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  • Mamat Exist Menyesal, Mahu Tebus Kesilapan

    Mamat Exist Menyesal, Mahu Tebus Kesilapan

    Mamat Piz 2

    PETALING JAYA: Bekas vokalis kumpulan Exist iaitu Mamat terpaksa menumpang di beberapa rumah kenalannya di Kuala Lumpur selepas mengambil keputusan untuk kembali aktif sebagai penyanyi.

    Mamat atau nama sebenarnya, Mohd Ali Kamarudin, 36, berkata, semenjak bercerai dengan isterinya, Marshila Mustapa Kamal empat tahun lalu dia lebih selesa menumpang di rumah temannya kerana dapat berkongsi masalah dengan mereka.

    “Saya tiada rumah di Kuala Lumpur jadi setiap kali ada tugasan di sini saya akan duduk menumpang dengan kawan-kawan atau pun tidur di hotel.

    “Biarpun saya ada rumah di Johor tetapi saya kini lebih selesa untuk tinggal bersama rakan-rakan kerana sekurang-kurangnya ada teman untuk berbicara dan berkongsi masalah,” katanya kepada mStar Online.

    Dalam pada itu, Mamat turut mengakui dia kadang-kala tertekan dengan pandangan negatif sesetengah pihak terhadapnya berhubung kisah silamnya termasuk dalam soal penyalahgunaan dadah sebelum ini.

    elas Mamat, dia berharap masyarakat dapat memberinya peluang untuk menebus semua kesilapan yang pernah dilakukannya dan bukan terus menghukumnya tanpa mengetahui keadaan sebenar.

    “Mungkin saya nampak seperti tidak kisah dengan apa yang orang perkatakan tentang saya tetapi jauh di sudut hati perasaan sedih itu ada.|

    “Apa yang berlaku sebelum ini adalah sejarah dan harap ia boleh diambil sebagai iktibar malah ia mengajar saya mengenai erti kehidupan,” ujarnya.

    Sementara itu, Mamat berkata, dia bakal muncul dengan single terbaharunya berjudul Keluhan Cinta dan berharap lagu itu nanti akan dapat diterima peminat selepas sekian lama menyepi.

    Jelas Mamat, lagu berkenaan diterbitkan oleh Anita Entertainment dan dia bersyukur atas kepercayaan diberikan oleh syarikat berkenaan.

    “Klip video lagu itu juga sudah dirakamkan dan sedang menjalani proses suntingan. Harap-harap ia akan dapat diterima peminat,” ujarnya.

    Dalam pada itu saksikan temubual video wartawan kami, Addy Junaidi bersama Mamat menerusi ruangan Zoom. 

    Penyanyi ini menjelaskan pendapatannya terjejas. Wajah terbaharu Mamat mengejutkan banyak pihak kerana dia kelihatan cengkung bagaikan tidak terurus. 

    Sumber: http://www.mstar.com.my/hiburan/berita-hiburan/2014/09/02/mamat-exist-hidup-merana/

  • Chinese and Indian Uncles Quarreling, Exchange Vulgarities in MRT

    Chinese and Indian Uncles Quarreling, Exchange Vulgarities in MRT

    juzavani
    FUU!!! PICHI SIA THE INDIAN MAN!!! Un wanna noe wat happened?Actually the train was crowed, so the chinese lady banged n pushed the indian man when took the train…
    But then the chinese lady scolded him in some chinese words instead!
    Then the man aso started to raise his voice n scold … Many bad words came sia…haha! First time seeing in my life…
    Wow The Arguement was jus so AWESOME at the morning !!!
    But inbetween the arguement another chinese man came up supporting the chinese lady who was at wrg sia…
    Then Guess wat the indian man didnt let him aso….He SCREWED both of them so well until I n the indian ladies in the train cant stop laughing sia…
    But i wonder how it would have hurt them aso…
    But pls they are spoling SINGAPORE NAME!!! THINK ABOUT IT ASO!

