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  • Singaporean Family Detained 14 Days For Verbally Abusing Malaysian Immigration Officer

    Singaporean Family Detained 14 Days For Verbally Abusing Malaysian Immigration Officer

    Singaporean family has been arrested and detained for 14 days for a probe into their alleged verbal abuse against an Immigration Department officer from Malaysia during a border inspection.

    Johor Immigration Department Datuk Rohaizi Bahari said the two-week remand of the Singaporean trio was to facilitate the investigations into the incident last week.

    “It is an offence to hurl abuse at my men who are just following the procedures during checks,” he was quoted saying by local daily The Star.

    “So far our investigation also showed that the officer did not ask for any bribe as alleged by the suspects,” he added.

    Rohaizi said individuals dissatisfied with the officers under him could file a direct complaint to him.

    According to The Star, the arrest was carried out after the Singaporeans refused to lower the back window of their Singapore-bound car with tinted windows for inspection at the Bangunan Sultan Iskandar Customs, Immigration and Quarantine Complex.

    The trio were reportedly a businesswoman in her 40s and her children aged 18 and 19 respectively.

    In the Friday afternoon incident, the woman was said to have verbally abused the immigration officer carrying out the inspection, while one of the trio purportedly gave a middle finger gesture.

    The investigation of the trio is under Section 56(1)(g) of the Immigration Act, where the penalty is a maximum RM10,000 fine or a maximum jail term if five years or both.

     

    Source: The Malay Mail Online

  • I Was Almost Recruited Into Terrorism Group By Best Friend

    I Was Almost Recruited Into Terrorism Group By Best Friend

    Six men were arrested in Batam on Aug 5 in connection with the terror plot against Singapore.

    One of them was released later. He says he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    Mr Tegar Sucianto’s friend Hadi Gusti Yanda, 20, was one of the five Indonesians picked up by anti-terror police and later taken to Jakarta.

    The pair were on the way to work when both were surrounded, pinned to the ground, had hoods placed over the heads and were bundled into a van.

    Hours later, Mr Tegar, 19, learnt that his friend was a member of a terror cell group that had sworn allegiance to Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

    He tells The New Paper on Sunday that he was shocked, but also horrified that his friend had been actively trying to recruit him. And he had little clue.

    Until the arrest, he thought he knew everything about the friend he had first met in secondary school seven years ago.

    They grew up playing video games and football and both lived in the Batu Aji neighbourhood on Batam.

    They even worked at the same Asus factory after they graduated last year.

    Mr Tegar says: “Hadi seemed like a normal teenager, we were good friends.

    “When we were growing up, I never noticed anything strange about him.”

    But Hadi changed last year and Mr Tegar says his friend would talk often about suicide bombers, Syria and ISIS.

    He thought Hadi was just more religious than him.

    “Hadi would always remind me to pray when I was lazy. It made sense that he knew all the news he talked about, I thought he was just keeping me up-to-date,” he says.

    But then Hadi invited him to meet a religious group to learn more about Islam.

    Mr Tegar resisted at first.

    “Why should I go? I wasn’t really interested in all this religious knowledge.

    “But Hadi would keep on asking,” he says.

    Mr Tegar finally relented late last year. He agreed to travel with Hadi to the Nurul Islam mosque in the Muka Kuning district, about a 30-minute drive from their village.

    Mr Tegar believes the hour-long meeting was the first time members of the terror cell Katibah Gonggong Rebus met.

    There were six people at the meeting, but Mr Tegar says nobody knew each other.

    “They had only communicated via chat groups in WhatsApp and other apps. It seemed like they were all meeting for the first time,” he says.

    UNCOMFORTABLE

    As the group introduced themselves and dwelled on religious issues, Mr Tegar became uncomfortable.

    “I had no interest in what they were talking about and told Hadi I wanted to go home,” he recalls.

    Before they left, they were all instructed to download the Telegram messenger app, says Mr Tegar.

    He did as he was told and was added into a chat group.

    Mr Tegar says he received hundreds of messages daily over the next few days.

    He tried to ignore the conversation by muting the chat.

    “I didn’t read it, there were so many messages. From what I saw, it was just a lot of things about Islam, like tips about how to pray and how to be a better Muslim.”

    He claims he did not participate in the conversation and was kicked out of the group a week after he joined.

    “I was surprised, but I was fine being kicked out without warning,” he says.

    He deleted the Telegram app from his phone and the two friends never talked about the group again.

