Category: Singapuraku

  • Wanita Singapura Sanggup Mengaku Bukan Islam Selepas Kena Cekup

    Wanita Singapura Sanggup Mengaku Bukan Islam Selepas Kena Cekup

    dirogol

    JOHOR BAHRU – Seorang wanita warga Singapura tergamak mengakui dirinya bukan beragama Islam bagi mengelak dirinya dicekup bersama pasangannya dalam serbuan Ops Ambang Merdeka, semalam.

    Wanita terbabit ditahan kerana disyaki berkhalwat bersama seorang lelaki bukan Islam dalam serbuan Bahagian Penguat Kuasa Jabatan Agama Islam Johor (Jaij) di sebuah hotel sekitar Taman Johor Jaya.

    Ketika disoal anggota operasi mengenai agamanya, dengan selamba wanita berusia 21 tahun itu mendakwa dirinya bukan Islam meskipun dalam pasport tertera ‘binti’ pada namanya.

    Ketua Penolong Pengarah Bahagian Penguat Kuasa Jaij, Mohd Zamri Kambari berkata, pihaknya tetap menahan wanita itu mengikut Seksyen 27 Enakmen

    Kesalahan Jenayah Syariah 1997 (Negeri Johor) kerana didapati berkhalwat bersama lelaki yang bukan suami atau mahramnya.

    “Melihat kepada alasan diberikan suspek, kita tetap membawanya ke balai polis untuk proses dokumentasi sebelum dibawa ke pejabat agama untuk tindakan susulan.

    “Kita juga akan bekerjasama dengan pihak berkuasa di Singapura untuk mengetahui latar belakangnya bagi mendapatkan kebenaran terhadap dakwaan kononnya dia bukan beragama Islam.

    “Jadi wanita itu juga kena buktikan juga yang dirinya bukan beragama Islam. Jaij menahannya kerana didapati berkhalwat malah nama tertera pada pasportnya merupakan nama individu Melayu,” katanya.

    Sementara itu, keinginan seorang pengurus sebuah syarikat untuk melampiaskan nafsu bersama gadis warga asing, terbantut apabila bilik hotel bajet dihuninya diserbu Jaij.

    Lelaki berusia 55 tahun itu ditahan bersama seorang wanita warga Filipina berusia lingkungan 20an dalam serbuan berasingan.

    Ketika disoal siasat, lelaki terbabit mendakwa mula memasuki bilik hotel berkenaan sekitar jam 7 malam kelmarin sementara wanita warga asing itu pula hadir kira-kira jam 1 pagi semalam.

    Beliau turut mengakui mendapatkan perkhidmatan seks ditawarkan oleh gadis genit warga asing itu pada harga RM200 bagi satu malam.

    Sumber: http://www.sinarharian.com.my/edisi/johor/sanggup-mengaku-bukan-islam-1.312708

    letters R1C

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  • Polis Cari Anggota Keluarga Seorang Bekas Penghuni Rumah Tumpangan Warga Tua Jamiyah

    Polis Cari Anggota Keluarga Seorang Bekas Penghuni Rumah Tumpangan Warga Tua Jamiyah

    POLIS sedang mencari anggota keluarga Allahyarhamha Alimah Asbas, bekas penghuni rumah tumpangan warga tua Jamiyah di No 1 Tampines Avenue 3.

    Allahyarhamha Alimah, 52 tahun, meninggal dunia di Hospital Universiti Nasional (NUH) pada 16 Ogos lalu.

    Anggota keluarga atau sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat mengenai Allahyarhamha Alimah diminta menghubungi polis di talian 1800-2550000.

    Maklumat boleh juga dihantar di laman www.police.gov.sg/CrimeStopper.

    Semua maklumat akan dirahsiakan.

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg/setempat/polis-cari-ahli-keluarga-wanita#sthash.lU00Ic3J.dpuf

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  • Sesak di Woodlands CIQ

    Sesak di Woodlands CIQ

    KEREDAAN kenderaan keluar masuk Johor Bahru selepas Malaysia menaikkan kadar tol hanya sementara sahaja?

    Nampaknya begitu jika keadaan di Kompleks Kastam, Imigresen dan Kuarantin (CIQ) Woodlands dan Johor hujung minggu lalu dijadikan sandaran.

    Beberapa pembaca Berita Harian memberi maklum balas mereka terperangkap dalam kesesakan lebih dua jam menyeberangi koswe kelmarin dan semalam.

    Malaysia baru-baru ini memperkenalkan tol baru bagi pemandu yang menggunakan Tambak Johor yang berkuat kuasa 1 Ogos lalu.

    Pemandu kenderaan persendirian yang memasuki Malaysia dari Singapura melalui Koswe perlu membayar tol RM9.70 ($3.80) berbanding RM2.90 sebelum ini.

    Apabila memasuki Singapura pula, mereka dikenakan tol RM6.80. Bas dan teksi masing-masing perlu membayar RM13.30 dan RM8.20 bagi setiap perjalanan dua hala. Kenaikan itu menimbulkan reaksi kurang senang sebilangan rakyat Singapura.

    Masyarakat peniaga di Johor Bahru turut tidak setuju kerana menjejas perniagaan mereka.

    Menyusuli langkah Malaysia, Penguasa Pengangkutan Darat (LTA) mengumumkan Singapura akan mengenakan kadar tol yang sepadan.

    Selain tol, Malaysia juga akan mengenakan bayaran permit masuk kenderaan (VEP) kepada kenderaan asing melalui Johor Bahru

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg/setempat/sesak-balik-di-ciq#sthash.9PRsf3tB.dpuf

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  • Suspected Malaysian Militants Use Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand As Transit Points to Middle East

    Suspected Malaysian Militants Use Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand As Transit Points to Middle East

    20140209_NHZAHIDI_ST holy.si

    KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia’s Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has said that suspected militants from Malaysia were using countries like Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand as transit points to travel to the Middle East to join up with extremist groups there, according to the local media.

