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  • Man Charged For Slapping Muslim Bollywood Actress For Wearing Short Dress During Filming

    Man Charged For Slapping Muslim Bollywood Actress For Wearing Short Dress During Filming

    MUMBAI (AFP) – A man has appeared in court after slapping a Bollywood actress for wearing a short dress during the filming of a reality television show, police said Tuesday.

    The 24-year-old assaulted model and actress Gauhar Khan in Mumbai because “being a Muslim woman, she should not have worn such a short dress,” police quoted him as saying.

    He was wrested away by security guards at the shooting of “India’s Raw Star”, hosted by Khan, in north Mumbai on Sunday and then arrested.

    “The accused was produced in the court on Monday,” said assistant police inspector Sanjay Shinde at the Aarey Sub Police Station, without giving further details.

    “Since it is a matter associated with Bollywood, a senior officer is also following the progress of the probe,” he told AFP.

    Khan has appeared in several films and last year won “Big Boss”, India’s reality show equivalent to “Big Brother”.

    Treatment of women in the country has been the subject of much media attention over the past two years after a student was gang-raped and killed in the capital New Delhi.

    But people hoping for increased awareness of women’s rights would probably be sent “into the depths of despair” by the comments of the man who attacked Khan, the Mid Day newspaper said Tuesday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Environmental Impact Studies To Be Conducted On Plans To Barricade 40 Per Cent Of Singapore’s Coastline

    Environmental Impact Studies To Be Conducted On Plans To Barricade 40 Per Cent Of Singapore’s Coastline

    With 40 per cent of Singapore’s 197km coastline to be barricaded in the coming years to beef up security, the authorities have reiterated that further studies will be conducted if there is a need to better understand the barriers’ impact on the surroundings — especially if they are near sensitive areas such as nature reserves or marine and coastal areas.

    Questions on the impact of barriers being built off the Kranji and Poyan reservoirs were raised recently on the Wild Shores of Singapore blog, run by nature enthusiast Ria Tan.

    The Kranji and Poyan barriers are not part of the additional 80km announced by Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean in October. Work on the barriers near the reservoirs started in August and will be completed in January 2016, a Singapore Police Force spokesperson said.

    The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and four other Government agencies had reviewed the proposal for any potential environmental concerns, a URA spokesperson told TODAY. The police is to do environmental monitoring and put in place mitigating measures such as silt control during construction.

    The police were required to conduct an environmental impact assessment (EIA) for the Kranji barriers, but not for the Poyan ones.

    “As the coastline next to Poyan Reservoir consisted mainly of seawalls, approval was given for the installation of sea-based barriers, on condition that the physical structures would not impede the movement of water-based plants and animals, and that the sediment plumes be kept to a minimum during construction,” said Dr Lena Chan, director of the National Parks Board’s National Biodiversity Centre.

    The EIA for the Kranji barriers was to ascertain the potential impact on existing biodiversity areas and aquaculture facilities nearby, said the URA. Mitigation measures for the Kranji stretch included building the fences on land to minimise disturbance to the inter-tidal environments.

    The Kranji-Mandai area is home to some rare and endangered mangrove plants. Dr Hsu Chia Chi, who started the Nature Society (Singapore)’s horseshoe crab research and rescue programme, said the mangroves also have one of the highest published densities of Mangrove horseshoe crabs.

    Speaking in his personal capacity, Dr Hsu said he found out in September 2012 about the barriers to be built in the Kranji-Mandai area. The society’s Marine Conservation Group asked the Police Coast Guard for more information about the project and offered to provide data about the area’s flora and fauna if needed.

    It was important for the mangroves and mudflats not to be impacted by the siting of the fences. “If the barriers are done properly and access is allowed to people who use the area responsibly, the fences may not be a bad thing. Now, when it’s wide open, you do find abandoned nets, which trap horseshoe crabs,” said Dr Hsu.

    If the horseshoe crab population is decimated, migratory birds would be deprived of their eggs and young to feed on, he added.

