Category: Sosial

  • Malay Woman Seeks Hongbao Help From Gilbert Goh

    Malay Woman Seeks Hongbao Help From Gilbert Goh

    Hi Gilbert

    I heard you are giving $100 Ang bao to people who need it ya.

    Well… I do need it as my hubby is the only breadwinner with basic pay of $1380 per month.

    We have two boys.. age of 7 yrs old & 8 yrs old.

    We can’t afford to pay school bus which cost $58/per person per month.

    I will personally send my boys to school everyday by bus.

    Every Monday my elder son will start at 9.45am until 6.30pm as my boys are in the afternoon session.

    After I send my elder son.. I need to go home to get my 2nd son ready for school. So i must reach the school before 12pm as my 1st son will be out for lunch @12pm.

    After that I will go home, cook & wait and at about 6pm I will be out to fetch my boys.

    My 2nd son also will have morning session every Friday.

    For Monday & Friday I will travel by bus 6 times a day just to fetch my boys to school.

    On Tuesday-Thursday I will only travel 4 times a day. I have to make sure that our EZ link has sufficient amount if not we will just walk home with me carrying two school bags.

    By the way for your info…my 2nd son is a asthma patient and every 3 months he will have his check up @KKH. His next appointment on April.

    We don’t own any flat as we are still waiting for any balance flat.

    Right now we stay in a rental flat 1-room 1-hall with my younger brother & his family.

    I will send you pictures how our living condition is. Thank you & good night.

    Tanti Mohd

    Editor’s note: we will transfer our Chinese new year charity angpao of $100 to the needy family – regardless of race, language and religion.

     

    Source: Gilbert Goh

  • Warning: Hidden-Cam Menace On The Prowl In Singapore

    Warning: Hidden-Cam Menace On The Prowl In Singapore

    The Real Singapore has been alerted to a blog online which is showcasing many illegally taken videos of upskirt shots around Singapore.

    The videos featured on the blog also show feeds from spycams in the female changing rooms of malls in Singapore.

    In many instances, the victims are young girls.

    We would like to remind our readers to be very careful and aware of your surroundings when in public and to check the changing rooms that they use. It seems that even public toilet cublices are not safe as the blog features videos of women using public toilets.

    None of the videos bother the censor the face of the victims and they are proudly uploaded online.

    The serial up skirt videographer has taken videos on Singapore buses, shopping mall escalators and even stairs along sheltered walkways:

    TRS Hidden Cam Expose

    TRS Hidden Cam Expose 1

    TRS Hidden Cam Expose 2

    He has then uploaded them online in a huge collection onto his tumblr blog.

    The videos on the blog also show some instances where girls have been video taped in public toilets showing girls peeing and from the background voices it is clear that it took place in Singapore.

    The blog is even shared on social media for all to see.

    Ladies, please be careful. The police have already been alerted to the blog but we wanted to remind women to be extra careful.

    Always be aware of your surroundings when using public toilets and changing rooms and always keep a look out for pinhole cameras or suspicious objects.

    Please Note: The name of the blog has purposely been left out of this post. If you do know which blog this is or come across it in future, please do not share the link further with others as this may be illegal and can further distress the victims whose faces are not censored.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Commercial Debts In Malay Households Rising Even As Incomes Rise

    Commercial Debts In Malay Households Rising Even As Incomes Rise

    Malay households in Singapore may be earning more money now, but they are also spending more.

    As a result, their debt situation, while not alarming, is a cause for concern, said Mr Azmoon Ahmad, chairman of the Association of Muslim Professionals (AMP) yesterday.

    While household balance sheets remain generally healthy, he added, figures from a survey the AMP conducted last year showed “increased expenditure, which may or may not be supported by real income gains”.

    Speaking at the association’s annual Community In Review seminar, which focused on debt this year, Mr Azmoon pointed out that the median income for Malays had risen from $2,709 in 2000 to $3,844 in 2010.

    This “creates the impression that they are doing well financially”, but does not account for how their liabilities have changed, he said.

    Citing the AMP survey, he said increased spending has become “entrenched”, and “even in times of financial difficulties, households may not revert to initial levels of consumption”.

    For example, 83 per cent said they would not unsubscribe from their cable television services in bad times.

    Other panellists at the forum said overspending due to lifestyle preferences is the most common cause of debt.

    Mr Azmoon said: “Higher expenditure could be supported by purchases made on credit, thus increasing the liabilities.”

    He also warned that the problem was not restricted to low-income families. PMETs (professionals, managers, executives and technicians) are a “risk group”, he said, as they have easy access to credit and thus may borrow above their means.

    National University of Singapore economist Sumit Agarwal, also a panellist, cited a graph showing that Malays have the highest credit card debt although they have the smallest credit card spending compared with other races.

