Category: Sosial

  • China Man offered Himself as Food to Tiger in the Zoo

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVScRA991Vk

    Chinese zoo keepers managed to save the life of a mentally disturbed man after he announced he wanted to improve the lives of caged tigers at a local zoo by offering them his own body to eat.

    Yang Jinhai, 27, had posted several online messages about how optimistic he was about starting a new life after getting a job as a security guard in Chengdu in southwest China’s Sichuan province.

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    But he quickly found the job boring and monotonous and moved instead to a job in a printing factory where he also then resigned, saying that he felt there was more to life.

    After going to the local zoo he wrote how depressing it was to see the ‘noble and magnificent tigers’ living in such humble surroundings, where they were caged and unable to follow their natural instincts to hunt and kill.
    He then announced that he had decided to sacrifice himself in order to provide the Bengal tigers with support.

    Eyewitness Feng Lin said: ‘He climbed up the outside of the cage and jumped inside expecting, I assume, that the tigers would pounce on him. Instead the two tigers, a male and a female, seemed more nervous than anything else and the female actually ran off.

    ‘He then tried to antagonise the tigers by pulling faces at them. Eventually he was attacked by the male where he was cut after being scratched and bitten before he could be rescued by zoo keepers who fired a tranquilliser dart at the male tiger.’

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    They then pulled the man out of the cage.

    Yang’s family told local media Mr Jinhai had been depressed for a long time and said that he had been taken to a home where he was given psychiatric counselling to cope with his problems.

    Source: Daily Mail

  • Roti Hotdog Giant Berkulat Dan Berulat!

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    Menggelikan… itulah perasaan apabila pertama kali melihat gambar-gambar roti sosej yang diupload oleh seorang pengguna facebook di dalam akaun peribadinya.

    Puan Bie Jackson mendakwa roti sosej yang dibeli suaminya telah berkulat dan berulat. 6 keping gambar yang dimuatnaik beliau turut menunjukkan tanda harga pasaraya Giant. Lokasi Pasaraya Giant tersebut terletak di Kelombong, Sabah.

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    “Suami membeli roti ini di kedai yg tertera d kolombong. Dgn harga rm5. Malangnya sesampai ja d rumah kita ingin menjamunya kelihatan hot dog yg d gunaan suda berkulat yg lebi malang berulat. Nasib la aku ni jenis keluarkan sosej dr roti br mkan. Dgn itu boikot giant utk roti jenis ini.” Menurut Caption dalam gambar tersebut

    Melalui tinjauan kami, gambar-gambar tersebut telah mencecah lebih 2000 share. Pihak pengurusan Giant perlu memberikan respon segera mengenai kejadian ini kerana ia pasti memberikan reputasi buruk kepada pasaraya terkenal itu

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    Sumber: Nescafeais & Tengok TV Online

  • Two Checkpoint Officers Who Failed to Stop Malaysian Teacher Face Disciplinary Action

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    Two immigration officers who failed to stop a Malaysian teacher at both levels of checks at the Woodlands checkpoint, allowing her to slip into Singapore illegally, have been redeployed and face disciplinary action.

    Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean revealed those and more details of the border breach in Parliament on Monday in response to five questions filed by MPs.

    Kedah state native Nurul Ruhana Ishak, 28, evaded Woodlands immigrations officers on Jan 17, and was only arrested three days later. She has been charged with criminal trespass.

    When Nurul slipped past the first check by tailgating a car, the immigration officer concerned consulted another officer and hesitated, and took 2.5 minutes to sound the alarm instead of sounding it immediately, said Mr Teo. The second auxiliary police officer tasked with conducting boot checks and counting vehicle passengers subsequently did not stop Nurul’s car nor did he sound the alarm.

    “I do not know the reason why, they’re not new officers and have been in the service for some years,” said Mr Teo. “Looking at their records, they have been in general good officers.”

    Their slow response compounded the “serious error of judgement” made by multiple agencies when grounds officers “decided to treat [the incident] as a less serious immigrations offence” rather than a “major security breach”.

    This in turn meant that the police “did not put out high level and persistent alerts to all ground forces”, nor was Nurul’s particulars and those of her car circulated.

    No passport or identification was found on her during her arrest on Jan 20, when she tried to force her way into the Ministry of Foreign Affairs compound while in her red Perodua hatchback. That led to the trespass charge.

    She has been in remand at the Institute of Mental Health since, and is due to appear in court for the first time on Feb 26.

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Companies Force Foreign Workers out of Singapore

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    Bapari Jakir’s employers wanted to see him off the job, but the welder was heavily in debt and didn’t want to go back to Bangladesh. So, he says, they encouraged him to leave — by hiring a company whose thugs held him captive in a room, holding a knife to his throat.

    Singapore needs foreign workers, but it doesn’t want them to overstay their welcome, and firms get fined when they do. That has created a market for “repatriation companies,” which deny allegations from activists and the United States that they use illegal tactics to expel foreign workers.

