Category: Sosial

  • Myanmar Calls ASEAN Talks Over Rohingya

    Myanmar Calls ASEAN Talks Over Rohingya

    [YANGON] Myanmar has called an emergency Asean meeting to discuss the Rohingya crisis, a diplomat said Monday, as regional tensions deepen over a bloody military crackdown on the country’s Muslim minority.

    More than 20,000 Rohingya have flooded into Bangladesh over the past two months, fleeing a military campaign in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state.

    Their stories of mass rape and murder at the hands of security forces have galvanised protests in Muslim nations around the region, with Buddhist-majority Myanmar facing diplomatic pressure from its neighbours.

    Last week Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak lashed out at Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi for allowing “genocide” on her watch, speaking before thousands of angry protesters in Kuala Lumpur.

    Myanmar, which has vehemently denied the accusations, responded by angrily summoning Malaysia’s ambassador and banning its workers from going to the country.

    A diplomatic source in the Philippines confirmed Myanmar had invited them for an emergency Asean meeting to discuss “the Rohingya issue”.

    The source declined to give more details on the meeting, which the Nikkei reported would be held in Yangon on Dec 19. Myanmar officials could not be reached for comment.

    The bloodshed presents the biggest challenge to Nobel Peace prize winner Ms Suu Kyi since her party won the country’s first democratic elections in a generation last year.

    Last week the UN’s special adviser on Myanmar criticised her handling of the crisis, saying it had “caused frustration locally and disappointment internationally”.

    Ms Suu Kyi also held talks over Rakhine with the foreign minister of Indonesia, after cancelling a visit to the country in November following protests and an attempted attack on the Myanmar embassy.

    State media report almost 100 people have been killed – 17 soldiers and 76 suspects – in the army operation in Rakhine that followed deadly raids on police border posts on Oct 9.

    That includes six suspects who died during interrogations, the Global New Light of Myanmar said on Saturday, out of some 575 people who have been detained.

    Advocacy groups put the death toll in the hundreds, but foreign journalists and independent investigators have been barred from visiting the area to verify the figures.

    With the crisis showing no sign of abating, the government over the weekend extended a 7.00pm to 6.00am curfew across the locked-down area for another two months.

     

    Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

  • Handsome Police Officer Shows He Is A Pussy Cat Magnet

    Handsome Police Officer Shows He Is A Pussy Cat Magnet

    <Facebook post by Benjamin Cheah>

    Guess what can happen if you leave your car and comes back in 10 minutes? Well….that can happen lol! Cats will be cats

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • I Ordered Roti John Requesting Mutton Replaced With Chicken, All I Got Was Unseasoned Roti With Egg

    I Ordered Roti John Requesting Mutton Replaced With Chicken, All I Got Was Unseasoned Roti With Egg

    PLEASE SPREAD AWARENESS !

    Last night I went to newton circus to eat at the famous food centre with a friend. It really wasn’t all that crowded for a Saturday night.

    faizur-newton-hawker

    I ordered Roti John from Faizur. I very clearly told the person cooking himself “bro, I don’t want mutton. Please change to some other meat like chicken”. He acknowledged.

    When the food arrived, this is the atrocity that came with it. No meat at all. Just the bread, and egg. I spent $6 on this?!
    I asked the stall to at least add some minced chicken meat on the side, but they said they couldn’t do it. When I asked for some other form of change, he said he’ll get back to me. I never saw him again.

    Defeated, I went to eat the disappointing meal. It wasn’t even seasoned; no salt or pepper.

     

    Source: Hann Tranquilo III in Halal Cafes & Restaurant in Singapore

  • Dr Hossein Rezai, Pereka Masjid Assyafaah, Dinobat “Pereka Terbaik” Anugerah Reka Bentuk Presiden

    Dr Hossein Rezai, Pereka Masjid Assyafaah, Dinobat “Pereka Terbaik” Anugerah Reka Bentuk Presiden

    Buat julung-julung kalinya sejak Anugerah Reka Bentuk Presiden dilancarkan pada 2006, seorang jurutera, Dr Hossein Rezai, adalah antara tiga penerima anugerah berprestij, “Pereka Terbaik”.

    Anugerah itu diberikan oleh Presiden Tony Tan Keng Yam semalam (9 Dis) di satu majlis yang diadakan di Istana, menurut Majlis DesignSingapore dan Penguasa Pembangunan Semula Bandar (URA) dalam satu kenyataan.

