Category: Sosial

  • Imam Shafie: For The Little Ones

    Imam Shafie: For The Little Ones

    Carrying a cardboard box, 42-year-old Mohd Shafie Mohd Hanapiah made his way to a room in the Pusara Aman Mosque at Lim Chu Kang Road.

    When he entered the room, Shafie placed the box on a table and carefully took out its contents, laying them out in front of him on a stainless steel slab.

    The box contained four foetuses and a few other surgical remains which he collected earlier from Changi General Hospital.

    After reciting a quick prayer, Shafie began to carefully wash each foetus and each of the surgical remains. A sombre mood hung over the room.

    Shafie said that he treats the foetuses as if they were his own.

    “Sometimes when we do our duty and cleanse the foetuses, I will talk to them and say that they are like my children,” he said.

    Working with an assistant, Shafie proceeded to carry out the necessary Islamic rites before shrouding the foetuses and surgical remains, then putting them back into the cardboard box to transport for burial later.

    As an Imam with the Singapore Muslim Casket (SMC), it is Shafie’s responsibility to cleanse, shroud and bury unclaimed foetuses and surgical remains in accordance with Islamic ritual.

    “It is wajib (compulsory) in Islam to wash, shroud and bury the foetuses. We cannot just dispose of them anyhow,” said Shafie.

    Unclaimed bodies handled by SMC and MTFA

    Working together with the Muslimin Trust Fund Association (MTFA), the SMC handles the burial of miscarried and aborted foetuses, surgical remains and unclaimed Muslim bodies in Singapore.

    MTFA pays for the burial services for the burial of unclaimed Muslims bodies who have passed away in Singapore, as well as those whose next-of-kin are unable to pay for the burial rites. The services also include burying foetuses and surgical remains.

    MTFA said the number of burials that includes unclaimed bodies, surgical remains and unclaimed foetuses varies from month to month.

    In 2015, the association buried 27 bodies, 239 foetuses and 489 surgical remains. The number of foetuses rose by 15 per cent to 239 in 2015 after declining in the previous two years.

    Unmarked graves

    A former Company Sergeant Major with the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), Shafie has been preparing the foetuses, bodies and surgical remains for burial for the past 28 years. He started volunteering to cleanse and shroud Muslim bodies when he was 14.

    The bachelor sees it as his responsibility to ensure that the unclaimed bodies, especially foetuses, are given proper burials.

    “According to Muslim laws, even a small part of the body needs to be buried. We cannot just anyhow put the remains (foetus or body parts) at any plot of land. It has to be buried in a cemetery,” explained Shafie.

    Shafie takes about 40 minutes to cleanse and shroud each foetus before they are brought to an unmarked piece of land at Lim Chu Kang Muslim Cemetery for burial.

    Each plot is divided into two parts, and up to 20 foetuses are buried in each part, he said. At the cemetery, another quick prayer is recited after the foetuses and remains are buried.

    There are no tombstones to mark the area.

    Despite doing this job for almost 30 years, Shafie admits that burying a foetus is always heartbreaking.

    “The feeling of sadness is there. We do have feelings for it (the foetuses) and it is not an easy task to do but we still have to proceed with it,” he said with tears welling up in his eyes.

    Source: Yahoo News

  • ‘Tipah Tertipu’, Suamiku Rupa-Rupanya Wanita!

    ‘Tipah Tertipu’, Suamiku Rupa-Rupanya Wanita!

    Siapa yang akan menyangka suami yang sah dinikahi rupa-rupanya seorang wanita.

    Namun itulah hakikat pahit yang terpaksa ditelan seorang wanita dari Boyolali, Jawa Tengah, lapor laman Jakarta Post.

    Wanita yang dikenali sebagai Heniyati, 25 tahun, hanya mengetahui identiti sebenar suaminya, Efendi Saputra, 40 tahun, setelah tiga bulan meniti kehidupan sebagai pasangan suami isteri.

    “Dia (Efendi) memalsukan semua dokumen untuk perkahwinan itu. Dia merubah nama dan jantina daripada wanita kepada lelaki. Keluarga saya dan saya sudah ditipu. Kami berasa malu,” kata ahli keluarga terdekat Heniyati seperti dilaporkan Jakarta Post.

    Pasangan itu bertemu pada hujung tahun 2015 dan sepanjang pertemuan itu Efendi, atau nama sebenarnya Suwarti, mendakwa bahawa dirinya merupakan seorang anggota polis.

    Heniyati mempercayainya kerana paras rupa Efendi persis perwatakan seorang anggota polis.

    Setelah bercinta selama enam bulan kedua-duanya memutuskan untuk melangsungkan pernikahan.

    Namun, setelah berkahwin, Heniyati mula mencurigai suaminya memandangkan dia enggan melaksanakan tanggungjawab sebagai suami dan menjalinkan hubungan intim.