    On Aug 5, Mr Tegar was giving Hadi a ride to work on his motorcycle when they were boxed in by several police vehicles.

    The officers approached Hadi first, handcuffing him and blindfolding him before doing the same to Mr Tegar.

    Mr Tegar says: “It was all happening so fast, I had no idea what was going on and I was panicking.”

    The two were taken to the Brimob special police headquarters for questioning. Later, Hadi was taken away while Mr Tegar was made to wait in a police car.

    “The officers were nicer to me than to Hadi. They spoke to me in a friendly way and even apologised for arresting me,” he says.

    Mr Tegar was released that evening after questioning and was home at 8pm. He was embraced by his worried mother, 42-year-old shop owner Desi Fitrianti.

    She says: “I hugged him so tight because I was scared.

    “All of a sudden in the afternoon that day, there were all these reporters knocking on my door, asking me if I knew that my son was a terrorist.”

    He says of the experience: “Nobody’s really scared of me because they know that I’m innocent. Some people stare and ask me, but I’m honest with them, there’s no reason to be scared if I’m telling the truth.”

    But he says of the man he thought was his friend: “I guess you never know people really. I never thought he would be someone like that.”

    Indonesian authorities arrested a total of five suspects in an anti-terror swoop after preliminary investigations showed they were part of a little-known cell called Katibah GR or Cell GR.

    Hadi, along with the remaining four suspects, Gigih Rahmat Dewa, Trio Syafrido, Eka Saputra and Tarmidzi, were later taken from Batam to Jakarta for investigations.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Lee Wei Ling: Contempt Of Court Bill Is Unfair And An Attempt To Silence Public

    Lee Wei Ling: Contempt Of Court Bill Is Unfair And An Attempt To Silence Public

    I just read CNA. The report seems to imply that I retract my entire first post of today. I only retract the part related to the comment on Mr. Tang Wee Sung. Mr. Shanmugam has informed me that even after the new law has been passed, it is not illegal to criticize a judgement or the AGC after the judgement has been delivered. Much of the proposed bill is ambiguous to a person not trained in legal matters.

    As per my current understanding, I stand by the rest of the statements I posted. The bill which will be passed in parliament tomorrow gives the government the right to comment whilst denying that to people. This is inconsistent with equality before the law and is an attempt to muzzle public opinion

    In Straits Times on 12/8/2016, it was reported that the contempt of court laws are set to be entered into the statutes.

    Minister Shanmugam stated that
    1) It gives the public a better sense of what action can unduly influence court proceedings, known as sub judice. Ironically, Sub Judice rules were set up for situation where there is laymen jury who may be naïve enough to be misled by rumours or lead by emotion rather than logic as in religious or racial issues. It was this weakness of having a jury swayed by ignorance or emotions that lead our founding PM Lee Kuan Yew, to do away with Juries in Singapore courts. If your judges are so vulnerable, then the cabinet is at fault for its choice of candidates proposed to be promoted to be judges.

    2) It provides a framework for contempt of court punishments. The maximum penalty is a fine up to $20,000 and/or jail term up to 12 months. This is very serious penalties for someone who may just want to speak out against an unfair judge and/or an unfair government. When I wrote in ST against the then penalty for Mr Tang Wee Sung, whilst I wrote out of my pity for Mr. Tang and the sense of how brutally unfair the penalty suggested by our Attorney General’s Chambers was, the letter published in Straits Time was worded with the help of Mr Shanmugam and his partner at Allen and Gledhill, Mr Lucian Wong. I would have written even if neither senior lawyers supported me, but the wording of my letter would have been very amateurish. Now being on the side of the government, Minister Shanmugam seems to see justice only from the point of view of the government and the AGC always being right.
    In fact, it is bizarre for me after what Mr. Wong and Mr. Shanmugam encouraged and supported me to do then, that Mr. Shanmugam now wants to demolish a tiny trail leading to some degree of justice for someone whom the government considers a nuisance.

    3) It provides a framework for contempt of court punishment and sets a limit on fines and prison sentences which as seen from above can be very serious.

    This has led to widespread concern amongst Singaporeans who understand the implications of this proposed law and one need only search the internet to find multiple posts stating why this bill will gag public debate on issues that are important to Singaporeans. I will not repeat what has been clearly stated in petition against this bill which was published Straits Times on 12/8/2016.