    Authored by: Juzavani Yaani

  • Top Lawyers Disagreeing Over Gay Sex Law

    Top Lawyers Disagreeing Over Gay Sex Law

    gay love 1

    The subject of universal human rights took a local turn at a university forum on Tuesday night, with two top lawyers disagreeing over whether an anti-gay sex law should be done away with.

    National University of Singapore (NUS) law don Walter Woon said he was in favour of repealing the law because of what he sees as a “constitutional problem”.

    The Government has said that the law will not be proactively enforced. But Prof Woon, a former attorney-general, cited Section 35(8) of the Constitution to make the point that the powers to prosecute lie with the Attorney-General.

    “So we have a very dangerous precedent here where the political authorities are saying to the Public Prosecutor – who is supposed to be independent – there are some laws that you don’t enforce,” he said at the 12th NUS Tembusu Forum attended by about 250 students.

    “I find that very uncomfortable,” he added.

    Section 377A makes it a crime for men to commit acts of gross indecency with other men, whether in private or public. It carries a jail term of up to two years. The law, enacted in 1938, has been in the spotlight in recent years following Parliament debates and constitutional challenges.

    Prof Woon said that homosexual sex was “absolutely impossible to prove” as a practical matter. He added: “As a matter of principle, if these are consenting adults, why should it carry a jail term?”

    While considered a sin by certain religions, it could be accorded similar treatment to adultery and fornication, which are not crimes under the law, he said, adding: “If it is a sin, it is between you and God.”

    NUS Centre for International Law chairman Tommy Koh agreed that the provision should in principle be done without, but said abolishing it was “not so simple” given potential political pushback.

    A majority of Singaporeans were against a repeal going by opinion polls, Prof Koh said.

    “The compromise is a law in the book, but Singapore will not enforce that law,” he said, adding that the Government’s difficulty in balancing opposing opinions “should not be underestimated”.

    The panel at the two-hour forum titled Are Human Rights Truly Universal? also included Ms Braema Mathi, president of human rights group Maruah, and Mr Bernhard Faustenhammer, who heads the political, press and information section of the European Union delegation to Singapore.

    They concurred that the idea of human rights is universal, but its application hinges on local contexts, such as culture and history.

    Ms Mathi cited the example of Brunei’s recent passing of the hudud law, an Islamic penal code that calls for death by stoning for adultery, which she said appears to contradict both regional and global human rights declarations.

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/walter-woon-tommy-koh-differ-377a-anti-gay-sex-law-nus-f#sthash.SlWstfl7.juoA4njc.dpuf

     

  • PAP Reshuffling Grassroots Advisers in Opposition Wards

    PAP Reshuffling Grassroots Advisers in Opposition Wards

    SINGAPORE — After serving as grassroots advisers in constituencies where they lost during the General Election in 2011, Mr Ong Ye Kung and Mr Desmond Choo are leaving their positions in the opposition-held wards of Aljunied GRC and Hougang.

    The People’s Association (PA) announced today (Sept 18) that Mr Choo had been appointed second adviser to Tampines Grassroots Organisations (GROs) for Tampines East.

    Mr Ong, who has been volunteering in Sembawang GRC, relinquished his post as adviser for Kaki Bukit in Aljunied.

    Replacing them are veteran grassroots leaders Goh Chee Koh, 69, and Dr Kee Wei Heong, 64.

    Mr Goh, the honorary chairman of Punggol Central Citizens’ Consultative Committee (CCC), is now adviser to Hougang GROs, while Dr Kee, chairman of Bukit Gombak CCC, takes over from Mr Ong.

    The changes mean the positions of adviser to GROs at the two Workers’ Party-held constituencies — typically occupied by People’s Action Party (PAP) Members of Parliament or potential PAP candidates — are now almost all filled by veteran grassroots leaders.

    Apart from Dr Kee, advisors to the Aljunied GROs include Mr Anthony Loh, 75, Mr David Tay Poey Cher, 69, and Professor Brian Lee Chang Leng, 73. The fifth advisor is former Senior Minister of State (Foreign Affairs) Zainul Abidin Rasheed, 66, who was part of the PAP team that was defeated in the 2011 election.

