Blog

  • Primary School Teacher Investigated For Abusive Punishment Of Students

    Primary School Teacher Investigated For Abusive Punishment Of Students

    Several parents, unhappy with how a maths and science teacher was disciplining students in Gongshang Primary School, have lodged complaints with the school and the Ministry of Education (MOE).

    According to the parents, the female teacher from the school in Tampines — who has been relieved of her teaching duties and cannot be named as investigations into the case are still ongoing — had resorted to abusive punishment of her students in the classes she taught.

    The punishments ranged from the students being called names, having to kneel beside the teacher’s table, and getting objects thrown at them.

    Parents TODAY spoke to say this happened from as early as March this year. The teacher also called students who had forgotten to bring their science textbooks “a bunch of retarded monkeys”, said Ms Karen Tan, whose Primary 5 son was among the forgetful students.

    The 42-year-old accountant added that her son, who has high myopia, had to constantly walk nearer to the whiteboard during lessons in class.

    The teacher was said to have told the boy: “Too bad you can’t see. Go get new spectacles.”

    To other students who did the same thing, she allegedly said: “Don’t you have the money to get new ones?”

    In another incident that occurred before the school holidays in June, the teacher is said to have made a classmate of Ms Tan’s son sit on the floor beside her.

    The student, whom Ms Tan said was “a little more playful than the rest”, was a little disruptive, and in an apparent fit of anger, the teacher allegedly threw a whiteboard marker at the boy’s head.

    Ms Tan noted that while other teachers of the Primary 5 class lectured the students, only this teacher punished them to such an extent.

    Ms Josephine Chua, whose son is also in the same class, told TODAY that the students often “have to dodge, because they never know what is going to get thrown their way”.

    The 43-year-old homemaker said another parent had told their child’s form teacher about the teacher’s actions in March, while the science head of department was informed about the matter in April.

    Ms Chua and her husband met the school’s management on Monday to discuss the teacher’s case.

    TODAY understands that on Tuesday, the school sent out a circular to parents and students to inform them that the teacher had been transferred to teach non-core subjects in the school, such as art and social studies, with effect from the same day.

    Her classes have been taken over by other teachers, and she is also no longer the form teacher of her class.

    Mr George Cheah, the school’s vice-principal (administration), told TODAY: “The school takes any misconduct of our teachers very seriously. After receiving the parents’ feedback, the school leaders met the parents to understand their concerns.

    “Our students’ welfare remains our top priority.”

    Ms Chua told TODAY that the school’s decision “belittles the severity of the abuse”, and that the parents hope the teacher will be transferred out of the school, and into a non-teaching role.

    Both Ms Chua and Ms Tan said they had met the teacher before during the parent-teacher sessions held before the June holidays. They described her as “patient, soft-spoken” and “cordial”.

    The teacher’s alleged actions have also been detailed in a blog about motherhood, Mother Inc.

    In response to TODAY’s queries, an MOE spokesperson said: “Teachers who fail to comply with our standards of conduct and discipline will be subjected to disciplinary action.

    “The teacher has been relieved of her teaching duties while investigations are ongoing.”

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Hari Raya Tahun Ini Yang Terakhir Di Dakota Crescent Bagi Penduduk Islam

    Hari Raya Tahun Ini Yang Terakhir Di Dakota Crescent Bagi Penduduk Islam

    Hari Raya tahun ini adalah yang terakhir di Dakota Crescent bagi para penduduk Islam di kawasan itu.

    Flat-flat yang dibina pada 1958 itu bakal dirobohkan untuk memberi laluan kepada projek pembangunan semula.

    Meskipun akur dengan keputusan tersebut, sebahagian penduduk berasa keberatan untuk berpindah kerana mempunyai kemudahan serta jiran-jiran yang baik.

    Bagi seorang penduduk, Cik Rohani Mahmood, keriangan Syawal tahun ini bercampur-baur dengan rasa sedih.

    Setelah 14 tahun mendiami flat 2 bilik di Blok 6 Dakota Crescent, beliau terpaksa berpindah pada Disember nanti.

    Sambutan Hari Raya di Dakota Crescent mungkin tidak semeriah di rumah lamanya di Pasir Ris dan Yishun kerana kebanyakan penduduk di sini merupakan warga senja. Namun lebih utama bagi Cik Rohani adalah kemudahan pengangkutan yang baik di kawasan itu.

    “Baru-baru kakak pindah di sini agak susah sikit sebab MRT belum siap, masih kotor, nyamuk banyak. Kami buka almari, nyamuk terbang-terbang, banyak air di longkang-longkang.