    Lantas, Heniyati cuba mencari maklumat mengenai suaminya, sehingga beliau membongkar dompet Efendi dan mendapati kad pengenalannya tertera nama seorang wanita bernama Suwarti.

    Heniyati bersama keluarganya kemudian membuat aduan polis, menurut.

    Menurut Jakarta Post lagi, Ketua Polis Boyolali, Agung Suyono mengesahkan aduan yang dibuat dan Efendi sudahpun ditahan untuk siasatan lanjut.

    “Siasatan awal mendapati Suwarti memalsukan semua dokumen peribadinya untuk urusan lesen perkahwinannya,” kata Encik Agung.

    “Kami masih menyoal beliau untuk mengetahui tujuan perbuatannya itu,” tambah beliau sambil menambah bahawa Suwarti akan didakwa atas kesalahan penipuan dan pemalsuan dokumen.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Family Upset About Caterer’s No-Show For Hari Raya Eve Dinner

    Family Upset About Caterer’s No-Show For Hari Raya Eve Dinner

    Lontong, rendang, and sambal prawns – that was what she was looking forward to serving her extended family at a special meal on July 5, the eve of Hari Raya Aidilfitri.

    But the food, which cost her $600, did not appear on the dining table.

    Ms Darniyati Majid, 46, is among several customers of a catering company who claim they did not receive what they ordered and also did not get refunds.

    Attempts by The New Paper to contact the owners of the company several times last week were unsuccessful.

    A search with the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (Acra) shows that the business is still listed as a live company.

    Ms Darniyati, a quality inspector, said: “My mother is not feeling well, so I wanted to order a feast for her to host 30 to 40 family members visiting on Hari Raya eve.”

    On July 4, a day before the delivery, she sent a Facebook message to the company to confirm the delivery timing, but there was no reply.

    Ms Darniyati said she was “so worried I could not sleep” so on the morning of July 5, she contacted another catering company to order food for the dinner. It cost her $300.

    Later that day, someone from the catering company sent her a message via Facebook, promising to refund her for the non-delivery, but she did not get a refund.

    On July 6, she made a police report. A police spokesman told TNP a report was lodged and investigations were ongoing.

    Another customer, graphic designer Zara Samsudin, 37, had ordered iftar (breaking of fast) meals for the entire duration of the fasting month.

    From June 7 to June 24, the orders were fulfilled, but from June 27, she stopped receiving any food.

    Ms Zara said: “The owner messaged me to say that her cook had been injured (due to an incident involving) hot oil.”

    She said the company gave her a full refund of $145 on July 5.

    Other customers have not been as lucky.

    At least four people, who posted messages online complaining about the caterer, told TNP they did not receive their orders and refunds. They said they could not reach the owners after Hari Raya.

    The amounts owed are between $69 and $149, according to their claims.

    One of them, housewife Sheree Deen, 28, said: “The owner keeping quiet would not assuage our worries.”

    When reporters visited the owner’s flat in Woodlands last week, he was not in. A woman at the flat, who declined to be named, said the catering business had closed down the week before.

    PAGE TAKEN DOWN

    The company’s Facebook page, which has been taken down since Tuesday night, listed the address of a food stall in Sembawang.

    When TNP visited the stall last week, the cooksaid the owner was in Johor Baru.

    Mr Seah Seng Choon, executive director of the Consumers Association of Singapore (Case), advised that consumers seeking for refunds from a registered business may file a claim with the Small Claims Tribunal (SCT).

    Mr Seah added: “If they get a judgment in their favour but the business refuses to pay, they can enforce the judgment by way of a writ of seizure and sale to recover their money.”

    Case said no complaints have been registered against the catering company in the past.

    Consumers can contact Case for advice on filing a claim at the SCT via their hotline at 6100-0315.

    Ms Darniyati said: “I hope caterers won’t take orders if they can’t cope. I would not want this to happen to anyone.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Pelakon Adi Putra Dilapor Senyap-Senyap Nikah Lagi

    Pelakon Adi Putra Dilapor Senyap-Senyap Nikah Lagi

    Pelakon kelahiran Singapura yang sudah menebarkan sayapnya di negara jiran sekali lagi terpalit kontroversi baru-baru ini.

    Adi Putra, didakwa sudah bernikah kali kedua secara senyap-senyap, lapor laman Astro Gempak.

    Perbuatannya itu terdedah setelah gambar yang menunjukkan beliau bersama seorang wanita berpakaian sedondon dalam sekitaran majlis pernikahan tersebar menerusi aplikasi Whatsapp.

    Sebelum gambar-gambar itu tersebar, laporan Harian Metro menyatakan pelakon KL Gangster itu didakwa berkahwin kali kedua dengan seorang janda anak satu baru-baru ini.

    Perbuatan Adi Putra mengejutkan ramai orang, termasuk isterinya, Aida Yusof, 41 tahun, yang dikatakan tidak mengetahui berita perkahwinan suaminya itu.

    Astro Gempak cuba menghubungi Adi Putra namun tidak berhasil.

