Category: Sosial

  • Woman Claims Photographer Molested Her During Photo Shoot

    Woman Claims Photographer Molested Her During Photo Shoot

    A 21-year-old woman who was promised a head start in a modelling career allegedly ended up being molested by the photographer.

    The aspiring model from Klebang here claimed that the man had, during the photo session at a hotel last Saturday, fondled and massaged her while taking pictures of her in undergarments and other sexy attire.

    Now, the woman is fearful that those pictures will be made public. She has lodged a police report on the incident.

    The young woman’s experience was related by her friend, who wanted to be identified only as Diana, 22, to The Star yesterday.

    According to Diana, the photographer had promised to help her friend become a popular face with advertising agencies and magazines.

    “He told her she could make good money if she was selected by any of the agencies,” she said.

    Diana claimed that the photographer had driven her friend from her home at about 1pm that day to a hotel for the photo shoot.

    “My friend was asked to pose in a coat and undergarments by the photographer.

    “Next thing she knew, the man was touching her private parts at the photo session,” Diana alleged.

    She said three days after that, the photographer still refused to show her friend the pictures he had taken of her.

    “My friend then lodged a report at the Tengkera police station on Mon­­day night,” she added.

    In her report, the woman claimed that she had refused to wear sexy attire midway through the photo session and demanded to be sent home.

    She added that she had got ac­­quainted with the photographer recently and believed his claims of connections with modelling agencies.

    Melaka Tengah OCPD Asst Comm Shaikh Abdul Adzis Shaikh Abdul­lah said investigations had been launched.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • Public Health England: E-Cigarettes Less Damaging Than Smoking Tobacco

    Public Health England: E-Cigarettes Less Damaging Than Smoking Tobacco

    Vaping is safer than smoking and could lead to the demise of the traditional cigarette, Public Health England (PHE) has said in the first official recognition that e-cigarettes are less damaging to health than smoking tobacco.

    The health body concluded that, on “the best estimate so far”, e-cigarettes are about 95% less harmful than tobacco cigarettes and could one day be dispensed as a licensed medicine in an alternative to anti-smoking products such as patches.

    While stressing that e-cigarettes are not free from risk, PHE now believes that e-cigarettes “have the potential to make a significant contribution to the endgame for tobacco”.

    The message was backed by the government’s chief medical officer, Dame Sally Davies, who nevertheless cautioned that “there continues to be a lack of evidence on the long-term use of e-cigarettes”. She said they should only be used as a means to help smokers quit.

    “I want to see these products coming to the market as licensed medicines. This would provide assurance on the safety, quality and efficacy to consumers who want to use these products as quitting aids, especially in relation to the flavourings used, which is where we know least about any inhalation risks.”

    The 111-page review raises concerns about the length and cost of the the government’s licensing process, which is a key part of the revised strategy to cut tobacco use.

    No e-cigarettes have yet been licensed, unlike other nicotine-replacement therapies such as gums, lozenges and patches. Pilot schemes in Leicester and the City of London allow stop-smoking specialists to offer free e-cigarette starter kits, but smokers elsewhere cannot be offered e-cigarettes on prescription.

    The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency began its work in this area more than two years ago, and manufacturers have complained that it costs them millions to go through the process.

    Jane Ellison, the public health minister in England, reminded smokers that the best thing they could do to avoid falling victim to the country’s number one killer was to quit completely.

    “Although we recognise the e-cigarettes may help adults to quit, we still want to protect children from the dangers of nicotine, which is why we have made it illegal for under-18s to buy them,” she said.

    The review found that almost all of the 2.6 million adults in the UK now thought to be using e-cigarettes are current or former conventional smokers, most using them to help them quit tobacco or to prevent them going back to smoking.

    There was no suggestion that the products were a gateway into tobacco smoking, with less than 1% of adults or young people who had never smoked becoming regular cigarette users.

    The PHE decision comes after carefully choreographed moves by anti-tobacco campaigners and public health specialists to help move the NHS towards offering better smoking cessation support and to be less negative about e-cigarettes.

    Services are being urged to follow those in the north-east of England in offering behavioural support to those wanting to quit tobacco and using e-cigarettes to try to do so.

    Smoking kills about 100,000 people a year in the UK, most of those in England where there are thought to be eight million tobacco users. But official figures suggest smoking is now at its lowest prevalence since records started in the 1940s.

    Rates are highest in many of the most deprived areas of England, and getting smokers off tobacco is increasingly seen as one of the best ways of reducing health inequalities.

    Worryingly for many of those behind the policy change, increasing numbers of people – up to 22%, compared with 8% two years ago – think e-cigarettes are equally or more harmful than tobacco. This is leading some smokers to avoid switching, studies have suggested.

    Tobacco reduction campaigners say the public needs to be educated to recognise that although e-cigarettes, like tobacco cigarettes, contain addictive nicotine, they do not contain more dangerous chemicals such as tar and arsenic.

    PHE is also advocating careful monitoring of the e-cigarette market, particularly of companies closely involved with or part of big tobacco companies. It says the government must meet its obligations “to protect public health policy from commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry”.

    Kevin Fenton, director of health and wellbeing at PHE, said: “E-cigarettes are not completely risk-free but when compared to smoking, evidence shows they carry just a fraction of the harm.

