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  • Pelakon Roslan Kemat ‘Terperanjat’ Pusara Abadi Digali Semula, Tapi Itu ‘Lombong Emas’ Baginya

    Pelakon Roslan Kemat ‘Terperanjat’ Pusara Abadi Digali Semula, Tapi Itu ‘Lombong Emas’ Baginya

    Kalau anda ke tanah perkuburan Pusara Abadi, besar kemungkinan anda akan bertemu dengan seorang artis. Seorang pelakon televisyen.

    Besar kemungkinan, beliaulah yang mula menyapa anda dahulu kalau anda ‘melawat’ ke kubur sanak-saudara, bukan sebaliknya.

    Itulah Roslan Kemat, yang pernah berlakon dalam 30 buah drama. Wajahnya sentiasa peramah dan tersenyum, walaupun dikelilingi ribuan kubur dan batu nisan – sesuatu yang boleh membuatkan sebahagian orang berasa ‘ngeri’ dan tidak selesa. Yang pasti, di sini, beliau tidak berlakon. Ini pentas amat luas untuk beliau mencari rezeki.

    Tidak lama lagi, Roslan Kemat akan menjadi tukang mandi mayat pula. Kenapa dan di mana? Itu akan kami jelaskan di perenggan di bawah nanti.

    (Gambar: Ira Musfirah)

    Sejurus selepas diumumkan tentang penggalian semula 35,000 kubur orang Islam di Pusara Abadi, memang, pelbagai reaksi bercampur-baur muncul di kalangan masyarakat Melayu/Islam.

    Yang pasti, proses penggalian semula tapak tanah perkuburan Choa Chu Kang itu bagi projek peluasan Pangkalan Udara Tengah, jelas menjejas banyak pihak.

    Bukan sahaja bagi waris kepada mereka yang sudah meninggal dunia, bahkan mereka yang ‘cari makan’ di pekarangan pusara juga terkena tempiasnya. Roslan, berusia 55 tahun, tidak terkecuali. Beliau bekerja dengan syarikat pembuat dapur-dapur kubur, Atmi General Contractor.

    Apa reaksi beliau apabila pertama kali mendengar tentang penggalian semula Pusara Abadi?

    “Saya terperanjat. Orang di luar pun kecoh dan menghubungi saya untuk bertanya sama ada berita itu adalah benar. Memang kalau boleh, kubur ini jangan diganggu.

    “Tetapi seperti flat HDB juga, bila-bila masa undang-undangnya boleh berubah. Kita terpaksa reda sajalah. Apa nak buat,” kata beliau semasa ditemui wartawan BERITAMediacorp di Pusara Abadi beberapa hari lalu.

    PUSARA DIGALI SEMULA – KONTRAKTOR MASIH ADA UNTUNG

    Meskipun begitu, Roslan lebih selesa memandang isu tersebut dari sudut yang positif.

    Bahkan, dari sudut pandangan seorang kontraktor, penggalian semula kubur juga dapat sedikit sebanyak membantu pihaknya.

    “Bagi saya, apabila kubur-kubur digali semula, kontraktor masih akan meraih keuntungan. Apabila kubur-kubur itu ditempatkan di pekarangan yang baru, kami masih perlu bikin rumput, iaitu sebanyak S$350 bagi setiap kubur.

    “Malah, kawasan sekitar Jurong ini adalah ‘lombong emas’. Di sinilah ramai pihak dapat bikin duit, bikin dapur-dapur. Sebab itu jugalah saya datang ke sini, sebab mahu mencari duit lebih,” katanya, yang berada di pekarangan pusara sekitar empat kali seminggu.

    Roslan, yang juga orang lama dalam dunia lakonan tempatan, turut berkongsi dengan BERITAMediacorp berkongsi pengalaman beliau sebagai ‘orang kubur’: “Sebagai contoh, pada hari Sabtu dan Ahad, ramai orang akan datang. Dari situ kami akan menghampiri mereka dan mencari pelanggan.

