Blog

  • Three Year Old Boy Falls From Sixth Floor, Survives

    Three Year Old Boy Falls From Sixth Floor, Survives

    A three-year-old boy has survived a fall from a sixth floor flat.

    The boy tumbled out of the kitchen window when his grandmother went downstairs to retrieve a pair of pants that had fallen downstairs, reported Chinese daily Shin Min Daily News on Wednesday.

    He landed in the carpark at Block 168 on Stirling Road.

    Police said they received a call about the incident at 6pm on Tuesday.

    A neighbour told Shin Min that she saw the boy hit a ledge before landing on the ground.

    She immediately called for an ambulance. His back was bruised but he had no other obvious injuries, she said.

    The boy was conscious, but he was short of breath as he was conveyed to National University Hospital, the Singapore Civil Defence Force said.

    The family declined to be interviewed when approached by a reporter at the hospital, Shin Min said.

    Police investigations are ongoing.

     

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • First Singaporean Charged Under PHTA Faces 18 More Charges For Recruiting Prostitutes And Sex With A Minor

    First Singaporean Charged Under PHTA Faces 18 More Charges For Recruiting Prostitutes And Sex With A Minor

    The first Singaporean to be charged under the new Prevention of Human Trafficking Act (PHTA) now faces 18 charges for recruiting prostitutes, including minors, having sex with a minor and paying for sex with a minor.

    Muhammad Khairulanwar Rohmat was yesterday slapped with 16 charges following police investigations. He has been in remand since he was first charged last week with one count of recruiting a child for exploitation, and for having sex with the girl, who is 15 years old.

    Today (April 29), Khairulanwar was charged with recruiting another 16-year-old for the purpose of sexual exploitation. He is said to have done so at Cuppage Terrace on March 15.

    Khairulanwar also faces charges for soliciting customers who paid him for sexual services by minors.

    He is accused of being paid S$350 and S$450 on two separate occasions between March and April this year, in exchange for arranging for customers to have sex with minors.

    He is also accused of paying S$70 to a minor to have sex with him in a male toilet on March 27, and faces another charge for having sex with a minor on April 13.

    Five of the charges Khairulanwar faces are for living on the earnings of prostitutes between February 2013 and April this year, while he also faces six charges for procuring women for the purpose of prostitution.

    Both crimes could earn him jail sentences of up to five years, with fines up to S$10,000.

    The PHTA was passed in Parliament last November and implemented in March. It serves to deter human trafficking, including the sexual exploitation of individuals.

    The Act states that any person who recruits, transports, transfers, harbours or receives an individual by means of threat, force or coercion, abduction, deception, abuse of vulnerability, or using money or any other benefit will be found guilty of trafficking.

    For receiving payment for trafficking individuals, a convicted person can be jailed up to 10 years, fined up to S$100,000 and receive up to six strokes of the cane.

    A harsher sentence will be imposed if he is discovered to have committed the offence more than once.

    The maximum sentence for sex with a minor is up to 10 years in jail, or a fine, or both, while the maximum punishment for paying for sex with a minor is up to seven years in jail, or a fine, or both.

    Khairulanwar’s case will be mentioned in court again on May 20.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Apakah Melayu Singapura Betul-Betul Maju?

    Zulfikar Shariff: Apakah Melayu Singapura Betul-Betul Maju?

    Orang Melayu selalu ditipu dengan dakwaan bahawa bangsa kita makin maju, makin kaya, makin ramai yang berada. Kalau dulu kita tinggal di rumah kampung, sekarang tinggal di rumah flat.

    Kalau kampung, tanah kita, kalau flat, tanah HDB. Tapi takpelah kita percaya juga yang kita ni makin kaya.

    Sekarang dah ada kereta, semua ada mobile phone, dah boleh melancung. Kan bagus tu.

    Tapi kita perlu juga selidik jika orang Melayu makin “kaya” kerana memang benar kita ni kaya, kerana tidak ada diskriminasi, atau hanya kerana mengikut arus keberadaan.

    Kalau kita ingin tahu jika orang Melayu makin kaya, makin mewah, kita perlu bandingkan dengan kaum bukan Melayu di Singapura. Dan bandingkan perluasan jurang kemewahan: bila ia berlaku? kenapa? siapa yang memerintah?

    Adakah kemewahan ini melalui absolute gains (kerana dunia semakin mewah jadi kita pun mewah) atau melalui relative gains (jika dibandingkan dengan kaum lain, sebenarnya kita makin miskin).

    Adakah Melayu semakin mewah? Apabila PAP memerintah, siapa yang lebih mendapat habuan? Sama rata ke? Atau ada kaum yang makin mewah? Dan kita sebenarnya makin miskin?

    Menurut Lily Zubaidah Rahim, PAP tidak suka kita bandingkan kemewahan orang Melayu dengan bangsa lain kerana ia akan menunjukkan jurang yang makin meluas (23-24).

    The economic gap between the Malay and Chinese communities grew since the PAP took over.

    “the gap between Malays and Chinese in the two highest occupational categories was 2.3 in 1957, which increased to 4.1 per cent in 1970 and 9.6 per cent in 1980.

    Whereas there was approximately the same proportion of Malays and Chinese in the lower manual category in 1957, by 1980 there were 10 per cent more Malays in this occupational grouping. In the 1980s, the Chinese community continued to enjoy greater occupational mobility relative to the Malay and Indian communities…

    While there was a decrease of 25.3 per cent of Chinese male workers in the income category of less than $400 a month between 1975 and 1980, the proportion of Malays in that income category actually increased by 1.5 per cent in the same period.