    “Tetapi selepas dua tahun kakak tinggal di sini, MRT pun dah siap, Alhamdulillah, sangat bagus. Cuma kakak kadang-kadang tidak mahu fikirkan yang ini adalah hari raya terakhir di sini sebab kalau difikirkan memang sedih,” kata Cik Rohani.

    Cik Rohani, seorang ibu tunggal, tinggal di flat itu bersama salah seorang daripada empat anaknya. Dua anaknya sudah berhijrah ke luar negara.

    Rumah itulah tempat anggota keluarganya berkunjung dari rantauan sempena Syawal.

    Anak Cik Rohani, Rifqi Mohd Kamil, berkata: “Memori yang paling manis adalah tahun lepas, bila kakak saya dari Amerika Syarikat semua turun, berkumpul bersama di sini. Saya rasa itulah yang membuat saya dan keluarga saya gembira.”

    Seperti Cik Rohani, Cik Wahidah Said juga akan berpindah dari Dakota Crescent ke sebuah flat sewa yang dibina berhampiran di Cassia Link.

    Cik Wahidah, 87 tahun, sudah tinggal di kawasan itu sekitar 40 tahun. Menurut salah seorang anaknya, para penduduk di situ, tidak kira kaum atau agama, sangat rapat dan mengambil berat antara satu sama lain, terutama terhadap mereka yang uzur dan lanjut usia.

    “Mengapa nenek suka tinggal di sini? Kawan-kawan datang menjenguk nenek, tanya khabar, bagus,” kata Cik Wahidah.

    Semangat kejiranan yang kuat itu membentuk identiti unik estet perumahan di Dakota Crescent.

    Kesemua 17 blok flat di Dakota Crescent yang merupakan antara yang tertua di Singapura, akan dirobohkan di bawah pelan pembaharuan estet Mountbatten.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Commentary: Why ISIS Is Attacking Muslims

    Commentary: Why ISIS Is Attacking Muslims

    Last month, Islamic State or ISIS claimed responsibility for a spate of high-profile attacks in cities such as Istanbul, Dhaka, Baghdad and Medina. Unlike previous targets such as Brussels and Paris, the recent attacks were squarely aimed at Muslim-majority countries.

    With these attacks claiming the lives of Muslims and occurring in the holy month of Ramadan, a new debate has ensued: Is ISIS really ‘Islamic’ as it declares itself to be? Or has ISIS, in fact, revealed much of its strategies, goals – and ultimately, how its brand of extremism can and should be countered?

    Targeting Muslims in the first instance may be puzzling to many. If ISIS hopes to draw more Muslims into its cosmic struggle to uphold the caliphate, killing fellow Muslims seems an error in strategy. Several commentators have been quick to highlight that this shows that ISIS is not Islamic and has nothing to do with Islam.

    Such a defensive reaction is not without basis. Islam, after all, has a well-developed tradition that puts universally-held values such as peace, mercy and compassion at the heart of its teaching. These ethical principles have guided the conduct of a large majority of Muslims over the last 1,400 years.

    And they continue to shape the moderate form of Islam as upheld by transmitters of the religious tradition to this day. The condemnation of ISIS by thousands of prominent Muslim scholars – including the world’s largest Muslim organisation, the Nahdlatul Ulama of Indonesia – represents this strand of mainstream Islam.

    A makeshift memorial to Ataturk airport employees who were killed in Istanbul on June 28. (Photo: AFP)

    But addressing the threat of ISIS may require more than the mere assertion that ISIS is not Islamic.

    It is crucial to understand why ISIS is able to recruit individuals and draw support and sympathy from some Muslims. In part it has to do with non-religious factors. These may include the sense of frustration at the unresolved political quagmire in the Muslim world, and the need for adventure among socially-disconnected and alienated youths.

    But some factors may lie in the ability of ISIS to latch onto pre-existing narratives located within the Muslim religious imagination. It is the latter that requires Muslims to take serious stock of how Islam has been taught, understood and socialised in certain circles.

    JIHAD AND THE ABUSE OF TRADITION

    One aspect that requires critical attention is the utilisation of the religious tradition by ISIS. Firstly, ISIS resurrects medieval rulings and opinions of past scholars, de-contextualises and fossilises them.

