Blog

  • Customer Service Star: Sahur Punya Pasal, McDeliver With Taxi!

    Customer Service Star: Sahur Punya Pasal, McDeliver With Taxi!

    We order our food at 3am plus.. they deliver so called late .. cause we have to eat before we fast in islam we call it “sahur” meaning to fill up ur stomach before the fasting day start..

    we were loitering around outside in a group of 30 worker and.. arnd 4am plus came a taxi.. someone crack a joke.. says that our mac came by taxi.. so we just laugh..

    when the taxi stop.. it was really the mac delivery..

    Taxi McDelivery 1

     

    so we laugh out loud.. we ask wat happend to ur bike.. they say.. order too much so they have to travel by cab..

    so kuddos to the outlet who make the fast decision for us who wanna “sahur” ..

    even though a bit late bt the effort counts…

     

    Casper

    [Reader Contribution]

  • Employer Jailed 15 Months For Abuse Of Myanmar Maid

    Employer Jailed 15 Months For Abuse Of Myanmar Maid

    For “cruel and inhumane” acts including scalding her domestic helper with a red-hot ladle because the curry cooked was not up to her standard, a 33-year-old minimart owner was sentenced to 15 months’ jail and ordered to compensate her victim S$4,900 today (June 25) by the State Courts.

    District Judge Christopher Goh ordered Jayaraman Suganthi to compensate Ms Naw Mu Den Paw for the time the latter could not work due to ongoing investigations.

    Suganthi’s offences were deliberate and malicious, and showed a profound lack of respect for the victim’s welfare, said DJ Goh, who noted that cases of maid abuse warrant a deterrent and retributive sentence. “You treated the victim more as chattel than a fellow human being,” he told Suganthi.

    Suganthi’s offences were particularly aggravated by her “carelessness and lack of sympathy” in not taking Ms Naw for medical treatment, added the judge.

    The abuse took place over four months between July and October 2013, and ended only after the victim ran away on Oct 3, he noted.

    Suganthi pleaded guilty last month to three counts of voluntarily causing hurt, and had three similar charges taken into consideration for sentencing. The prosecution had pressed for a jail term of 12 to 16 months for her.

    Besides placing the hot ladle on Ms Naw’s back and calf, Suganthi used a metal pestle on another occasion to hit the 24-year-old Myanmar national. This was because Ms Naw was not frying an Indian snack called vadai “fast enough”.

    On a third occasion, Suganthi punched and bruised her victim’s left eye for failing to wake up at 6.30am to send her daughter to school — even though the maid had only completed her chores at 4am that day.

    Despite the victim’s serious injuries, which included heavy bleeding from her head on one occasion, she was not given any medical help and was even told to wear long pants to cover up the injuries.

    Suganthi also used household items such as a broom handle and kitchen scissors to assault Ms Naw on various occasions, the court heard.

    Ms Naw lived in constant fear during the period of abuse and did not dare to inspect her wounds as Suganthi would scold her for it.

    A medical examination revealed that she had suffered visible burns and injuries on her back, head, eyes and the back of her ears.

    DJ Goh reiterated the gravity of foreign-worker abuse in sentencing Suganthi.

    “There is no legitimate reason why an employer should inflict any injury on any of (his or her) employees, let alone workers who are at a disadvantage because they are working in a foreign country,” he said. “It will be a sad reflection of our society if we allow such acts to go unpunished.”

    Suganthi, whose mother, husband and other relatives were present in court, sobbed loudly throughout the hearing today. She could have been jailed up to 10-and-a-half years and fined for causing hurt with a heated substance. She could have been jailed up to three years and fined up to S$7,500 for voluntarily causing hurt to her domestic helper.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Bangga Ada Commando Melayu

    Bangga Ada Commando Melayu

    Bro,

    Nak share ngan korang this…adik gua nya member

    Malay Commando

    Commando Melayu kaper???  Cool ar gua tengok.

    Orang tua dia mesti bangga gila punya.

    Gua pun tumpang bangga siak.

    Bukan sebarang orang siak bleh jadi commando.cutting mesti ada.

    Org Melayu sekarang hebat jugat ar. dulu nak cari melayu dlm army pun susah siak tapi sekarang dah ada commando. Maju bro…

     

    Danish

    [Reader Contribution]

  • Dr Mahathir Slams Zeal To Impose Dress Code

    Dr Mahathir Slams Zeal To Impose Dress Code

    KUALA LUMPUR — The rift in Malaysian society over a spate of dress code enforcement actions by government agencies and public buildings on non-Muslim women has widened, with former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad saying that Malaysia is now sliding backwards and is acting like Saudi Arabia in its zeal to impose a dress code on the public.