    Whereas there was an increase of 5.9 per cent of Chinese male workers in the income bracket of more than $1,000 per month between 1975 and 1980, the increase for Malays was only 1.9 per cent…

    In 1980, the average Malay household income was 73.8 per cent of the average Chinese household income. By 1990, the income gap widened as the average Malay income dropped to 69.8 per cent of the average Chinese household income.” (20)

    Rahim, Lily Zubaidah. The Singapore dilemma: The political and educational marginality of the Malay community. Oxford University Press, USA, 1998.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Dzar Ismail: Jangan Rosakkan Lagi Nama Baik Budak-Budak CD, Hantar Culprits Gi Nepal

    Dzar Ismail: Jangan Rosakkan Lagi Nama Baik Budak-Budak CD, Hantar Culprits Gi Nepal

    Pikirkanlah blood brother korang yg bertungkus lumus bantu mangsa gempa kat Nepal. Jangan sebab segelintir, sebar video rosakkan harta bende, semua nama jadi busuk. Aku pun dulu SCDF jugak.

    Dulu-dulu pakcik-pakcik pandang hina kat aku beb. Nak tackle anak dia, tanya army ker SCDF. Bila sebut SCDF, dia pandang atas bawah.

    Last bila jumpa masa jemputan, cakap dia selalu dengar aku, dan berkenan sangat dengan aku. Well its too late pakcik, sapa suro ko pandang hina kat SCDF! Tapi mungkin selepas hari nih, dia akan senyum! Dia akan cakap, “Aku dah cakap dah!” Aku tau dia tengah senyum! Aku tampar kang. Jadi, hargailah mereka yg mengharumkan nama SCDF. Jangan amek sambil lewa, bila pakai uniform, sebab yg lain, yg tak bersalah, semua akan terbabit.

    Dan kepada SCDF, janganlah sampai buang mereka, tapi, hantarlah mereka ke Nepal, baru mereka tau hargai kehidupan susah, cari mangsa pakai tangan, angkat batu bata, jadi rescuer, jadi medic, baru tahu menilai erti pakai uniform biru tuh.

    Nih dah lemak sangat nih.

     

    Source: Dzar Ismail

     

     

  • Jalan Keluar Kurangkan Kesesakan Solat Jumaat

    Jalan Keluar Kurangkan Kesesakan Solat Jumaat

    Beberapa masjid kurang sesak mengajak jemaah menunaikan solat Jumaat di tempat mereka, terutama pada cuti umum, bagi melegakan kesesakan di sesetengah masjid.

    Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (Muis) pula semalam memberi Berita Harian senarai 13 masjid yang mempunyai cukup ruang bagi menampung jemaah solat Jumaat yang bertambah pada cuti umum.

    Antaranya ialah Masjid Al- Amin, Masjid Jamiyah Ar-Rabitah di Tiong Bahru, Masjid Hajah Rahimahbi di Kebun Limau, Masjid Omar Salmah di Jalan Mashor dekat Thomson Road dan Masjid An-Nahdhah di Bishan.

    Pengerusi Eksekutif Masjid Jamiyah Ar-Rabitah, Encik Sadir Osman, misalnya, berkata masjid itu menerima 1,000 jemaah solat Jumaat setiap minggu sedangkan ia boleh menampung hingga 2,000 jemaah.

    Encik Sadir, 67 tahun, mengalu-alu jemaah dari kawasan lain memakmurkan masjid di Tiong Bahru Road itu, semasa dihubungi semalam.

    Minggu lalu, di majlis pembukaan Masjid Al-Ansar, Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, menyarankan agar jemaah menunaikan solat Jumaat di masjid kurang sesak, terutama apabila cuti umum jatuh pada hari itu, bagi mengelakkan kesesakan di masjid kejiranan.

    Semalam, jurucakap Muis memberitahu Berita Harian memang banyak masjid sesak setiap kali Jumaat jatuh pada cuti umum sedangkan sebilangan yang terletak di kawasan dekat bandar mempunyai banyak ruang kosong.

    “Sebilangan masjid di Singapura, terutama di estet matang HDB, mengalami kesesakan untuk jemaah bersolat Jumaat, terutama jika hari Jumaat jatuh pada haru cuti umum.

    “Ini mungkin disebabkan kehadiran ramai pekerja asing lelaki yang tidak bekerja dan bapa tidak bekerja yang datang bersama anak-anak tidak bersekolah,” ujar beliau.

    Mengenai senarai masjid cukup ruang bagi jemaah solat Jumaat yang bertambah pada cuti umum, masjid-masjid tersebut dianggarkan mempunyai ruang bagi tambahan 200 hingga 1,000 jemaah.

    Jurucakap Muis menambah ada ruang masjid, terutama di kawasan bandar, tidak dimaksimumkan bagi solat Jumaat pada hari cuti umum.

    “Memanfaatkan sepenuhnya ruang masjid ini dapat meringankan masalah kesesakan berlebihan di sesetengah masjid kejiranan. Sehubungan dengan ini, kami menggalak masyarakat meneroka pilihan lain dengan melawat masjid-masjid ini bersama keluarga,” ujarnya.

    Sebuah lagi masjid yang mengalu-alu lebih ramai jemaah datang menunaikan solat Jumaat ialah Masjid Mujahidin di Stirling Road, Queenstown.

    Pengerusi Eksekutifnya, Encik Muhammad Khairul Jameel, berkata:

    “Bilik darjah dan dewan serbaguna kami boleh dijadikan ruang solat. Ruang-ruang ini berhawa dingin, lantas jemaah dapat beribadah dengan selesa.”

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

deneme bonusu