    “Malah, pada bulan puasa, saya pernah mendapat lebih 10 pelanggan dalam tempoh sehari.”

    LEBIH 30 TAHUN BERKHIDMAT DI KAWASAN PUSARA

    Jika sesetengah orang mungkin berasa agak ganjil harus ‘berpejabatkan’ pusara untuk mencari pelanggan, yang pasti, tidak bagi Roslan.

    Bahkan, beliau sebenarnya sudah berkhidmat di sekitar kawasan pusara sejak lebih 30 tahun di bawah syarikat yang dikendalikan makciknya itu.

    “Lebih 30 tahun, sudah biasa, tak rasa apa-apa. Kami di sini untuk cari makan. Dulu saya bekerja sepenuh masa, tetapi sekarang lebih bersifat sambilan,” jelasnya, yang kini juga bekerja sebagai penghantar surat khabar, pemandu Grab dan penghantar kuih.

    Bagi Roslan, beliau sanggup melakukan lima pekerjaan dalam satu masa demi membesarkan enam anaknya yang tersayang.

    ANAK ROSLAN KEMAT MASUK UNIVERSITI

    “Apabila anak-anak saya masih kecil, saya terpaksa bersusah-payah kerana sayalah satu-satunya pencari nafkah dalam keluarga,” kongsi Roslan lagi yang mempunyai anak dalam lingkungan usia 16 hingga 29 tahun.

    “Tetapi Alhamdulillah, tak sia-sia saya bekerja demi anak-anak. Sekurang-kurangnya salah seorang daripada anak-anak saya berjaya memasuki universiti di NTU. Saya sangat bangga dengan pencapaian semua anak saya,” luahnya. Ini jelas membuktikan bahawa hasil titik peluh bekerja di tanah perkuburan, ada peranan membantu membiayai anaknya, ke universiti.

    Kebetulan, anaknya itu yang berusia 25 tahun, Muhammad Shafiq Roslan, baru selesai konvokesyen semalam (3 Ogos) dalam bidang Kimia dan Kimia Biologi.

    Yang pasti, tidak kira dalam bidang apa sekali pun yang dilakukannya, Roslan Kemat berjaya mengimbangi masanya dengan baik, selain terus memburu peluang.

    “Perubahan untuk menggali semula kubur jelas suatu yang positif. Kami dapat bikin rumput bagi kawasan baru selepas kubur digali semula, tetap meneruskan perniagaan dan meraih keuntungan,” kata pelakon sambilan itu yang pernah mendapat Anugerah Life Record bagi Pelakon Lelaki Terbaik untuk drama Jeritan Sepi.

    (Gambar-gambar: Petikan skrin dari video Youtube Mediacorp Suria)

    PROJEK TERBARU ROSLAN KEMAT: 6X7 – 6 KALI 7

    Oh ya, Roslan memberitahu BERITAMediacorp, selain daripada kubur, beliau kini akan ‘bergiat’ pula sebagai tukang mandi mayat.

    Bukan menukar kerjaya, tetapi meneruskan kerja seninya. Roslan Kemat sebenarnya bakal memainkan watak seorang tukang mandi mayat dalam drama lapan episod bertajuk ‘6X7’. Ia bakal ditayangkan di Mediacorp Suria bermula 17 Oktober ini.

    Tapi kalau anda rindu untuk melihat wajah Roslan lebih awal, berkunjunglah ke Pusara Abadi. Roslan Kemat pasti beri salam kepada anda.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Seeking A Dream, Indonesian Family Finds Nightmare In Raqqa

    Seeking A Dream, Indonesian Family Finds Nightmare In Raqqa

    The 17-year-old Indonesian girl made a persuasive case to her family: Lured by what she had read online, she told her parents, sisters, aunts, uncles and cousins they should all move to Syria to join the Islamic State group.

    Each of her two dozen relatives found something in it for them. Free education and health care for the girls. Paying outstanding debts for her father and uncle. Finding work for the youngest men.

    And the biggest bonus: a chance to live in what was depicted as an ideal Islamic society on the ascendant.