    “We are now sliding backwards. Soon, not only shorts will be an issue. If a woman leaves a house without a burqa, it will be considered wrong,” he said yesterday, adding that dress codes in government buildings should only apply to its employees and not to visitors, especially those who are not Muslim.

    Earlier yesterday, Cuepacs, an umbrella group of 140 civil service unions, spoke up for civil servants who have been criticised for directing women to wear sarongs before entering government buildings.

    Many of the civil servants had used their own money to buy sarongs for visitors who were improperly dressed.

    “The aim of the dress code is get people to dress modestly, it is applicable to everyone. You cannot just go to someone’s house dressed however you want,” Cuepacs president Azih Muda told reporters yesterday.

    “But no one is to blame in these incidents. The personnel are not wrong for following the rules and the client (visitor) is also not wrong as they may have forgotten about the dress code.”

    “The people who are wrong are those who are posting comments (on social media) and sensationalising something that should not be sensationalised in the first place,” he said.

    Mr Azih said that Cuepacs would be sending out a certificate of appreciation to a People’s Volunteer Corps (Rela) officer who on June 16 generated controversy for stopping a woman wearing shorts and making her wrap a towel around her waist before allowing her into Sungei Buloh hospital.

    Meanwhile, an ethnic Chinese opposition lawmaker and a columnist engaged in a war of words after the latter labelled the lawmaker an “enemy” to her own race for donning a headscarf while in a mosque last week.

    In a Facebook post, Ms Lim Fang, who is a columnist with Sin Chew Daily and China Press criticised Selangor state Speaker Hannah Yeoh of the Democratic Action Party (DAP) for allegedly giving a chance for Malay government officials to impose dress codes on Chinese women.

    “If DAP’s Hannah Yeoh can assimilate into Malay society why should Chinese women be different from Malay society? The DAP should discipline the enemy within,” the columnist wrote on Wednesday.

    Ms Yeoh, who is ethnic Chinese, retorted on Facebook yesterday that “extreme views exist in every faith and race” and called on fellow Malaysians to reject such mindsets if they hoped to move the country forward.

    The appreciation letter signed off by Cuepacs follows a similar letter of appreciation issued by Rela to one of its security guards working at a Road Transport Department (RTD) office on Wednesday.

    The guard caused an uproar in Parliament and social media earlier this month by making a middle-aged ethnic Chinese women wear a sarong over her knee-length skirt before being allowed to access the Department.

    Rela had issued the letter despite Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai clarifying that there is no “sarong policy” at the RTD and the department issuing a public apology to the woman.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 34 Suspected Online Scammers And Money Mules Under Investigations

    34 Suspected Online Scammers And Money Mules Under Investigations

    A total of 34 persons aged between 16 and 75 are being investigated for their suspected involvement in various online scams, said the Singapore police on Thursday (Jun 25).

    Following an island-wide operation conducted between Jun 22 and 24, the suspected 24 men and 10 women are believed to be involved in 88 cases of online scams involving more than S$165,000.

    Some of the suspects are believed to have posed as online sellers of baby products or electronic gadgets, and did not deliver the products to buyers after receiving payment, said police. Others are believed to have been recruited from online job portals or social networking websites to become “Money Mules”.

    According to police, “Money Mules” describes those who have allowed their bank accounts to be used by criminal syndicates to receive and transfer money to and from unknown sources. In doing so, they would have assisted in the commission of an offence, police added.

    The suspects will be investigated for the offence of Cheating which carries a punishment of 10 years in jail and a fine, or money laundering offences, which carry a punishment of imprisonment for up to 10 years and a fine of up to S$500,000 as well.

    Director of Commercial Affairs Department, Mr David Chew, said: “Police take a serious view against those who intentionally use the online marketplace to commit crimes and will not hesitate to prosecute them. Account holders who are aware that their accounts are being used to transfer proceeds of crime will also be taken to task for money laundering.”

    The police would like to advise members of public to be vigilant when engaging in any form of online activity on social media applications or on online shopping platforms. To avoid becoming a victim of such scams, police say:

    • Be wary of strangers who befriend you online.
    • Never give your bank and credit card details and personal information to anyone you do not know or have not checked out.
    • When purchasing, always check the track record of the party you are dealing with.
    • Use reputable sites and payment platforms with established refund policies.
    • Avoid making advance payments. If advance payments are necessary, insist on getting a contact number so that you may verify the beneficiary’s identity.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

deneme bonusu