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  • Damanhuri Abas: Unprincipled Leaders Corrupt Morals, Out Of Wedlock Pregnancy Suggested As Solution

    Damanhuri Abas: Unprincipled Leaders Corrupt Morals, Out Of Wedlock Pregnancy Suggested As Solution

    Unprincipled leaders will spew morally bankrupt suggestion of illicit out-of-wedlock pregnancies as solutions to tackle complex procreation, child-bearing and upbringing issues. They should seriously step aside and allow more serious decent productive conversation to take place.

    On a lighter note, just consult your proven procreation expert (your next door abang lah with 5 children). We malays cope with tight flats and still produce many babies and don’t complaint.

    We marry at void decks and make do. We are champions leading the babies production game for this country we love and we don’t compromise on marriage and family. If the Minister or whoever she is wants some ideas, join us at the nearest void deck on Sunday. See u there.

    And no silly hanky panky ideas lah…. haiyo please lah…. we got pride u know…

     

    Source: Damanhuri Abas

  • Khan Osman Sulaiman: Mengapa AP Melayu Islam Dan MUIS Membisu Dalam Isu Online Gambling?

    Khan Osman Sulaiman: Mengapa AP Melayu Islam Dan MUIS Membisu Dalam Isu Online Gambling?

    Apabila polisi membina 2 casino dibahaskan dalam parliament dan diletakkan pada undian, tidak seorang pun AP Melayu/Islam menentang hasrat pemerintah. Malahan mereka setuju dgn hala tujuan pemerintah untuk membangunkan negara dgn hasil perjudian.

    Sebaliknya, yg menentang ialah AP2 bukan Islam.

    Baru2 ini, pemerintah meluluskan permohonan dari Singapore Pools dan Singapore Turf Club untuk menyediakan perkhidmatan ‘Online Gambling.’

    Langkah itu menimbulkan kebimbangan daripada pihak Majlis Kebangsaan Gereja-Gereja yang menekankan bahawa perjudian akan meninggalkan kesan buruk terhadap masyarakat.

    Yg peliknya, bantahan dari MUIS dan AP2 Melayu kita tidak langsung kedengaran. Walaupun Singapura adalah negara sekular, ini tidak bermakna nilai2 murni yg diajarkan kepada kita melalui agama Islam tidak boleh diluahkan.

    Kita dapat melihat bagaimana Majlis Kebangsaan Gereja-Gereja memainkan peranannya terhadap masyarakat umum dengan mengambil pendirian tegas terhadap polisi2 pemerintah yg tidak sehaluan dgn ajaran agama mereka.

    MUIS selaku kuasa tertinggi yg menyeliakan hal ehwal umat Islam di Singapura, seringkali didapati membisu apabila pemerintah menggubal rang undang2 yg bercanggah dgn ajaran Islam.

    Pucuk kepimpinan MUIS yg lemah setelah beberapa dekat ini menjadikan organisasinya mandul. Tidak dapat memainkan peranan nya seperti yg diharapkan oleh masyarakat.

    Pada masa jangkau yg panjang, kelemahan MUIS untuk membuat pendiriannya terhadap isu2 genting yg berkaitan dgn polisi2 negara, akan menghilangkan pengaruh masyarakat Islam Singapura.

     

    Source: Khan Osman Sulaiman

  • Philippines’ Duterte Set To Toughen Laws On Smoking

    Philippines’ Duterte Set To Toughen Laws On Smoking

    Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is set to sign a regulation this month banning smoking in public across South-east Asia’s second-most populous country, rolling out among the toughest anti-tobacco laws in the region.

    Public health campaigners who have long battled against the country’s hefty tobacco lobby, welcomed the push to end smoking in public places and said they believed Mr Duterte, with his tough anti-vice record, was the man to do it.

    Health Secretary Paulyn Jean Rosell-Ubial told Reuters on Tuesday (Oct 11) she hoped the president would sign the ban, which expands the definition of public places, into law before the end of October and that it would come into effect next month.

    She was quoted by newspapers as saying that no smoking would be allowed in public places, whether indoor or outdoor. “Parks, bus stations, and even in vehicles. All these are considered public places,” she said, according to media. She later clarified the law would apply only to public vehicles.

