Category: Sosial

  • Topless Woman On Nicoll Highway Arrested

    Topless Woman On Nicoll Highway Arrested

    She was spotted walking topless in the middle of the busy road.

    A witness, who wanted to be known only as Madam Yu, 51, told The New Paper that the woman caused a traffic jam along Nicoll Highway towards Mountbatten Road at around 5.45pm yesterday.

    The senior personal assistant, who was in a car driven by her husband, said: “The woman was carrying her bra in her right hand. She was strolling calmly towards the city near The South Beach hotel. Many vehicles swerved to avoid her.”

    TNP understands that there was no accident during the incident, and the woman is a China national.

    Responding to queries from TNP, police said they received a call about the woman at around 5.40pm.

    A spokesman added that officers arrived at the scene and arrested the 38-year-old under the Mental Health Act.

    Madam Yu, who has two adult children, said her husband had picked her up near her workplace at Clarke Quay Central shopping mall at around 5.30pm.

    They were heading home to Tampines when they were caught in a traffic jam near Raffles City shopping centre.

    She said it usually takes three minutes to travel about 1km from Raffles City to Nicoll Highway. But due to the jam, the journey took 10 minutes.

    Madam Yu said: “I was shocked when I later spotted the topless woman. I could have stepped out to help her but my husband could not stop the car.”

    Police investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Private Schools Need MOE Permission To Admit Singaporean Children

    Private Schools Need MOE Permission To Admit Singaporean Children

    The Ministry of Education (MOE) is keeping a closer watch on children who are not part of the mainstream school system.

    Previously, permission from MOE was needed only for Singaporean children who wished to be homeschooled or attend Foreign System Schools such as the Singapore American School.

    But smaller, full-time private schools, some of which base their programmes on overseas education models, will also now need to get permission from MOE if they wish to admit Singapore citizens at the primary and secondary levels.

    The Sunday Times understands that at least six private schools here are affected by the new rule.

    These include Victory Life Christian School (VLCS), Heritage Academy and TLS Academy, all private schools offering the Accelerated Christian Education (ACE) curriculum widely adopted in the US. All are registered with the Council for Private Education, and admit a mix of local and foreign students.

    Asked about the new rule, MOE would say only that it “would like all Singaporean children to attend our mainstream schools to acquire a common set of core values, knowledge and skills”.

    Mrs Jan Boey, 62, VLCS’ founder, said she worried about the new rule at first but now welcomes it after seeing that Singapore students who do not fit the mainstream can still be admitted to the school.

    “MOE wants national education for all Singapore citizens. It is good for the ministry to know which are the students who pull out from the mainstream, and that there is a place where students who cannot fit into the system can turn to,” she said.

    Under the Compulsory Education Act, a child must attend a national primary school. Only those with special needs or attending designated religious schools – the six madrasahs for primary school-going children and San Yu Adventist School – may be exempted.

    The period of compulsory education is limited to Primary 6. On average, there have been about 50 homeschooled children per cohort in the past five years, the MOE said.

    VLCS, located in Balestier Point, has grown from having only 17 students in 2002 to about 130 now. There are currently 42 Singaporean students enrolled in grades seven to 12. They earn an American high school diploma based on their school credits and can take the Scholastic Aptitude Test.

    Mrs Boey said: “Some parents feel that their children need a safer environment that teaches values alongside religious education.

    “Other children were bullied in school, and did not like going to school, and their parents had to look for an alternative.”

    Last month, three Singaporean siblings who relocated here after growing up in Japan were given the nod by the MOE to join VLCS.

    Mrs Candy Yim, a missionary in her 40s, said she decided to send her three children, aged 12 to 15, to VLCS even though they had considered public schools.

    “The standards of English in Singapore are very high, compared to Japan, and my son would have entered the Normal (Technical) stream if he joined a public school.

    “Under the ACE curriculum, the students can get school credit for Japanese, and the Christian environment is also good for them.”

    Heritage Academy in Yishun will welcome its first students soon. Most students are foreigners from regional countries, though a few Singaporean parents have asked about its secondary curriculum.

    Said education policy expert Jason Tan of the National Institute of Education: “Mainstream education is seen as a prime means of socialising young people and preparing them for adulthood. The authorities want to regularly monitor students who are not part of the mainstream system. Even one child who slips through the cracks could be one child too many.”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Mohamad Jonit Adnan Dituduh Bunuh Bekas Isteri Di Yishun Ring Road

    Mohamad Jonit Adnan Dituduh Bunuh Bekas Isteri Di Yishun Ring Road

    Seorang lelaki berusia 37 tahun didakwa dengan tuduhan membunuh pada Isnin (15 Ogos), setelah seorang mangsa berusia 29 tahun meninggal dunia di hospital semalam (14 Ogos).

