Category: Sosial

  • Here’s What Lee Kuan Yew Did When WW2 Hit Singapore 75 Years Ago

    Here’s What Lee Kuan Yew Did When WW2 Hit Singapore 75 Years Ago

    February 15 is the day when the British surrender to the invading Japanese forces in Singapore, and this year marks the 75th anniversary of one of the darkest period in our island nation’s history — the Japanese Occupation (1942 to 1945).

    Many of S’pore’s past leaders, such as Lee Kuan Yew and David Marshall, were young men during that period. They experienced the hardships, felt the hunger brought on during that period, and lived through the uncertainties with some narrow escapes.

    Following our previous story on what these founding fathers did at the outbreak of war,  let’s now take a look at some of their experiences during the Occupation.

    1. Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first prime minister (1959 to 1990): He had a lucky break as he escaped theSook Ching massacre.

    Lee was 18 years old when the Japanese Occupation of Singapore began.

    Source: NAS

     

    Recording his Japanese Occupation experience in his memoirs, The Singapore Story: Memoirs of Lee Kuan Yew, Lee wrote that a few days into the Occupation, the Japanese carried out the Sook Ching operation to cleanse the local Chinese population of anti-Japanese elements. He reported to Jalan Besar stadium together with his family friend and helper, Koh Teong Koo, for registration and screening. He narrowly escaped being one of the many Chinese rounded to be massacred in the operation.

    “Soon after the Japanese soldiers left my house, word went around that all Chinese had to go to a registration centre at the Jalan Besar stadium for examination. I saw my neighbour and his family leave and decided it would be wiser for me to go also, for if I were later caught at home the Japanese military police, the Kempeitai, would punish me. So I headed for Jalan Besar with Teong Koo.

    As it turned out, his cubicle in his coolie-keng, the dormitory he shared with other rickshaw pullers, was within the perimeter enclosed by barbed wire. Tens of thousands of Chinese families were packed into this small area. All exit points were manned by the Kempeitai. There were several civilians with them, locals or Taiwanese. I was told later that many of them were hooded, though I do not remember noticing any.

    “After spending a night in Teong Koo’s cubicle, I decided to check out through the exit point, but instead of allowing me to pass, the soldier on duty signalled me to join a group of young Chinese. I felt instinctively that this was ominous, so I asked for permission to return to the cubicle to collect my belongings.

    He gave it. I went back and lay low in Teong Koo’s cubicle for another day and a half. Then I tried the same exit again. This time, for some inexplicable reason, I got through the checkpoint. I was given a “chop” on my left upper arm and on the front of my shirt with a rubber stamp. The kanji or Chinese character jian, meaning “examined”, printed on me in indelible ink, was proof that I was cleared. I walked home with Teong Koo, greatly relieved.”

     

    Images of Sook Ching screening centres, taken at the Syonan Gallery.
    Images of Sook Ching screening centres, taken at the Syonan Gallery.

     

    Source: Extracted from http://mothership.sg

  • Jufrie Mahmood: Don’t Question The Loyalty Of Malays To Singapore

    Jufrie Mahmood: Don’t Question The Loyalty Of Malays To Singapore

    During the war my late father, who was then an officer in the Civil Defence was busy risking his life evacuating people from buildings bombed by the Japanese warplanes.

    Compare this with what the father of someone in the ruling party did, collaborating with the Japanese invaders while many of our countrymen were being tortured and executed. For what my father did he was honoured by the Queen, head of the government of the day, with a medal (MBE) while the father of that person was posthumously honoured by the Japanese government for his services.

    And I am a Malay and they dare question my and my community’s loyalty to this nation.

    That is where it hurts!

     

    Source: Mohamed Jufrie Mahmood

  • Crocodile Spotted At Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve

    Crocodile Spotted At Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve

    Stomper Patsy was trekking at Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve this morning (Feb 16) with her friend when she spotted what looked like a log floating in the wetland.

    Upon closer inspection, the Stomper realised it was a crocodile after she noticed that the ‘log’ had a tail.

    According to the Stomper, the crocodile was roughly 1.5m in length and it looked like it was having a snapping good time just floating around.

     

    Source: www.stomp.com.sg

  • Abused Maids Should Use MOM’s System To Report Abusive Employers

    Abused Maids Should Use MOM’s System To Report Abusive Employers

    The Ministry of Manpower has a “feedback” system which allows an employer to recommend that a worker not be employed here if s/he is undesirable or “bad”. I have always been opposed to this because MOM’s decision to accept such feedback is based on the employer’s story only without any proper investigation.

    I don’t think such a feedback system should exist, whether it is a complaint by an employer or a worker. Claims and complaints need to be investigated properly. But now I have decided to turn the tables and write negative feedback about abusive employers to MOM.

    What triggered this? This afternoon, despite acknowledgement by MOM that an employer (who is an SMU professor with a Phd from MIT) had pressured a domestic worker to kneel on the floor to say sorry for mistakes made, and had to write 500 times “I will follow what grandma tells me to” as punishment, she was still unfairly terminated by the employer and had to return home.

    Another domestic worker was threatened and had a knife pointed in her direction by the employer. Despite filing a complaint at MOM, she was told she had “no case” and had to return home.

