Category: Singapuraku

  • Kirsten Han: Time To Make Singapore A More Inclusive Space

    Kirsten Han: Time To Make Singapore A More Inclusive Space

    Ireland – a largely Catholic country which only decriminalised homosexuality in 1993 and divorce in 1995 – voted resoundingly to amend their constitution and approve same-sex marriage last weekend. They have become the first country in the world to approve gay marriage by popular vote, and at a count of 62 per cent to 38 per cent, no less.

    This piece of news stood in stark contrast to another development circulating on social media in Singapore: that the Media Development Authority (MDA) had apparently banned from radio and TV a song and music video by Jolin Tsai, presumably because its pro-gay message would encourage a push for same-sex marriage here.

    It feels a bit as if the MDA has jumped the gun; there *is* no push for same-sex marriage in Singapore, mostly because everyone is still wondering how to shift the supposedly-not-enforced-but-somehow-still-important-to-keep Section 377A, which criminalises sex between men. On top of that, many in the LGBT community find themselves struggling against the fact that some Singaporeans don’t even recognise that discrimination exists.

    That conservatives exist in every country is beyond doubt; I’m sure there were some fundies praying for the Lord to chuck rain down on gay people in Ireland too.

    But while we’re riding high on the inspiration generated by Ireland’s stellar example, it’s time to think of how our own country could be so much better for everyone living in it. To not just dwell on hate and fear, but on love.

    The repeal of 377A would have little to impact on the lives of heterosexual – or even religious – people. It would, however, mean a lot for LGBT people in Singapore, all of whom have parents, siblings, relatives and friends who would in turn be affected. It would be a strong signal that Singapore’s government will no longer be in the vanguard of discrimination against LGBT people, that it will no longer support the symbolic legislation that validates countless forms of bullying, dehumanising language and prejudice.

    It would be a step towards telling young LGBT persons that they *are* accepted in Singaporean society; that they don’t have to be ashamed of who they are and that they can have a future without stigma and fear in Singapore. It would tell the parents of these LGBT persons that they are not alone, that they don’t have to worry about their children being branded as deviants and criminals. Conservatives aren’t the only ones who care about family; gay people have families too. Love, even familial love, is not exclusive to heterosexuals.

    The court has rejected the constitutional challenge to 377A, essentially pushing the responsibility back to the legislators. Yet legislators have often pointed to Singapore’s conservatism as a reason for maintaining the status quo. As we see from the MDA’s move, the state is not only unwilling to change, but actively restricting the conversation.

    Ireland has done something wonderful and historic in this past weekend. Let us Singaporeans not be caught on the wrong side of history; let us not wait for court cases or politicians to bring us the equality that we should have.

    Make it to Hong Lim Park for Pink Dot. Write to your MP about LGBT rights and the need for anti-discrimination legislation. Talk to your friends about acceptance and diversity. Reach out to LGBT people around you who might need support. Do what you can to create a safe space for them to be who they are and say what they need to say.

    377A continues to loom over us all – a symbol of prejudice and discrimination. Yet we cannot simply wait for it to disappear; we as Singaporeans can do our part to start making Singapore a more inclusive place. Today.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Three-Day Operation Nabs 89 People For Vice And Immigration Offences

    Three-Day Operation Nabs 89 People For Vice And Immigration Offences

    Law enforcement officers arrested 89 people for various offences in a three-day operation to weed out illegal activities, the police said on Monday.

    These included voluntarily allowing their bank accounts to be utilised by unlicensed moneylenders, suspected involvement in vice, drug-related offences and immigration offences.

    The operation was led by Jurong Police Division and supported by the Traffic Police (TP), Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB), Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) and Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF).

    The officers checked 1,240 persons and 1,520 vehicles at the land checkpoints as well as multiple locations in the western part of Singapore, including karaoke lounges in Jurong.

    During a raid at the Sun City karaoke lounge above the Jurong Superbowl bowling alley, police arrested eight Vietnamese women for working illegally at the establishment.

    Shopkeeper Muhammad who runs a provisions stand near the karaoke lounge said that that some of these women were working.

    “So many foreigners there, we can’t be sure that all of them have work passes,” he said.

    The officers also busted prostitution activities in forested areas along Kranji and arrested suspects for drug peddling in Bukit Batok.

