Category: Singapuraku

  • IKEA Singapore To Continue Support For Magic Show By Pastor Lawrence Khong

    IKEA Singapore To Continue Support For Magic Show By Pastor Lawrence Khong

    Furniture retailer Ikea Singapore will not pull out of a tie-up that offers members of its loyalty programme discounted rates for a show that features a pastor known for his views against homosexuality.

    The decision to continue the promotion comes after a thorough review, said the company in a statement on Tuesday.

    It said: “We have spoken directly with the organizers, reviewed the content and confirmed that the Vision show offers high family entertainment value and, on that basis, we are continuing our promotional collaboration.”

    Vision, a magic show performed by pastor Lawrence Khong of Faith Community Baptist Church and his daughter Priscilla, will be held at the Esplanade in July.

    In its statement, Ikea Singapore added that it respects the diversity and equality of all people in the community.

    “We also respect that all individuals have a right to their opinions and personal choices, including the freedom to choose their preferred entertainment,” it said.

    The company thanked customers for their patience as the company deliberated over an issue that had “raised sensitivities in our community”.

    Mr Khong is known for his strong views against homosexuals. Last year, he pledged support for a campaign to “wear white” in protest of the LGBT picnic Pink Dot.

    His church did not respond to queries.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • More Parents Opting For Beyond Parenting Control Order

    More Parents Opting For Beyond Parenting Control Order

    More parents are taking up a Beyond Parental Control (BPC) order, the Singapore Children’s Society Youth Services said. This order applies to children aged 16 and below and have behavioural problems in school or at home, leading to their parents applying to the Court for assistance in managing them.

    Every Friday at Youth Court, a team of social workers and counsellors from the Singapore Children’s Society Youth Service Centre screen complaints from parents wanting to pursue a BPC order. In the first three months of 2015, the team has screened 113 complaints. It screened a total of 373 complaints for the whole of 2014.

    Among the common complaints by parents – that their children were involved in truancy, were runaways or stayed out late at night.

    “A lot of parents who come to court every Friday to lodge the BPC complaint, a lot of them are desperate,” said Dr Carol Balhetchet, Senior Director at the Youth Service Centre. “Some of them are desperate but are open to listening to other possible alternative care or alternative help. But the majority of them come to court with the intention of forcing through the BPC order, of obtaining the BPC order.”

    Before an order is obtained, counsellors organise a pre-mediation session with parents and their children to see if their issues can be resolved. But if such measures fail, the BPC complaint will proceed. Once accepted by a judge, the child is put into a closed institution – either the Singapore Boys’ Home or Singapore Girls’ Home – for four to five weeks. During that time, an investigation is carried on the child’s background, which will be presented to the judge.

    The judge then has three options: To keep the child in a closed institution, or admit the child in an open institution like Boys’ Town, where they can come out during weekends. The child can also be put under a Statutory Supervision Order, where a counsellor will supervise youth and parents. All options can last between one and three years

    GIRLS MAKE UP MAJORITY OF BPC CASES

    In 2013, there were 83 Beyond Parental Control cases, compared to 66 cases in 2014. But a consistent trend has remained since 2008 – girls form the majority of BPC cases. In 2014, 40 cases involved girls, while 26 cases involved boys. The Youth Service Centre of Singapore Children’s Society says it is also seeing girls become tougher and more aggressive.

    “During adolescence, generally youth could face challenges in regulating their emotions and girls tend to have higher emphasis on maintaining good relationships with significant others and friends,” said counseling psychologist at PsyFit Gerald Boh. “If they could not have quality relationships, they might face difficulty fulfilling their underlying need for love and belonging and, as a result, might exhibit inappropriate behaviours.” These could actually be a cry for help, he said.

    There were three Beyond Parental Control cases involving 11- to 12-year-olds, and 24 cases involving 15-year-olds. The age group of 13 to 14 years old, which comprised 39 cases, made up the majority in 2014.

    The Singapore Children’s Society Youth Services said this is a newer trend. In previous years, the majority of BPC cases were between the ages of 14 and 15 years old.

    The Society said this could be due to the fact that parents are now receiving less family caregiver support. In response, they are encouraging parents to spend more quality time with their children to get to know them better. The Society adds that ultimately, community support is a better solution for a delinquent child than intervention from the authorities.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Teenage YouTuber Amos Yee was back at the State Courts on Tuesday (Apr 21) for a bail review. He had been remanded at Changi Prison since last Friday, after no bail was posted for him following a pre-trial conference that day.

    The 16-year-old appeared in court handcuffed and dressed in a purple jumpsuit just after 4pm, and looked calm. Three lawyers, Alfred Dodwell, Chong Jia Hao from Dodwell & Co LLC, and Ervin Tan from Michael Hwang Chambers LLC told the court they would be acting for Yee pro bono. Mr Dodwell said a bailor was on the way, but offered no further details.

    Yee’s parents were at the State Courts on Tuesday, as well as a few other members of the public who said they were there to show moral support for the teen. Activist Jolovan Wham and was spotted at the Court as well.

    Yee’s pre-trial conference has been moved forward to Apr 30, 3pm.

    He was charged with multiple offences on Mar 31, after posting a video which contained disparaging remarks against Christians. On Apr 14, Yee posted on his blog and made two Facebook posts asking for public donations. Doing this meant he flouted his initial bail conditions – which disallowed him to post materials online.

    The Court on Friday changed the police bail to a court bail, and set new conditions for bail such as making the YouTube video private and having to report to an Investigation Officer at Bedok Police Station every day at 9am.

