Category: Singapuraku

  • Boy, 13, Falls To Death

    Boy, 13, Falls To Death

    A 13-YEAR-OLD boy fell from the 10th floor of a Housing Block flat in Bendemeer and died on Wednesday night.

    Secondary 2 student Muhammad Aidil Zahid was with a group of friends from a nearby secondary school, Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao reported yesterday.

    They had been playing football when he and three others went up Block 24.

    He fell from the 10th floor at about 6pm and landed on a platform at the second floor.

    Police told My Paper yesterday that a “13-year-old boy was found lying motionless” and pronounced dead by paramedics.

    Aidil’s mother, who gave her name as Anna, rushed to the scene and broke down when she saw the body.

    The 34-year-old housewife said he was a carefree boy who was close to her.

    She told Wanbao that he was on probation as he had been involved in a case of theft and had to be home by 6pm. When he did not return by then, she felt that something was wrong.

    Residents said they heard boys shouting before the accident occurred.

    Madam Lin, 77, who lives on the 10th floor, said she heard agitated fighting among a group of teenagers at the stairs and one of them shouting “tolong tolong”, or help in Malay, before a loud thud was heard.

    The boy’s principal told Wanbao that the school has contacted the family to give support.

     

    Source: AsiaOne

  • Six Bangladeshis Are First In Singapore To Face Terrorism Financing Charge

    Six Bangladeshis Are First In Singapore To Face Terrorism Financing Charge

    Six radicalised Bangladeshi nationals who were detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA) in April this year are the first to be prosecuted under the Terrorism (Supression of Financing) Act.

    The six men – Rahman Mizanur, Mamun Leakot Ali, Miah Rubel, Zzaman Daulat, Md Jabath Kysar Haje Norul lslam Sowdagar, and Sohel Hawlader lsmail Hawlader – were charged in court on Friday (May 27), “for providing and/or collecting property for terrorist purposes”, said a police statement.

    Of the six, two – Miah Rubel and Md Jabath Kysar Haje Norul lslam Sowdagar – will also be charged for possession of property for terrorist purposes under the same Act.

    The six were part of a group of eight plotting to establish an Islamic state in Bangladesh, according to a statement by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on May 3.

    The group – which called itself Islamic State in Bangladesh – was set up by 31-year-old S-Pass holder Rahman Mizanur in March this year.

    The rest of the group members – whose ages range from 26 to 34 – are Work Permit holders. All of them were working in the local construction and marine industries.

    Based on investigations by MHA, the group had identified several possible attack targets in Bangladesh, and possessed documents on weapons and bomb making. They also had significant amount of ISIS and Al Qaeda radical material, and planned to recruit other Bangladeshi nationals working in Singapore to grow their group.

    MHA said it had also seized funds the group had raised to buy firearms to carry out their planned terror attacks in Bangladesh.

     

    Source: ChannelNews Asia

  • Lanjut Usia Tak Bererti Puasa Terganggu

    Lanjut Usia Tak Bererti Puasa Terganggu

    DALAM meniti usia yang semakin senja, apa lagi yang diharapkan selain dikurniakan kesihatan yang baik, kebahagiaan dan kesenangan hidup di samping keluarga dan anak cucu.

    Namun, warga tua tidak boleh mengambil ringan dalam mengecapi kehidupan dan kesihatan ketika meniti bulan puasa nanti.

    Keprihatinan inilah yang bakal dikongsi oleh pakar geriatrik, Dr Nur Farhan Alami, sempena bulan Ramadan bagi mempersiap warga senja menjalani puasa dengan lancar.

    Dr Nur Farhan akan mengupas tajuk Sudah Tua, Masih Boleh Puasa Ke? dalam Bengkel Kesihatan Pra-Ramadan anjuran Berita Harian pada Sabtu, 4 Jun.

    Beliau, antara lain, akan menyentuh tentang langkah berjaga-jaga yang perlu diambil oleh warga emas semasa berpuasa.

    Dr Nur Farhan juga akan membentangkan aspek fisiologi orang tua – perubahan biologi dan psikologi mereka – yang akan berlaku pada setiap tahap kehidupan.