    The commander of the Jurong Police Division, Deputy Assistant Commissioner of Police Wilson Lim, said: “Police will continue to work closely with other Home Team agencies to deal with those who carry out such illicit activities.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Singapore A Secular State? Think Again

    Singapore A Secular State? Think Again

    By Michael Y.P. Ang

    In recent years, there have been loud calls to exclude religion from the public sphere in Singapore.

    Singapore is widely seen as a secular state because it has no official religion. But there’s more to secularism than the absence of a state religion.

    Secularism also involves the strict separation of the state from religious institutions and the equal treatment of all citizens under the law, whatever their religion or belief.

    Two weeks ago, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong reinforced the commonly held view of a secular Singapore: “To maintain harmony in Singapore’s multiracial and multi-religious society, the government … has got to be neutral, secular in its approach, and pragmatic in solving problems.”

    However, going by the definition of secular — not connected with religious or spiritual matters — it’s hard to see Singapore as a secular state.

    Let’s consider two points.

    1) Religion-based public holidays

    Have you noticed that more than half of the 11 public holidays you enjoy every year are related to religion? Good Friday, Vesak Day, Hari Raya Puasa, and Deepavali are some of these religion-based holidays.

    With the state giving official recognition to religious holidays, taxpayer money is used to pay public servants a full day’s worth of salary for taking a day off to celebrate a holiday related to a particular religion. Private companies too are legally bound to give their employees a paid day off.

    Doesn’t sound secular, does it? Let’s face it, religion has always been a part of the public sphere in Singapore.

    It’s baffling that Singaporeans who advocate secularism do not question state-sanctioned religious holidays. Perhaps they only believe in selective secularism, voicing their objections only when it is convenient.

    Have true secularists ever considered suggesting Total Defence Day, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Youth Day, Remembrance Day, or any other non-religious day to be observed as a public holiday? They could even argue that the official observance of such days has nation-building value.

    Personally, I like having the various religious holidays. In fact, I wish for more.

    2) Religion-based government agencies

    Another clear indication of Singapore being non-secular is the existence of religion-based statutory boards. Such bodies are government agencies under the care and budget of the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth.

    One of them is the Hindu Endowments Board. Set up under the Hindu Endowments Act in 1968, itmanages four temples, among other functions. Another is MUIS (the Malay acronym for the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore), established when the Administration of Muslim Law Act came into effect in 1968.

    The mission of MUIS is “to work with the community in developing a profound religious life and dynamic institutions”, while its strategic priority is “to set the Islamic agenda, shape religious life and forge the Singaporean Muslim Identity”.

    With government agencies performing religious functions, how can a country consider itself a secular state?

    The lack of public opposition to religion-based statutory boards possibly means that Singaporeans, including secularists, either support or do not object to the allocation of taxpayers’ public resources for religious purposes. This is a positive sign.

    But once again, secularists’ apparent lack of opposition to having religion in the public sphere may mean they are not really serious about secularism.

    Proselytising isn’t only about religion

    Besides emphasising state neutrality on religious matters recently, PM Lee also raised some concerns. He said religious fervour, although in itself positive, could make people “proselytise more aggressively, offending others”.

    We should apply PM Lee’s statement to secular issues as well. Proselytising also means “trying to persuade someone to change their political beliefs to your own”.

    Proselytising per se is perfectly fine, but when people excessively promote their way of life or political beliefs and practically demand others to accept their views or change the status quo, they are crossing the line.

    Don’t cry foul just because others disagree with your beliefs or lifestyle. Social issues, whether they are of a religious or secular nature, are rarely simple and straightforward.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • MUIS Agih Wakaf Berjumlah Lebih $2.7 Juta Di Masjid Al Mawaddah

    MUIS Agih Wakaf Berjumlah Lebih $2.7 Juta Di Masjid Al Mawaddah

    Majlis Ugama Islam (Muis) telah mengagihkan wakaf berjumlah $2,793,035 di Masjid Al Mawaddah di Sengkang semalam.

    Ketua Eksekutif Muis, Haji Abdul Razak Maricar, dan Mufti Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram, telah merasmikan majlis pengagihan wakaf kepada masjid, madrasah, pertubuhan Islam dan golongan yang memerlukan.

    Melahirkan rasa syukur, Haji Abdul Razak berkata agihan itu telah meningkat berbanding $1.13 juta sedekad lalu.