    YEE BAILED OUT BY YOUTH COUNSELLOR

    Youth Councillor Posts Bail For Amos Yee

    At about 6.10pm, Yee was brought to the bail centre, still handcuffed and with ankle restraints, accompanied by more than five officers. Youth and family counsellor Vincent Law posted bail for him.

    Mr Law said that he came forward to post the S$20,000 bail as he is a Christian, and wanted to show he was not offended by Yee’s posts. “It seems the charges say he made disparaging remarks about Christianity. I’m a Christian and I’m stepping up to say I’m not offended,” he said, adding that he, too, is a parent.

    The 51-year-old, who is not related to the Yee family, hopes that Yee will also be willing to be counselled by him, and that he may respond better to a third party.

    Yee was released at about 7pm.

    YEE AGREED TO PULL DOWN OFFENSIVE POSTS: LAWYER

    Lawyer Alfred Dodwell Acting For Amos Yee

    Mr Dodwell is on the board of directors for socio-political website The Independent.Sg. Asked about his pro-bono contribution to the case, he told Channel NewsAsia: “Because he’s a 16-year-old boy and everybody requires and needs legal representation. Needless to say, I have been following these news and I learnt that he’s not had any lawyer come forward to represent him and it is not easy for anybody to manoeuvre through the criminal justice system let alone a 16-year-old.

    “We may not agree with him on what he has posted… (but) if it is a crime it has to be proven in the court of law and it needs some level of representation, that’s what we’re doing in this case.”

    Mr Dodwell said he had yet to meet with Yee to “have a discussion with him on where he wants to go with this”, but that his client has been cooperative so far, having “immediately agreed” to pull down the offensive posts.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

     

  • Maid Punched, Slapped For Eating Fish Not Meant For Her

    Maid Punched, Slapped For Eating Fish Not Meant For Her

    In 2012, a Filipino maid jumped from the bedroom window of a sixth-floor condominium unit to escape the alleged abuse by her employer and her employer’s mother.

    A district court heard that she landed on the fifth-floor rooftop of another building at Maplewoods condominium and broke her legs as a result.

    Her employer, Chua Siew Peng, 43, went on trial yesterday for wrongfully confining Ms Jonna Memeje Muegue at the Bukit Timah Road condominium on Oct 30, 2012, and slapping her the night before.

    Her 74-year-old mother, retired radiograph and medicine technician Lum Wai Lui, will know her fate next month for allegedly pulling the maid’s hair, knocking her head on the wall and pouring bleach on her hands and arms on Oct 29 that year.

    Chua’s 41-year-old sister, Kathleen Chua Siew Wei, is also accused of slapping the maid sometime in May that year.

    Yesterday, Ms Muegue, 26, who is now working for another employer, testified that she was initially treated well when she started work in December 2011.

    She said she was never given the key to the unit’s door and gate from the time she began working for the family.

    She said Lui, whom she called “por por” (grandmother), punished her for eating fish that was not meant for her on Oct 29 that year. After Lum found out, she punched, slapped and slammed Ms Muegue’s head against the wall of the kitchen toilet.

    Ms Muegue said: “She used bleach on me and she poured bleach on my hands and my body.”

    A few minutes later, she said, Chua Siew Peng came in and pulled her hair and slapped her many times.

    Chua then told her to stand in one corner of the toilet and to take a shower at around midnight.

    In the morning, she was alone in the flat when she climbed out of a bedroom window and escaped.

    She was later referred to the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics and a police report was lodged. She was warded in hospital and then admitted to a nursing home.

    The hearing continues.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Raffles Education Corporation Director Lists Multiple Fake Degrees On CV

    Raffles Education Corporation Director Lists Multiple Fake Degrees On CV

    Netizens are continuing to dig up people with questionable degrees following the scandal at IDA where a worker was found to have a fake degree and IDA, instead of taking action, defended the staff member.

    See: IDA Defends Decision to Hire Foreigner with ‘Fake’ DegreeDishonest People Must Never Work for the Government

    Now, Netizens have dug up this “Dr” Terence Seet living and working in Singapore. Almost all of his degrees are from known and reported degree mills, yet he was still able to work as a Director at Raffles Education Corporation:

    Templeton University is a degree mill.

    Next, Sree Raghavendra Research Foundation University where he did his MBA is ALSO a fake university. It is listed here as a fake university in India.

    Lastly, his phD from Open International University is a sham degree too. Open International University is also a known degree mill. And can you believe it? He earned his phD in just a year!

    He even posted photos of his phD on facebook:

    How on earth did a person with a whole string of fake qualifications get a job in Singapore?

    What is MOM doing? I urge MOM and the Minister in charge to come clean.

    He even had a photo with former President SR Nathan (https://fbcdn-sphotos-f-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/385161_10150466513543007_746855864_n.jpg?oh=79e995ed3ace5ade25aa7658f647520e&oe=559AB940&__gda__=1440947654_30a443fb604a44fe53a5a5af1683a579).

    This is how lousy the system is. Even a former President of Singapore can’t detect a fake degree holder even if he is right in front of him.  Terence Seet was also involved when a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) was signed between Singapore and India. Proof is this album here: https://www.facebook.com/terenceseet/media_set?set=a.10150093780978007.284539.651563006&type=3

    This Director of Raffles Education Corporation with the fake degrees,  “Dr” Terence Seet,  has represented Singapore in India at major events! Is that not a disgrace?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWG6vZohfQE

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

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