Category: Sosial

  • Grace Fu: ‘No Discrimination In Helping Para-Athletes Excel’

    Grace Fu: ‘No Discrimination In Helping Para-Athletes Excel’

    Instead of focusing on post-podium rewards for national athletes, the Government’s focus remains on helping all athletes get to the podium, said Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Grace Fu.

    To this end, there will be no discrimination on the support extended to para-athletes, Ms Fu stressed.

    Ms Fu was responding to questions on whether the Government will consider offering equal rewards to Olympic and Paralympic gold medallists.

    Para-swimmer Yip Pin Xiu will receive $400,000 for the two gold medals she won at the recent Rio Paralympics, while swimmer Joseph Schooling received $1 million for winning a gold medal at the Rio Olympics.

    The rewards medal-winning athletes receive are decided by the Singapore National Paralympic Council (SNPC), Singapore National Olympic Council (SNOC) and their sponsors.

    “This is in line with the general convention that monetary rewards for competitions in sport are largely funded by private means through sponsorships, donations and product endorsements,” said Ms Fu.

    “I encourage the SNOC and SNPC to review the schemes with their sponsors, and for more corporations to step forward to support SNOC and SNPC on the awards.”

    What can make a difference to the national athletes is the combined assistance they receive from family, the community, corporations, the public and the Government, Ms Fu said.

    She said: “Instead of a one-off cash prize, athletes would also welcome career opportunities that can accommodate their sporting commitments and provide greater security and dignity when they retire from their sporting career.

    “To enable this, SportSG has the spexBusiness Network.”

    There is also no discrimination. For instance, the monthly payments under the spexScholarship scheme for all athletes are the same.

    And sports medicine and sports science specialists, psychologists and trainers under SportSG offer the same support to both able-bodied and para-athletes.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • 11-Year-Old Boy Dies From Dengue In Singapore

    11-Year-Old Boy Dies From Dengue In Singapore

    An 11-year-old Singaporean boy died from dengue on Aug 30, the Ministry of Health (MOH) and National Environment Agency (NEA) announced on Tuesday (Oct 11).

    He died the same day he was admitted to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, they said in a joint news release. MOH said it was informed of the cause of death in a coroner’s report on Tuesday.

    The patient lived at Woodleigh Close, an active two-case dengue cluster, which was reported on Sep 6, but no mosquito breeding was detected there, NEA said. The cluster was closed on Sep 14.

    This is the eighth fatality from dengue in Singapore this year.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

  • Anda Kenal Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal? Sila Bantu Pihak Polis

    Anda Kenal Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal? Sila Bantu Pihak Polis

    Pihak polis meminta orang ramai supaya tampil ke hadapan untuk memberi maklumat tentang lokasi remaja berusia 13 tahun, Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal.

    Kali terakhir Nur Sarah Syafiqah dilihat adalah di Blok 12A Marsiling Lane sekitar 6.45 pagi pada 7 Oktober 2016.

    Pada ketika itu, Nur Sarah Syafiqah memakai jersi berwarna merah dan seluar pendek berwarna biru.

    Sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat diminta menghubungi talian Hotline Polis 1800-255-0000 atau secara online di www.police.gov.sg/iwitness.

    Semua maklumat yang diterima akan dirahsiakan.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Local Teen Footballer Marc Embarks On England Stint

    Local Teen Footballer Marc Embarks On England Stint

    He first came to prominence as one of the stars of the 2014 Gothia Cup — regarded as the world’s largest youth tournament — as he helped Singapore’s F-17 academy achieve a third-place finish out of 120 teams in the Under-11 category.

     

    And last November, Marc Ryan Tan, the son of Singapore’s Malaysia Cup hero Steven Tan, made his mark again during a local training camp conducted by West Ham’s academy coaches.

    The 14-year-old made such a positive impression on the visiting coaches that he was invited to train with the English Premier League outfit’s academy in London this week.

    The West Ham academy, which has produced players such as Rio Ferdinand, Michael Carrick and Frank Lampard, has been given a Category One status under the Premier League’s Elite Player Performance Plan (EPPP), which puts them among the top 20 academies in England.