    One example is ISIS leader al-Baghdadi’s call for Muslims to perform the ‘hijrah’ (migration) “from wherever you are to the Islamic State, from dar-ul-kufr (land of the infidels) to dar-ul-Islam (land of Islam)”. This call, issued in the ISIS newsletter Dabiq, is reminiscent of a fatwa issued by a 16th century jurist, al-Wansharisi, who declared that it is obligatory for Muslims to migrate to Muslim-controlled regions – but if they had no choice but to reside in non-Muslim lands, then they must not be in solidarity with non-Muslims and must engage in jihad (struggle).

    ISIS supporters who perpetrated the Paris attacks on Nov 13, 2015, which killed at  least 129 people, were EU citizens. (Photo: Reuters)

    ISIS, however, has no regard for context: Al-Wansharisi wrote in a milieu of empires, where Christian-Muslim rivalry shaped the religious imagination soon after the Muslims had lost the Iberian Peninsula to Christian conquests. Nor does ISIS highlight that the vast majority of the ulama today have rejected this paradigm of thought by declaring it a remnant of the past.

    In 1935 in Banjarmasin, Indonesia, the Nahdlatul Ulama declared that Muslims were no longer obliged to establish the ‘daulah islamiyyah’ (Islamic state) but instead, it was incumbent upon them to uphold the paradigm of the pluralistic nation-state, that is, ‘al-jumhuriyah al-Indonisiyah (the Indonesian state).

    EXPLOITING THE APOCALYPSE

    Secondly, ISIS latches on to the apocalyptic imagination of some Muslims. It is not surprising that its English-language propaganda magazine was named Dabiq – a location in Syria where a cosmic battle between Muslim and anti-Muslim forces has been prophesied, as recorded in medieval apocalyptic writings.

    In fact, end-time prophecies are a consistent feature in the preaching of many contemporary extremist movements. When the Americans were invading Afghanistan in 2001, several Muslims saw the Taliban as the ‘black flag army’ that would usher in the coming of the ‘Mahdi’ (end-time messiah in Muslim theology) who would defeat the ‘Dajjal’ (antichrist).

    Such imageries continue to inform Muslims who cannot make sense of geo-political conflicts happening in the Middle East. Popular preachers fill the gap through eschatological explanations. The strategists in ISIS are well aware of this, and it is no coincidence that the black flag was hoisted as a symbol.

    What this shows is that political turmoil allows for certain religious imagination to be evoked. This may explain why ISIS does not discriminate between Muslim and non-Muslim targets.

    In particular, a Muslim country governed by legal and political institutions such as parliamentary democracy, is painted as un-Islamic. Muslims who reside in and support such institutions are cast as collaborators of a ‘taghut’ (idolatrous) system. They are therefore legitimate targets, including the Saudi government for being a close ally of the United States; hence, the attack in Medina is not unthinkable.

    In Medina, at least 4 people were killed in a July 4 suicide bombing near the Prophet’s Mosque, one of the holiest places in Islam. (Photo: Reuters)

    For ISIS, undermining stability is a primary goal for chaos to reign and an Islamic State to finally emerge.

    Typically, a terror attack will be followed by panic, fear and anger. This will create a climate of anxiety where mutual suspicion envelops societal relationship. Non-Muslims may be driven to accuse Muslims of being collectively responsible, as Muslims are put on the defensive to constantly deny that these acts of terror have anything to do with them or their religion.

    This works to the advantage of the extremist agenda. Mutual suspicion will often lead to further distancing and discriminatory practices. They heighten the existing ‘siege-mentality’ in some Muslims, making them susceptible to the view that that the world is really ‘against Muslims/Islam’ and that Muslims have to defend their dignity.

    Groups like ISIS then provide ready platforms for disgruntled Muslims to take their sentiments to their violent conclusion.

    DEMONISING ‘DEVIANTS’ FROM ISLAM

    Thirdly, ISIS feeds on sectarian thinking. Those who are puzzled by ISIS’ attacks on fellow Muslims ignore two important facts: One, Muslim history is full of examples of sectarian conflicts that started soon after the death of Prophet Muhammad and, two, the main targets of ISIS are often the Shi’a and other Muslim minorities who are considered as deviants or heretics.

    The major attack in Baghdad recently that killed nearly 300 was aimed at the Shi’a community. In fact, Dabiq’s thirteenth issue released early this year was devoted to denouncing the ‘Rafidah’ – a pejorative term used on the Shi’a who were said to have originated from Abdullah ibn Saba’, a Jewish convert to Islam in 7th century who intended to divide the Muslim community.

