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  • RIA 89.7FM Ingin Jadi Lebih Interaktif Sempena Ulang Tahun Ke-26

    RIA 89.7FM Ingin Jadi Lebih Interaktif Sempena Ulang Tahun Ke-26

    Stesen radio tempatan RIA 89.7FM ingin menjadi satu saluran yang lebih interaktif bagi mereka yang berusia dari lingkungan 15 hingga 29 tahun sempena ulang tahun mereka yang ke-26 pada 1 Disember.

    Salah satu daripada usaha mereka adalah untuk lebih melawat sekolah-sekolah agar para pelajar dapat mendekati DJ-DJ dan lebih mempelajari tentang balik tabir dunia penyiaran radio.

    Demikian menurut Pemangku Pengarah Program RIA 89.7FM, Penyiaran Melayu Mediacorp, Aura Shai, selepas acara sambutan ulang tahun itu hari ini.

    Menurut beliau, langkah ini perlu diambil bagi menghadapi cabaran generasi ‘Snapchat’ yang inginkan pencernaan maklumat yang padat.

    Malah, sambutan ulang tahun RIA 89.7FM yang ke-26 kali ini juga penuh bermakna bagi stesen radio tersebut.

    Aura Shai memberitahu BERITAMediacorp: “DJ kami Fiza O baru melahirkan cahaya matanya yang kedua dan Dzar Ismail juga sedang menunaikan ibadah umrah. Kami rapat seperti sebuah keluarga dan sudah mencapai pelbagai kejayaan bersama-sama.”

    “Dan ia juga bermakna kerana kami juga disajikan dengan persembahan-persembahan oleh bakat tempatan yang tentunya dari kumpulan sasaran kami,” tambahnya.

    BUKAN SEKADAR STESEN RADIO

    Acara tertutup yang diadakan di Kaw Kaw Sg itu turut dimeriahkan oleh 90 hadirin, termasuk mantan DJ-DJ RIA, 18 pendengar bertuah dan barisan bakat muda setempat.

    Antara yang membuat persembahan ialah ARUS Band, Didicazli, Haqim Mokhtar, Farhan Shah dan Sunny Jackson.

    Sambutan ulang tahun itu juga diwarnai dengan kehadiran penyanyi terkenal Indonesia, Rossa, selama setengah jam, yang turut menyumbangkan sebuah lagu di acara tersebut.

    “Kami berharap agar kami dapat sentiasa berhubung dengan para pendengar melalui wadah Facebook atau menerusi panggilan. Anggaplah kami seperti keluarga dan bukan sekadar sebuah stesen radio,” kata Aura Shai kepada BERITAMediacorp.

    Sambutan selama dua jam itu juga diakhiri dengan sesi pemotongan kek.

    Acara itu turut dirakam di Facebook Live dan dapat didengar secara langsung melalui stesen RIA 89.7 FM.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Farhain Abu Bakar – Wanita Melayu Singapura Pertama Jadi Juruterbang Komersial

    Farhain Abu Bakar – Wanita Melayu Singapura Pertama Jadi Juruterbang Komersial

    LEBIH dua dekad lalu, di satu sudut Sekolah Rendah Telok Kurau, seorang murid darjah dua mendongak kagum ke langit setiap kali pesawat dari lapangan terbang berdekatan menderum membelah angkasa.

    Kini, murid itu, Cik Farhain Abu Bakar, 29 tahun, memandu pesawat sebagai kerjaya.

    Beliau ialah wanita Melayu setempat pertama menjadi juruterbang komersial.

    Bagaimanapun, Cik Farhain, seorang Pegawai Pertama di syarikat pesawat tambang murah (LCC) Scoot-Tigerair akur tetap kagum setiap kali berada di angkasa.

    “Saya kagum melihat keindahan alam… warna angkasa yang berubah apabila malam menjadi siang… semuanya.

    “Rasanya, saya tidak akan jemu dengan pengalaman dan perasaan ini,” ujar Cik Farhain, yang menyertai Scoot-Tigerair akhir tahun lalu dan menjalani latihan asas selama 10 bulan.

    Bersama seorang kapten, Cik Farhain kini memandu pesawat Boeing 787 Dreamliner, yang boleh membawa lebih 300 penumpang, selepas menjalani latihan asas selama 10 bulan.

    Paling jauh, beliau telah memandu pesawat itu ke Jeddah, Arab Saudi, penerbangan sekitar sembilan jam dari Singapura.