    Rather, I am amazed that there has not been more vocal protest by more Singaporeans. A phenomenon I observed this morning may provide the answer. I woke up and stepped out of my air-conditioned bedroom and immediately smelled smoked. I asked my two maids who sleep in bedrooms with their windows open whether they smelt anything smoke and they did not. I called a friend who also sleeps in air-conditioned bedroom and he too smelt smoke as he stepped out of his bedroom. Smell is a sensation that we quickly get used to and then no longer notice it if it lingers for less than an hour. Perhaps, Singaporeans have gotten used to an authoritarian government who until recently had always acted for their wellbeing, and so when another new action is taken, they do not even bother to think whether it may be against their welfare. This current government is not like previous PAP governments. I urged all Singaporeans, and all MPs and NMPs to think through what has been proposed, and also read the many commentaries on the internet.

     

    Source: Lee Wei Ling

  • Atlit Hijab Pertama Amerika Raih Gangsa Lawan Pedang

    Atlit Hijab Pertama Amerika Raih Gangsa Lawan Pedang

    RIO DE JANEIRO: Ibtihaj Muhammad menyertai Sukan Olimpik Rio dengan azam untuk menunjukkan kepada dunia bahawa wanita Muslimah Amerika juga mampu bersaing dalam sukan elit.

    Atlit lawan pedang berusia 30 tahun dari New Jersey itu – yang juga atlit Olimpik Amerika Syarikat pertama yang berhijab – berjaya meraih pingat gangsa dalam acara ‘sabre’ pasukan wanita pada hari Sabtu (13 Ogos).

    Pasukan AS terdiri daripada empat wanita itu – yang juga termasuk juara Olimpik sebanyak dua kali, Dagmara Wozniak, Mariel Zagunis dan Monica Aksamit – menumpaskan Itali 45-30 untuk meraih tempat ketiga.

    Pasukan Amerika (dari kiri) Dagmara Wozniak, Ibtihaj Muhammad, Monica Aksamit dan Mariel Zagunis dengan pingat gangsa mereka. (Gambar: AP/Andrew Medichini)

    Mereka juga merangkul pingat pertama untuk sukan lawan pedang wanita bagi Amerika di Rio.

    “Ia satu perjalanan jauh untuk kami. Sudah enam tahun kami menempuhinya. Saya tidak akan pernah melupakan detik ini.

    “Kami bekerja begitu gigih untuknya, dan hakikat bahawa kami mampu bersaing pada tahap ini, di pentas terbesar dunia di Sukan Olimpik, kami benar-benar menghargainya,” kata Ibtihaj.

    Ibtihaj, yang mengendalikan kedai pakaian wanitanya sendiri, sejak beberapa tahun kebelakangan ini terlibat dalam satu program yang disokong pemerintah untuk mengupaya kaum Hawa menerusi sukan.

    Rakan sepasukannya, Wozniak, yang mewarnakan rambutnya kepada warna ungu, berkata: “Inilah sukan. Tidak kira warna rambut anda, atau agama anda.

    “Yang penting, anda ke luar sana dan menjadi atlit yang terbaik mungkin, dan saya rasa kamilah contoh terbaik apa itu Amerika, iaitu gabungan begitu banyak budaya dan kaum berlainan.”

    AS kembali bangkit selepas tewas 45-42 di pusingan separuh akhir kepada juara dunia Rusia, yang terus menguasai acara itu dengan meraih pingat emas pertama di Rio, menewaskan Ukraine 45-30 dalam pusingan akhir.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Nadiah M Din Sah Bergelar Isteri Kepada Bilal Jeanpierre

    Nadiah M Din Sah Bergelar Isteri Kepada Bilal Jeanpierre

    Pelakon dan pengacara popular tempatan, Nadiah M Din sah bergelar isteri, hari ini (14 Ogos).

    Majlis akad nikah tertutup Nadiah dan Guillaume Jeanpierre, atau nama Muslimnya, Bilal, berlangsung sekitar 5.50 petang tadi di The Colonial @ Scotts.

    Dengan sekali lafaz, Bilal, jejaka asal Perancis, secara rasmi menjadi suami Nadiah. Majlis persandingan mereka pula akan diadakan pada Disember nanti.

    Nadiah pertama kali bertemu suaminya itu di satu majlis “housewarming” anjuran seorang teman beliau.

    Bilal memeluk agama Islam pada 24 Oktober 2015 di Darul Arqam di Onan Road. Beliau menyuarakan hasrat untuk memeluk agama Islam hanya setelah 6 bulan mereka bersama sebagai sepasang kekasih.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

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