Category: Sosial

  • Certis Cisco Warden Didn’t Want To Do His Job, Refused To Issue Summons To Illegally Parked Vehicles At My Flat

    Certis Cisco Warden Didn’t Want To Do His Job, Refused To Issue Summons To Illegally Parked Vehicles At My Flat

    I was on my way to work this morning and i caught a few vehicles parking illegally in No Parking Area, Double yellow lines and Season Parking Lots underneath my flat located in 668 Chander Road.

    I managed to get hold of one of Certis Cisco Wardens that were deployed there but he refused to summon those vehicles claiming those lots are under the charge of his colleague.

    He then tried to leave the scene with his motorbike without issuing any summon.

    Attached are the photos of those vehicles illegally parked in bke 1 and the warden involved and the licence plate of his motorbike.

    Illegally Parked Car 1 Illegally Parked Car 2 Illegally Parked Car 3 Illegally Parked Car 4

     

    All friends kindly help me and share because i want Certis Cisco to be accountable for having wardens like him.

     

    Source: Kelvin Meng Hwee Lim

  • Biases And Ignorance Of West Have No Place In Singapore

    Biases And Ignorance Of West Have No Place In Singapore

    I have benefited from dealing with people from the Muslim part of the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent, so I was gratified to read the commentary “Time to look beyond the Western view of the Middle East” (Nov 23).

    My experiences when I talk about the Islamic world and the subcontinent confirm Ms Koh Choon Hwee’s point: The average Singaporean’s knowledge of both regions is inadequate, and his or her views reflect those of small-town American news outlets.

    Why do we parrot the views on cultures we have grown up with from a group of people who are too far removed from those cultures to know better?

    Our ignorance is more shocking, especially as gaining markets in those regions has become more crucial to our economic well-being.

    I think back to 2006, when I worked with oil firm Saudi Aramco on an event promoting Saudi culture: One of the Saudis asked me if geography was taught in Singapore, after several members of the public had asked him which part of Dubai he was from.

    This was not an isolated incident of ignorance. One only has to think of the way people think that Sikhs come from Bengal. A glance at the map would show that Bengal and Punjab are at opposite ends of a very large country.

    Our small island has prospered from being open to the world. While it remains important to be tuned in to the Western world, we cannot be deaf to places that people in the West are.

    Like any other part of the world, the Middle East and India present both challenges and opportunities that we cannot ignore.

    To succeed in the wider business world, we should encourage people to understand cultures beyond the ones we know.

    We must acknowledge that things such as the Paris bombings were caused by people claiming to be Muslims.

    We must be vigilant against terrorism. We must understand there are reasons why things such as terrorism exist, however, and we cannot let the experiences and prejudices of the West influence our interactions with people from other parts of the world.

    I remember Khaled Maeena, former editor of Saudi daily Arab News, telling me: “Singaporeans, you should trust your own experiences and culture, and not believe everything the West tells you.”

    I could not agree more.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Fahmi Rais: I Was Adopted, My Biological Parents Are Chinese

    Fahmi Rais: I Was Adopted, My Biological Parents Are Chinese

    All his life, he thought he was the only child of his loving Malay parents.

    Even though everyone he met has assumed he is Chinese because he is fair-skinned, Mr Fahmi Rais never gave it much thought.

    This was until about two weeks ago, when a casual question posed to his 90-year-old grandmother during a monthly visit revealed a shocking, long-kept family secret.

    Mr Fahmi found out he had been adopted and that his biological parents are Chinese.

    The 47-year-old media consultant said: “I told her that people have been asking me for many years if I was adopted.

    “I expected her to tell me that I was being ridiculous. But when her expression changed and she was silent for a few seconds, I just knew it.”

    Mr Fahmi, a Malay community leader who was a SingFirst candidate in this year’s General Election, was so overwhelmed by the sudden revelation that he started crying.

    His grandmother, who was also reduced to tears, told him that his parents were a poor Chinese couple who lived in Segamat, Johor.