    Menurut laman mStar, Adi Putra membatalkan majlis Aidilfitri bersama kelab peminatnya, yang dijadual hari ini (17 Jul), pada saat-saat akhir.

    Beliau memuat naik gambar di laman Instagramnya memohon maaf kerana terpaksa membatalkan perjumpaan tersebut.

    “Assalammualaikum wmb. Saya memohon maaf kepada semua hotlovers kerana perjumpaan raya dan ulang tahun hotlovers esok 17 Julai, harus dibatalkan atas sebab-sebab yang tertentu. Saya sekali lagi mohon kemaafan,” katanya dalam laman sosial itu.

    Pada bulan Disember 2013, Adi Putra pernah mencetuskan kontroversi setelah beliau dilaporkan mempunyai skandal dengan isteri orang dari Johor sehingga melibatkan laporan polis dan disiasat mengikut Seksyen 509 Kanun Keseksaan, menurut laporan mStar.

    Namun, kes itu ditutup dan diklasifikasikan sebagai “no further action” atau tiada tindakan lanjut.

    Rumah tangga Adi Putra dengan Aida sebelum ini juga pernah berdepan dengan masalah apabila beliau memfailkan perceraian di Mahkamah Rendah Syariah Kuala Lumpur terhadap Aida pada 11 Mei 2012 namun membatalkan hasrat itu kemudiannya.

    Pasangan Adi Putra dan Aida sudah bernikah sejak 14 April 2006 namun tidak dikurniakan cahaya mata, tetapi mengambil seorang anak angkat perempuan berusia empat tahun, menurut mStar.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Filipino Professionals Head To Singapore As Tourists To Seek Jobs

    Filipino Professionals Head To Singapore As Tourists To Seek Jobs

    This is allowed for foreign professionals; once hired, firms apply for work passes

    Mr Ramz came to Singapore in March as a tourist but his itinerary did not include visiting the Merlion, Universal Studios or Orchard Road.

    Instead, the 29-year-old Filipino had only one goal: to find a job.

    He would spend hours scouring employment websites every day, and often had only one meal a day to save money.

    Finally, after about four months, he landed a job as a financial analyst at an offshore bank, drawing a monthly salary of $2,800.

    Filipino professionals like Mr Ramz, who declined to give his full name, are increasingly taking a route once used mostly by maids to find employment in Singapore: entering the country as tourists. Once they secure jobs, their employers apply for work passes for them so that they can work here legally.

    In Singapore, foreign professionals can apply for jobs while visiting. But the authorities “will not grant an extension of visit passes” if the job prospects are unclear, states the Manpower Ministry on its website.

    However, Manila frowns on it and has been clamping down on its citizens leaving the country as tourists to prevent human trafficking.

    Immigration officials at the airports send people home if they do not have two-way tickets and a sufficient amount of cash to prove that they are genuine tourists.

    Mrs Daisy Lopez, who owns employment agency WorkHome Personnel in Singapore, said aspiring maids, who are usually from the countryside, have borne the brunt of the tightened rules.

    “The immigration officers can tell by one look that they aren’t tourists. They don’t dress fashionably and cannot answer the questions confidently,” she said.

    In contrast, professionals, many of whom hail from cities like Manila and Cebu, have a better chance of convincing immigration officers as they dress better and carry themselves well.

    Taking the legitimate route has its advantages, said Filipino bank staff and marketing and retail executives.

    It ensures that their rights, such as paying no placement fees, are protected under Philippine laws.

    But the process takes several months and has no guarantee of success.

    This is because they have to rely on recruitment agencies in the Philippines which are inundated by thousands of applications from university graduates who want to head to Singapore because of the good pay.

    Graduates earn only about US$400 (S$510) a month in the Philippines whereas in Singapore, they can draw over $2,000.

    So, many prefer the tourist route.

    It allows employers to interview them in person, increasing their chances of getting hired.

    While they are here, many bunk with their friends for free but dip into their savings to pay for food and transportation.

    If they cannot find a job before their tourist visa expires in a month, they apply to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority to extend their stay.

    In some cases, the extension is rejected.

    Filipinos like Mr Ramz then head to Johor Baru for a few days and re-enter Singapore on a new tourist pass.

    “It was stressful. But I told myself to stay positive because I must get a job here,” he said.

    Headhunters such as Mr Satish Bakhda from Rikvin recruitment consultancy said many foreigners who try the tourist route go home empty-handed as the Manpower Ministry continues to tighten the rules for the hiring of foreign workers.

    “But some foreigners will still try their luck because the pay here is so much higher than what they earn at home,” he said.

    One hopeful foreigner is Ms Mary, 26, a Filipino marketing executive whose employer was unable to renew her S Pass and has to leave Singapore next month.

    She said: “I’ve heard of Filipinos who went home without a job. But I’m willing to take my chances and fly here next year as a tourist. I really want to work here.”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

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