    “The problem is people increasingly think they are at least as harmful and this may be keeping millions of smokers from quitting. Local stop-smoking services should look to support e-cigarette users in their journey to quitting completely.”

    Peter Hajek, of Queen Mary University, London, one of the independent authors of the review, said: “My reading of the evidence is that smokers who switch to vaping remove almost all the risks smoking poses to their health. Smokers differ in their needs and I would advise them not to give up on e-cigarettes if they do not like the first one they try. It may take some experimentation with different products and e-liquids to find the right one.”

    Ecita, a trade association of e-cigarette manufacturers, said: “There could be huge long-term benefits to taxpayers and the NHS as well as to former smokers and their families. The proposed ban in public places across Wales is very worrying, as are many of the bans in pubs and restaurants across the UK. This appears to be driving a growing number of people to think the harm is the same, deterring smokers from moving to e-cigarettes, and damaging public health.”

    The smokers group Forest questioned whether prescribing e-cigarettes on the NHS would be a justifiable use of taxpayers’ money. Simon Clark, its director, said promoting them “as a state-approved smoking cessation aid ignores the fact that many people enjoy vaping in its own right and use e-cigs as a recreational not a medicinal product.”

    He said e-cigarettes had been successful because the consumer, not the state, was in charge. “If they want more smokers to switch to e-cigarettes, public health campaigners should embrace consumer choice and oppose unnecessary restrictions on the sale, marketing and promotion of this potentially game-changing product.”

    The switch in policy towards e-cigarettes coincided with publication in the Journal of the American Medical Association of research from Los Angeles suggesting that high school students who had use e-cigarettes are more likely to go on to try tobacco.

    But Hajek said this did not show that vaping leads to smoking. “It just shows that people who are attracted to e-cigarettes are the same people who are attracted to smoking. People who drink white wine are more likely to try red wine than people who do not drink alcohol.”

     

    Source: www.theguardian.com

  • Engineer And Property Agent Fined For Selling E-Cigarettes Online

    Engineer And Property Agent Fined For Selling E-Cigarettes Online

    An engineer and a property agent who imported and sold electronic cigarettes online were fined a total of $31,000 yesterday.

    Francis Chue Kar Fatt, 33, was fined $16,000, while 32-year-old property agent Zhang Zhaoming, was fined $15,000 after they each pleaded guilty to 10 charges.

    Two of Chue’s charges were for obstructing an authorised officer by deleting the www.thaivape.com website and a PayPal account which housed the evidence to all the e-cigarette sales transactions.

    Another four were for selling and importing e-cigarettes with Zhang.

    Following online surveillance of online electronic cigarette peddlers, Health Sciences Authority officers raided the Woodlands home of Chue and his wife, Ms Rattikan Khamtong, a 29-year-old Thai national, on Jan 7, 2013, for allegedly offering e-cigarettes for sale on the website.

    They seized e-cigarettes, related peripherals and SingPost receipts.

    Investigations showed that Ms Khamtong instructed her husband to delete the website while officers were conducting the search. She gave him her username and password and he did it from his office laptop at his office at Land Transport Authority at Sin Ming Drive.

    On July 18, 2013, when HSA officers raided Zhang’s home in Sengkang, Chue deleted the PayPal account which contained e-cigarette sales transactions from the website.

    Investigations showed that despite knowing it was an offence to deal in e-cigarettes, Zhang was still keen on the business. He started the e-cigarette online business with Chue’s help sometime in June. They agreed on the terms of the business and a profit-sharing arrangement.

    The court heard that the goods were ordered online and payments made via Zhang’s credit card. The e-cigarettes were sold to customers at between $55 and $110 a set.

    A warrant for the arrest of Ms Khamtong was issued last month.

    Both men could have been fined up to $5,000 on each charge of selling or importing. For obstruction, Chue could have been fined up to $10,000 and/or jailed for up to 12 months per charge.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • FT: Honest Cab Driver Returned My Wallet, Credit To Singapore

    FT: Honest Cab Driver Returned My Wallet, Credit To Singapore

    After a long flight from the United States lasting more than 22 hours, I caught a cab from Changi to my apartment in Nassim Road around midnight.

    After paying and trying to juggle my many bags and suitcases, I left my wallet in the cab.

    The kind cab driver took my wallet, containing all of my credit cards and hundreds of dollars in cash, of both US and Singapore currencies, to the security booth at my apartment block.

    It is unlikely that I would have had such luck in my home country, or in many of the other countries I have lived in or visited.

    It really speaks to the integrity of this man and the Singaporean people.

    Kate Mitchell (Ms)

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Taxi Driver Allegedly Beaten Up, Disallowed Passenger Drinking Beer In Taxi

    Taxi Driver Allegedly Beaten Up, Disallowed Passenger Drinking Beer In Taxi

    A cabby was allegedly beaten up by a passenger yesterday (Aug 19), when he told the latter not to drink beer in his car.

    All Singapore Stuff shared a post by Facebook user Evon Lim, who wrote that the incident happened at Holland Block 1.

    She shared a photo of the cabby with a bloodied face.

    According to her post, it allegedly happened “because the driver did not allow passengers to consume beer in the taxi”.

    Evon wrote:

    “Passengers treat us cabbies as what? Venting anger targets is it?”

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

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