Blog

  • 70% Of Persons Who Committed Suicide In 2014 Were Males

    70% Of Persons Who Committed Suicide In 2014 Were Males

    Seven out of every 10 persons who committed suicide last year were male, according to the latest statistics by the Samaritans of Singapore (SOS).

    In a report on Monday (July 27), the suicide prevention group noted that 292 men and 123 women committed suicide last year.

    In the past decade, it added, the number of men committing suicide rose by nearly 30 per cent, while the number of women fell by 20 per cent.

    Part of the reason is that men tend to keep quiet about the problems they are facing, while women are more likely to seek help, said SOS executive director Christine Wong.

    “(Men) feel the continuous pressure to solve issues faced on their own, and suppress feelings of distress,” she said.

    “Help-seeking is often associated with loss of status… loss of control and autonomy, and incompetence.”

    Ms Wong noted that most of the people who seek help at SOS are female.

    The difference between the genders, she added, is clearest for those aged between 60 and 69. This is likely to be because the elderly tend to adhere more strongly to traditional gender roles.

    Problems such as loneliness and mental health issues were common to both genders. However, many men faced financial or debt issues, while more women faced problems at home.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Fandi Ahmad And Sundram As Co-Coaches Of National Team?

    Fandi Ahmad And Sundram As Co-Coaches Of National Team?

    They set pulses racing among football-crazy Singaporeans when they played together for the country, a dream attacking combination capable of unsettling many defences on the continent.

    Now, there is a possibility Fandi Ahmad and V Sundramoorthy, two of Singapore’s all-time greats, could lead the national team as co-coaches.

    Current Singapore coach Bernd Stange’s contract is understood to be up at the end of September and the two local coaches are among the front-runners to take over, should the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) choose not to extend the German’s tenure.

    Sundram and Fandi both have expressed their desire to take on the national job, but the prospect of the duo handling the role together is an intriguing one.

    Most football brains The New Paper spoke to, however, don’t seem convinced a co-coaching system will work.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Clashes Rock Al-Aqsa Mosque

    Clashes Rock Al-Aqsa Mosque

    Israeli police Sunday entered Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque, one of Islam’s holiest sites, as they clashed with Palestinians angered by Jews’ access to the compound on an annual day of Jewish mourning.

    Palestinians threw stones and fireworks while police fired stun grenades after security forces entered the Al-Aqsa compound, which is also revered by Jews, before briefly going inside the mosque itself.

    Police said they went a few metres (yards) into the mosque to shut the doors in a bid to restore calm and lock in rioters who were inside.

    About 300 security personnel had entered the compound when the clashes began with about 200 Palestinians, an AFP photographer reported.

    The Palestinian government said Israel’s actions proved it wanted to “drag the region into a religious war”.

    Jordan, the custodian of the compound, said: “The repeated Israeli violations of the sanctity of the holy site are a provocation against the feelings of Arabs and Muslims… designed to ignite further hostility.”

    It was the first time Israeli security forces had entered the mosque since November, when clashes with worshippers also erupted.

    There were multiple arrests linked to the latest clashes, which came as Jews sought to access the mosque compound to mark Tisha B’av, a day commemorating the destruction in ancient times of the first and second temples.

    – Major flashpoint –

    Palestinians were angered by what they considered intrusions by Jews. Visits are allowed, but Jewish prayer at the site is prohibited.

    The hilltop compound in Jerusalem’s Old City, one of the biggest flashpoints in the Middle East, is the most sacred site in Judaism and Islam’s third holiest, after Mecca and Medina. Jews refer to the site as the Temple Mount.

    Police said Palestinian youths had prepared to clash with them, spending the night in the mosque in which they had stored stones and fireworks, as well as wooden planks to prevent police from closing the doors.

    Upon seeing police at the northern steps to the mosque in the morning, “they began throwing stones at them and firing fireworks”.

    They then barricaded themselves in the mosque, from where they continued to attack the forces, according to authorities.

    “In light of the severe confrontation and the escalating actions of the rioters and with the aim of preventing further injury to police… forces entered a number of metres inside and closed the doors to the mosque with the rioters inside, restoring order,” police said.

    Police reinforcements had deployed in the Old City overnight for fear of unrest as thousands of observant Jews flocked to the Western Wall, located below the mosque complex, for the annual prayer ceremony.