    Namun, pengembaraannya menjadi juruterbang memakan lebih banyak masa daripada itu.

    Walau memburu diploma sains biomedikal di Politeknik Singapura selepas meninggalkan Sekolah Menengah Tanjong Katong, jiwa Cik Farhain tetap terpaut kepada kerjaya di angkasa.

    Beliau mendapatkan lesen juruterbang swasta (PPL) daripada Kelab Penerbangan Belia Singapura (SYFC) pada 2004 sebelum menyertai program Jurulatih Penerbangan Kadet di Kolej Penerbangan Singapura (SFC) pada 2007.

    Selang setahun, beliau meraih Lesen Juruterbang Komersial (CPL) dan seterusnya mendapat tauliahan susulan sebagai jurulatih.

    Beliau menimba pengalaman hampir enam tahun sebagai jurulatih penerbangan di SFC, melatih juruterbang baru – termasuk beberapa juruterbang yang kini menjadi rakan sekerjanya.

    Walau menggemari kerjayanya di SFC, ‘bisikan’ menjadi juruterbang sepenuh masa kian lantang di benaknya dan Cik Farhain menyertai Scoot-Tigerair sebagi Pegawai Kedua.

    Baru-baru ini, beliau, yang berpengalaman 1,900 jam penerbangan, dinaikkan pangkat sebagai Pegawai Pertama.

    Matlamat beliau seterusnya, kata Cik Farhain, adalah menjadi kapten, tanggungjawab yang memerlukan 5,000 jam penerbangan.

    “Keinginan (menjadi juruterbang) sentiasa ada dalam jiwa saya… dari saat saya berada di sekolah rendah.

    “Apabila saya berada di kokpit, setiap butang, peralatan bak lanjutan jari-jemari saya… saya rasa senang hati,” ujarnya.

    Mungkin Cik Farhain memang mempunyai bakat semula jadi memandu pesawat. Beliau masih ingat lagi penerbangan solo pertamanya – pada 2004 – memandu pesawat enjin tunggal selama 15 minit dari Lapangan Terbang Seletar.

    “Saya tidak berasa gementar atau cemas apabila jurulatih meninggalkan pesawat. Tapi saya mula sedar betapa senyap kokpit itu.

    “Pada masa yang sama, saya yakin saya mampu mengawal pesawat itu tanpa bantuan jurulatih,” kata Cik Farhain dengan matanya bersinar semasa mengimbas kenangan itu.

    Tugasnya ini bermakna beliau sentiasa berjauhan daripada keluarganya, kadang kala sehingga 15 hari sebulan.

    Namun Cik Farhain, anak keempat dalam keluarga lima beradik, berkata beliau mendapat sokongan padu daripada anggota keluarganya.

    Lagipun, beliau jarang membazir masa apabila tidak bertugas, ujar Cik Farhain, yang belum berumah tangga.

    Selain bersenam – kegiatan yoga kegemarannya – beliau sedang belajar menggesek biola.

    “Lautan ilmu begitu luas tetapi kita baru menimba sedikit sahaja airnya… jika boleh saya ingin terus belajar sepanjang hayat saya,” katanya.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

  • Zam Zam VS Victory: Hired Gangster Gets 6 1/2 Years Jail, 6 Strokes Of Cane For Slashing Victory’s Restaurant Supervisor

    Zam Zam VS Victory: Hired Gangster Gets 6 1/2 Years Jail, 6 Strokes Of Cane For Slashing Victory’s Restaurant Supervisor

    The owner of Singapore Zam Zam allegedly hired a secret society headman to slash a rival’s face, a court heard.

    Zackeer Abbass Khan, the owner of the well-known murtabak restaurant in North Bridge Road, had been having a dispute with a neighbouring murtabak restaurant.

    He allegedly paid $2,000 to his business associate Anwer Ambiya Kadir Maideen, who is purportedly a headman of the Sio Ang Koon secret society.

    Anwer then allegedly told his secret society member Joshua Navindran Surainthiran to carry out the vicious assault.

    It left the victim, Victory Restaurant supervisor Liakath Ali Mohamed Ibrahim, with a permanent scar.

    Mr Liakath had a 7cm cut over his right upper lip, which extended to his right cheek, and a part of the cut went through to the inner surface of the lip.