    It didn’t take long before their dreams were crushed and their hopes for a better life destroyed as each of those promised benefits failed to materialize. Instead, the family was faced with a society where single women were expected to be married off to IS fighters, injustice and brutality prevailed, and a battle raged in which all able-bodied men were compelled to report to the frontline.

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Nurshardrina Khairadhania, now 19, recalled her family’s fateful decision to immigrate to the IS stronghold of Raqqa two years ago — and how, only months later, their bid to escape began.

    During that time the family endured separation, her grandmother died and an uncle was killed in an airstrike.

    “IS shared only the good things on the internet,” said the young woman, who goes by her nickname, Nur.

    She now lives with her mother, two sisters, three aunts, two female cousins and their three young sons in Ain Issa, a camp for the displaced run by the Kurdish forces fighting to expel IS from Raqqa. Her father and four surviving male cousins are in detention north of there. While the men are being interrogated by the Kurdish forces for possible links to IS, the women wait in a tent in the searing heat, hoping for the family to be reunited and return to their home in Jakarta.

    Nur’s family is among thousands from Asia, Europe, Africa, North America and the Middle East who chased the dream of a new Islamic society advertised by IS in slickly produced propaganda videos, online blogs and other social media. By the time they got there, the group’s brutal campaign of beheadings, kidnappings and enslaving women was well underway.

    For Nur and her sister, such images were part of a hate campaign against the nascent Islamic caliphate or simply justified punishment for crimes committed there.

    “I was afraid to see that. I first thought it was another group … who hates IS,” Nur said.

    Nur recalled calling her family together just months after the extremists’ declared their “caliphate” on territory seized in Syria and Iraq in the summer of 2014.

    Making her pitch, she recounted the benefits laid out on the IS blogs: her 21-year-old sister could continue her computer education for free. Her 32-year-old divorced cousin, Difansa Rachmani, could get free health care for herself and her three children, one of whom was autistic. Her uncle could get out from under the debt he incurred trying to save a struggling auto mechanic business in Jakarta — and could even open a new one in Raqqa, where mechanics were in high demand to build car bombs, the extremists’ signature weapon.

    For Nur, the Islamic State seemed to be the perfect place to pursue her desire to study Islam and train to be a health practitioner.

    “It is a good place to live in peace and justice and, God willing, after hijrah, we will go to paradise,” she recalled thinking, using the Islamic term for migration from the land of persecution to the land of Islam. “I wanted to invite all my family. … We went to be together forever, in life and afterlife.”

    The family sold their house, cars and gold jewelry, collecting $38,000 for the journey to Turkey and then on to Syria.

    But once in Turkey, the first quarrels began, over how or even whether to sneak into Syria. Seven relatives decided to head out on their own and were detained by the Turkish authorities while trying to cross the border illegally. They were deported back to Indonesia where, the family says, they remain under surveillance because the rest of their relatives had lived in IS territories.

    The saga of family separation had only just begun, however.

    After arriving in Islamic State group territory in August 2015, the family was divided again: the men were ordered to take Islamic education classes, and ended up jailed for months because they refused military training and service. After their release, they lived in hiding to avoid forced recruitment or new jail sentences. The women and girls were sent to an all-female dormitory.

    Nur was shocked by life in the IS-run dormitory. The women bickered, gossiped, stole from each other and sometimes even fought with knives, she said. Her name and those of her 21-year-sister and divorced cousin were put on a list of available brides circulated to IS fighters, who would propose marriage without even meeting them.

    “It is crazy! We don’t know who they are. We don’t know their background. They want to marry and marry,” she said.

    “IS wants only three things: women, power and money,” she and her cousin, Rachmani, said in unison.

    “They act like God,” Nur added. “They make their own laws. … They are very far from Islam.”

    In a separate, monitored, interview with the AP at a security center run by Kurdish forces in Kobani, north of Raqqa, where he and the other male family members were being questioned for possible IS ties, her 18-year-old cousin said that living under the extremists was like living in “prison.”