    Wild Shores of Singapore’s Ms Tan agreed that it is important for responsible users to continue to have access to the mangroves and mudflats, but felt the fences “probably will not keep out people who abuse (the) shores”.

    It would be ideal for the Kranji barriers to have low openings at intervals to allow crawling or slithering creatures to move between both sides of the fence, and for biodiversity studies to be done before and after barriers are built, said Dr Hsu.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Licensed Moneylenders May Be Just As Bad As Ah Longs

    Licensed Moneylenders May Be Just As Bad As Ah Longs

    A man borrowed $400 from a licensed moneylender and ended up owning thousands of dollarst.

    This was reported by The Straits Times who interviewed cleaner Goh Chin Ann and found out about this.

    Mr Goh initially borrowed $400 from the licensed moneylender Credit88 in August.

    But there were three different conditions on the loan.

    On the agreement that Mr Goh signed, the interest was only eight cents a day.

    However, the contract also had another condition – if he did not pay back his loan the next day, he would need to pay a $600 late-fee charge.

    But he was give a card with a third condition. It said that he had to repay his loan in five months, at $200 a month.

    But this loan repayment was actually not in the agreement.

    Mr Goh is 62 years old and earns only $1,000 a month. Eventually, he defaulted on one of his installments.

    That was when he was warned of the “very, very high” late fee.

    By now, Mr Goh was at wit’s ends and he approached two other moneylenders – licensed ones again.

    He borrowed another $500 from Assure Capital in Clementi and AP Credit in Anson Road. Their interest rates were half of what Credit88 charged, at 3.72 percent.

    But they both also made him sign contracts which said that he had to pay up the full loan the next day or he would have to pay a late fee of $1,250.

    Soon, Mr Goh was saddled in thousands of dollars of debt.

    Eventually, Mr Goh approached Blessed Grace Social Services, a support group for gambling addicts, who helped Mr Goh negotiate to pay the loans over a longer period.

    These were licensed moneylenders but even they would resort to such tactics to force borrowers into a corner.

    The three licensed moneylenders did not want to comment on their tactics.

    But apparently it is a common “scare tactic” that these licensed moneylenders use.

    It is also a way for “moneylenders to cover themselves”.

    This is how their trick works – as the repayment schedule is different from the agreement they give to borrowers, if they are questioned on this, they will then pretend that the the repayment schedule actually includes the late fees.

    But how have these moneylenders become so bold in using such tricks? Are they not licensed and should be better policed?

    However, Moneylenders’ Association of Singapore president David Poh acknowledged that because there no rules at all on late charges, this allowed the licensed moneylenders to do whatever they want.

    There is only a rule on interest rates cap.

    But even then, for borrowers who earn below $30,000 a year, the annual interest is still a staggering 20 percent.

    Mr Poh admitted, “The only way for moneylenders to earn a profit from low-income borrowers is through late fees,”

    On how this should be dealt with, Mr Poh said, “We encourage the authorities to cap such fees, so borrowers do not suffer.”

    When contacted, the Registry of Moneylenders only said that it knows of the “very high late fees” and a review is ongoing but if this problem has been ongoing for some time now, should remedial actions not have been taken earlier?

    The registry regulates the moneylenders.

    The licensed moneylenders claim that there should not be further new rules as they would have to close shops.

    They also said that they do not lend money to the low-income to make money off them.

    However, Mr Goh’s example proves otherwise and not only that, many gambling and debt support groups also revealed that these moneylenders have been very happy to keep lending the low-income money.

    Clearly, these licensed moneylenders lack morals and ethics and they are profiting off the low-income, who have the least ability to pay.

    Earlier last month, a committee tasked to review moneylending regulations recommended new regulations for a loan cap of four times the borrower’s monthly income, interest rates to be capped at 4 per cent a month, and late interest capped at 4 per cent a month, with no other fees allowed.