    This Iraqi man’s sons were killed in a suicide bombing that ripped through Baghdad’s shopping district of Karrada on July 3. (Photo: AFP)

    Again, the use of tradition to propagate myths that inform sectarian thinking – albeit fabricated, but widely circulated in certain anti-Shi’a Wahhabi circles – is an unmistakable strategy employed by ISIS.

    Here, the nexus between sectarian attitudes such as ‘takfir’ (excommunication or declaring someone out of Islam) and extremism requires serious attention. This tendency is often seen in puritanical forms of Islam, such as Wahhabism.

    Several scholars have noted the similarities between the conduct of ISIS – such as beheading, keeping slaves and its anti-Shi’a and anti-Sufi (mystical branch within Islam) attitudes – with the ideas promoted within Wahhabism. Hence, ISIS’ destruction of historical sites, such as the purported tomb of Prophet Jonah in Mosul, Iraq last year, was not surprising – it was equivalent to the destruction of notable early Muslims’ tombs and historical sites in Saudi Arabia, where Wahhabism is the country’s official creed.

    Yet, ISIS cannot simply be identified as Wahhabism, even if they share many commonalities in thinking. Far more important, and urgent, is to identify the narratives employed that generate supremacist attitudes, divisive behaviour and cultish adherence to an in-group that excludes and demonises the ‘others’.

    RAMADAN AND JIHAD

    Fourthly, violence is not something that is foreign to the ISIS worldview which promotes Muslim ‘chivalry’ in its fight to implement what it considers to be the only legitimate form of governance.

    In fact, ISIS once again employs tradition to spur Muslims to fight in the month of Ramadan. Al Fatihin, a recently launched newsletter meant for the Malay-speaking world, carries the message for jihad during Ramadan by Abu Hamza Muhajir, the leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq who was killed in 2010.

    For Muslims, Ramadan is indeed a month for jihad. This jihad, however, is understood as a struggle against base desires through acts of devotion such as fasting and alms-giving. But for ISIS, jihad is understood in its distorted form of attacking and killing the supposed enemies of Islam.

    Displaced children who fled from ISIS violence receive free food during Ramadan at a restaurant in Baghdad, Iraq (Photo: Reuters)

    ISIS would point to the fact that the first battle that Muslims engaged with and led by Prophet Muhammad was the Battle of Badr, which took place in the month of Ramadan in 624 CE. Although the Muslims were not the aggressors and were defending Medina from the Meccan attack, ISIS’ invoking of jihad in Ramadan was a calculated move.

    The Battle of Badr ended with a Muslim victory, despite being outnumbered – hence, it serves ISIS’ propaganda to inflame radicalised Muslims and spur them to launch attacks, with the promise of victory and the rewards of Paradise.

    GOING BEYOND RHETORIC, TO CRITICAL THOUGHT

    It is clear that dismissing ISIS as “nothing to do with Islam” may not address the lure that ISIS has for some Muslims. What is needed is a deep and critical understanding of Muslim history, and how certain aspects of the tradition are being utilised, albeit in distorted ways. This may explain the apparent paradox: Why ISIS has been able to attract certain Muslims while, at the same time, targeting fellow Muslims.

    Knowing this will compel Muslims to go beyond making rhetorical statements, and to begin focusing on the long-needed reform of Muslim thought.

    As urged by Professor Ebrahim Moosa when he spoke in Singapore at a conference in April, the key to dealing with extremism is to engage with the tradition in a critical way. Tradition is not static; it evolves and new traditions can emerge. Muhammad Qasim Zaman in his book, Modern Islamic Thought in a Radical Age, highlighted this evolving nature of tradition, including the views of those whom we consider as the gatekeepers of tradition. While Islam as a faith remains constant, its application and understanding are diverse and often competing.

    Hence, a way to combat extremism in Muslim circles is to firstly familiarise Muslims with the diversity within Islam and the evolving nature of tradition. Second is to allow room for the scrutiny of Muslim thought to ensure that extremist ideas do not get shielded and passed off as “the Islamic view”, and therefore, beyond reproach.

    Criticising religious ideas is not equivalent to undermining religion as extremists would have us believe. Populating the religious discourse with competing ideas may be a good way to demonstrate the diversity in religious thought that can allow good ideas to trump bad ideas.

    One way to combat extremism is to familiarise Muslims with the diversity within Islam, says the writer. (Photo: AFP)

    Ultimately, diversity in religious discourse will demonstrate how religion can be an inspiration for peace and harmony, as well as a tool for violence and domination. Muslims will then be called to make a decision to uphold one and isolate the other.