    Political analysts TODAY spoke to said the moves are not surprising, coming in the wake of earlier appointments of grassroots veterans at Aljunied GROs. For example, Mr Loh replaced former Foreign Affairs Minister George Yeo in Bedok Reservoir—Punggol in 2012, said Institute of Policy Studies senior research fellow Gillian Koh.

    Singapore Management University law professor Eugene Tan said the PAP faces a dilemma in Aljunied and Hougang. Fielding a strong candidate with no guarantee of an electorial victory would upset the PAP’s leadership plans, he said. If a weaker candidate is fielded, voters could feel they are not taken seriously.

    The latest move also suggests that while the PAP considers Mr Choo — who also lost in the Hougang by-election in 2012 — and Mr Ong MP material, the party feels the ground in Aljunied and Hougang are not sweet enough. “The party is seeking to be realistic in electorial prospects,” said Assoc Prof Tan.

    The PAP received 57.2 and 63.9 per cent of the vote at Tampines GRC and Sembawang GRC during the last General Election. Tampines GRC and Sembawang GRC are currently helmed by Education Minister Heng Swee Keat and National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan respectively.

    At Tampines, Mr Choo will be working with Mr Mah Bow Tan — current Adviser for Tampines East. Mr Mah stepped down as Minister of National Development after the 2011 General Election. Mr Ong, meanwhile, was reportedly slated to join Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Education and Manpower Hawazi Daipi said at his Marsiling Meet-the-People Sessions.

    Asked whether the move to place Mr Ong and Mr Choo in Sembawang and Tampines was intended to ensure they stand a higher chance of getting elected into Parliament, Dr Koh said the PAP knows there is no such thing as a stronghold and each constituency has to be taken seriously. Voters have become more demanding and will scrutinise the candidates, she added.

    On whether the move would give them a better chance of getting into Parliament, Mr Choo and Mr Ong – who was both the PAP branch chairman and grassroots adviser for Kaki Bukit at one point – stressed that the announcement was made by the PA, and not by the party. The PA appointment and whether a candidate is fielded in the constituency where he is adviser are two separate matters, Mr Choo said.

    “I think the PA is quite clear about this separation. Whether I will be fielded as a candidate in Tampines, that is something that is still very much (the) party’s decision,” he added.

    When contacted, Dr Kee, who hopes to do more for seniors in Kaki Bukit, said he is not interested in becoming an MP and prefers serving residents through grassroots work. “I had predecessors who actually died on the job when they are in their 80s. Even at 80 years old, they still come and help out at functions and do their best for the community. I will be like that,” he said.

    Previous media reports have identified several chairmen of the PAP branches in Aljunied GRC as potential candidates. The next General Election is due by Jan 2017.

    http://m.todayonline.com/singapore/ong-ye-kung-desmond-choo-appointed-other-constituencies

  • Taiwanese Food Contain Tainted Cooking Oil

    Taiwanese Food Contain Tainted Cooking Oil

    taipei-1908e

    SINGAPORE – Six food products from two Taiwanese brands have been recalled by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) for containing tainted cooking oil.

    Frozen pork, vegetable and leek dumplings made by Chi Mei plus cream cookies, classic cream cookies and the cookies selection from Sheng Hsiang Jen are all being removed from shelves.

    The AVA said it is working with importers and major supermarkets to remove the affected products and that it has also suspended their import into Singapore.

    The two brands were the only two out of those on lists published on the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration and Hong Kong Centre of Food Safety websites to be imported into the Republic.

    The use of “gutter oil” in Taiwan made headlines earlier this month.

    Waste oil was collected from cookers, fryers and grease traps and mixed with lard oil, which was then used for food production in Taiwan and Hong Kong.

    The AVA said the use of tainted oil “is primarily a fraudulent practice” and that it is working with Taiwan and Hong Kong food safety authorities to ensure that other affected products on the recall list will not be imported here.

    It also assured the public that tainted oil was not imported from Taiwan and Hong Kong for use in food processing or food preparation in Singapore.

    The AVA said it will continue to monitor the situation closely and impose additional measures when necessary.

    Sumber: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/ava-recalls-six-taiwanese-food-products-containing-taint#sthash.luzBPSLW.dpuf

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