    Mohamad Jonit Adnan didakwa membunuh Sri Idayu Ghazali di sebuah flat di tingkat tiga Blok 342B Yishun Ring Road pada Sabtu (13 Ogos) sekitar pukul 9.00 malam.

    Mediacorp difahamkan, pasangan itu sedang dalam proses untuk bercerai.

    Cik Sri Idayu dijumpai cedera di rumah tersebut dan dikejarkan ke Hospital Khoo Teck Puat, menurut polis.

    Bagaimanapun, beliau meninggal dunia beberapa jam kemudian sekitar pukul 4.30 pagi semalam.

    Mediacorp juga difahamkan, saudara perempuan Cik Sri Idayu, yang juga merupakan jiran sebelah rumah beliau, menghubungi ambulans dan polis.

    Di mahkamah pagi tadi, Jonit tidak menunjukkan sebarang emosi apabila pertuduhan terhadapnya dibacakan.

    Pendakwa raya polis meminta supaya dia ditahan reman untuk membantu siasatan.

    Kes Jonit akan dibicarakan lagi pada 22 Ogos.

    Jika sabit kesalahan, Jonit boleh dijatuhi hukuman mati.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • What Did Singapore Airlines Really Give Schooling?

    What Did Singapore Airlines Really Give Schooling?

    Singapore’s Olympic hero, Joseph Schooling, returned home with the country’s first ever gold medal.

    Before his flight back from Brazil, Singapore Airlines gave the 21-year-old 1 million Krisflyer miles along with a KrisFlyer Gold Card.

    Frequent flyer miles are usually accumulated based on the distance you fly or the amount of money spent. These miles can later be used to buy flight tickets or upgrade from economy class to business or first class*.

    A million miles may sound like a lot of free travel, but what does it really translate to? And how far can Schooling go with these free miles?

    1. Some websites estimate that 1 million miles translate to $16,000.

    However, miles can vary in value as it depends on the location a traveller is going to and so on.

    For example, a traveller would need to redeem more miles per km to fly from Singapore to New York than if they were to exchange for shorter flights to say Hong Kong or Bangkok.

    The average monetary value can vary from 0.57 cents per mile to 1.11 cents per mile.

    2. Schooling is based in Texas, where he attends university and where his training base is.

    With the 1 million miles, he can take five return trips on first class, or, if his broad shoulders can fit into economy seats, then 15 return trips in economy.

    3. Schooling could also use his free miles to fly to London to watch his favourite soccer team, Chelsea. The miles will allow him 16 economy class trips or five first-class tickets.

    4. Alternatively, if Schooling wanted to take a trip every year to Hong Kong, he could use his free miles for 40 years (flying economy) or 21 years (on business).

    5. If sushi and ramen are more to his taste buds, Schooling could take annual trips to Tokyo and finish his miles only in 26 years (on economy) or 10 years (if flying first class).

    MILLION MILE AWARDS: 

    Schooling is not the only person to be awarded lots of air miles. Here are some others:

    Aug 9, 2016: A 19-year-old Dutch youth Olivier Beg was given 1 million miles from United Airlines for discovering security flaws in its online system.

    Aug 9, 2016: Djaballah Mohamed Taher, a 23-year-old hacker, was awarded 1.7 million miles from United Airlines for discovering three security problems under the airline’s bug bounty programme.

    July 10, 2015: Jordan Weins earned 1 million miles from United for finding a bug that allows people to seize control of one of the airline websites.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Singaporean Family Detained 14 Days For Verbally Abusing Malaysian Immigration Officer

    Singaporean Family Detained 14 Days For Verbally Abusing Malaysian Immigration Officer

    Singaporean family has been arrested and detained for 14 days for a probe into their alleged verbal abuse against an Immigration Department officer from Malaysia during a border inspection.

    Johor Immigration Department Datuk Rohaizi Bahari said the two-week remand of the Singaporean trio was to facilitate the investigations into the incident last week.

    “It is an offence to hurl abuse at my men who are just following the procedures during checks,” he was quoted saying by local daily The Star.

    “So far our investigation also showed that the officer did not ask for any bribe as alleged by the suspects,” he added.

    Rohaizi said individuals dissatisfied with the officers under him could file a direct complaint to him.

    According to The Star, the arrest was carried out after the Singaporeans refused to lower the back window of their Singapore-bound car with tinted windows for inspection at the Bangunan Sultan Iskandar Customs, Immigration and Quarantine Complex.

    The trio were reportedly a businesswoman in her 40s and her children aged 18 and 19 respectively.

    In the Friday afternoon incident, the woman was said to have verbally abused the immigration officer carrying out the inspection, while one of the trio purportedly gave a middle finger gesture.

    The investigation of the trio is under Section 56(1)(g) of the Immigration Act, where the penalty is a maximum RM10,000 fine or a maximum jail term if five years or both.

     

    Source: The Malay Mail Online

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