    “Berteraskan aspirasi dan sokongan masyarakat Islam, pulangan daripada aset wakaf telah menghasilkan lonjakan yang amat positif.

    “Alhamdulillah, tahun ini kita berupaya mengagihkan pulangan aset wakaf tiga kali ganda melebihi pengagihan sedekad yang lalu,” katanya.

    Beliau mengajak masyarakat meneruskan legasi dan warisan kedermawanan yang dilakukan pewakif perintis.

    “Masyarakat Islam harus mengambil iktibar mengenang bakti dan wawasan para wakif perintis kita yang telah mewakafkan harta mereka…

    “Masyarakat hari ini masih berpeluang meraih semangat amal jariah yang sama, dengan menyemarakkan sifat dermawan kita,” kata beliau.

    Sebanyak 34 masjid menerima wakaf bagi kerja-kerja operasi, pentadbiran dan pengurusan, termasuk kerja-kerja peningkatan dan pembaikan.

    Selain itu, 26 pertubuhan seperti Persatuan Bertindak Ginjal bagi Masyarakat Islam (MKAC), Rumah Kanak-Kanak Pertapis, Casa Raudha, Persatuan Persuratan Pemuda Pemudi Melayu (4PM) dan Persatuan Kebajikan Muslim Singapura turut menerima wakaf bagi membiayai aktiviti mereka dalam program sosial, penjagaan kesihatan dan pendidikan Islam.

    Kesemua enam madrasah sepenuh masa juga menerima wakaf daripada Wakaf Ilmu dan wakaf lain.

    Ini adalah pengagihan kedua bagi Wakaf Ilmu sejak pelancarannya pada 2012 – pelaburan yang dibuat dari Januari 2014 hingga Disember 2014.

    Ustaz Jazair Jumat, Ketua Dakwah dan Islah Masjid Kampung Siglap, berkata wang daripada wakaf itu dapat membantu pembangunan program Al-Quran di masjidnya.

    “Di Masjid Kampung Siglap, kami mempunyai Darul Quran Singapura dan insya-Allah kami akan memanfaatkan semaksimum mungkin program-program pembangunan Al-Quran dan pembelajaran Al-Quran,” katanya.

    Presiden 4PM, Encik Izzuddin Taherally, pula berkata dengan wang wakaf yang diterima, ia dapat membantu persatuannya mengajak anak-anak muda menyertai program-program kemasyarakatan yang dianjurkannya.

    “Kami akan mencapai tujuan itu dengan mengadakan programprogram seperti projek Roda Roda Ramadan, Remaja Resilien dan Frenz bagi membantu golongan belia,” ujar beliau.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • ‘Superwoman’ Tidak Wujud

    ‘Superwoman’ Tidak Wujud

    Wanita tetap perlukan sokongan semua orang di sekitarnya dan boleh lakukan lebih lagi untuk majukan masyarakat bersama kaum lelaki, kata Ketua Pegawai Eksekutif PPIS, Cik Maznah Masop

    SOALAN (S): Apakah trend mengenai wanita Melayu/Islam yang anda lihat hari ini?

    JAWAPAN (J): Wanita hari ini lebih berpendidikan, lebih ramai bekerja serta lebih lantang dan berani meluahkan pendapat mereka, lebih-lebih lagi dengan adanya media sosial.

    Mereka tidak lagi hanya membincangkan peranan mereka sebagai ibu dan isteri, bahkan sebagai anggota masyarakat. Mereka bercakap tentang budaya, kepercayaan mereka, isu tentang hijab, misalnya, perkembangan semasa dan dasar pemerintah.

    Ini trend positif tetapi kami juga berhati-hati. Ada cara untuk meluahkan pandangan secara objektif untuk memastikan apa yang kita luahkan boleh dikaitkan dengan orang lain, bukan kita syok sendiri sahaja.

    S: Apa isu wanita Melayu/Islam yang menjadi keprihatinan anda?

    J: Saya prihatin mengenai wanita, yang dalam tekanan kehidupan hari ini, hilang arah, matlamat dan nilai pegangan hingga boleh menjejas tingkah laku moral mereka.

    Apabila ini berlaku, ia boleh mendatangkan kesan ke atas anak-anak mereka yang mungkin hilang panduan atau menjejas hubungan suami isteri.

