Category: Singapuraku

  • Malaysian Couple Semi-Naked Wedding Photoshoot Goes Viral

    Malaysian Couple Semi-Naked Wedding Photoshoot Goes Viral

    semi nude wedding naked

    IPOH – Photos of a semi-naked couple, believed to be taking their pre-wedding photographs in front of a bank on Jalan Sultan Yussuf here have surfaced on social media.

    The photographs depict the groom wearing a bow tie and black pants while the bride was in white undergarments and a wedding veil.

    It is not known when the photographs of the brazen couple were taken but the photographs have surfaced online since Monday.

    The couple also seemed undaunted by their action while being photographed by some members of the public passing by.

    A wedding gallery general manager, who only wished to be known as Koo, said it was only a photo shoot and the couple were models.

    Koo, who organised the photo shoot, said the photographers were merely exploring “creativity” and was surprised by the response triggered on social media.

    He said he has considered the legal issues on the matter and was confident that it was not an offence.

    “People are just over-reacting because they have never seen a bikini-clad woman on the streets before.

    “It is their rights to complaint,” said Koo, adding that he has been a professional photographer for more than 20 years.

    “I chose the location because it suited the theme and concept,” he added.

    When contacted, Perak police chief Senior Deputy Comm Datuk Acryl Sani Abdullah Sani said the police have not received any reports but are probing on the matter.

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com/news/malaysia/couples-semi-nude-wedding-photo-shoot-making-waves-social-media

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  • Rathi Menon is Miss Singapore Universe 2014 Winner

    Rathi Menon is Miss Singapore Universe 2014 Winner

    rathi menon
    Winner of Miss Universe Singapore 2014 pageant

    It was a really close fight between first runner-up Arrian North and winner Rathi Menon at the Miss Universe Singapore pageant finals on Friday.

    North — a 20-year-old model of Arabian-English descent — was a top favourite among the 12 contestants during the competition. Having won three other subsidiary titles — Miss City of Dreams, Miss Body Beautiful and Miss Catwalk – the 1.68-metre porcelain-skinned beauty seemed to be a hit with the judges.

    23-year-old pharmacy technician and eventual winner Menon was another favorite, impressing with her poise and elegance on the catwalk throughout the competition. She too won subsidiary titles – Miss Brilliance and Miss Personality.

    But during the earlier Question and Answer flub, it was clear who performed better.

    During the dreaded live segment, North was asked “Is increasing Singapore’s population to 7 million a good move?”

    In her reply, North said, “I don’t see why we can’t have more reclaimed land and bring more people in”.

    Meanwhile, for her question, Menon was asked to give a “worst case scenario” if the world becomes “deprived of the Internet”.

    The human resource management undergraduate explained how being “disconnected” from loved ones living far away would be the worst thing to happen.

    “It is these services that enables us to connect with loved ones near or far. Not knowing where they are or if they are in danger, I think that would be the worst scenario.”

    The two of them, along with 10 other contestants, took part in other segments such as swimwear and evening wear during the two-hour pageant finale at Shangri-La hotel.

    Overall, they were scored on elegance, poise, body figure, catwalk presence and their Q&A performance by a panel of 10 judges, which included local fashion guru Daniel Boey and supermodel Junita Simon.

    The winner will represent Singapore in the Miss Universe international pageant set to take place in December. The actual date and hosting country have yet to be announced.

    Source: https://sg.entertainment.yahoo.com/blogs/singapore-showbiz/did-q-a-flub-cost-contestant-the-miss-universe-singapore-title-034238433.html

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  • Some Muslims Want To Withdraw CPF Before 65 To Perform Haj

    Some Muslims Want To Withdraw CPF Before 65 To Perform Haj

    haji

    SOME Muslims would like to withdraw a larger portion of their Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings before turning 65 to perform the haj – and Minister of State for National Development and Defence Maliki Osman hopes the Government will consider this wish when it reviews its policies.

    At a post-National Day Rally dialogue attended by over 100 Malay residents of the East Coast GRC on Wednesday night, participants asked if they could be given the option of tapping into their CPF savings at age 55 to fund the pilgrimage.