    On Tuesday (Nov 29), Joshua, 23, was sentenced to 6½ years’ jail and six strokes of the cane for the slashing and other crimes.

    He pleaded guilty to five charges: one of causing grievous hurt, two of rioting, and one each of disorderly behaviour and using criminal force against a policewoman.

    Five other charges were taken into account in sentencing as part of his plea bargain.

    A district court heard that on Aug 22 last year, Mr Liakath, 52, stood outside Victory to tout for customers. He had previously worked for Zam Zam from 1985 to 2004.

    When a policeman came by at about 6pm, Mr Liakath said he was touting for customers because staff from Zam Zam were doing so.

    Zam Zam staff Koleth Navas, 29, overheard this and an argument broke out between him and Mr Liakath.

    The officer told them to stop arguing before leaving.

    VICTIM THREATENED

    Shortly after, Zackeer, 45, allegedly threatened Mr Liakath in Tamil that he would “do him” within a week, the court heard.

    Koleth Navas and Zam Zam’s chef supervisor Koleth Abdul Nasir, 41, both also allegedly threatened Mr Liakath.

    Zackeer later contacted Anwer, 46, who owns As-Safeera Restaurant at Block 301, Serangoon Avenue 2, the court heard.

    Anwer in turn told Joshua that Zackeer had asked for Mr Liakath’s face to be slashed, in return for $2,000.

    Joshua got his elder brother Joel Girithiran Surainthiran, 24, allegedly also a Sio Ang Koon secret society member, to help him in the slashing. Joshua also asked his friend Ramge Visvamnathan, 19, to help him act as a lookout.

    The next day, Joshua and Joel met Anwer near As-Safeera. The latter showed them a picture of Mr Liakath on his mobile phone.

    The brothers then went to Golden Landmark Hotel, near Victory and Zam Zam, to observe Mr Liakath’s movements. At about 9.50pm, they saw him walking towards Victoria Street after work and trailed him to Little India MRT Station at Race Course Road. However, they were unable to find an opportunity to spring an attack.

    VICTIM’S CAP DEFLECTED KNIFE

    On Aug 26, Joshua, Joel and Ramge waited outside Victory. The brothers sat on a bench overlooking the eatery’s rear door, while Ramge stayed at the junction of North Bridge Road and Arab Street, where he could view Victory’s main entrance.

    At about 9.50pm, Joshua and Joel saw Mr Liakath walking along Arab Street towards Rochor Canal Road and Little India MRT station.

    They caught up with him at the junction of Rochor Canal Road and Sungei Road. Joshua swung a knife at Mr Liakath’s face. Although the weapon was partially deflected by the victim’s baseball cap, there were deep cuts to his right nose and right upper lip.

    During the attack, Mr Liakath also took out a small fruit knife, which caused a cut on Joshua’s left hand.

    Joel allegedly kept a lookout. The brothers fled after the slashing.

    Mr Liakath called his restaurant manager, who in turn contacted Victory’s managing director Abdul Raheem Muhamed, 46. The latter called the police.

    At about 12.30am on Aug 27, Anwer deposited $1,700 into Joshua’s bank account, the court heard.

    Joshua had earlier received an initial payment of $200. He told Anwer to keep $50 for getting him and Joel the job, and $50 for passing Ramge money to buy ice for the wound on his hand.

    Joel, Ramge, Zackeer, Anwer, Koleth Navas and Koleth Abdul Nasir have all been charged with engaging in a conspiracy to cause grievous hurt to Mr Liakath and/or criminal intimidation by threatening to hurt Mr Liakath.

    The cases for all six are at a pre-trial stage.

    OTHER OFFENCES

    Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Claire Poh said Joshua had gone on a spree of violence across a period of more than two years, demonstrating “sheer lawlessness”.

    At about 2.45am on July 2013, Joshua and four friends assaulted two others at Clarke Quay. The five assailants had kicked and punched the victims.

    At the time, Joshua was on probation for an offence of causing hurt.

    At about 5.30am on Nov 28, 2013, while out on court bail, he also slapped a person at Liang Court.

    About 10 minutes later, he pushed a police woman’s right shoulder and spat at her face.

    While inside a police vehicle at about 6am, he also hurled vulgarities at a policeman.

    Out on bail again, and just two weeks before he was scheduled to plead guilty in court to his July 2013 rioting offence, Joshua took part in a gang fight at Liang Court, outside a club called Rumours.

