Category: Singapuraku

  • Ibu Tunggual Berjuang Tanggung 4 Anak Dan Ibu Tua

    Ibu Tunggual Berjuang Tanggung 4 Anak Dan Ibu Tua

    Setiap hari, ibu tunggal Azizah Mohamed Noor bangun pada 5.00 pagi untuk bersiap sedia di flat dua biliknya di Lengkok Bahru untuk ke kerja.

    Flat dua bilik itu juga dikongsi beliau bersama empat orang anaknya dan ibunya yang berkerusi roda.

    Pada 5.30 pagi beliau keluar untuk memulakan tugas pertamanya sebagai seorang pekerja pembersihan separuh masa bagi pusat kegiatan warga tua NTUC Silver Ace.

    Dua jam kemudian, beliau pulang ke rumah untuk menyiapkan sarapan bagi kesemua di rumah, termasuk anak bongsu beliau, Siti Nur Jannah, 6 tahun, yang memerlukan perhatian istimewa – Jannah mengalami gangguan masalah tumpuan dan hiperaktif (ADHD) dan kelengahan pertuturan.

    Beliau bersama ibunya, Cik Fatimah. (Gambar: Sonia Yeo)

    Ibu beliau Fatimah yang berusia 72 tahun pula menghidapi kencing manis, tekanan darah tinggi dan paras kolesterol yang tinggi, dan memerlukan suntikan insulin dua kali sehari, yang dilakukan Azizah sendiri – satu pada waktu pagi dan satu lagi pada sebelah malam.

    Pekerjaan kedua beliau, seorang penghantar bagi khidmat online Lazada, memerlukan beliau ke pelbagai tempat di Bukit Merah.

    Walaupun berasa penat, Azizah berkata beliau akan terus berusaha, dan selalu menyelesaikan tugas-tugasnya sebelum 3.00 petang, supaya dapat memberinya masa yang cukup untuk pulang ke rumah dan menantikan anaknya pulang dari sekolah dengan menaiki bas sekolah.

    Kemudian, beliau akan terus menyiapkan hidangan bagi makan malam.

    Mungkin apa yang digambarkan ini nampak payah, tetapi Azizah berkata beliau sudah mengalami masa-masa yang lebih susah dulu.

    Pada tahun 2010, beliau menganggur dan susah mendapatkan rezeki bagi anak-anak dan ibu beliau selepas bercerai dengan bekas suami.

    “Saya tidak ada wang, satu sen pun tiada,” katanya, menyifatkan pengalaman itu sebagai “tidak boleh dilupakan”.

    “Saya tidak tahu bagaimana untuk mendapatkan bantuan kewangan. Satu hari, ibu saya menyertai NTUC Silver Ace sebagai seorang anggota dan dari sana, saya mengenali penyelianya, yang bertanyakan jika saya mahu bekerja di sana.”

    DETIK PERUBAHAN BAGI AZIZAH

    Di sanalah Azizah mendapat saranan mengenai cara-cara untuk merancangkan bantuan kewangan.

    Selepas itu, anak beliau, Muhammad Nurazizul, 22 tahun, memberitahunya mengenai Khidmat Sosial Beyond, yang merubah hidupnya.

    Selepas menyertai Khidmat Sosial Beyond – sebuah pertubuhan yang bekerjasama dengan belia kekurangan – sebagai seorang sukarelawan, beliau menyertai kumpulan pembuat kuih-muih, yang menjual barangan mereka semasa musim perayaan.

    Sekarang beliau mendapat pendapatan tambahan sekitar S$800 hingga S$900 bagi setiap projek membuat kuih atau kek yang diambilnya.

    “Saya rasa gembira kerana saya dapat membuat ramai kawan daripada jawatankuasa itu – sekitar 30 orang. Tambahan lagi, saya dapat pendapatan tambahan,” kata beliau.

    PELIBATAN DALAM PERSEMBAHAN KOMEDI SECARA LANGSUNG

    Azizah adalah salah seorang daripada mereka yang dapat manfaat daripada inisiatif amal Khidmat Sosial Beyond – sebuah persembahan komedi berseorangan secara langsung, Living Together. No Holds Barred.

    Persembahan semalam saja akan diadakan pada 16 November ini, bertujuan untuk berkongsikan kisah keadaan miskin di Singapura.

    Derma-derma daripada persembahan itu akan disalurkan kepada Khidmat Sosial Beyond dan para penerimanya – sebagai contoh kumpulan pembuat kuih-muih Azizah, yang akan menerima lebih banyak dana untuk membeli bahan-bahan membuat kuih atau kek.

