Category: Singapuraku

  • Local Hijabi: Caucasian Man Pulled My Hijab At Dhoby Ghaut MRT But No One Helped Me

    Local Hijabi: Caucasian Man Pulled My Hijab At Dhoby Ghaut MRT But No One Helped Me

    A screenshot of a Singaporean Muslim lady posting a twitter update saying a caucasian man pulled off her hijab at Dhoby Ghaut MRT station yesterday (August 26). To her horror, no eyewitnesses helped her. A police report has since been lodged.

    Sofia Arissa - Hijabi Assaulted

     

    Source: http://statestimesreview.com

  • Kenneth Jeyaretnam To Lead Reform Party Team Contesting In West Coast GRC

    Kenneth Jeyaretnam To Lead Reform Party Team Contesting In West Coast GRC

    The Reform Party (RP) on Thursday (Aug 27) announced its slate of candidates for the West Coast Group Representation Constituency (GRC) and the Radin Mas single-seat ward.

    Leading the four-man team is the party’s chief Kenneth Jeyaretnam. The other three candidates are chairman Andy Zhu, Darren Soh and Noraini Yunus.

    Party member and businessman Kumar Appavoo will be fielded in the Radin Mas Single Member Constituency (SMC).

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Man Charged For Sexually Abusing Niece Who Was Then Only 12 Years Old

    Man Charged For Sexually Abusing Niece Who Was Then Only 12 Years Old

    A construction firm supervisor appeared in the High Court yesterday accused of sexually abusing his young niece, who had looked up to him as a “father figure”.

    The 51-year-old Malaysian faces a total of six charges for sexual acts with the victim on five occasions from 2005 – when she was just 12 years old – to 2008.

    They include one count of rape, two counts of oral sex, one count of sexual exploitation of a child, one count of outrage of modesty and one count of sexual assault of a minor.

    The man, represented by Mr N. Kanagavijayan, has admitted to the charge of sexual assault, committed in 2008 when the girl was 15. However, he is disputing the other five charges, including the most serious one of rape, which carries up to 20 years’ jail and caning or a fine.

    A seven-day trial started in the High Court yesterday.

    The alleged victim is now 23 years old. A probation officer who accompanied her to report the offences is among the six prosecution witnesses.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Ong Luan Tze said in the prosecution’s opening address that the victim regarded the accused, her maternal aunt’s common law husband, as a “father figure” after her biological father died in 2003.

    The accused abused his position in the victim’s life to sexually groom her and performed sexual acts with her without her consent, the DPP contended.

    On one occasion in 2005, he sexually abused her while helping her to change her clothes to visit her mother in hospital.

    On another occasion, he woke her up and slipped his hand into her shorts.

    The trial continues.

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • MOH: No Link Found Between GBS And Sashimi Consumption

    MOH: No Link Found Between GBS And Sashimi Consumption

    The Ministry of Health (MOH) has not found any link between the Group B Streptococcus (GBS) infection and consumption of sashimi-style raw fish, it said yesterday (Aug 26).

    It posted a clarification on Facebook, stating that its investigations have only found an association between GBS infections and the consumption of “yusheng” — a raw fish dish. It had earlier detected traces of the bacteria on samples of Toman fish and Song fish.

    MOH’s Facebook note comes after was alerted to a rumour being circulated via WhatsApp and SMS. The message claims one person died from a bacterial infection after eating sashimi over the Jubilee weekend and that a professor was critically ill from consuming salmon sashimi two months ago.


    Screenshot of a message circulating via WhatsApp. Photo: Channel NewsAsia

    Last month, the ministry noticed a spike in GBS cases and advised food stall holders to temporarily stop the sales of raw fish dishes using Song fish and Toman fish. A few GBS patients told Channel NewsAsia that they had painful swelling of the joints and some had to have surgery.

    The health ministry yesterday reiterated that there has been a downtrend in the number of GBS cases since mid-July, after the sale of yusheng was halted.

    “MOH would like to reiterate that GBS is a common bacterium that colonises the human gut and urinary tract. While GBS does not usually cause disease in healthy individuals, it may occasionally cause infections of the bloodstream, skin and soft tissue, joints, lungs and brain. The risk factors for GBS infection include underlying chronic or co-morbid conditions,” it said.

    “As a general precaution, vulnerable groups of people, especially young children, pregnant women, elderly persons, or people with chronic illness such as diabetes, should continue to exercise caution by avoiding raw ready-to-eat food.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    PAP – Same Old, Same Old

    The Elections Department (ELD) is tweaking the rules again, raising maximum spending limit from $3.50 to $4.00 per voter, tilting the “level playing” field to political parties with deeper pockets. Other changes include new ballot papers featuring candidates’ mugshots “to help the elderly identify the candidates”. Since we only get to see these guys face to face once in fifty five years, we won’t know the purity of their hearts from a brief encounter. What they should include is an accompanying short quote reflective of their true colours:


    “If you’re lazy and work less, you’ll have less Medisave” – Khaw Boon Wan

     

     

     

     

     


    “Without foreign workers, Singapore is likely to become a ‘garbage city’. Cleanliness is a character thing. It shows who you really are.” – Goh Chok Tong on Tokyo has no rubbish even though the Japanese capital has no rubbish bins in public places

     

     

     

     


    “A manpower policy that advocates hiring “Singaporeans first” will not benefit the economy in the long term” – Senior Minister of State for Manpower Amy Khor

     

     

     

     

     


    “We (also) need to reflect, are we the way they described?” – Baey Yam Keng on Sun Xu’s “more dogs than humans in Singapore”

     

     

     

     

     


    “However, it may not be wise to call for the tradeoffs to be tilted further to an extent that it dissuades good people from coming forward in future” – Grace Fu on ministerial pay cut

     

     

     

     


    “Some cardboard collectors treat it (collection of cardboards) as a form of exercise and activity rather than being cooped up at home” – Tan Chuan Jin

     

     

     

     

     


    “Well, everybody has a car, we have two — my wife drives one, I drive one. We are both professionals, we need to travel” – Koh Poh Koon on car ownership

     

     

     

     

     


    “…I regret making the decision because, in the end, the baby continued to be in intensive care, and KKH now runs up a total bill of more than $300,000…”- Lim Hng Kiang on regretting the decision to save a baby’s life.

     

     

     

     


    “If we spent 387 million dollars, will we get value from that expenditure? In my mind, the answer… is yes.” – Vivian Balakrishnan on YOG budget blowout

     

     

     

     


    “Whether a participant perished or survived depended on where he or she happened to be at the time.” Heng Swee Kiat on why 12 year olds died on Mt Kinabalu

     

     

     

    Tattler

    * The writer blogs at singaporedesk.blogspot.com.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

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