    While in England, Marc will also train at three other English academies – Wolverhampton Wanderers (Category One), Stoke City (Category One) and Charlton Athletic (Category Two) – during the 10-day training tour, which is organised by United States-based sports management company Global Image Sports (GIS).

    The teenager, who can play as a forward or on the wings, is the only local player out of four others from the F-17 academy who was shortlisted for this tour.

    Speaking to TODAY ahead of the training tour, Marc said that he hopes to use this opportunity to improve himself as a player.

    In addition, he hopes to impress the coaches, and any watching scouts, as he works towards his dream of earning a professional contract with a top European team in future.

    “I want to go there to learn how the English kids play because I’ve never played with the European kids before,” said the Secondary 2 student at the Singapore Sports School (SSP). “It’ll be interesting to see their style of play, observe how they train and find out why they’re so good at football.

    “Hopefully I can go there, improve myself and bring something back with me so that I can share my experience with my SSP team-mates and make the team stronger.

    “I’m very excited for this tour and I’m confident of making an impact there. After all, my dream is to one day playing for a top European team so this will be a great chance for me to get clubs to notice me.”

    His dad Steven, affectionately known as “Super Sub” when he was part of Lions’ famous 1994 Malaysia Cup-winning team, said this tour will give Marc an indication of where he stands against some of the top young talents in the world.

    “At this stage of his career, it’s good for him to know where he stands at an international level,” said Steven, who is now a coach at the ActiveSg Football Academy. “He can only do that by going up against players of a higher standard. In England, the level of football there is very high.

    “So I want him to go there and test himself against those boys. Hopefully, he can rise up to the challenge and meet the standard that they’re looking for.”

    Steven added that he will not hesitate to send Marc overseas for the long-term if the right opportunity comes knocking.

    This mirrors what fellow local football icon Fandi Ahmad has done for his sons Irfan, Ikhsan and Ilhan – the former two trained in Chile for over two years, while Ilhan is expected to head to England this week.

    “Of course, I would love for Marc to train in England for the long-term, and get a school to study there as well, because it will help his football development immensely,” said Steven.

    “But it’s not easy to get a permit to play in the UK, so we have to see if the F-17 or GIS can help us with the procedure and see how we can work around it.

    “Unlike in my time (as players), the kids now have more opportunities to play overseas, and so we must expose them as much as we can. Going to Europe, there’ll be more people watching Marc play, so we need him to take this step and get out of his comfort zone and see how far he can develop as a player.”

    Marc, accompanied by his father, departed for England on Monday (Oct 10) night. The expenses of the trip for Marc, which is expected to reach up to S$7,000, will largely be borne by the F-17 Academy.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Woman Gets Year’s Jail For Killing Hubby Who Attacked Her

    Woman Gets Year’s Jail For Killing Hubby Who Attacked Her

    Their marriage of almost two years was on the rocks.

    Not only did they sleep in separate bedrooms, they also barely talked. And they texted each other if they needed to communicate.

    In August last year, things came to a head with tragic consequences.

    The wife would later tell the police that her husband, suspecting her of cheating on him, had attacked her – choking and hitting her until she confessed to the affair.

    Then, armed with a knife, he threatened to kill her and their 14-month-old daughter.

    She reacted by grabbing a knife and later stabbing him in the chest, puncturing his heart and killing him.

    Yesterday, Vivien Teoh Yi Wen, now 27, was jailed for a year for causing grievous hurt to her husband, Mr Gordon Yeo Han Tong, 33, on grave and sudden provocation.

    The sentence was backdated to when she was remanded. She has served her time and is now free.

    A search on the Registry of Marriages website shows that the couple got married on Oct 5, 2013.

    Their daughter was born in June 2014.

    By August last year, their relationship had soured. Though they still lived together in a four-room HDB flat in Block 636B, Senja Road, in Bukit Panjang, they slept in different bedrooms, and seemed to communicate only by texting, according to court papers.