    She had no other details of his adoption – neither names nor the amount of money exchanged, if any.

    Already feeling lost, Mr Fahmi was crushed when he realised that his relatives had known about the adoption but hid it from him.

    His adoptive parents died more than 20 years ago, both from heart attacks.

    His maternal grandmother is his only surviving grandparent.

    He said: “Maybe my parents wanted to tell me one day, but never had the chance.”

    For the past two weeks, Mr Fahmi, a father of four children aged between six and 19, has been determinedly searching for his biological family.

    He wrote to The New Paper, hoping that by sharing his story, he would find them.

    His parents had managed to keep details of his adoption a mystery, even to his relatives.

    Mr Fahmi’s most credible lead is his birth certificate, which was issued 10 years after he was born.

    The names of his birth parents are not on the certificate, but there is one clue.

    It lists Kandang Kerbau Hospital (now known as KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital) as his place of birth.

    When he approached the hospital last week, he was told that there are no records of his birth and he was directed to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority.

    They, too, told him they had no further information and asked him to approach the family court.

    He is now waiting for the adoption registry, located at the MND Complex, to check if there are records of his adoption, but he has not heard from them yet.

    ONLY CHILD?

    Growing up as an only child, Mr Fahmi said the possibility of having siblings has been the greatest motivation for his search.

    He believes his parents had many children and were forced to give a child away because of poverty.

    “The thought that my sister could be sitting next to me at a foodcourt, or that my brother could be one of my friends on Facebook (without realising it), has been unbearable,” he said.

    Mr Fahmi’s wife, Madam Sulaimah Abdul Kadir, 40, a consultant, was also there during Mr Fahmi’s conversation with his grandmother.

    She said she is moved by his sadness since he found out the truth about his adoption.

    “As a wife, I’ll support him in his search. But no matter what happens, we still love him for who he is,” she said.

    Mr Fahmi insists he is not overreacting and that he just hopes to find closure.

    The couple have an adopted daughter, Nur Natasya, 16, and Mr Fahmi admitted that he does blame his parents a little for withholding the truth from him.

    He said: “My wife and I never hid the fact from our daughter that she was adopted. It was my policy of love, I don’t think adoption should be a secret.

    “I wish my parents had the same level of transparency, but this does not reduce my love for them.

    “I was a late bloomer and only passed one subject at O levels. I disappointed them many times when I was younger, but they loved me all the same.”


    This adoption discovery came at the lowest point of my life. As if the seabed wasn’t ground deep enough, this experience (took) me on a slippery slope into the dark abyss. My wife and four children are the only people keeping me together. Not omitting my caring grandmother, without whom my entire life would have been a continuous lie.

    – Mr Fahmi Rais in a blog entry on Tuesday

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Reasons For Divorces Differ In And Out Of Court

    Reasons For Divorces Differ In And Out Of Court

    It appears that divorcees tell a different story in and out of court when asked why they broke up.

    One in four respondents cited adultery as the main reason for their divorce, going by a survey of about 130 divorcees presented last month by Dr Jessica Leong .

    This figure is similar to official data on Muslim divorces, but contradicts that of non-Muslim divorces.

    Figures from the Department of Statistics show that for non-Muslim divorces last year, only 1 per cent of the plaintiffs cited adultery as the main reason for divorce.

    Instead, over half said they split due to “unreasonable behaviour” during divorce proceedings. And 45 per cent split because the couple “lived apart or were separated for three years or more”, while 2 per cent cited “desertion” as the main reason.

    Dr Leong’s survey figures on the main reasons for divorce could be closer to the truth.

    Lawyers told The Straits Times that a person filing for divorce usually finds it too costly to prove that the partner had committed adultery. He must usually hire a private investigator, who will give a report of his surveillance findings, and the investigator may need to appear in court. The person with whom the adultery took place must also be named as a co-defendant, and some people do not know the name of the third party in the marriage.

