Category: Sosial

  • New Fears Of Communal Violence In Myanmar

    New Fears Of Communal Violence In Myanmar

    NINE police officers were killed early on October 9th in a series of apparently co-ordinated attacks on border-guard posts in the troubled state of Rakhine in Myanmar’s west. The attackers were armed with knives, slingshots and only a few guns—and reportedly made off with dozens more guns and thousands of bullets. The Buddhist majority in Rakhine has long oppressed the state’s Muslim Rohingyas. Now the victims may be starting to fight back.

    Nobody has yet claimed responsibility, but police say the attackers—at least two of whom were captured and eight killed—were Rohingyas. One local official blamed the Rohingya Solidarity Organisation, a militant group that has been dormant for decades. The two who were detained reportedly told authorities that they planned the raids with fellow locals.

    The central government’s response has been reasonably level-headed. On the same day it held a press conference to appeal for caution and restraint. Two days later it dispatched high-ranking officials to talk to local leaders in the Muslim-majority townships where the attacks took place. Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s de facto leader, did not cast blame, but reiterated her commitment to “peace and stability”. “Rakhine State’s problem is Myanmar’s problem,” said the information minister.

    Since the attacks in northern Rakhine, however, clashes have broken out there leaving at least a dozen people dead—including unarmed civilians, according to locals. The government has beefed up an already heavy military presence. Some worry that the stolen guns will be used in future attacks on security forces, or that in trying to retrieve the weapons, the police will target innocents.

    By far the biggest concern is that unrest could spread, as it did in 2012, when communal violence between Buddhists and Muslims killed scores and displaced tens of thousands. Many outside Myanmar have criticised Miss Suu Kyi for failing to speak up for the Rohingyas. Anti-Muslim sentiment runs deep among the Burman Buddhist majority. Wirathu, a virulently nationalist monk and master of social media, posted a video on his Facebook page this week that he claims shows the attackers calling for Rohingyas to join the jihad.

    In August Miss Suu Kyi invited Kofi Annan, a former UN secretary-general, to head a commission investigating human-rights abuses in Rakhine. Buddhist nationalists protested, and the Rakhine parliament passed a resolution condemning the commission. But as this week’s events have shown, efforts to bring about a just and durable peace in Rakhine are more urgent than ever.

     

    Source: www.economist.com

  • Man Who Took Toddler Hostage Faces 3 New Drug Charges

    Man Who Took Toddler Hostage Faces 3 New Drug Charges

    A 39-year-old man who was arrested for holding a toddler hostage in a Sembawang flat last month returned to court on Friday (Oct 14), where he faced three new drug charges.

    Muhammad Iskandah Suhaimi had confined his girlfriend’s two-year-old son in a fifth-floor rental home at Blk 462, Sembawang Drive, in a 17-hour overnight standoff with the police.

    Iskandah is accused of taking methamphetamine “on or before” the day of the standoff.

    He is also accused of having a packet containing 0.63g of a crystalline substance, which included methamphetamine.

    The toddler’s mother, Ms Siti Zubaydah Mohd Hamzah, had “knowledge” (of) and “consent(ed)” to this packet of drugs, court documents stated.

    In addition, Iskandah allegedly owned utensils, namely an improvised glass bottle with a glass pipe and a rubber tube, for drug consumption on April 12 with Ms Zubaydah. He will return to court on Nov 1.

    Iskandah has been prosecuted in the past for a drug offence. In August 2001, he was jailed for a year for consuming a controlled drug.

    Apart from the latest charges, he faces an earlier charge of possessing a scheduled weapon in the form of a knuckle-duster — an offence that carries a jail term of up to five years and at least six strokes of the cane for first-timers if convicted.

    The hostage situation arose from a dispute that Iskandah had with the toddler’s family members. The police were notified on the evening of Sept 27, but he refused to open the door for them when they arrived.

