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  • Traffic Police Station Inspector Went Beyond Call Of Duty To Ensure The Safety Of A Stranded Malaysian Motorcyclist And I

    Traffic Police Station Inspector Went Beyond Call Of Duty To Ensure The Safety Of A Stranded Malaysian Motorcyclist And I

    On 23 June, about 1830hrs,I was coming home from work via PIE towards Tuas on my scooter.

    Just after Bukit Batok East exit, I saw a Malaysian rider struggling to start his bike on the road shoulder, as his throttle cable had snapped.

    As another rider, it is quite sad to see him stranded by the road shoulder as Hari Raya is coming this weekend and he is on his way home to JB from his workplace at Changi

    I rendered my assistance to bring him over to the nearest workshop around that area to buy the parts.

    We got back to his bike and start fixing his cable, I decide company him as afraid he might not able to converse in English.
    Shortly saw an expressway patrol car (QX889A) slowed down and stop behind us, a station inspector greeted with a smile, asking whether is everything alright, and do we need any EMAS towing.

    Soon after, another patrol car arrived at the scene tries to assist us both in the situation. As soon it’s about 7.14pm, the 2nd car officers remind me to break-fast 1st and they need to leave as to attend a case.

    The station inspector still stay throughout with us till the skies are quite dark, he told me at least the blinkers which is on the police car will warn away the rest of the motorist in case they might crash to both of us bikers.

    Such a simple care and gesture using his patrol car to protect us from the rear in case of any mishaps.

    Finally as the rider has completed fixing his cable, he escorted out back to the expressway safely as traffic is quite heavy.

    Kudos to that TP Station Inspector whom I forgot to take his name down.

    But I managed to take down the patrol car plate number, hopefully you guys could able to find out who was the helpful Hero

     

    Source: Muhammad Fithri

  • Polis Rayu Maklumat Remaja Lelaki Melayu Dilapor Hilang

    Polis Rayu Maklumat Remaja Lelaki Melayu Dilapor Hilang

    Polis merayu orang ramai supaya tampil memberikan maklumat tentang seorang remaja lelaki Melayu yang dilaporkan hilang.

    Dalam catatannya di laman Twitter, Pasukan Polis Singapura (SPF) menyatakan bahawa remaja berusia 15 tahun itu kali terakhir dilihat di Blok 536 Choa Chu Kang St 51 pada 19 Jun 2017, pada 7.25 malam.

    Menurut SPF, remaja itu bertubuh kecil dan mempunyai ketinggian 1.7 meter.

    Remaja itu juga kali terakhir dilihat memakai baju kemeja T berwarna hitam dan selipar berwarna gelap.

    Sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat tentang remaja lelaki ini boleh menghubungi 999.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • RRG Counsellors Saved Two Secondary Schoolboys From Further Radicalisation

    RRG Counsellors Saved Two Secondary Schoolboys From Further Radicalisation

    One developed an interest in global affairs involving Muslims and became convinced of the need to migrate to an Islamic caliphate. Another penned pro-Islamic State (IS) slogans in his school books that were discovered by his father.

    In both cases, which involved secondary schoolboys, relatives and friends became concerned enough to alert the Religious Rehabilitation Group (RRG). The boys met with RRG counsellors, who explained religious concepts and the IS’ violent ideology to them.

    A third case was of a wife who noticed her husband becoming more vocal about a much stricter form of Islam, holding the exclusivist view that loyalty could only be given to God and Muslims. She confided in her relative, who approached RRG for advice. The wife spoke a few times over the phone with a counsellor on how she could advise her husband not to hold such extreme religious views.

    Sharing these cases on Friday (June 23) of people who had approached the RRG, the group’s vice-chairman Mohamed Ali urged the public to tap its helpline, mobile app and resource and counselling centre at Khadijah Mosque on Geylang Road, if they suspect their loved ones are close to being radicalised.

    The three cases are the only instances of voluntary reporting that RRG has encountered since 2014 – the year its resource centre opened – and that its counsellors “saved” from going further down the path of radicalisation, said Ustaz Mohamed.

    Because they were detected early, they did not need to be reported to the Ministry of Home Affairs or dealt with under the law, he said. “They are not those who were ready to use violence, but they believed that violence is justified.”

    Ustaz Mohamed declined to reveal when RRG was alerted to each case or the backgrounds of the individuals. The secondary schoolboys felt they benefited from the sessions with RRG counsellors and realised the danger of supporting IS, he said.

    In the third case, counsellors had no contact with the husband. But through speaking with the counsellors, the wife learnt more about how extremists promote their ideologies “under the cloak of religion”, said the RRG.

    Loved ones must be “first agents” and seek information such as what websites their children, relatives or friends have browsed, and for how long, said Ustaz Mohamed.

    Cases are not reported to the MHA unless individuals persist in the belief that violence is legitimate even after counselling. “RRG works with MHA, not for MHA,” he said.

     

    On whether the three individuals might have ended up detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA), were they not reported early to the RRG, Ustaz Mohamed said the answer was not straightforward.

    This is because there are other channels available, such as local mosques or the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore. “But logically we understand that when someone is radicalised and nothing is being done, that process of radicalisation can go further and it could lead to violence. It could lead to him wanting to use violence,” he said.

    The authorities have stepped up calls for family members and the community to report those who are potentially radicalised. They said the time between radicalisation and committing violence could be very short and that terror attacks would divide communities, playing into the hands of terrorist groups.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Maliki Osman: No Room For Islamophobia In Singapore

    Maliki Osman: No Room For Islamophobia In Singapore

    There is no place for Islamophobia or any similar attitude against other religions here, as this would harm the social cohesion Singapore has built up over the years, said Senior Minister of State for Defence and Foreign Affairs Maliki Osman.

    He related a recent incident yesterday to illustrate how Islamophobia has crept into the community here, in a climate where acts of terrorism and extremism make headlines regularly.

    A few weeks ago, a Malay pest controller checking for mosquitoes outside a home was shooed away by a Chinese resident who suggested he could be a terrorist, he said.

    “He tried to explain that he was just trying to do his job, and she (said) ‘no, no, no, I hear so much things about terrorism and terrorists, you better go’,” said Dr Maliki, adding that the incident shocked and saddened him.

    “The last thing we want is incidents like this where the inter-ethnic cohesion that we have built for so long, is divided by people who have the wrong understanding of the Muslim community,” he said.

    He urged people who know of such incidents to come forward, as such views cannot be allowed to “take root in the minds of Singaporeans”.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Bomber Planning To Attack Grand Mosque In Mecca Blows Himself Up

    Bomber Planning To Attack Grand Mosque In Mecca Blows Himself Up

    Saudi security forces on Friday foiled a suicide attack on the Grand Mosque in the Muslim holy city of Mecca, cornering the would-be attacker in an apartment, where he blew himself up, the Interior Ministry said.

    In a statement read on state television, the ministry said that three cells had planned the attack on worshippers and security forces at the mosque as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan nears its climax.

    The trapped would-be suicide bomber exchanged fire with the security forces, then set off explosives when he was surrounded in a house in the central Mecca neighbourhood of Ajyad al-Masafi near the mosque that had been used as the base for the attack, the ministry said.

    The building collapsed, injuring six foreigners and five members of the security forces.

    Earlier in the day, security forces had shot dead a wanted man at another suspected Islamist militant hideout in Mecca’s al-Aseelah neighbourhood. The ministry also said a third cell had been broken up in the Red Sea city of Jeddah, but gave no further details.

    Five suspected militants including a woman were arrested, it said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com