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  • Man Dies After Being Attacked In Malaysia As Heated Facebook Argument Turns Violent

    Man Dies After Being Attacked In Malaysia As Heated Facebook Argument Turns Violent

    A heated Facebook chat between a 15-year-old schoolgirl and some friends turned deadly when one of them came looking for her together with other family members.

    The scuffle that followed led to the death of a man at the Jalan Kurau flats in Jelutong.

    Mr Panjavarnam Perumal, 56, died after he was attacked by about six girls, aged between 15 and 20, armed with helmets, at about 11pm on Monday (Aug 22). The Form Two student’s mother, Madam A. Rajeswari, 34, was also injured in the attack.

    Madam Rajeswari, a factory worker, said she received a call at 10pm while she was at work from a girl who insisted on meeting her.

    “I told her I was at work and would only be home at 11pm. When I got home, I saw a group of girls hanging around on the ground floor.

    “I then went back to my flat on the first floor and my daughter told me that the girls were shouting profanities at her and she was afraid,” she said on Tuesday (Aug 23).

    Madam Rajeswari said she asked her uncle, Mr Panjavarnam, who lived with her, to talk to the girls and see what was going on.

    “They told me that my daughter wrote disparaging remarks about them on Facebook and she should apologise.

    “I told them what they were doing was very unbecoming as what they were shouting could be heard by the other residents.

    “Two men also turned up to threaten us but they were not involved in the attack.

    “We then walked away and they started to beat us with their helmets. I lost consciousness and woke up in an ambulance,” she said.

    Madam Rajeswari was discharged from the Penang Hospital after receiving treatment for bruises on her head and body.

    George Town OCPD Asst Comm Mior Faridalathrash Wahid said Mr Panjavarnam died on the way to the hospital. A post-mortem showed that he died of a heart attack.

    “We arrested three girls and a man, aged between 15 and 23, at the scene and they have been remanded for six days pending investigations.

    “The case has been classified as murder under Section 302 of the Penal Code.”

    He confirmed that the disparaging Facebook post led to the argument and the deceased, who worked as a cleaner, had tried to stop the argument but was beaten up, kicked and stepped on instead.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Bayi Masih Bertali Pusat Ditemui Ditinggalkan Di Depan Sebuah Rumah

    Bayi Masih Bertali Pusat Ditemui Ditinggalkan Di Depan Sebuah Rumah

    Penghuni tingkat 12 sebuah apartmen di Jalan Jelawat 2, Cheras gempar apabila seorang bayi perempuan masih bertali pusat ditemukan terbaring di atas lantai di hadapan sebuah unit apartmen itu semalam (22 Ogos).

    Saksi, S. Kumuthini, yang berusia 24 tahun, berkata beliau mengetahui tentang kejadian itu selepas seorang jiran di tingkat sama mengetuk pintu dan memaklumkan mengenai penemuan bayi di hadapan rumahnya pada kira-kira 2.15 petang.

    “Semasa ditemui, bayi itu tidak menangis dan hanya memakai lampin serta dibalut dengan jaket ditinggalkan bersama beberapa peralatan bayi termasuk botol susu dan dua keping lampin pakai buang dalam sebuah plastik di sisi bayi itu,” katanya ketika kepada Bernama.

    Kumuthini berkata beliau dan penduduk lain yang berada di tempat kejadian tiba-tiba didatangi seorang lelaki tidak dikenali berusia lingkungan 20-an yang bertanya tentang punca kekecohan berlaku sebelum mengakui bayi berkenaan adalah milik saudaranya.

    Menurutnya, lelaki itu kemudiannya tergesa-gesa melarikan diri ke arah tangga apabila mereka meminta nombor telefonnya.

    Susulan itu, katanya, wanita yang menemukan bayi tersebut membuat laporan di balai polis berhampiran sebelum bayi itu dihantar ke Pusat Perubatan Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia untuk pemeriksaan kesihatan.

    Sementara itu, Ketua Polis Daerah Cheras ACP Chong Kok Sin berkata pihaknya menahan seorang lelaki berusia 25 tahun di sekitar Cheras pada pukul 12.30 malam tadi (22 Ogos) bagi membantu siasatan berhubung kes berkenaan.

    “Kami akan melakukan ujian Asid Deoksiribonukleik (DNA) bagi mengenal pasti identiti bayi berkenaan,” katanya.

    Katanya, polis memaklumkan Jabatan Kebajikan Masyarakat berkenaan penemuan bayi itu.

    Beliau berkata kes disiasat mengikut Kanun Keseksaan kerana membuang bayi yang memperuntukkan hukuman penjara maksimum tujuh tahun atau dengan denda atau kedua-duanya, jika sabit kesalahan.

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Cleaners, Wardens Pick Up After Hougang Pokemon Crowd

    Cleaners, Wardens Pick Up After Hougang Pokemon Crowd

    The disamenities caused by Pokemon Go players surging to Block 401 Hougang Avenue 10 in recent weeks have led to stepped up cleaning of common areas there.