    Living Together. No Holds Barred akan menampilkan komedi mengenai landskap perumahan Singapura yang berbilang kaum dan nasional, dan akan menerjun ke dalam isu-isu yang menjejas rakyat Singapura dengan sekitaran paling dekat di hati mereka – rumah mereka.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Man Chased Own Family Out Of Car, Broke Traffic Rules And Behaved Aggressively Towards Wife During Family Dispute

    Man Chased Own Family Out Of Car, Broke Traffic Rules And Behaved Aggressively Towards Wife During Family Dispute

    At around 11.30pm on 12th November, hubby Azlan and I heard shoutings from our bedroom. This Malay driver in his 30s (car plate number: SGN4611D) parked his car along the Pioneer Road North junction, at the bus stop outside City Harvest Church (Blk 949) and was yelling at 2 ladies in hijab who were with 3 kids (2 of them were around 3 to 6 years and an infant) who were standing by the roadside. Judging by how they were just standing there unsure of what to do and that the car front passenger’s door was open, I had already suspected that they were passengers in the car and was chased out by the driver. The driver then went back into the car and honked non-stop to nothing. After awhile, without closing the front passenger’s door, he reversed at least twice (going against the flow of traffic) to follow the ladies and kids who were walking away. He then drove up the kerb and targeted towards them. One of the older kids was already right in front of the headlights. He then drove off towards PIE and we thought the whole incident was over.

    My hubby didn’t stop looking out the window and was telling me that the ladies and kids were asking around for help. They approached two Indian teenagers (who also witnessed the incident) and requested their help to call a cab. The younger lady, who claimed the driver was her kids’ father (possibly her husband) wanted to bring them all to her parent’s home nearby. As the 2 Indian teenagers were assisting her, my husband spotted the car returned. We were still at home then. According to the 2 Indian teenagers, the driver scolded them and asked to mind their own business as it’s his family issues. Judging by his temper, the 2 Indian teenagers probably did not want to get into a fight with the husband and decided to go to the nearest coffeeshop to call an older Chinese guy for help.

    Hubby and I decided to go down and see what was going on. When we were downstairs, we purposely walked past the family to keep an eye on them. I saw the wife pinned against the wall at a corner and crying while the husband was talking to her with his hands up against the wall and blocking her. We moved a little further from them as the husband was glancing at us and since I’m pregnant, we did not want to get into unnecessary trouble. By then all the witnesses had gathered with us and a few had called the police. By the time the police arrived, the whole family had left. We didn’t know if any domestic violence was involved while we were not around to watch.

    Officers said that for now, there seems to be NO imminent danger and if they do receive a call from the family, they will continue the investigation. The driver was recklessly driving; reversing with the doors open, driving against traffic, driving on pedestrian walkway, making a U-turn at non-designated U-turn spots, beating the red light and has a temper. Let’s just hope no innocent lives will be hurt by this reckless driver. And to the ladies and kids if they had followed the driver back home, stay safe. If you’re in trouble, seek help. There are people willing to help you out of your predicament.

     

    Source: Nurfa Noor

  • Man Hospitalised After His Motorcycle Hit A Wild Boar On BKE

    Man Hospitalised After His Motorcycle Hit A Wild Boar On BKE

    A 25-year-old man has been hospitalised after hitting a wild boar with his motorcycle on the Bukit Timah Expressway (BKE) on Sunday night (Nov 13) – in the second road accident involving the porcine creature this year (2016).

    Both times, both wild boars died.

    The accident on Sunday happened at around 7pm on the BKE heading towards the Pan Island Expressway, after the Dairy Farm Road exit, reported Chinese evening newspaper Shin Min Daily News on Monday.

    It said the motorcyclist, who was not identified, had lost control of his bike after trying to avoid hitting the animal.

    He skidded and landed in the right-most lane of the expressway.

    The man was subsequently warded at the intensive care unit of the National University Hospital and was said to still be unconscious as of Monday morning (Nov 14), with bandages on his head, face and left hand.

    The Singapore Civil Defence Force said it received a call about the accident at 7.18pm and dispatched an ambulance to the scene.

    A 48-year-old cabby, who wanted to be known only as Mr Zhang, told the Chinese paper the boar was about 1m long and appeared to have run out from the forested area on to the BKE.

    This is believed to be the second road accident involving a wild boar this year (2016).

    In April another motorcyclist, identified as 49-year-old senior manager Mr Krishnan, fractured his right shoulder after running into and killing a wild boar on the Seletar Expressway.