    Moneylenders, both licensed and unlicensed, also contribute to the problem because they do not offer stringent safeguards like those of banks, the panellists said. They suggested that more financial literacy camps be conducted.

    Mufti Mohamed Fatris Bakaram, Singapore’s top Muslim religious leader, urged prudence when the panel sought his comments. “It is an ethical issue of behaviour, attitude and self-responsibility of trying your best to limit borrowing only for necessities – not for lavish purposes – and the commitment of paying it back.”

    Senior Minister of State for Home Affairs and Foreign Affairs Masagos Zulkifli, who also spoke at the forum, said: “Even though our debt problem is not endemic, it is something we need to constantly pay attention to.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Beware of Durian Scam By Malaysians

    Beware of Durian Scam By Malaysians

    Dear TRS,

    I wanna share about this conman!

    Happened to me last week at Woodlands HDB. He cheated my mom to buy 4 durians that cost $252!

    He’s rounding at HDB block for people to buy his durian. But will come back with his ‘guni’ bags of durians.

    He’ll tell you 1kg cost $15.

    He will say once he peeled the skin, must take. He will keep on peeling the skin. Until the fourth one, he’ll take the weight of the durian and tell you the cost!

    Ridiculously, for my mum case, cost $252!

    He even ask my mum to go to atm! My mum paid him $50 and went to the atm. That’s when i decided to call the police. He even dared to make sure that my mum went to the atm.

    He will keep on pestering for the money! I’d reported to the police! He is believed to be a malaysian man. Cause he say he’ll leave his passport at your house, to drive you to the atm. But my mum prefer to go by herself. And he drive a blue malaysian plate car.

    If anyone saw this guy, do not hesitate to inform police!

    I am not the only victim either, I have seen this facebook post being circulated and wanted to also share my experience:

     

    Durian Scam

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Schools Turn To “Smokerlysers” To Combat Worsening Underage Smoker Problem

    Schools Turn To “Smokerlysers” To Combat Worsening Underage Smoker Problem

    The problem of underage smoking looks to have worsened, as some schools turn to detection devices to help them smoke out offenders.

    Last year, more than 6,200 smokers below the legal age of 18, including some in primary school, were caught. This was about 17 per cent more than the 5,311 in 2013, according to data from the Health Sciences Authority (HSA).

    Most underage smokers caught were 15 to 17 years old and the rise in numbers could be because of greater enforcement, said an HSA spokesman.

    But a 36-year-old teacher who spoke to The Straits Times on condition of anonymity said she has noticed a growing number of student smokers in her neighbourhood secondary school, where she has taught for 14 years.

    There are those who pick up the habit in primary school, smoking as many as 10 sticks a day by the time they enter secondary school. Some light up in school, with habitual offenders using hidden corners or toilets to take a puff, she said.

    Several schools, such as Greenridge and Chestnut Drive secondary schools, have used “smokerlysers” – portable devices that measure carbon monoxide, a by-product of cigarette smoke – to monitor if students smoke.

    Newer versions of these devices can detect cigarette use from as far as two days back. A Health Promotion Board (HPB) spokesman said these carbon monoxide meters are used in its smoking cessation programme in schools.

    Over in Choa Chu Kang, Regent Secondary School plans to install cigarette smoke detectors in the common areas of five of its male toilets. It wants detectors that can log the exact location and time when someone smokes, and send an alert to the school’s general office and a message to a staff member’s mobile phone.

    “The initiative is one of the school’s efforts to promote deterrence,” said Regent’s vice-principal Sheree Chong, adding that it also holds anti-smoking talks.

    Mr T.C. Lim, 48, whose company distributes cigarette smoke detectors, said such products have been in Singapore for more than a decade, but demand from schools has been low as most found the device too costly. He began getting enquiries from schools last year. A toilet with four cubicles should ideally have two detectors, he added, each of which can cost $500 to $700.

    The effectiveness of such efforts remains to be seen, as “it would take more influence than detection to curb the problem of underage smoking”, said Ms Gracia Goh, deputy director of the Singapore Children’s Society. Its Youth Centre runs anti-smoking campaigns and has encountered smokers as young as eight.

    “Influence by family, friends and community has a much stronger impact for them,” she said, referring to young smokers.

    Take Varun, a 17-year-old student, who took his first puff two years ago “because all my friends were smoking”. Now the Institute of Technical Education student, who declined to give his full name, is a habitual smoker but his family does not know.

    Persons below 18 caught using, buying or possessing tobacco products can be fined up to $300. First-time offenders can have the fines waived if they finish an online smoking cessation module.

    The HPB said it works closely with the Ministry of Education to discourage youth from experimenting with tobacco products.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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