    The country’s wealth and continued growth rely in large part on foreign workers like Jakir, who build its skyline and maintain its top-notch infrastructure. Yet as the numbers of migrant workers soar, tales of abuse and exploitation are threatening to take some of the shine off the city-state’s international reputation.

    In December, migrant workers from South Asia rioted in the country’s first social unrest for more than 40 years. Some activists claim that anger over working conditions might have been a factor in the riots, which shocked a nation long seen as an island of stability in an unruly region.

    The activities of “repatriation companies” are a major source of concern for activists on the tightly controlled island.

    Firms hiring foreign labor must lodge 5,000 Singapore dollars ($3,900) bond with the government for each worker that is returnable only when they leave. Some firms employ companies to hunt down fired or laid-off workers, or those whose contracts have expired, and put them on a plane.

    After more than year in the job, Jakir said he was taken to a repatriation company’s office in August 2012 because his employer wanted him out of the country before his contract expired. He wasn’t given a reason, but suspects it was because they thought he was disruptive on account of his assertiveness in pressing for more working hours.

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    Once inside the office, he was asked to sign a document by three “big gangsters” stating that his employers didn’t owe him any salary arrears. He refused because he figured doing so would make it easier for them to repatriate him. He then alleges he was punched and had “a knife put to his neck.” Jakir was able to call a friend, who in turn contacted migrant rights activist Jolovan Wham.

    Jakir was allowed to leave the officers of the repatriation company after Wham signed a form stating that he would be responsible for paying the bond should he run away or disappear. Jakir is now living at a friend’s house, while his case is appealed. He wants to keep on working in the country to pay back the S$9,000 ($7,100) debt he took out to pay agents who got him the job in Singapore.

    “My father is sick now and he can’t work anymore. My two younger brothers have stopped school because I can’t send money home anymore. I also cannot call them often so I worry how they are doing,” he said.

    Jakir’s case was handled by UTR Services, the largest repatriation company in Singapore.

    In an email, the head of the company denied the allegations, which he said were fabricated.

    “We build good relationships with workers we are sending back. In fact some workers visit us when they return back to Singapore,” said J. Ravi. “If a worker refuses to go back, we will first find the reason for his refusal and if there is a valid reason, we may than refer him to the relevant authorities to legalize his stay pending outcome of his case.”

    In its 2013 report on human trafficking, the United States said the some repatriation companies in Singapore had “seized and confined” workers and used “assaults, threats and coercion to get them to the airport.” The report added that the high costs of coming to Singapore to work via agent fees “makes migrants very vulnerable to forced labor, including debt bondage.”

    Singapore’s manpower ministry said the Jakir’s case was “with the police.” In a statement, it said companies were obliged to follow the law when sending migrant workers home, and were not allowed to confine them. It said last year the ministry investigated four allegations of abuse by repatriation companies, but they were found to be unsubstantiated. The manpower ministry said it was aware of cases where foreign workers paid high fees to employment agents in their home countries before coming to Singapore, but it said the Singapore government was unable to regulate this.

    One of the wealthiest countries in the world, Singapore has about 1.1 million foreign workers out of a population of 5.3 million. The vast majority of them are low wage workers from developing countries — mainly from India, China and Bangladesh.

    Complaints about overcrowding and the difficulties some Singaporeans face in finding well-paid work are leading to discontent and anti-foreigner sentiment, a worry for the government given the key role imported labor plays in the country’s economic life.

    Compared to other places that rely on migrant workers like Dubai, conditions in Singapore are seen as relatively good. Most workers leave after a few years with the kind of savings they would have little chance of building if they had stayed at home.

    Yet, activists like Wham say many employers use repatriation companies to help them manage workers whom they perceive to be giving them problems or to get rid of those who are injured. Some say employers use the threat of repatriation to keep workers from arguing over pay disputes.

    Ravi from UTR Services said he repatriated around 1,200 workers last year. He said companies pay him S$250-S$350 ($199-$278) per worker, depending on the complexity of the job and time. On the average, he said it takes his company between six and eight hours to get the job done.

    Source: Associated Press

  • Singapore National Hurdler Zaki Sapari Killed in Motorcycle Crash

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    Singapore national hurdler Zaki Sapari had dreamed of racing on home soil and winning Singapore’s first-ever gold medal in the men’s 400m hurdles event.

    But he was instead mourned as the countdown to next year’s SEA Games began on Saturday, a day after he died in a motorcycle accident at the age of 22.

    The full-time national serviceman had been riding along Mandai Road on Friday evening when he collided with a lorry. He was pronounced dead on the scene.

    The national junior record-holder in the men’s 400m hurdles with a time of 53.51sec, Zaki had seemed destined to one day rewrite Seah Soo Lye’s senior mark of 52.30 set almost 31 years ago.

    Source: The Straits Times