    (Dari kiri) Dr Hossein Rezai, Raymond Woo dan Rene Tan.

    Dr Rezai, pengarah bagi Web Structures dan juga seorang jurutera berkanun dalam kejuruteraan awam dan struktur, sudah melibatkan diri dengan projek-projek reka bentuk dan pembangunan seperti Masjid Assyafaah, yang menggunakan rangka lengkung konkrit untuk mewujudkan ruang solat yang bebas tiang di tingkat satu dan yang dapat menampung tiga tingkat bilik-bilik darjah dan ruang sampingan lain.

    (Gambar: Web Structures)

    REKA BENTUK MASJID ASSYAFAAH JIMAT KOS

    Rangka lengkung itu membantu mewujudkan ruang yang lebih luas di tingkat bawah serta mengurangkan kos binaan sebanyak 6.5 peratus.

    Kos keseluruhan pembinaan bangunan masjid itu adalah AS$43 juta (S$30 juta).

    Dr Rezai memberitahu Mediacorp bahawa reka bentuk yang baik dan yang dapat menjimatkan kos bukan sesuatu yang mustahil.

    “Dengan reka bentuk struktur kami, tiada sebab mengapa kami perlu menggunakan lebih banyak bahan daripada apa yang benar-benar diperlukan. Dari segi struktur, anda tidak akan meraih apa-apa dengan membelanjakan lebih banyak wang atau menggunakan lebih banyak bahan. Oleh itu, kami mengurangkan pengeluaran karbon dioksida dengan mengurangkan penggunaan bahan.”

    TURUT TERLIBAT BINA KAMPUS BARU MEDIACORP

    Projek-projek lain Dr Rezai di Singapura, termasuk kampus baru Mediacorp setinggi 12 tingkat, seluas 800,000 kaki persegi yang terletak di Stars Avenue serta Pusat Tokio Marine dan Ardmore Residence.

    (Gambar: Web Structures)

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Discouraged, More Under 30 Stop Looking For Jobs

    Discouraged, More Under 30 Stop Looking For Jobs

    After he graduated with a degree in economics and finance in 2014, Mr Haziq Baharudin spent a year sending out hundreds of resumes as he looked for a permanent job.

    Late last year, the 25-year-old decided it was time to give up on his job search after he failed to receive any responses.

    He decided he would resume his search for a full-time position when the economy improves and joined his friends and started an F&B business.

    Mr Haziq is part of a growing number of discouraged workers here aged under 30.

    This year, there were 1,200 young discouraged workers, up from 700 last year. A discouraged worker is someone who is not actively looking for a job because he or she does not think that a search will yield results.

    When the prevailing outlook in the economy is gloomy and there is a shortage of jobs, the incidence of discouraged workers tends to increase.

    This year, there were 9,900 discouraged workers, up from 8,700 last year but lower than the 11,100 in 2009.

    According to the Ministry of Manpower’s (MOM) advance release on the labour force two weeks ago, 6,900 of discouraged workers – nearly 70 per cent – were aged above 50.

    The under 30s were the second largest group at 12 per cent.

    The MOM report cited some reasons for workers being discouraged – the belief that there is no suitable work available, employers’ discrimination or the lack of necessary qualifications, training or experience.

    National University of Singapore (NUS) labour economist Liu Hao Ming says it is hard to guess if young discouraged workers here are highly educated.

    He said: “By definition, these individuals believe that they cannot find a job at the wage rate that is at or above their reservation wages (lowest wage rate at which a worker is willing to accept a particular type of job).

    “It… is a mix of expectation of acceptable wages and probability of finding such jobs.”

    Mr Haziq admits that his chances of employment could have been limited because he insisted on getting a job in the creative industry.

    Eventually, worry over his finances led him to set up SteamHaus with his friends.

    SteamHaus sells steamed buns at events and has been quite successful so far.

    He said: “I think I would be a lot more stressed if the business was going badly. I saved quite a bit during National Service and from my freelance jobs, but I was worried this would dry up.”

    NUS sociologist Tan Ern Ser thinks that the number of young discouraged workers could rise if there continues to be a mismatch of skills and expectations between job seekers and employers.

    He said: “Our young people have been brought up to believe in the Singapore Dream – they want to be able to purchase a flat, settle down and enjoy a decent standard of living. If their job prospects do not support that kind of aspirations, they would be rather discouraged.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

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