    “We don’t know whether we’ll be well enough to do our haj, or if we can even move if we wait till 65,” said a 50-year-old Changi resident who wanted to be known as Sofea.

    According to the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, haj packages cost from about $7,000 to over $13,000.

    Speaking in Malay to reporters after the dialogue, Dr Maliki said: “This is a concern in our community, and we can channel these worries… And I hope when the Government tries to draft new policies related to the CPF, the concerns voiced by our residents will be taken into account.”

    The Government, he added, acknowledges that people want more options when it comes to their CPF savings, “but this choice must also be limited, so it does not reach a stage where people don’t have savings after they retire”.

    As residents discussed the announcements Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had made in Sunday’s National Day Rally, some were still riled up over retirement funds.

    There were raised voices and demands to know how many Singaporeans could meet the CPF Minimum Sum.

    But dialogues like this are a platform for the Government to soothe such fears, said Dr Maliki.

    “When I clarified the reasons and ways we draft government policies, they showed understanding… their feelings of anger started to recede.”

    He told participants about his late father, who died this February at age 91.

    There was no Minimum Sum in place for his cohort – when life expectancy was 65 years. He withdrew all his CPF savings at 55 and spent them all by age 60, when he stopped working.

    “He had nine children to help him… but how many children do you have, and do you want to continue depending on them?” asked Dr Maliki, adding that life expectancy has gone up, making the Minimum Sum scheme necessary.

    Residents also asked about the future of young Malays without university degrees.

    Ms Mardina Aziz, 27, who has a polytechnic diploma, said she has the skills and hands-on experience some university graduates lack.

    But she cannot qualify for most government jobs, which require degrees.

    At this year’s rally, Mr Lee said the public sector will take the lead in shifting the focus away from paper qualifications to take skill and experience into account in hiring and promotions.

    Dr Maliki said parents and students also need to change their mindsets.

    “We want (students) to change their mindsets, to ensure that they keep on believing that they are able to succeed.”

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/some-muslims-seek-option-tap-cpf-55-go-haj-20140822

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  • History of Singapore Hadramis

    History of Singapore Hadramis

    Yemen

    Singapore is a cosmopolitan city state made up of various races. The 1990 census shows the Chinese as the majority with around 74% of the population, the indigenous Malays with 14%, the Indians at less than 10% and the balance “others”. This “others” category includes Armenians, Eurasians, Arabs and all other “others”. The census shows Arabs to be around 7,000, but unofficial estimates place the number of Arabs at 10,000. The difference is due to a large number of the Arab community being classified as Malays in official statistics. The Arab community is almost all of Hadrami origin.

    The Arabs had played a dominant role in South East Asian trade since the fifteenth century and when Sir Stamford Raffles founded Singapore in 1819, he hoped to attract the Arab traders to his new city. By 1824, there were 15 Arabs out of a population of 10,683 and Raffles anticipated a rapid growth in Arab immigration. His blueprint for Singapore included provisions for an Arab district. In giving instructions to a Singapore housing committee in 1822, he stated that “The Arab population would require every consideration No situation will be more appropriate for them than the vicinity of the Sultan’s residence.”

    The first Arabs to arrive in Singapore in 1819 were two wealthy merchants from Palembang in Sumatra, Syed Mohammed bin Harun al-Juneid and his nephew, Syed Omar bin Ali al-Juneid. Their numbers gradually increased and by 1846, there were five important Arab merchant houses. The al-Juneid family in Singapore grew to be a rich and influential family along with the al-Kaffs and the al-Saggoffs and there are numerous streets and a town council named after them. The al-Saggoffs appear to have arrived a little later, as spice traders, but acquired further influence by marrying into a Sultanic family from the Celebes and among the many properties they, like the other Arab families, acquired was the “Perseverance Estate” where they grew lemon grass. The estate is now considered the heart of the Muslim community in Singapore. Apart from being successful merchants and land owners, the family also became involved in civic affairs and various members held civic office on and off from the 1870s until independence. The al-Kaff family arrived in 1852. All these families lived in mansions of considerable opulence. The al-Kaff house is now a restaurant called the al-Kaff Mansion, as a gesture to preserve the name, but has no other Hadrami connection, either in architectural style or ownership.