    “We (didn’t) want to go to Syria to fight,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution from IS or trouble with the Kurdish authorities or those back home in Indonesia. “We just wanted to live in an Islamic state. But it is not an Islamic state. It is unjust, and Muslims are fighting Muslims.”

    IS officials ignored Nur’s persistent queries about continuing her education in Raqqa. And because they refused to enroll in military service, the men never got the jobs they had been promised. When the battle for Raqqa intensified in June, IS militants set up checkpoints around the city, searching for fighters and came looking for the men.

    Rachmani did get free surgery for a chronic neck ailment and her son got attention for his autism and was finally able to walk. Soon after the family’s arrival, she was sent to the then-IS stronghold of Mosul in Iraq for the surgery.

    “I left my country for my stupid selfish reason. I wanted the free facilities,” Rachmani said. “Thank God I got my free (surgery) but after that all lies.”

    The family searched for months for a way to escape, a risky endeavor in the tightly controlled IS territory.

    When the Kurdish-led campaign to retake Raqqa from IS intensified in June, the family finally saw their opportunity. At great personal risk, Nur used a computer in a public internet cafe to search for “enemies of IS,” despite the danger posed by frequent raids carried out by IS there. She contacted activists and eventually found smugglers, who, for $4,000, got the family across the front line and into Kurdish-controlled territory. They turned themselves in to Kurdish forces on June 10.

    An Indonesian Foreign Ministry official said authorities have known for several months about the presence of Indonesian nationals, including Nur’s family, in the Ain Issa camp and were investigating their condition.

    “However, they have been two years living in the IS area, so the risk assessment of them is required and we have been facing obstacles to reach them as they are in an area not controlled by any official government, either Iraq or Syria,” said Lalu Muhammad Iqbal, the ministry’s director of Indonesian citizen protection.

    “I am very regretful. I was very stupid and very naive. I blame myself,” Nur said of the family’s plight. “May God accept my repentance because you know … it is not like a holiday to go to Turkey. It is a dangerous, dangerous trip.”

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Western Union Armed Robbery: 56-Year-Old Man Arrested

    Western Union Armed Robbery: 56-Year-Old Man Arrested

    A 56-year-old Singaporean man suspected to have robbed a Western Union branch in Ubi at knifepoint has been arrested, the Singapore Police Force announced on Friday (Aug 4).

    The police said despite an initial lack of leads, officers were able to establish the suspect’s identity, and arrested him on Thursday at 10.35pm along Pasir Ris Drive 6.

    The robbery took place at the Western Union branch at Block 301 Ubi Avenue 1 on Tuesday morning.

    According to the police, the suspect entered the remittance outlet wearing a helmet and mask, and armed with a knife. He ordered the staff not to shout and demanded money, then fled with about S$4,000.

    However, in the process of fleeing, he dropped about S$3,000, which was recovered at the back of the Western Union outlet by staff and members of the public.

    The suspect eventually fled on a bicycle with S$1,071 in a bag. By the time the police arrested him on Thursday night, the suspect claimed to have spent most of the money, including S$24 on 4D tickets. The police are investigating his claims.

    He also allegedly threw away the helmet and knife used in the robbery, the police said.

    He will be charged in court for armed robbery on Saturday. If convicted, he faces between two and 10 years in jail and at least 12 strokes of the cane.

    Assistant Commissioner of Police Tan Tin Wee, who is the commander of Bedok police division, said he is proud of his officers who worked hard to establish the identity of the suspect.

    “They have worked long and hard over three days to trace the suspect’s movements, establish his identity and subsequently bring him to justice,” AC Tan said. “The police do not tolerate such brazen acts and we will spare no effort to hunt down these offenders to ensure they face the full brunt of the law.”

    This was the second armed robbery in Singapore in as many days. On Monday, a man robbed a Shell petrol station at knifepoint in broad daylight and made off with nearly S$1,200. A 48-year-old suspect has since been arrested and charged.