    Impak penuaan juga menyebabkan seseorang individu kehilangan atau tidak dapat mempertahan keseimbangan badan.

    Segala perubahan ini perlu diketahui dan difahami oleh penjaga warga emas bagi memastikan mereka benar-benar dapat menyesuaikan diri dengan peranan warga emas yang dijaga.

    Bahaya jatuh dan hilang upaya juga akan disentuh oleh Dr Nur Farhan.

    Justeru, beliau akan menerangkan tentang perlunya warga emas memiliki kemahiran menjaga diri agar mereka berada dalam keadaan fizikal dan psikologi terbaik semasa mengharungi bulan puasa.

    Dr Nur Farhan ialah antara tiga anggota panel dalam bengkel ini.

    Imam Masjid Al-Muttaqin, Ustaz Muslim Amad, akan turut tampil dan memperkatakan tajuk Hidup Sihat Keluarga Bahagia.

    Doktor Keluarga, Dr Elly Sabrina Ismail, pula akan memperkatakan tentang Fit Ramadan Bersama Famili. Makan Dan Senam Sihat Ketika Ramadan.

    Secara umum, mereka akan menyentuh tentang menjaga kesihatan sepanjang bulan Ramadan yang perlu sentiasa diberi keutamaan.

    Apabila badan cergas seseorang dapat meneruskan puasa tanpa masalah kesihatan.


    YANG DAFTAR AWAL DIDAHULUKAN

    Penganjur: Berita Harian
    Tarikh: 4 Jun 2016
    Tempat: Berita Harian, News Centre, Singapore Press Holdings, 1000 Toa Payoh North
    Daftar Masuk: Bermula 9.30 pagi
    Bengkel: 10 pagi hingga 1 petang
    Panel:

    • Ustaz Muslim Amad, Imam Masjid Al-Muttaqin
      Tajuk: Hidup Sihat Keluarga Bahagia
    • Dr Elly Sabrina Ismail, Doktor Keluarga
      Tajuk: Fit Ramadan Bersama Famili.
      Makan Dan Senam Sihat Ketika Ramadan
    • Dr Nur Farhan Mohd Alami, Pakar Geriatrik
      Tajuk: Sudah Tua, Masih Boleh Puasa Ke?

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

  • A Confused Muslim, Once Again

    A Confused Muslim, Once Again

    I found myself sucked into a debate while having breakfast at a mamak restaurant recently. It all started with a friendly chat about the call by Penang Opposition Leader, Jahara Hamid to remove a Taoist shrine from Armenian Park in Georgetown.

    “You are a Muslim. Tell me why Muslims do this?” asked an uncle who joined me for my morning nasi lemak.

    “Apparently they are confused,” I replied with a chuckle.

    “I don’t think so. This is something they are doing on purpose. You should know – you are a Muslim.”

    Getting somewhat defensive, I blurted, “Not all Muslims are the same.”

    “So you don’t practice your religion?” the uncle shot back.

    Realising the conversation had taken a serious turn, I tried explaining: “I do practice my religion to the best of my ability. But that is not what we are talking about here.”

    “It is precisely what we are talking about. The lady who wanted the shrine to be removed; the man who wanted ‘No Pork’ signs to be banned, the group who wanted the cross taken down – you all have the same faith. You all read the same Holy Book…”

    “I disagree. You can’t judge everyone based on the conduct of a small group of Muslims. I do not go around persecuting people. I do not go around telling people how to live their lives. I support freedom and human rights. I am no extremist. Most Muslims are not extremists.” I was clearly upset by now.

    “Girl, you follow your Holy Book and so does the confused Muslims and the extreme Muslims. If all Muslims accept the one and only Holy Book and live by it, they are no different from one another. They are all extremists – including you.”

    “I disagree. I do not condone discrimination, violence and terrorism. Islam is not a religion of violence. Islam is a religion of peace,” I argued, as the uncle had gotten on my nerves with his blanket judgements.

    “Your Holy Book promotes violence. There is even a verse saying: ‘Go and kill.’ Now how can a religion which promotes killings be a peaceful religion?”

    “There are more than six thousand verses in our Holy Book – why emphasise on the negatives? Why aren’t you talking about the messages of kindness, love and compassion in most of the verses?” I countered, not realising that I had raised my voice in the process.