    In addition, to deal with players who have been parking indiscriminately, parking wardens were also “hard at work over the weekend”, said Hougang Neighbourhood Police Centre (NPC) in a Facebook post on Sunday.

    The area has been one of the hotspots for Pokemon hunting since the game was launched in Singapore earlier this month. Littering and illegal or indiscriminate parking have been raised as concerns by residents, alongside other problems such as 
jaywalking.

    Hougang NPC wrote that it had previously alerted both the Land Transport Authority and the Housing and Development Board regarding these concerns.

    “To alleviate the problem of indiscriminate parking within the car park, HDB enforcement officers were hard at work over the weeked,” it said. “We urge all gamers who drive there to park their vehicles in the appropriate lots. Indiscriminate parking may pose issues or even dangers to other car park users.”

    Hougang NPC also said the National Environment Agency and the town council have stepped up their cleaning of the area, but urged everyone to play their part in keeping the environment clean.

    It added: “The police will continue to work with the relevant agencies to ensure a pleasant environment for all, even as residents and gamers alike indulge in the Pokemon phenomenon.”

    Apart from ungracious behaviour, there have been nastier incidents involving the popular game.

    Last Tuesday, for instance, the police said it made the first arrests relating to Pokemon hunting here over an altercation between a motorist and a player who was on the game while crossing the road.

    The motorist had sounded his horn at the player and they came to blows after that, the police said in a news release. The incident happened at the car park entrance of Plaza Singapura on Aug 14.

    The men, aged 28 and 33, were arrested on the spot for affray, which carries the maximum penalty of one year in jail and/or a fine of S$5,000.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Jail For Man Who Sped Off From Tuas Checkpoint With Illegal Imports Of ‘Ramly’ Beef Patties

    Jail For Man Who Sped Off From Tuas Checkpoint With Illegal Imports Of ‘Ramly’ Beef Patties

    The owner of a struggling car grooming company turned to importing traditional cakes and pastries from Malaysia to help support his 10 children during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, a court heard on Monday (Aug 22).

    Mohamed Dawood R.M. Abdul Sukkur, 48, who also owns a food distribution company, even worked part-time as a driver with ride-hailing service Uber to make ends meet.

    But afraid that he would get caught for unlawfully importing nearly 40kg of “Ramly” beef patties without a licence, the businessman sped off from an inspection pit at Tuas Checkpoint in June 2015 – during the first week of Ramadan – sparking off a two-hour manhunt.

    On Monday (Aug 22), Dawood was jailed for nine months and fined $8,000 for a spate of crimes. He will also be barred from driving for three years after his release from prison.

    He pleaded guilty to four charges: obstructing a customs officer, perverting the course of justice, importing a meat product without a licence and dangerous driving.

    Four other charges were taken into consideration in sentencing: one count of failing to make a declaration on dutiable goods, one charge of importing processed food without registration, and two counts of having cigarettes that had not passed through customs.

    A district court heard that on June 23, 2015, Dawood drove to Malaysia at about 7am in a rented black BMW car to collect traditional cakes and pastries to supply to shops in Singapore.

    He also went to a supermarket in Bandar Baru, Johor, to buy 105 packets of Ramly beef patties, weighing about 37.8kg in total, for RM400. He wanted to sell them to night market shops in Woodlands for a profit.

    Dawood hid the beef patties in the spare tire compartment of the car and reached Tuas Checkpoint at about 11.35am.

    After he had cleared immigration, however, ICA officers found discrepancies in Dawood’s goods import permit and directed him to a full inspection pit for further checks.

    He nodded his head to acknowledge this instruction. However, as he was driving towards the pit, he realised officers would discover that he had brought in the beef patties without a licence, the court heard.

    “(Dawood) thus decided not to comply …. Instead, he stepped hard on the car accelerator and sped off out of Tuas Checkpoint,” said Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Mansoor Amir.

    After he left the checkpoint, Dawood travelled at about 142kmh along Jalan Ahmad Ibrahim towards Ayer Rajah Expressway (AYE), and then at about 172kmh along the AYE towards the slip road to the Pan-Island Expressway (PIE).

    Dawood drove at about 88kmh on the slip road, and at about 140kmh on the PIE from Tuas Road to Pasir Laba Flyover towards the East Coast Parkway, and then at about 90kmh from the flyover to PIE exit 38.

    The car broke down at about 12.20pm along the PIE towards Changi Airport, near Pioneer Road North exit 38 and the entrance of Nanyang Technological University.

    “Aware that the police would soon catch up to him and that the Ramly beef patties would incriminate him, (Dawood) thus disposed of the 105 packets of Ramly beef patties after his vehicle had broken down, before the police arrived,” said DPP Mansoor. The businessman threw them away into an open drain along the PIE towards Changi Airport before PIE exit 38.