    Joshua and five friends belonging to the Sio Ang Koon gang fought with six people from the Ang Soon Tong triad society of the Ji It group on Oct 22, 2014.

    Joshua did not show up in court and remained at-large until he was arrested on Sept 21 last year for slashing Mr Liakath.

    DPP Poh asked for at least 7½ years’ jail and six strokes of the cane, while defence lawyer K Jayakumar Naidu asked for not more than six years’ jail and six strokes of the cane.

    After passing sentence, District Judge Salina Ishak allowed Joshua to speak with his mother and fiancee before he was taken away to prison. His jail term was backdated to the date of his remand on Sept 23 last year.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Political Activist, Uncle Yap, Gives Up On Selfish Opposition Politics

    Political Activist, Uncle Yap, Gives Up On Selfish Opposition Politics

    A well-known political activist, he had been seen by the side of leaders of various opposition parties for almost two decades, from the 1980s to mid-2000s.

    During the 2006 General Election, there was even talk of Mr Yap Keng Ho, better known as “Uncle Yap”, contesting under the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) umbrella.

    But little has been heard of this colourful character — who had been in and out of jail many times for breaking the law while participating in some political activities — for the past five years.

    In a recent interview, Mr Yap, 55, told TODAY that he gradually stepped away from the local political scene because he grew disillusioned with some of the personalities in opposition parties and the “selfish politics” that were increasingly being played out.

    “What we are seeing now is politicking for personal interest and freedom, it is not for the good of the entire nation … I was expecting to see more valuable voices and ideas by reversing the fear (of the establishment) … But what came out was not what I appreciated.”

    Mr Yap said he first entered politics in the 1980s with a desire to “lift the lid of fear” that many opposition politicians had towards the governing People’s Action Party (PAP) and Singapore’s founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

    During the 2006 election, even though he did not contest as a candidate, Mr Yap took an active part in the hustings to express his support for SDP secretary-general Chee Soon Juan and veteran opposition politician J B Jeyaretnam, whom he described as the late Mr Lee’s greatest adversaries.

    The late Jeyaretnam could not run as a candidate in the polls because he had been declared a bankrupt for failing to pay damages from defamation lawsuits brought by several PAP leaders.

    While he still keeps in touch with SDP members, Mr Yap spends most of his time now caring for his elderly mother and drives a Chrysler limousine taxi at night.

    Two months ago, he was highlighted in the newspapers as the cabbie who responded more than 20 times to cardiac arrest cases, among the highest number under SMRT’s AED-On-Wheels programme. Mr Yap, who was an instructor with the St John Ambulance Brigade in his school days, said he volunteered for the programme because he wanted to refresh the life-saving skills that he had learnt earlier.

    Mr Yap is also interested in raising awareness about the rapid depletion of natural resources.

    “The globe’s resources are not able to withstand our living and consumption habits … We need to convey the urgency (of this challenge), adjust values to correctly influence lifestyles,” he said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Donald Low: Singaporeans Need To Get Facts Right On Singapore’s Role In China’s Economic Modernisation

    Donald Low: Singaporeans Need To Get Facts Right On Singapore’s Role In China’s Economic Modernisation

    The Singaporeans who think that the current kerfuffle with China shows that the Chinese government has forgotten that it was Singapore that inspired China’s economic modernization (beginning with Deng Xiaoping’s visit to Singapore in 1978) really need to get their heads (and their understanding of economic history) checked.

    First, the Chinese do not forget easily.

    Second, it is simply not true that Singapore’s development story was of great relevance for China. China’s development experience of the last thirty years has a lot more in common with Japan, South Korea and Taiwan’s experience: export-led industrialization through home-grown firms rather than MNCs, industrial policy aimed at developing indigenous capabilities rather than simply importing technologies from abroad, maintenance of tariff barriers (rather than the free trade that Singapore practised) for relatively long periods to benefit local companies, financial repression rather than a liberalized capital account, relatively weak rule of law, government-business relations that are quite cosy and corrupt, etc. All these practices are more reminiscent of China’s northeast Asian neighbors than of Singapore. So it’s simply not true that our development experience was an important role model for China; it’s delusional for us to think we are—then, or now.

    To the extent that the Chinese were interested in the Singapore experience at all, it has more to do with how the state maintained law and order, political stability and one party rule in an ostensibly democratic environment.

     

    Source: Donald Low

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