    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/9081676/16x9/991/557/e4b16832b652f87f3396d08c3541badc/pJ/western-union-robbery.jpg

    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/9091394/16x9/991/557/c424bd1411b9b1be72ab9a3ff3de1655/JH/evidence-seized-in-western-union-robbery.jpg

    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/9091400/16x9/991/557/d5397017930feb674674704ee20d73c/Kl/western-union-robbery-4d-tickets.jpg

     

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/

  • Muslimah Bride-To-Be Shuts Down Kaypoh Fat Shamers

    Muslimah Bride-To-Be Shuts Down Kaypoh Fat Shamers

    Living in Singapore as a hijabi, I would have thought people would have known to not make rude or inappropriate comments to me. I wear the hijab because I am a Muslim woman who belives her body is her own private concern. The Qur’an teaches us that individuals should not be judged according to gender, beauty, size, wealth, or privilege. Her or his character, that’s what matters.

    Nonetheless, I still receive many comments thrown at me today “you drink coke everyday issit?”, “oh no wonder, your maternal family is on the bigger side” , “sayang tau you have a pretty face”, “you need to start exercise”, “were you a fat baby?”, “stop eating fast food,”, “your kakak is smaller than you!!!”, “oh thought you are the kakak”. Sad to say, many times those comments were made by fellow Muslim women.

    But now, oh boy, now with my upcoming wedding, the remarks are now shifted to that focus “eh u not on diet”, “woi can still dare to eat”, “i’m invited to your wedding right? i better start dieting if not i will look super fat and ugly in your wedding photos”, “your fiancee not fat”, “better exercise, go run 3-4 times weekly”, “your wedding next year and..*looks at me up and down*”

    Firstly, thank you for even using your brain before you open your mouth. Secondly, Alhamdulillah at the end of the day, I know who to go to remind myself to focus on what’s important. I know I’m not perfect and I used to make rude remarks too but I grow up (ok larr wider also I’m not in denial).

    Because they speak their minds freely and brashly in front of their young ones, I encountered many kids making rude comments. Initially I brushed that aside to “kids say the darndest thing”. But since the arrival of my nephews and my close friends’ kids who have never ever made rude remarks about one’s appearance, it then dawned on me (thanks to Pooja Kaur), due to the kids’ upbringing. You see, my sister and BIL (esp my sis) are very careful with their words and how they treat others in front of my nephews.

    In summary my message to Singapore and to the world larr basically — we women (be it Muslim, non-Muslim, old, young etc) – our BODY is our OWN BUSINESS!! Tak faham meh sini, gua kasi satu tampar kat mulut kamu!

     

    Source: Nurazila Suparman

  • Is Government Providing Fair Subsidy To Local And Foreign Stallholders?

    Is Government Providing Fair Subsidy To Local And Foreign Stallholders?

    I went to this stall because of their signboard.

    As I asked about the subsidy as shown, I receive the following reply.

    The stall owner Aunty raised her tone at me with her angry pointed-up eyebrows, which look like an angry bird in red.

    I asked about the written subsidy meal.. She shout :’ Government help one, I am private. Different, u dun understand??!!’

    I told her :’ Your attitude is bad, I do not want to order your food.’

    I walk to another economic stall. The boss explained, I am not the 1st person to feedback on her bad attitude. He explained, the boss of the stall is a PRC lady. She receives 5k subsidy assistance per month.

    Isn’t this a 100% profitting business?

    Why is so much help cater to prc, but how about local hawker entrepreneurs?

    We have to go through approval n approval and check n checks.

    I kinda felt the unfairness to other hawker entrepreneurs whom just start out their noble hawker business.

    To start a hawker stall, a $30k to 40k is needed. His stall rental is 1.7k per month.

    My outcoming stall rental is 1.8k.

    Is a hawker entrepreneur life easy?

    How many plates of rice do we need to sell to cover the basic cost price. The long working hours too.

    My morning is indeed a memorable one.

    Regards,
    Aunty Pan

    #SPH

     

    Source: Vivian Pan