres further away from Mr Sim, however, he noticed a red passport on the ground and picked it up.

    The police arrived later and asked to see Mr Sim’s passport. Mr Lee took out a passport and checked to see if it was Mr Sim’s. It was only then that he realised the first page of Mr Sim’s passport was missing.

    Mr Jack Sim said he has made a report to Malaysian and Singapore police about the matter.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Housewife In ICU After E-Scooter Hits Her

    Housewife In ICU After E-Scooter Hits Her

    In the next two days, her loved ones must make what could be a life-or-death decision – whether to take her off life support.

    The last time they saw her conscious was last Saturday when she left their Pasir Ris home with her bicycle to shop for groceries.

    It was her Saturday routine, but on this fateful day, Madam Ang Liu Kiow, a 53-year-old housewife, met with an accident involving a 17-year-old on an electric scooter.

    She was still awake after the accident but lost consciousness in the ambulance while being taken to Changi General Hospital (CGH), where she underwent two operations on her brain.

    Not only has she not woken up, but her condition has since worsened. Her husband and children – two sons and a daughter – are bracing themselves for the worst.

    The circumstances surrounding the accident, which happened around 10am on a pavement in Pasir Ris Drive 1, remain unclear.

    But Madam Ang’s son, Mr Wilson Leong, believes the e-scooter crashed into her. The 22-year-old student told The New Paper on Monday: “My mother rides her bicycle to buy groceries every Saturday, so I think the accident must have happened then.”

    TNP understands that Madam Ang was not on her bicycle when the accident happened.

    Mr Leong said his father received a call from the hospital around noon telling him about Madam Ang.

    “We rushed over and were told that there was a blood clot at the back of her brain that required immediate surgery,” he said.

    “The surgery was supposed to take three hours but because of complications, it took almost six. She used up about two bags of blood.”

    Just when the family thought the worst was over, they were told on Sunday morning that there were further problems.

    “We were told that they needed to do another operation to drain out brain fluid that was building up,” he said.

    “They put a tube into her brain. She was heavily sedated, and I haven’t been able to speak to her.”

    APPEAL

    Mr Leong said that when he posted an appeal on Facebook for witnesses to the accident, a woman told him that she had seen five youths tending to Madam Ang. The e-scooterist was believed to be among them.

    He understands the e-scooterist called for an ambulance for his mother, but his family have yet to hear from the teen, who did not give them his contact number.

    “My mother never did anything to hurt anyone,” said Mr Leong.

    The e-scooterist was arrested yesterday. The police have classified the case as a rash act causing grievous hurt and are investigating.

    Mr James Bay, 73, a retiree who lives in the area, told TNP that he was cycling when he saw the aftermath of the accident on Saturday morning.

    “I saw a woman sitting at the bus stop with five young guys around her,” he said.

    “There was also a dark-coloured e-scooter on the ground nearby. It was a big scooter.”

    Mr Bay added that many youngsters ride e-scooters, bikes and skates, some of them at fast speeds, in the area.

    “There are a lot of old people here, so it can be quite dangerous.”

    Lawyers said that it might be difficult to get compensation in accidents involving personal mobility devices (PMDs), such as e-scooters, e-skates and hoverboards.

    PMDs are currently not allowed on pavements, roads and park connectors, only on private premises.

    This is set to change by year end when new rules kick in.

    Member of Parliament for Pasir Ris-Punggol Zainal Sapari was shocked to learn of the accident.

    “We need to look into legislation to make it compulsory for riders of personal mobility devices to have third-party insurance,” he said.

    “Despite our best efforts at education, there are still users who do not adhere to guidelines that have been prescribed.

    REVIEW

    “I hope this incident will trigger the relevant authority to review its position with regard to making third-party insurance mandatory.”

    He will be alerting Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean, who is the MP for that area, and they will be reaching out to the family to provide assistance.

    He added that enforcement must also continue to ensure the safety of pedestrians.

    But any new measure may come too late for Madam Ang and her family.

    Mr Leong said: “I cannot describe the feeling in words. My father has been crying often and hasn’t been eating since the accident.”

    “The doctor told us my mother has had multiple strokes in the brain due to a lack of oxygen. We have to decide whether to take (her) off life support and see if she comes to,” he said.

    “But when the time comes, if needed, we want to let her go peacefully. We can’t bear to see her suffer any more.”