    Lawyer Michelle Woodworth said: “The difficulty in obtaining the evidence and the costs in doing so are key considerations for clients making a decision against citing the fact of adultery. Often, a plaintiff may choose to proceed on the fact of behaviour instead.”

    Another lawyer, Mr Rajan Chettiar, said people may also not mention adultery because of their ego. “Men may feel that they ‘lose face’ if they tell the court that their wives had an affair with another man.”

    The 134 divorcees surveyed were asked to give “one specific personal example or event to illustrate the main indicator leading to the divorce”. Six of them did not answer.

    The question was an open-ended one, and responses were then classified into several categories such as relation problems, including “loss of love” and conflicts with in-laws (14 per cent), and communication problems (13 per cent).

    Respondents were also asked to select, from a list of 18 options, the factors that contributed to their marital instability.

    There were gender differences.

    Nearly half the men said nagging or complaining contributed to the broken marriage, while only 27 per cent of women said so. About 56 per cent of men said “loss of love” was a factor, while only 38 per cent of women said so.

    Mr Joel Chua, who attended Dr Leong’s presentation and has had over a year of experience as an intern counsellor, said: “Men are emotional creatures too, just that they may not be as expressive about it.”

    They could feel a loss of affection with their ex-spouse, and the lack of sexual intimacy may play a part.

    “Some men have mentioned, without being asked, that there was less sexual intimacy with their spouses when there was more tension in their marriages,” added Mr Chua.

    Counsellors said it was also important for couples to communicate well, in away that is mutually respectful. Dr Leong suggested more public education in pre-tertiary and tertiary schools, when people tend to start dating.

    “We can teach respect and trust in relationships, and they can bring these values to marriage later on,” she said. “They may even identify indicators of troubled marriage and… alert their parents to blind spots they may have in their marriages.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Non-Muslim: Ignorant Islamophobes Should Read The Quran Before Judging Islam

    Non-Muslim: Ignorant Islamophobes Should Read The Quran Before Judging Islam

    What a hateful book this is. For those of you who don’t know this is the Quran, the book you probably think is guiding ISIS based on my newsfeed. Although I don’t think most of you have ever read a single passage from this book there sure are a lot of experts in my Facebook list.

    Some interesting facts about this book you might not know:

    1. It is a religion of Abraham, just like the Bible and Torah.
    2. Jesus is a big part of this book, although there is discrepancy on if he is the son of God he is still a pretty kick ass prophet who teaches love and peace.
    3. All of the shitty, angry, hateful things you probably think are in this book are all taken out of context from the early part of the religions of Abraham and those same hateful rules are in the Bible and Torah as well.
    4. Islam is the only religion that has mandatory giving to those who are less fortunate.

    For the sake of this post length I will stop there. I am so tired of being told how hateful the Islamic religion is from ignorant people who really have no idea. Any time you see something that you think is true about the Islamic religion I urge you to find those facts in the book and not from someone who has never read it.

    In the book of Genesis Eve brought on sin for all generations to come because she listened to the words of a snake who deceived her. Before you pass judgment based on something you heard, you should look for yourself.

    [17:26-29] You shall give the due alms to the relatives, the needy, the poor, and the travelling alien, but do not be excessive, extravagant.

    The extravagant are brethren of the devils, and the devil is unappreciative of his Lord. Even if you have to turn away from them, as you pursue the mercy of your Lord, you shall treat them in the nicest manner. You shall not keep your hand stingily tied to your neck, nor shall you foolishly open it up, lest you end up blamed and sorry.

    [2:177] Righteousness is not turning your faces towards the east or the west. Righteous are those who believe in GOD, the Last Day, the angels, the scripture, and the prophets; and they give the money, cheerfully, to the relatives, the orphans, the needy, the traveling alien, the beggars, and to free the slaves; and they observe the Contact Prayers (Salat) and give the obligatory charity (Zakat); and they keep their word whenever they make a promise; and they steadfastly persevere in the face of persecution, hardship, and war. These are the truthful; these are the righteous.

    It will be interesting to see how many Facebook friends I lose.

     

    Source: Colin Ripley