    The next day, the Crisis Negotiation Unit and Special Operations Command officers broke the window panes and cut the locked gate to rescue the toddler and arrest Iskandah.

    Ms Zubaydah was also arrested then for drug-related offences, but the Central Narcotics Bureau and the State Courts did not reply to queries as to whether she has been charged in court.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Online Gambling Just Another Revenue Generating Avenue For Government

    Online Gambling Just Another Revenue Generating Avenue For Government

    The SDP had opposed the PAP’s move to allow the construction of casinos in Singapore in 2005. The government’s rationale then was that there was money to be made off the gambling scene in Asia.

    Not every business venture should be pursued just because it makes money. There are moral and ethical considerations too.

    Gambling is a vice and its social ills are widely documented. Lives and families are destroyed because of addiction to gambling. Gambling also brings along other criminal activities such as money laundering, organised crime and sex trafficking.

    Just this year, for example, two people were engaged in gambling related crimes. A Singaporean was caught laundering nearly one million dollars in Australia in order to gamble. In a separate case, a UOB officer stole a total of $95,000 from the bank to pay for his gambling habit in Macau.

    For these complex and intertwining reasons, gambling – especially one facilitated by the state – should not be encouraged.

    Minister for Social and Family Development Tan Chuan-jin disingenuously argues that the PAP, by allowing state organisations such as Singapore Pools and the Singapore Turf Club to conduct online betting, is not encouraging gambling.

    He says that the move will, instead, allow that government to monitor the “very real dangers” of virtual gambling. However, he doesn’t spell out how the authorities will overcome these dangers by legitimising gambling over the Internet.

    The truth is that with or without the state’s entry into the online world of gambling, those who seek to indulge in the gaming habit will find ways on the Internet to satisfy their desires. Providing additional and state-sanctioned gaming sites adds to, not minimises, the problem.

    One factor that is prompting the government to enter into the online gambling business is that it sees its revenue falling due to poor economic circumstances. By getting into the act, the government opens up another avenue for revenue collection.

    The problem is that gambling exploits the dreams and hopes of the poor who are most vulnerable to and who can least afford such activity.

    There are many ways to develop a sound and mature economy without resorting to this kind of exploitation. Instead of making money from Singaporeans placing online bets, the PAP should free up the political system and encourage innovation and entrepreneurship. This will generate a productive economy and drive sound economic growth without adversely affecting our families.

    This latest measure is another step in a slow but certain descent into turning Singapore into a city without any values, and one ruled by a government with no ideas beyond exploiting the people.

     

    Source: http://yoursdp.org

  • Israeli Anger At UNESCO Motion Condemning Aggressions at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    Israeli Anger At UNESCO Motion Condemning Aggressions at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    The United Nations cultural and heritage body, Unesco, has condemned Israel’s “escalating aggressions” regarding the holy site in Jerusalem’s Old City, known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif and to Jews as the Temple Mount, prompting a furious reaction from Israeli politicians.

    A resolution passed on Thursday denied the importance of the site to the Jewish faith by referring to it and the al-Aqsa mosque only by their Muslim names, the politicians said.

    The site has been a flashpoint between Muslims and rightwing Jews over the past two years in particular, although tensions in the vicinity stretch back decades.

    The resolution was backed by 24 countries, with six opposing it and 26 abstaining. The US, UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Estonia voted against the resolution; Russia and China were among those backing it.

    While affirming the importance of the Old City to all three monotheistic faiths – Judaism, Islam and Christianity – the resolution failed to acknowledge Jewish connections to Temple Mount/al-Haram al-Sharif, Israel said.

    The al-Aqsa mosque – the third holiest site in Islam after Mecca and Medina – and the iconic Dome of the Rock stand on a plaza on the eastern edge of the Old City, and are under the control of an Islamic trust called the Waqf.

    The Western Wall, below the concourse, is regarded as the holiest spot in Judaism as the last remnant of the temple that once stood there. Jews can visit the plaza above the wall, but are forbidden by law from praying, reciting religious texts or entering Muslim holy sites there.