    One distinctive characteristic of Hadrami immigration into Singapore was that it was re-immigration from Indonesia, rather than direct from the Hadramawt. The early settlers came to Singapore with wealth made in Indonesia and being already familiar with local custom, were easily accepted by the Malays. The Arabs in South-East Asia, by the time they came to Singapore, already enjoyed respect as religious scholars who brought Islam to the Malays.

    The Arabs and wakaf properties

    The Singapore Hadramis were major landlords, the large families having substantial properties held in wakafs (trusts), which ranged from private family trusts to public charitable trusts. Most of the land in today’s central business district was once owned by Hadrami wakafs. These wakafs, bearing the family names, whether private or charitable, gave considerable prestige to the Arab community among the Muslims in Singapore.

    In recent years, four factors have affected the wakafs and undermined the status of the community. The first three factors are the more substantial and have been a direct result of government policies. The first was the enactment of the Administration of Muslim Law Act 1968. The Singapore Islamic Council is the corporate body now empowered to oversee the administration of charitable wakafs in Singapore. The Arab trustees were in total control of their wakafs prior to the Act. With the transfer of the wakafs’ administration to the Council, the Arabs’ authority over them was considerably undermined. The association of wakafs with Arabs and the reputation of Arabs as benefactors diminished as their connection with the charitable functions of the wakafs was no longer directly visible to the public.

    The second factor was the Rent Control Act 1947. The rents of pre-war properties were controlled and, in effect, frozen. As the Arab wakafs were mostly pre-war properties, the income of the Arab families correspondingly diminished. The decline of income from the wakafs resulted in Arab economic influence diminishing. The Arabs were also, unfortunately, not prepared for such a drastic drop in income; they had not given their children a Western education. Many Arabs went to madrasahs (Arab schools) and some families never sent their children for any formal education at all. The development in Singapore since the 1960s has made it difficult for the Arabs to compete.

    The third factor was the Land Acquisition Act. Land is scarce in Singapore and it is government policy to have complete control over land usage. The Land Acquisition Act empowered the government to acquire land required for urban renewal and compensation is paid on a predetermined formula. The compensation amounts were significantly lower than the prevailing market value. The government embarked on a major acquisition campaign in the 1970s and 1980s. Pre-war properties were the major target for acquisition as Singapore underwent a modernisation programme. These pre-war properties were subject to rent control and had tenants that could not be removed.

    The wakafs were hence not in a position to develop these properties. Significant properties owned by Arab wakafs were acquired and minimal compensation paid. This eroded Arab wealth and influence. It also diminished the Arab identity as substantial landlords. The Sheikh Salem Talib Family settlement, for example, used to have more than three pages in its audited accounts listing the properties held, but the current accounts have less than one page. More than half of the properties were acquired by the government. The al-Saggoff Perseverence Estate was acquired in 1962 for urban renewal. Another 10-acre plot of land in a prime area was donated by the al-Juneid family to the Muslim Trust Fund (a wakaf created by the al-Saggoffs) to be developed so that the income could be used for welfare projects. The Trust wanted to build a mosque and a madrasah, but building permission was not granted by the government. That piece of land was acquired in 1985. In present-day Singapore, the Arabs are no longer considered as the main landowners. Many Singapore Arabs regard the land acquisition policy as the main reason for both their loss of status and identity.

    The fourth factor is having professional trustees manage the wakafs instead of family members. Most of the large private family trusts had problems of mismanagement or breaches of trust and legal disputes. In many cases a professional trustee was then appointed, which had a similar effect to the Administration of Muslim Law Act: the management of the wakafs became impersonal and the Arab families lost the social status arising therefrom.

    Culture, identity and affiliation with the homeland

    In the heyday of the Arab prosperity, the Arabs of Singapore maintained close links with the Hadramawt and a lot of money was remitted to the homeland. The rich built themselves splendid houses there, the most magnificent being the al-Kaff palaces. They also used to send their sons back to the Hadramawt for a spell to enhance their identity as Hadramis. This custom enabled them to maintain their language and Hadrami culture and even resulted in some Malay being incorporated in the spoken Arabic of the Hadramawt. The Hadramawt was regarded as a cultural training ground and the spell there the final preparation for manhood. Upon their return these youths would take their place in the family businesses.