    But Mr Poh had said then, “It won’t be a sustainable figure. We are looking at around 10 to 15 per cent based on our default (costs), our accounts … if this were to go on, at 4 per cent, we will definitely close shop – most of my members will close shop.”

    But yet, Mr Poh also acknowledged that the moneylenders were actually profiting from the low-income.

    Clearly, what the “licensed” moneylenders are doing is unethical and preys on the low-income.

    Even if the new regulations are implemented, the moneylenders can still devise new ways to go about that.

    Moreover, it does not solve the fundamental issue as to why the low-income even need to borrow in the first place.

    To effectively deal with the current situation, the solution should not be a piecemeal effort to develop new regulations.

    A holistic plan should also involve uplifting the incomes of the low-income to allow them to earn enough without having to borrow beyond their needs, in addition to the addiction counselling and support provided.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Two Civil Servants Among Three Arrested In Malaysia For Suspected Links to IS

    Two Civil Servants Among Three Arrested In Malaysia For Suspected Links to IS

    KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian police said today (Dec 2) that they have detained three men, including two civil servants, suspected of being linked to the militant Islamic State group.

    The detentions bring the number of people held for suspected militant links to 43 this year.

    National police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said the three were detained Nov 27 and 28 in operations in Kuala Lumpur and in northern Kedah state.

    Mr Khalid said in a statement that a 36-year-old suspect had joined militant groups in Syria since Dec 28 last year and returned to Malaysia on April 8.

    Another two, both civil servants in their 20s, were believed to have been channelling funds to several Malaysians who want to go to Syria to join the Islamic State terror group, he said.

    The spread of the Islamic state ideology has worried Prime Minister Najib Razak, who recently warned that it can cause chaos and conflict in the country. He said the government would introduce a new anti-terrorism law next year to combat the security threat.

    No details have been given on the new law, but officials said it may include preventive measures such as detention without trial. Critics have urged the government not to revive the Internal Security Act, which allowed indefinite detention without trial. It was abolished in 2012 as part of political reforms.

    The government said they have identified 39 Malaysians fighting in Syria and Iraq, including five who had died. AP

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Wife And Suspected Son Of IS Leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi Detained

    Wife And Suspected Son Of IS Leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi Detained

    BEIRUT — Lebanese authorities detained a wife and suspected son of the leader of the Islamic State group several days ago, and she is being questioned, two senior Lebanese officials said today (Dec 2).

    A military official said the woman and child were detained about 10 days ago while carrying fake identification cards.

    Both officials refused to give further details about the woman who is believed to be one of the wives of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group’s reclusive leader. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

    The military official said the woman is a Syrian citizen and is being questioned by authorities.

    The announcement of the arrest comes amid attempts to reach a prisoner-exchange deal between Lebanese authorities and the Islamic State group and the Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s Syria branch, who have been holding more than 20 Lebanese soldiers and policemen hostage since August.

    They have demanded the release of Islamist prisoners being held by Lebanese authorities.

    Last night, the Nusra Front threatened to kill one of the soldiers it is holding captive.

    The wife’s arrest could be used as a bargaining chip for Lebanese authorities in their attempts to win the freedom of the troops.

    A judicial official said the interrogation is being supervised by Lebanon’s military prosecutor, Mr Saqr Saqr. He added that a DNA test is underway to confirm that the child is the son of the detained woman.

    The Lebanese daily As-Safir was the first to break the news, saying they were detained near a border crossing point with Syria. It added that the arrest was made in “coordination with foreign intelligence agencies”.

    Very little is known about al-Baghdadi’s personal life, including how many wives and children he has. Conservative interpretations of Islam allow for a man to marry up to four wives.

    Al-Baghdadi’s first wife is believed to be Iraqi citizen Saja al-Dulaimi, who was reportedly held by Syrian authorities and freed in a prisoner exchange with the Nusra Front earlier this year.

    In March, the Nusra Front freed more than a dozen Greek Orthodox nuns, ending their four-month captivity in exchange for Syrian authorities releasing dozens of female prisoners. AP

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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