    Mr Yeo, who was vice-president of business development at an IT company, based on his Linkedin profile, was preparing to divorce his wife, whom he suspected of having an affair with a colleague.

    THE QUARREL

    On Aug 30, at about 10.30pm, Teoh, a senior human resource executive at the Ministry of Social and Family Development, was in the master bedroom with her daughter when she texted Mr Yeo to tell him to stop driving her car because he did not have a valid licence.

    Unhappy, he knocked on the bedroom door, but she refused to let him in.

    The knocking eventually woke their daughter up, and Teoh texted Mr Yeo to go away, but he refused.

    At about 11.25pm, the lights and the air-conditioning in the master bedroom suddenly went off.

    Suspecting her husband had switched off the electricity in a bid to draw her out, Teoh texted her mother.

    The mother later told her that her father had spoken to Mr Yeo, who said there had been a power trip. The electricity came back on soon after.

    Teoh later went out to get milk for their daughter, and was confronted by Mr Yeo in the kitchen.

    He demanded to know why she had locked her room door. When she ignored him, he blocked her way out of the kitchen.

    Teoh managed to get past him and scrambled back to the bedroom, but he barged in. So as not to disturb their daughter, they agreed to go outside to talk.

    But when Mr Yeo tried to snatch her mobile phone, she screamed.

    THE FIGHT

    He pushed and pinned her to the floor, and choked her.

    She swung her arms at him, and he released his grip on her to grab her mobile phone, which displayed a text message from her colleague.

    When Mr Yeo refused to give the phone back to her, Teoh kneed him in the groin area. He retaliated by wrapping his arm around her neck in a chokehold.

    She then punched him in the groin, causing him to drop the phone. Before she could pick it up, he grabbed it and threw it towards the common toilet.

    She dashed to retrieve it, but he grabbed her head and hit it against the toilet mirror.

    Teoh heard her daughter crying and told her husband that they had to attend to her.

    Mr Yeo let Teoh leave, picked up her phone and followed her to the bedroom, where he badgered her to unlock the phone. After she unlocked it, he scrolled through her messages as their daughter started crying again.

    Teoh carried the baby to the kitchen to get a pacifier. At the kitchen service yard, she shouted: “Help, my husband is trying to kill me.”

    Mr Yeo kicked the bi-fold door and it slammed into their daughter, who fell and hit her head. He grabbed a knife, pointed it at his wife and told her to return to the master bedroom.

    She checked her daughter for injuries as he browsed through her phone messages. When he told her she had one last chance to confess, she admitted that she had been cheating on him.

    Enraged, Mr Yeo told his wife that he was going to kill her and their daughter before taking his own life.

    Teoh then carried the baby into the kitchen to get ice for her head as Mr Yeo followed behind.

    THE STABBING

    In the kitchen, she grabbed a knife from the drawer with her right hand, and brandished it at him while carrying the baby with her left arm.

    He ordered her to drop the knife, but she refused and retreated to the master bedroom. Along the way, she saw Mr Yeo’s phone on the bed of his room.

    She went in to take his phone so she could call for help, but he barged in and closed the door.

    Teoh pointed the knife at Mr Yeo and tried to grab his phone.

    Mr Yeo, who was still holding a knife, closed the curtains – making the room even darker as the lights were off – and moved towards his wife, who warned him to stay away.

    As he continued towards her, he told her that it would be her fault if their daughter were to die.

    At this point, Teoh lost her self-control and swung the knife at her husband, stabbing him.

    She then fled the unit with their daughter – accidentally cutting herself with the knife in the process – and met her mother at a nearby block.

    The mother then called the police.

    Mr Yeo was pronounced dead at 1.19am on Aug 31. He was later found to have 11 stab wounds, the first of which pierced his heart.

    He also suffered five potentially fatal wounds to his liver, omentum and colon.

    Teoh had bruises all over her body and head. She also had fingermarks on her neck.

    She was initially charged with murder last September.

    For causing grievous hurt on sudden and grave provocation, Teoh could have been jailed up to six years and fined up to $10,000.

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