    Policemen arrested Dawood when they arrived. Among other things, they found 145 boxes or packets of assorted traditional cakes and pastries weighing a total of 200kg, some of which were on the grass verge next to the car while others were inside the vehicle.

    Dawood later led officers to the open drain where he had thrown the beef patties.

    DPP Mansoor asked for eight to 10 months’ jail and a fine of about $10,000. He also asked for a five-year driving ban.

    Defence lawyer Noor Mohamed Marican asked for “a minimal fine” instead.

    He said: “(Dawood) has realised his mistake and is remorseful. … He is the sole breadwinner of his family and single-handedly maintaining 10 children.

    “He is self-employed in the car grooming business and earns a low income because his business is struggling to survive amidst heavy competition. During the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, he usually imports traditional cakes and pastries to sell in Singapore, and makes a small profit to help sustain his family,” said Mr Marican.

    The lawyer added that Dawood panicked and drove out of the checkpoint in “a momentary lapse of judgment”.

    In sentencing, District Judge Lee Poh Choo said: “Entrepreneurship is encouraged but this is certainly not the way to go about it. From start to end, you contravened the law. The manner you kept the (patties) – hiding them in the spare tyre – would have caused health problems.”

    For obstructing a customs officer, Dawood could have been fined $10,000 and jailed for 18 months.

    For perverting the course of justice, he could have been jailed for seven years and fined.

    The maximum penalty for importing a meat product without a licence is a $50,000 fine and two years’ jail for a first conviction, and subsequently, a $100,000 fine and three years’ jail.

    The maximum punishment for dangerous driving is a $3,000 and 12 months’ jail for a first conviction, and subsequently, a $5,000 fine and two years’ jail.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Philippines Drug War Deaths Climb To 1,800; US ‘Deeply Concerned’

    Philippines Drug War Deaths Climb To 1,800; US ‘Deeply Concerned’

    The Philippines has recorded about 1,800 drug-related killings since President Rodrigo Duterte took office seven weeks ago and launched a war on narcotics, far higher than previously believed, according to police figures.

    Philippine National Police Chief Ronald Dela Rosa told a Senate committee on Monday that 712 drug traffickers and users had been killed in police operations since July 1.

    Police were also investigating 1,067 other drug-related killings, Dela Rosa said, without giving details. On Sunday, Duterte railed against the United Nations for criticising the wave of deaths.

    The United States, a close ally of the Philippines, said it was “deeply concerned” by the reports, and U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner urged Duterte’s government to ensure that law-enforcement authorities abided by human rights norms.

    The drug trafficking crackdown and some strongly worded criticisms Duterte has made of the United States since coming to power present a dilemma for Washington, which has been seeking to forge unity among allies and partners in Asia in the face of an increasingly assertive China, especially in the strategic South China Sea.

    Toner made the dilemma clear in responses to questions at a regular State Department briefing in Washington, in which he referred to Duterte as “a plain-speaking politician.”

    “We continue to make clear to the Philippines government … our concern about human rights, extrajudicial killings, but we are also committed to our bilateral relationship and strengthening that bilateral relationship,” he said.

    Toner said there was no question of the United States turning a blind eye to rights abuses and that the relationship with Manila, while good, was “frank and candid.”

    As recently as Sunday, the number of suspected drug traffickers killed in Duterte’s war on drugs had been put at about 900 by Philippine officials. But this number included people who died since Duterte won the May 9 presidential election.

    Duterte said in a strongly worded late-night news conference on Sunday the Philippines might leave the United Nations and invite China and others to form a new global forum, accusing it of failing to fulfil its mandate.

    His foreign minister, Perfecto Yasay, said on Monday the Philippines would remain a U.N. member and described the president’s comments as expressions of “profound disappointment and frustration”.

    “We are committed to the U.N. despite our numerous frustrations and disappointments with the international agency,” Yasay told a news conference. U.S. officials declined comment on Duterte’s U.N. remarks.

    Last week, two U.N. human rights experts urged Manila to stop the extra-judicial executions and killings.

    Yasay said Duterte has promised to uphold human rights in the fight against drugs and has ordered the police to investigate and prosecute offenders. He criticised the U.N. rapporteurs for “jumping to an arbitrary conclusion that we have violated human rights of people”.

    “It is highly irresponsible on their part to solely rely on such allegations based on information from unnamed sources without proper substantiation,” he said of the United Nations.

    Senator Leila de Lima, a staunch critic of the president, started a two-day congressional inquiry into the killings on Monday, questioning top police and anti-narcotics officials to explain the “unprecedented” rise in killings.

    “I am disturbed that we have killings left and right as breakfast every morning,” she said.

    “My concern does not only revolve around the growing tally of killings reported by the police. What is particularly worrisome is that the campaign against drugs seems to be an excuse for some law enforcers and other elements like vigilantes to commit murder with impunity,” De Lima said.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

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