    Why should migrant workers have to suffer in silence when such injustice happens? Why should you have to lose your job when your employer points a knife at you, humiliates and tortures you mentally? We need to take action.

    If abusive employers can submit negative feedback about you for no good reason and MOM blacklists you without thorough investigations, it is time to fight back. I don’t like this feedback system. But it looks like we have no choice because too many migrant workers have been unfairly punished by it.

    You can feedback an abusive employer and recommend that s/he be barred from hiring workers to the following email: [email protected]. If you are a domestic worker and need help with this, I’m happy to assist you. HOME Singapore


    Republished from Jolovan’s FB.

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    A trending topic on social media has recently been this question: What in the world is wrong with Yishun?

    “Build a wall around Yishun,” says a popular meme, while a Twitter account has been set up, dedicated to weird happenings in this northern town.

    Somehow, Yishun has developed a reputation for bad news. Alongside the everyday events, Yishun is also home to cat abuse, murder, car chases, brothel raids, civilians trying to attack policemen with stun guns, loan sharks, falling concrete slabs, sinkholes, feuding taxi drivers, shopping mall stabbings and more.

    Could it be something in the air? Or perhaps the water?

    But it turns out that the problem with Yishun is simple, just like what most people won in the Toto draw last week: Nothing.

    It is a made-up phenomenon, driven by media coverage and confirmation bias.

    Assistant Professor Liew Khai Khiun, from Nanyang Technological University’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, said Yishun’s reputation boils down to “public imagination”.

    By coincidence, one or two sensational things happen in the estate that draw widespread coverage, some enterprising wags seize upon it and soon the idea that the place is jinxed enters almost mainstream thought.

    “For example, Woodlands had that murder case on Chinese New Year, along with the water tank murder in 2013, but the place is not associated with dysfunctionality.”

    Emphasising the role of media attention, Mr Louis Ng, an MP for Nee Soon GRC, said cat killings had been going on since 2012, but most people did not know about them at the time.

    Only after a press conference in December 2015 did people begin looking out for such incidents and highlighting them.

    Soon, Yishun became synonymous with the phrase “cat killer”.

    Mr Ng, who is also head of animal welfare group Acres, said cat abuse happens in other neighbourhoods – most recently in Tampines, Ang Mo Kio and Redhill – but the publicity does not reach the same level.

    “There’s a balance of positive and negative news with every estate. But a lot more people read the bad news,” he noted.

    There is also an expectation that a public housing estate in the heartland is insulated from problems that beset more worldly areas.

    Prof Liew said: “For example, Geylang is not associated with being a family-friendly place like the HDB heartland.”

    So if something occurs in Yishun, people sit up and take notice.

    These factors combine to create an often darkly funny, dystopian image of the town.

    “Perhaps people want to reaffirm their own geographical biases,” said Prof Liew. “For example, people in the east may not like to travel that far, so they pick on this to justify themselves.”

    He added that Yishun’s demographics are similar to those of other housing estates and its social problems, such as poverty, are found elsewhere in Singapore as well.

    That Yishun’s popular image is firmly tongue-in-cheek is clear in the negligible impact on property values.

    R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng said: “I wouldn’t say the spate of bad news would affect property prices there.”

    He added that buyers make decisions based on budget and location and take into account the available amenities and connectivity to the city centre.

    Property in Yishun still draws buyers, he pointed out.

    He said: “In 2015, a private residential project, Northpark Residences, was launched. Although prices were on the steeper side, averaging $1,300 per sq ft, there was still overwhelming interest.

    “This was because the project offered integrated amenities.”

    There is also a more sinister side to the misrepresentation of Yishun, said Ms Lee Bee Wah, an MP for Nee Soon GRC.

    Though netizens may find it funny to cherry-pick incidents and poke fun at the town, the jokes may hurt the feelings of some.

    Ms Lee has received feedback from upset residents, some of whom have been the target of insensitive jokes. “It will affect the morale of the hard-working police and other community partners in Yishun,” she said. “If you work hard every day to make somewhere a peaceful home, but only the negative incidents get blown up, you would be a little discouraged too.”

    She urged people to also acknowledge positive events in Yishun.

    Vegetable seller Jenny Ong, 47, has lived in Yishun Avenue 6 for almost two decades. She said: “People here are actually nice and normal. My neighbours are friendly and we are all on good terms.”

    She regards her regular customers as friends, having served them for years, and does not mind when some make purchases on credit.

    “There’s that trust,” she said. “Some people say Yishun is a kampung because it is far from the city, but I find it cosy.”

    Mr Muhamad Riduwan, 24, a driver, has lived in Yishun Ring Road for more than a year. He first noticed the jokes on Facebook a few months ago but laughs them off.

    The parrot enthusiast said that with developments such as the Seletar West Link, Yishun is not as inaccessible as some make it seem.

    “Things like fighting, murder and animal abuse happen everywhere,” he said. “We can’t stop people from saying what they want.”

    To put the stereotypes to rest, Prof Liew suggests making relevant statistics public.

    “Perhaps it’s time to raise the question of whether Singapore’s police should release figures for crime rates by region,” he said. “If not, such stereotypes might persist.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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