    Given that there are enough resources within the vast reservoir of Muslim tradition to promote peaceful co-existence and acceptance of diversity, there is hope that the vast majority of Muslims will remain moderate and tolerant. This, however, will require firm leadership and a conducive political climate that is able to keep extremism in check while ensuring that voices of reason prevail.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

  • Family And Friends Of StanChart Robbery Suspect Shocked By His Arrest

    Family And Friends Of StanChart Robbery Suspect Shocked By His Arrest

    David James Roach’s family and friends were shocked to learn of his arrest.

    The mother of the Canadian national was not aware of his arrest when Shin Min Daily News contacted her at 5am yesterday.

    Roach’s mother, who was not named, told the Chinese evening daily she had not seen her son since he went abroad last August.

    He had taken a break from his engineering studies at a Canadian university to travel.

    His mother asked Shin Min: “Where did the robbery happen? What’s the distance between Singapore and Bangkok? Is he safe? What’s the status of the case? Will he face punishment?

    “Please tell him that we miss him, we are very worried, and we love him.”

    She said she would seek consular and legal assistance for her son, reported Shin Min.

    A Canadian woman, who was identified as Roach’s travelling companion, was also surprised. The woman, who was not named, travelled with Roach for three months through Turkey, Iran and Nepal.

    KNIFE

    The host of the house that Roach stayed in while he was in Turkey was also stunned to see the Canadian’s face in the Thai media.

    He said he remembered Roach distinctly because he had always placed a knife beside his bed throughout his stay.The host said he found it strange, but assumed it was for protection.

    For three days before the robbery, Roach stayed at a hostel in Singapore’s Chinatown.

    The hostel told Shin Min that he did not make a prior booking.

    At a press conference yesterday, Mr Nithithorn Chintakanon, Deputy Commander of the Thai Tourist Police, said they took two days to trace Roach by contacting the taxi driver and examining closed-circuit television footage where he alighted the taxi, reported The Straits Times.

    Roach was found with the equivalent of about $27,000 in US, Singapore and Thai currencies.

    He also had a notebook that contained the same phrases he had allegedly written on the slip of paper used to rob the bank.

    The note reportedly said: “This is a robbery, I have a weapon, give me money, don’t call police.”

    It also contained nine steps on how to commit the robbery, and five steps on how to flee Singapore, as well as plans to commit robberies in Chiang Mai and Dubai, Shin Min reported.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Footage Of Mystery 2011 SMRT Bishan Depot Break-In, Vandalism Emerges

    Footage Of Mystery 2011 SMRT Bishan Depot Break-In, Vandalism Emerges

    Fresh video footage of the culprits who broke into SMRT’s Bishan Depot five years ago and vandalised a train carriage has turned up online.

    The footage, part of a 12-episode video series to market a photo book by an American duo who called themselves “Utah and Ether”, showed three people crossing the canal at the Bishan SMRT depot at night and cutting a hole through the fence.

    Two of them — with their faces covered — were filmed spray painting one of the trains in the depot with the words “jet setter’s” before escaping through the fence again.

    The culprits behind the act on August 17, 2011 have never been identified or arrested. Media reports have identified “Utah and Ether” as Danielle Bremner and Jim Clay Harper, respectively. It is unclear, however, if they are behind the Bishan Depot break-in.

    SMRT was fined S$200,000 by the Land Transport Authority in October 2011 for that security lapse. SMRT’s trains were vandalised in similar fashion in separate incidents in 2010 and 2014.

    Shin Min Daily News reported on the footage of the Bishan Depot break-in on Thursday, though the video was first posted online on April 29 this year. When approached, SMRT said the issue was a police matter.

    According to media reports in Australia and Hong Kong, Harper is in jail while Bremner is said to be on the run from the authorities. Harper was arrested in Melbourne on May 4 this year, after a man confronted him about defacing shops. He was jailed at the end of May for six months.

    “The Singapore Police Force is aware of the arrest and is currently working with the Australian authorities to facilitate investigations into the case of vandalism reported at Bishan MRT depot in August 2011,” said the police in a statement.

    Following Harper’s arrest, Bremner and another Australian graffiti artist went on the run from the Australian authorities for almost four weeks before boarding a plane and flying to Hong Kong, reported Australia’s The Age newspaper.

    According to reports, Harper and Bremner were charged in 2008 for vandalising trains when they returned to the United States from Europe. They were to have been on probation for five years after their release.

    However, they broke probation by boarding on a plane to India in 2011. Their book, which is sold on The Grifters website, purportedly documents their travels to 11 countries and 37 cities in Asia where they vandalised a number of subways.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

deneme bonusu