    Designated smoking areas will be set up at least 10 metres outside buildings, according to a draft of the executive order seen by Reuters.

    Around 17 million people, or nearly a third of the adult population, smoke in the Philippines, according to a 2014 report by South-east Asia Tobacco Control Alliance, the second highest in the region after Indonesia. Nearly half of all Filipino men and 9 per cent of women smoke and experts say the habit costs the economy nearly US$4 billion (S$5.5 billion) in healthcare and productivity losses every year.

    The proposed smoking ban replicates on a national level an existing law in Davao City, where Mr Duterte ruled as mayor for 22 years until his rise to the presidency earlier this year.

    Penalties for breaking the anti-smoking law in Davao can include a 5,000 Philippine peso (S$141) fine or four months in prison.

    When Mr Duterte was in Davao, he once personally forced a man to stub out his cigarette and eat it after he refused to stop smoking in a restaurant, according to media reports.

    A government spokesman declined to comment on the incident but said: “Certainly in Davao, the sentiment and business establishments support a smoke-free Davao. The president sees it as something that’s not ideal for health… and this is part of the public well-being,” Mr Ernesto Abella said.

    Mr Duterte also rolled out a number of other strict rules in the city of 1.5 million during his term as mayor, including banning late-night drinking and karaoke, and a 10pm curfew for school children. He also oversaw a severe crackdown on narcotics and crime in the city, earning him the nickname “The Punisher”.

    The 71-year old won the presidency on a promise of widening that crackdown throughout the country of 100 million. Over 3,600 people, mostly small-time drug user and dealers, have died in police operations and alleged vigilante killings since he took office in June.

    Anti-tobacco activists said Mr Duterte’s reputation meant the nationwide smoking ban would be implemented. “This is effectively a scaling up of the Davao City plan,”said Mr Ralph Degollacion of Health Justice Philippines, a local NGO. “We know his track record… and given the political will in his government, we’re confident that in terms of implementation he will really push it,” he said.

    When asked if the ban could extend to alcohol and gambling – both multi-million dollar industries – government spokesman Abella said there were no such plans in the offing and that bars and casinos were continuing to operate normally.

    The nationwide ban is set to be among the strictest no-smoking laws in South-east Asia, experts say. The region is home to nearly 10 per cent of the world’s smokers and while most countries have partial smoking bans in place, enforcement is often lax.

    The Philippines ban will also cover ‘vaping’ or the use of electronic cigarettes.

    Analysts say the ban would put major tobacco companies, already under pressure from tobacco tax hikes under the previous government, at further risk. “Industry volumes and pricing have become pressured due to the growth of cheaper illicit brands… A smoking ban could see any further recovery in the sales dynamics in the market stall,” Mr Owen Bennett, equity analyst at Jefferies International, said in a note.

    Mr Duterte’s government has also proposed increasing taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products, Finance Undersecretary Karl Kenneth Chua said. The tax would build on a landmark tax-hike imposed by the previous government, but Mr Chua did not elaborate on how much additional revenue the government was expected to net.

    A spokeswoman for Philip Morris International, which controls around 70 per cent of the cigarette market in the Philippines, referred queries to the Philippine Tobacco Institute, which represents tobacco interests in the country.

    A spokesman for the institute said he had no immediate comment on the proposed ban.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Mayat Bayi Baru Lahir Dijumpai Dalam Pesawat Di Indonesia

    Mayat Bayi Baru Lahir Dijumpai Dalam Pesawat Di Indonesia

    Mayat seorang bayi yang baru lahir dijumpai dalam tandas sebuah pesawat selepas pesawat itu mendarat di Indonesia dari Doha, dengan pihak polis sedang menunggu untuk menyoal siasat seorang penumpang wanita, kata seorang pegawai hari ini (11 Okt).

    Penemuan mengejutkan itu berlaku lewat Ahad (9 Okt) oleh para pekerja pembersihan semasa mereka berada dalam pesawat Qatar Airways selepas ia tiba di lapangan terbang antarabangsa di Jakarta.

    Bayi itu dianggarkan berusia antara lima hingga tujuh bulan, kata Endang Sutrisna, jurucakap polis lapangan terbang kepada AFP.