    The police said that after their brief foray into the mosque, they withdrew and the area was quiet. Access to the site was later restricted.

    – ‘Ready to die’ –

    Protests broke out in the lanes and alleyways of the Old City around the mosque, with demonstrators confronting police and chanting “Allahu Akbar (God is greatest)” and police firing stun grenades.

    Some vowed to protect Al-Aqsa, with one man saying the holy site “is in our blood”.

    “We are ready to die,” said Khaled Tuffaha, a 46-year-old Palestinian shop owner. “Everybody is ready to die.”

    One 22-year-old Jewish religious student, carrying a Torah holy book and who said he was briefly in the compound during the clashes, argued that Jews and Muslims should share access.

    “One day for Jews, one day for Muslims,” he said.

    Police said a young Jewish man attempted to enter while wearing phylacteries — small leather boxes containing sacred texts worn by observant men during morning prayer.

    When told to remove them, he resisted and grabbed hold of railings, biting a policeman who tried to remove him before he was arrested.

    At least three stone-throwers were detained and four police were lightly wounded, authorities said.

    One Palestinian man was seen bleeding from the head and protesters spoke of further injuries.

    After Israeli police entered the mosque in November, Jordan — one of the very few Arab states with diplomatic relations with Israel — recalled its ambassador for three months.

    Israel seized east Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community.

    Israel considers all of Jerusalem as its indivisible capital, but the Palestinians claim the eastern sector as capital of their promised state.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Zulfikar Shariff: PAP Malay Muslim MPs Cannot Be Counted On To Fight For Malay/Muslim Issues

    Zulfikar Shariff: PAP Malay Muslim MPs Cannot Be Counted On To Fight For Malay/Muslim Issues

    We are constantly told to leave the hijab issue to the Malay MPs. We are told they are working on it behind close doors.

    We are told that if we raise the issue, it will force the government to dig in their heels and deny our Muslimah of their rights for even longer. We should keep quiet and appreciate their decisions.

    I remember a conversation I had with a Malay MP shortly before the 2001 elections.

    Yatiman Yusof was part of the Tampines GRC. By 2001, he had been in parliament for 17 years and was the Senior Parliamentary Secretary of the Ministry of Information, Communications And The Arts.

    One night about a week before the election, I had a meeting with members of the Fateha group at Afghanistan Restaurant in Tampines. Yatiman happened to be at the same restaurant.

    As I made my way to order dinner, he asked me to sit with him for a chat.

    Our conversation understandably, turned to the hijab issue. According to Yatiman, he supported the ban on “tudung”.

    He argued that if Singapore was to allow tudung in school, we will not integrate anymore and society will disintegrate.

    When it was pointed out that other countries such as Malaysia allows tudung, he answered:

    “It is a mistake by the Malaysian government to allow tudung in schools. I am 55 now. If we allow tudung in school, in 25 years, by the time I am 80, we will start to kill each other.”

    A Malay MP prioritized government policies and support the oppression of our Muslimah.

    And yet…

    We are told to leave the hijab issue to the Malay MPs.

    We are told they are working on it behind close doors.

    We are told to support them and keep quiet.

    And we believe them.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Syed Danial: Government And Opposition Malay Muslim MPs Should Make Clear Their Stance On Hijab

    Syed Danial: Government And Opposition Malay Muslim MPs Should Make Clear Their Stance On Hijab

    The Malay Muslim MPs should make their stance on the hijab issue clear. From both the PAP n WP.

    I must say the only opposition Malay Muslim MP was the only one with the moral courage to make his stance unequivocally clear during the LGBT issue during last year’s Ramadhan. May Allah azzawajal Bless him n Reward him profusely. From the ruling party we have the Minister in Charge of Muslim Affairs making the statement mosques shouldn’t take sides in an issue Allah azzawajal Himself has taken sides. Shocking, to say the least. It doesn’t help that the establishment ulema were silent in docility when this was played out in real time.

    Our current MPs should bear in mind we may be witnessing as we speak this notion that if we throw our hat hook line n sinker with official govt stand we may juz end up being considered a sellout and a political liability when elections draw near.

    They plan. And Allah azzawajal Plans. And Allah is the Best of planners.

    May Allah azzawajal Grant us leaders who would serve His Deen.

    Above all.

     

    Source: Syed Danial

deneme bonusu