    He added that his ministry would monitor Malaysians going through these countries on their way to Iraq and Syria, with the help of Interpol and intelligence agencies, reported the New Straits Times (NST) on Friday.

    “We are working with Interpol and our intelligence unit is monitoring these people because they don’t travel straight from Malaysia,” Datuk Seri Zahid was reported by the NST as saying.

    “The government would like to stress that we don’t endorse the Islamic State (IS) militants of Syria and Iraq nor are we a hub for terrorism and a terrorist training centre,” Dr Zahid added, according to the NST.

    He was addressing the media at the 23rd Security Services Association Malaysia Annual General Meeting in Kuala Lumpur on Friday morning.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/asia/south-east-asia/story/singapore-among-nations-suspected-militants-use-transit-middle-east

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  • Is Singapore A Racist Country?

    Is Singapore A Racist Country?

    singapore-day-sydney

    AUGUST 31 — Often in the lift that deposits me on my flat’s floor, I am quizzed by curious neighbours and their ilk on my Singaporean-ness.

    “Where are you from girl?”

    “Singapore”

    “Then your mother? India lah?”

    “No. Singapore. You?”

    “I’m Singaporean lah.”

    The perpetrators of these questions are usually Chinese.

    Amy cheong

    They are polite, often friendly exchanges but unfortunately they belie a persistent and pervasive Chinese chauvinism that, too often, underlies this nation.

    The Chinese identity — the C in the oft-used CMIO (Chinese Malay Indian Other) construct the state is so enamored with, is the default identity. If you aren’t Chinese you need to justify your Singaporeaness, and even so you’ll never be quite as Singaporean as a Singaporean Chinese.

    In a very astute commentary published last year, social activist Mohamed Imran Mohamed Taib summed it as such: Despite our professed desire for a unified nation “regardless of race, language or religion”, what had transpired for the last four decades was the opposite. Race has become a single most important marker for our social existence. In other words, we have become a totally racialised society. There is hardly a moment in our social interactions that we are not reminded of our racial identity — from the imprint in our identity cards, to our schooling years to job applications.

    We are constantly reduced to our race.

    The other day, my brother exclaimed that he was stretched and needed to hire more people to join his creative agency. But, he shared, he had to make sure they weren’t all from his ethnic group lest his 23-man-strong set-up be pigeon-holed as an Indian organisation and be written off by the majority of Singaporeans.

    Now, with a very healthy mix of races running about his two-storey shop-house office, I think he is far from having to field such an accusation. But his commitment to multi-ethnicity isn’t the issue.

    Here’s the issue: I am certain none of his Chinese Singaporean counterparts have had to entertain this question and fear the repercussions of being labelled as mono-ethnic. After all, most small businesses on the island are overwhelmingly Chinese.

    And that is, we’re raised to believe, okay.

    Only state-sponsored banners seem to feel obliged to dutifully represent the Singaporean in every shade.

    This idea that minorities have to justify themselves is not a new one, but it is not always accepted; there are people who argue than Singapore is truly a meritocracy that disregards race.

    My husband, who is from a very dominant majority in his country of birth, often accuses me of over-reacting. Singaporean Indians are too “jumped up” he says — most people don’t really care about the colour of your skin.

    And if ever I felt like maybe he was right, I need only to look at the recent string of comments that trail the headlines surrounding our newest Miss Singapore Universe.

    Remarkable for their lack of any awareness — in the past days I’ve seen comments denouncing the 23-year-old for being “unattractive” — her skin is too dark, she isn’t as pretty as a Korean girl and one particularly vile character claimed that looking at her made him want to throw up.

    Now, I am no expert in beauty pagents. But Rathi Menon seems for all intents and purposes beauty-queen like. She’s tall, poised and has the big hair I have long associated with sash-wearing beauties. But somehow she falls short?

    Years ago, in 1998, Aneetha Ayyavoo cinched the title of Supermodel of the World — a genuine global title, and the best perfomance ever by a SIngaporean at an international pageant. And the reward she enjoyed locally hovered on zero.

    These days, Ayyavoo is a regular on Tamil programming channel — Vasantham. Really? Supermodel of the World and our city’s mainstream media doesn’t hold her up as a cause for celebration. Though she was a Singaporean contestant she ended up being an Indian success and not a national success.

    This constant and nagging discrimination manifests in many ways: A friend tries to rent a flat and is advised by his housing agent to say he is a foreigner from America since his name is rather ambiguous. Because, as he will learn, many landlords are very open about their decision to not rent to Indian tenants.

    That we’re encouraged to tolerate the month-long offerings for the Hungry Ghost month that often leave entire void decks in a mess of burnt floor, ash and strewn paper in the interest of racial harmony but the annual Thaipusam needs to be celebrated in relative silence as it affects people.

    Are these festival less Singaporean? Something to be tolerated but not taken to heart? Malays very evidently and Indians historically have been on this island for as long.

    My mother is 4th generation Singaporean. My staple diet is bak chor mee. Our culture is a fusion from across the races and religions. We believe some things are pantang and others are heng.

    To me, the Singaporean identity is a mix of all the races. We belong to this island as much as the next person. So, I would like to be treated to the same courtesies and the same sense of belonging please.

    * This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

    Authored by Surekha A. Yadav

    Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/opinion/surekha-a-yadav/article/is-singapore-a-racist-country#sthash.HyQmLMHX.dpuf

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