    Kakitangan lapangan terbang itu mendapati bayi itu dibalut dengan kertas tisu di dalam sebuah tandas.

    Seorang penumpang wanita – warga Indonesia yang bekerja di luar negara – dibawa untuk pemeriksaan kesihatan sebelum dipindahkan ke sebuah hospital polis di Jakarta Timur untuk ujian lanjutan.

    Para pegawai bagaimanapun tidak menjelaskan hubungan wanita itu dengan bayi berkenaan.

    “Jika hasil pemeriksaan doktor menunjukkan wanita itu sihat untuk disoal siasat, wanita itu akan dibawa kepada pihak polis lapangan terbang untuk menjawab beberapa soalan dan perlu bertanggunjawab atas (yang disyaki) tindakannya,” kata Sutrisna.

    Masih tidak jelas sama ada wanita itu akan dikenakan dakwaan jenayah, tambah pegawai itu.

    Negara-negara Timur Tengah seperti Qatar, Arab Saudi dan Bahrain adalah destinasi utama bagi pembantu rumah Indonesia, terutama sekali wanita yang bekerja sebagai amah dan menghantar wang pulang kepada keluarga mereka.

    Source: BeritamediaCorp

  • You Don’t Need Much Space To Have Sex: Josephine Teo On ‘No Flat, No Child’ Belief

    You Don’t Need Much Space To Have Sex: Josephine Teo On ‘No Flat, No Child’ Belief

    You do not need much space to have sex.

    That was the feisty rejoinder from Senior Minister of State Josephine Teo, who oversees the National Population and Talent Division, to a question on whether young people are not getting their flats early enough to have children.

    The suggestion was that this could be a chicken-and-egg problem. To qualify for the Parenthood Priority Scheme, which gives first- time married couples first dibs on getting a flat, they must be expecting or have a citizen child below 16.

    But to have a child, some say they need to have a flat first.

    With a straight face, Mrs Teo declared: “You need a very small space to have sex.”

    Known for her candid blog posts on dating and marriage, Mrs Teo does not mince her words – think “menstruation” and “cysts” – when it comes to urging young people to look for love and settle down early.

    In an interview on marriage and parenthood issues last week, the mother of three teenage children tackled issues ranging from infertility to why the Government should not be “too kaypoh” (Hokkien for busybody).

    She noted that the Singaporean love story has a different arc from that of countries in the West. “In our case, man meets woman, man falls in love with woman, man proposes to woman, they then plan the wedding and do the house,” she said.

    “In France, in the UK, in the Nordic countries, man meets woman, tonight they can make a baby already. They love each other. Both of them partly have their own family, so it is a matter of living in yours or living in mine, and they also don’t have to worry about marriage – that comes later,” she added.

    So how about having a couple declare that they wish to have a child in two years and get the flat first?

    “What if they can’t conceive? Take back the flat from them? How do you know they really tried to conceive? Can we check whether they use contraceptives? Cannot, right?” she replied, amused.

    Instead of having the Government poke its nose into the bedroom, Mrs Teo relied instead on persuasion. She urged women to have babies early as they would not know if they are fertile or not.

    “You never really know that you’re not fertile until you try. Unfortunately, it is one of those things. There is no fertility indicator. As a woman you will know, if you have regular menstruation, okay, (there is a) likelihood. But maybe you have a major cyst and how would you know until you attempt to conceive, only to realise that you can’t?”

    The search for love is also not something to be left to chance, she said. “When I meet young people and ask if they go and look for upgrading opportunities, they said ‘yes’. I said, ‘What about love? Do you go and look for love?’ They said ‘no’. I said, ‘Why not?’ They said, ‘If it happens, it happens’.

    “I said, ‘You don’t think that upgrading and a good job, if it happens it happens, right? So why is it that you would apply that thinking to your career and your own education, but you don’t apply it to your personal life?’”

    However, the minister was quick to point out that there is a need to respect personal choice when it comes to marriage and children.

    She said: “In this day and age, it is not possible for us to say that you are somehow bad, you are not doing your part for society.

    “No, there are many reasons why people remain single. Sometimes, (for) very good reasons. Why should we pass judgment on them?”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

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