    Contohnya, dahulu kita dengar tentang suami mempunyai hubungan sulit. Sekarang, kita dengar tentang wanita juga terlibat dalam hubungan sulit. Ada hamil dengan anak bukan daripada suami mereka. Secara anekdotal ini sedang berlaku.

    S: Apa pendapat anda tentang wanita berpendidikan yang menjadi suri rumah?

    J: Saya memahami keperluan duduk di rumah selama beberapa tahun, tetapi saya tidak pasti apakah ia perlu berlarutan.

    Jika seseorang dianugerahkan bakat, saya fikir ia satu pembaziran jika beliau tidak keluar bekerja untuk menyumbang kepada masyarakat.

    Ini pendapat peribadi saya, mungkin ada tidak setuju.

    Sudah tentu ada wanita juga menghadapi isu apabila keluar bekerja seperti isu penjagaan anak mereka. Tetapi harap-harap mereka boleh huraikan isu itu dan mendapat sokongan keluarga.

    Mereka juga mempunyai sokongan struktur dengan tersedianya pusat jagaan kanak-kanak atau pusat jagaan pelajar.

    Jika kita jelas bahawa peranan wanita lebih daripada berada di rumah sahaja, kita boleh lakukan lebih lagi untuk memajukan masyarakat kita bersama kaum lelaki.

    S: Apa pendapat anda tentang peranan suami dan bapa dalam konteks kehidupan hari ini di mana wanita juga turut keluar bekerja?

    J: Kaum lelaki perlu mengubah pemikiran mereka dan sedar bahawa wanita berperanan penting, bukan sahaja di rumah, bahkan dalam masyarakat.

    Mereka perlu lebih proaktif dan menyokong isteri mereka yang berpendidikan untuk menyumbang kepada masyarakat.

    Perubahan minda ini harus ditangani sekarang. Ini kerana wanita akan menghadapi lebih banyak cabaran sedang penduduk menua.

    Wanita akan memainkan peranan tambahan menjaga orang tua, selain perlu mengimbangi kerjaya dan menjaga anak-anak.

    Lelaki mesti mengubah pemikiran mereka dan turut proaktif memainkan peranan juga.

    S: Apakah pendapat suami anda tentang jawatan anda sebagai CEO (ketua pegawai eksekutif) sebuah pertubuhan untuk wanita?

    J: Isunya bukan saya menjadi CEO. Isunya ialah saya menyumbang secara aktif kepada masyarakat. Perkara ini kami persetujui sebelum kami berumah tangga.

    Beliau tahu ini laluan kerjaya yang saya pilih dan beliau menghormatinya.

    S: Bagaimanakah anda mengimbangi kerjaya dan keluarga?

    J: Saya mempunyai sistem sokongan baik di rumah, baik daripada suami mahupun ibu bapa saya.

    Satu episod mencabar bagi saya ialah apabila saya perlu menjaga ibu bapa saya yang sakit. Ayah saya, sebelum beliau meninggal dunia, menghidap barah dan ibu saya telah menjalani pembedahan penggantian pinggul.

    Saya bersyukur kerana turut mempunyai sokongan kukuh daripada adik-beradik saya.

    Di tempat kerja saya mempunyai majikan dan pekerja yang memahami keadaan saya dan membolehkan saya bekerja secara fleksibel. Saya juga mempunyai seorang pembantu rumah yang banyak membantu.

    ‘Superwoman’ tidak wujud dalam dunia ini. Seorang wanita perlu sokongan semua orang di sekitarnya.


    BIODATA

    NAMA: Maznah Masop

    USIA: 44 tahun (Julai ini)

    KERJAYA:

    • 2009 – sekarang: Ketua Pegawai Eksekutif (CEO) Persatuan Pemudi Islam Singapura (PPIS)
    • 2005 – 2009: Ketua, Pembangunan Dana, Madrasah Al-Irsyad Al-Islamiah
    • 1998 – 2003: Pengarah, Amni Management & Promotions Pte Ltd
    • 1994 – 1998: Eksekutif, Perdaus

    KELUARGA:

    • Dua anak perempuan berusia 17 tahun dan 15 tahun
    • Suami jurutera di sebuah syarikat berbilang negara

    PENDIDIKAN:

    • Ijazah Sarjana Muda Sastera (Ekonomi), Universiti Nasional Singapura (NUS) 1993
    • Diploma Undang-Undang Syariah, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) 1998

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

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