    In May, a boy was hospitalised after being injured by a wild boar near Edgefield Plains in Punggol.

     

    Source: The Straits TImes

  • Wanita Disiasat Kerana Dakwa Anak Nyaris Diculik

    Wanita Disiasat Kerana Dakwa Anak Nyaris Diculik

    Seorang wanita berusia 35 tahun sedang disiasat polis kerana dipercayai membuat aduan palsu bahawa anak lelakinya nyaris diculik.

    Polis semalam (14 Nov) menyatakan wanita itu memberitahu polis kelmarin bahawa seorang lelaki tidak dikenali cuba menculik anak lelakinya yang berusia lima tahun ketika beliau membeli-belah di Bukit Panjang Plaza. Beliau mendakwa lelaki itu cuba menculik budak itu dengan menolak kereta sorongnya, namun melarikan diri setelah wanita itu menghalang percubaannya itu.

    Polis mendapati banyak percanggahan semasa melakukan siasatan dan mendapati wanita itu memberikan keterangan palsu.

    Siasatan terhadap wanita tersebut sedang dijalankan. Jika didapati bersalah memberikan keterangan palsu kepada kakitangan awam, wanita itu boleh dipenjara sehingga setahun dan didenda sehingga S$5,000.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Elected Presidency Changes: Big Step Backwards For Malay community

    Elected Presidency Changes: Big Step Backwards For Malay community

    I worry about the unintended consequences of changes to the elected presidency, especially the move to reserve elections for minority candidates.

    I was brought up in an era where we Malays were told we had to fend for ourselves in school and in our careers, as Singaporeans of other races did. After initial trepidation, due in part to seeing how Malays in other countries in the region depended on race-based policies to help them advance, Malay Singaporeans grew out of their historical reliance on such crutches. And that has over time become a source of pride and motivation for the community.

    In my frequent travels to neighbouring countries and in the speeches I deliver there, I speak proudly of the significant progress the community has made as we proved we could stand on our own feet. That was thanks in no small part to the brave decision by our earlier leaders to take away our proverbial crutches and make us compete on a level playing field. Like everything else, healthy competition drives the community to a higher level.

    Now, I worry that all that is being undone. The announcement that next year’s presidential election will be reserved for Malay candidates strikes me as a major step backwards. Like it or not, it risks being read as a vote of no confidence in the community. It seems to suggest that we are still unable to compete on the same level with the rest of the population and that we remain a troubled community that requires – selectively – a big handicap. It makes me wonder what happened to our belief in boosting self-reliance and self-respect through doing away with affirmative action and race-based state aid in education and career progression.

    During the last three decades of minimal race-based policy assistance, Malays have worked hard to prove our self-worth with significant achievements in the education and professional arenas. Today, more private sector and business leaders are drawn from the community than ever before.

    There has been gradual but meaningful progress in all other statistics too, including education. The sense I get from my daily interactions with members of the community is that we are patient in waiting for further public sector achievements. I did not sense any clamour for the next president to be from the Malay community.

    America waited more than 230 years for a member of a minority race to be elected president. That did not make people from minority races there feel any less American. When the day finally arrived in November 2008 and Mr Barack Obama was elected America’s first black president, the outcome was greeted with great celebration not just within the country but in countries across the free democratic world, including those in Asia and Africa.

    Here in Singapore, the last time a president of a minority race was in the Istana was five years ago. The last time we had a Malay president was 46 years ago. I believe most Malays are willing to wait patiently for our next Malay president to be voted into office based on his own merit and in a contest against other capable Singaporeans of different races or creeds, however long it takes.

    I personally think that even without changes to the elected presidency, it will not take quite so long. After all, minority MPs have regularly won elections in single-seat constituencies while others have led teams in group representation constituencies – a scheme originally created to assist minority candidates to be elected into Parliament – instead of being pedestrian members of the GRCs.

    I would argue that more than a Malay president, what Singapore needs is policy consistency – we cannot afford policy twists and turns, especially on a selective basis, no matter how well intended.

    Still, if the chance to have a member of their community as president is offered on a platter, not many Malays will reject such a gift. That is human nature. But what would be even more satisfying is a hard-fought campaign leading to the election of a Malay president who deserves the position based on the famously Singaporean values of grit and merit.

    That is worth waiting for. The changes to the Constitution relating to the elected presidency may have inadvertently denied me and other members of Singapore’s minority communities the pleasure of seeing that happen.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

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