    The uncle laughed, “Girl, religion is not like a plate of mee goreng you order at a mamak shop. You don’t get to tambah pedas or kurang pedas; tambah taugeh or takdak taugeh; tambah telur or tambah ayam. You can’t be selective of which content suits you and drop those you disagree with.”

    The uncle got me thinking. If a good Muslim accepts every single verse in the Holy Book without any argument, does that make me, a cherry-picking liberal Muslim and a moderate, a bad Muslim?

    I went home that day, quite confused.

    There are approximately 30 million people in Malaysia, 60% of whom are Muslims. If a mere 1% of Malaysia’s 18 million Muslims are extremists, why is it that we haven’t witnessed violence or crime perpetrated by some 180,000 extremists?

    Clearly, that could mean only one thing – extreme Malaysian Muslims don’t even make up 1% of our Muslim population. That makes me wonder – why then did the uncle get so worked up over a tiny number of people?

    More importantly, if 99% of Malaysian Muslims are non-extremists, why haven’t we seen even 1% of the 17,820,000 non-extremists fighting against extremism in our country?

    Maybe that’s what makes us – the non-extreme, moderate ones – bad Muslims. We do not fight injustice and cruelty. We are after all, moderates – in thinking and behaviour. We can talk for hours about Arabisation, Islamaphobia, Zakir Naik, Zionist and Shariah law. But when it comes to fighting extremism and terrorism, we hide behind our moderate robe. That’s the problem with being a moderate Muslim. We tolerate nonsense.

    Perhaps that is also why we moderates like to insist that Islam is a peaceful religion – it allows us to justify our laid back attitude. In response to any extreme movement, we, the moderates peacefully make a peaceful statement, clarifying how peaceful Islam is, so we can get back to our peaceful lives, sipping kopi O at Kedai Kopi Ahmad.

    In conclusion, although I do not agree with the uncle on most counts, I believe he got one thing right – we are not good Muslims. As long as we tolerate nonsense, the moderates are equally as bad as the extremists.

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com

  • SMRT Contractor Suffered Burns After Electrocuted Doing Maintenance Work

    SMRT Contractor Suffered Burns After Electrocuted Doing Maintenance Work

    A rail worker survived a 750-volt electrical shock yesterday in what appeared to be another serious safety lapse at SMRT.

    In an incident that came just two months after a pair of SMRT trainees were killed by a train while they did maintenance work on a track, a contractor sustained burns while working on a power-supplying third rail. The incident happened at around 1.50am near the Sembawang station.

    Like the two dead trainees, the injured man was in his 20s. He was taken to Khoo Teck Puat Hospital in a Singapore Civil Defence Force ambulance, and was discharged after being treated for electrical burns to his left hand.

    SMRT spokesman Patrick Nathan said: “Three SMRT staff, along with two contractors, were on the track by the platform of Sembawang MRT station to conduct maintenance work during engineering hours.

    “One of the contractors was using a third-rail gauging bar to measure the height and distance of the third rail from the running rail, to ensure the correct positioning of the third rail, which supplies power to the trains. While carrying this out, the contractor sustained a burn injury to his left hand.”

    Mr Nathan said “the necessary approval was given to the team to access the track for the maintenance work”.

    “Our findings show that the contractor proceeded to an adjacent sector instead, for which prior approval had not been sought and where the traction power had not been switched off,” he said.

    The incident triggered a circuit breaker at the switch room at the Sembawang station.

    According to former SMRT employees, there are several layers of protection for workers on the track. Beyond authorising access, workers must be told where they can go. Short circuit devices are also installed, so that in case a third rail is accidentally switched on, workers are not electrocuted by the 750 volts of direct current.

    The Land Transport Authority said it would investigate.

    On March 22, two SMRT workers were killed by a train travelling at 60kmh near the Pasir Ris station. They were part of a team sent to check a potential equipment flaw.

    Last month, SMRT admitted that safety lapses led to the incident.

    In a blog post yesterday, National Transport Workers’ Union executive secretary Melvin Yong cited the incident and stressed the importance of workplace safety.

    “While service excellence is important, workplace safety should never be compromised,” he wrote.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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