    The resolution said Muslims’ freedom of worship was being curtailed by “escalating aggressions and illegal measures”. It deplored the “continuous storming of al-Aqsa mosque and al-Haram al-Sharif by the Israeli rightwing extremists and uniformed forces … [and] forceful entering by so-called ‘Israeli Antiquities’ officials”.

    Ultra-Orthodox Jews praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem

    In March 2015, a leaked EU report said tensions over al-Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount were partly to blame for a spike in violence, including shootings and stabbings, over the previous six months.

    Uri Ariel, a rightwing minister in the Israeli coalition government, called on Israel to respond to the Unesco motion by stepping up activities at the site.

    “Especially now, it’s on us as a government to act in defiance of these decisions and to strengthen the Temple Mount and the Jewish presence on the site holiest to the Jewish people – the Temple Mount,” he said in a letter to the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu.

    The Labour party leader, Isaac Herzog, wrote on Facebook: “Unesco betray their mission, and give a bad name to diplomacy and the international institutions. Whoever wants to rewrite history, to distort fact, and to completely invent the fantasy that the Western Wall and Temple Mount have no connection to the Jewish people, is telling a terrible lie that only serves to increase hatred.”

    Before the vote, the British Jewish organisation Yachad, which campaigns for an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land and for a two-state solution, condemned the resolution as “an inflammatory denial of Jewish history” which “serves only to set back the cause of peace in the region by playing into the hands of those on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict who see it as a holy war”.

    The motion was submitted by the Palestinians supported by Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar and Sudan.

    A similar resolution in April passed with 33 votes to six, and was supported by a number of European countries led by France. This time France abstained amid a heavy lobbying campaign by Israel.

     

    Source: www.theguardian.com

  • Khutbah Solat Jumaat: Masyarakat Islam Digesa Jauhi Tabiat Menjudi

    Khutbah Solat Jumaat: Masyarakat Islam Digesa Jauhi Tabiat Menjudi

    Masyarakat Islam Singapura diberi peringatan supaya menjauhi tabiat suka berjudi dan kesan-kesan buruk daripada tabiat yang merugikan itu. Ia menjejas bukan sahaja individu yang terlibat secara langsung, malah anggota keluarga serta masyarakat secara amnya.

    Menerusi khutbah solat Jumaat bertajuk “Istaqamah Bertakwa Kepada Allah” yang disampaikan di masjid-masjid merata Singapura hari ini (14 Okt), masyarakat Islam diingatkan bahawa dengan kemudahan teknologi yang ada sekarang, semakin mudah untuk melakukan pelbagai perkara maksiat tanpa diketahui orang lain.

    Satu tinjauan oleh Touch Cyberwellness yang disentuh dalam khutbah solat Jumaat, mendapati bahawa sembilan daripada 10 remaja yang ditinjau menonton atau membaca bahan lucah melalui internet.

    Lebih membimbangkan lagi, lebih 70 peratus daripada mereka yang ditinjau pernah menonton kandungan sedemikian melalui telefon bijak mereka.

    Selain itu, timbul juga keprihatinan terhadap trend berjudi secara online, di mana masyarakat Islam juga digesa supaya mendidik anak-anak mereka tentang kesan-kesan negatif akibat tabiat yang merugikan itu dan kesannya terhadap kehidupan mereka dan keluarga.

    Khutbah solat Jumaat turut menukil dapatan tinjauan itu yang menunjukkan bahawa mereka yang menjadi tahi judi lazimnya bermula dengan berjudi secara sosial.

    Maka itu, masyarakat Islam perlu mengambil langkah berjaga-jaga seperti memastikan anggota keluarga mereka termasuk dalam senarai individu yang tidak dibenarkan menyertai sebarang kegiatan perjudian yang berlesen serta memantau lelaman yang dikunjungi, menurut khutbah solat Jumaat hari ini.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

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