    During the second world war, it was impossible to go back home, but the practice was resumed thereafter. However, the Rent Control Act came into effect soon after, freezing the Hadrami incomes and signalling to them that the wakaf incomes would not be sufficient for the next generation. So families began to take a keener interest in the education of their children; the richer families sent their children to London to study and others spent time working in Aden rather than just going to the Hadramawt. The cultural and linguistic links were more or less maintained. But the family incomes continued to decline.

    In the 1960s came a major change. The independence of South Yemen with a communist government in power put an end to the Singapore Hadramis returning home. At the same time, the economic developments in Singapore made the importance of the English language and of education even more essential. The new Arab generation has grown up without Arabic and has lost both its identity and its affiliation with the Hadramawt. Some families, in the oil boom of the 1970s, tried sending their sons to the Gulf or Saudi Arabia, where there were first generation Hadrami immigrants already and the young men returned with their Hadrami ties and their Arabic enhanced, but it was not a success. The young men did not like living in Saudi Arabia and their prospects in Singapore were better than in the Arabian peninsula.

    The Hadrami community in Singapore is now facing an identity crisis. The younger generation does not speak Arabic and has lost its affiliation with the Hadramawt, partly because Hadramis have stopped sending their children back there. The Arab community recognises the lack of knowledge of Arabic is a major factor and an Arabic language centre has been set up. It is hoped that the younger generation will learn both the language and about their culture and heritage. The challenge facing the community is to ensure that the new generation maintains its identity. The link with the Hadramawt needs to be re-established and travel to the Hadramawt needs to be encouraged.

    November 1995

    Authored by Ameen Ali Talib

    Source: http://www.al-bab.com/bys/articles/talib95.htm

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  • Australian Woman Accused Chief Steward of Molest On Board Malaysian Airlines Flight to Paris

    Australian Woman Accused Chief Steward of Molest On Board Malaysian Airlines Flight to Paris

    20140822_162305_rekaman-pelecehan-seks-di-malaysia-airlines

    0219_MAS_Malaysian_Airline_AFP_840_558_100

    KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 22 ― An Australian woman alleging that she had been sexually assaulted by a Malaysia Airlines steward on an intercontinental flight has gone public about her ordeal.

    Known only as Laura, the 26-year-old alleged that the chief steward on Malaysia Airlines flight MH20 from Kuala Lumpur to Paris on August 4 had attacked her during which she had been paralysed by fear, according to a report on News.com.au.

    “I couldn’t stop it, I just froze, I was just scared,” the news site quoted her as saying in a interview expected to be to be aired on Australian television this weekend.

    “I keep saying ‘why didn’t I scream, why didn’t I shout, why didn’t I stop it? I’m a strong person because I can, I can do that, I know I can, but when I was in the moment I couldn’t. I felt so scared, so petrified,” she was further quoted as saying.

    Laura was reported to have recorded an exchange mid-flight in which a woman is heard crying and saying: “I’m so scared, I just want to get off this plane … I don’t want to see you, go away, you give me the creeps, you dirty old man.”

    In a statement last week, Malaysia Airlines confirmed the allegations had been made were made and that a member of staff had been detained by French police.

    “We will naturally assist the French authorities as they conduct their investigation and would stress that the safety, comfort and well-being of our passengers is always our highest priority,” it said.

    While the airline gave no other details about the member of staff arrested, the Australian news site said the chief steward is married with children remains in the custody of French police after “making admissions.”

    The story comes at a time when the struggling airline is on its knees after successive years of losses and is now being taken over by the government.

    The national carrier has also been in the spotlight for two tragedies this year.

    In March, Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing carrying 239 people on board disappeared from the skies in what is believed to be among the greatest mysteries of modern aviation. The jetliner remains missing and everyone on board is believed to be dead.

    Mid-July, Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was shot down over Ukrainian airspace, killing all 283 people on board.-tmmOnline

    Source: http://www.malaysiaedition.net/australian-woman-in-alleged-sex-attack-on-malaysia-airlines-flight-goes-public/

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