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  • Ghostly Soldier Figures Caught On Camera Along Deserted Sembawang Canal

    Ghostly Soldier Figures Caught On Camera Along Deserted Sembawang Canal

    <Facebook post by Thomas>

    “I was thinking to take some photos with the haze condition tonight. This photo was taken at Sembawang Simpang kiri @ around 10pm.

    I was all alone, there wasn’t a single soul when this photo was taken but look at the image carefully again. Scary sia! This isn’t edited and it is a raw photo.”

    Ghostly Figures At Sembawang

    Responding to these spooky images, netizens shared similar spooky encounters in this part of Sembawang while cycling or running in the area. Others advised to stay away from the area especially when alone at night.

    Adventurous individuals who have the ability to see spirits advised the photographer to not be afraid as they won’t hurt you so long you just do your thing.

    Have you had a similar spooky experience in Sembawang too? 

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Militants Intend To Kill Malaysian Who Is Slowing Them Down

    Militants Intend To Kill Malaysian Who Is Slowing Them Down

    KOTA KINABALU: Abu Sayyaf mi­­litants holding two Malaysian hostages are threatening to behead one of them if no payment is made soon as they move bases amid heavy Philippine troops’ movement in Jolo island.

    According to Filipino and Malaysian sources, the Abu Sayyaf group is facing pressure from the Philippine security forces which were closing in on them.

    Apparently, the gunmen wanted the cash fast as one of the two hostages was slowing them down.

    The sources said that Sarawak tourist Bernard Then, 39, had leg injuries and was not able to run with the gunmen during military operations around Jolo.

    Then and restaurant manager Thien Nyuk Fun, 50, were snatched from the Ocean King Restaurant in Sandakan on May 14 by a Filipino kidnap-for-ransom group.

    They are being held by Abu Sayyaf sub-commander Indang Susukan who was demanding 30 million pesos (about RM2.8mil) for their freedom.

    Families of the two Malaysians have been receiving calls from the Abu Sayyaf group, threatening to carry out the beheading.

    However, the families have been unable to raise the money and were seeking help from the Prime Minister as well as chief ministers of Sabah and Sarawak to help inter­­vene and secure their freedom.

    According to the sources, the situation turned critical especially after two Canadians, a Norwegian and a Filipina were kidnapped from a Philippine resort in Samal Island on Sept 21.

    They are widely suspected to have been brought to Jolo island though no group had claimed responsibility so far.

    Filipino sources believed that they might be held by Abu Sayyaf commander Al Habsi Misaya and another sub-commander from the notorious Sawajan family that triggered intensified security ope­rations in Jolo island.

    Though they are from different groups, they are linked to each other. The operations are forcing all of them to be on the run, a source said, citing that Then was thus slowing them down.

    Philippine officials have yet to confirm the whereabouts of the Canadians and Norwegian but they have spotted an abandoned boat believed to have been used by the kidnappers along a village coast in Jolo.

    Unlike previous kidnap victims who were mostly hidden in jungle hideouts, sources said the two Malaysians were now being moved all the time to avoid capture by Philippine military or police.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • Parramatta Shooting – Australian Police Search Mosque In Shooting Investigation

    Parramatta Shooting – Australian Police Search Mosque In Shooting Investigation

    The Parramatta Mosque has been searched, a senior police source has told the ABC, as investigations into Friday’s fatal shooting of a civilian police force employee continue.

    Farhad Jabar Khalil Mohammad, 15, shot and killed 17-year police force veteran Curtis Cheng at close range outside the Parramatta police headquarters.

    A senior police source told the ABC Farhad attended a mosque shortly before the shooting.

    The mosque believed to have been searched overnight is a few blocks away from the site of the shooting that killed Mr Cheng, 58, as he left work at 4:30pm on Friday.

    A senior figure at the Parramatta mosque has confirmed that police searched the mosque to look for a black backpack which they believe Farhad used to carry the gun he used to kill Mr Cheng.

    Police said the warrant was undertaken by arrangement with leadership at the mosque, who gave their full assistance to police.

    Earlier, a police source said the teenager had been armed with a revolver and did not know Mr Cheng.

    After shooting Mr Cheng, Farhad fired at officers who emerged from the building to respond to the incident, but was killed when special constables returned fire.

    Earlier, senior law enforcement sources said it appeared the teenager had acted alone.

    “The people there (at the mosque) went looking for him after prayer,” one source said.

    “There is a fair bit of information that he acted alone.”

    They said after prayer he changed into a black robe.

    Neil El-Kadomi from the Parramatta Mosque said Farhad visited the building in the past on occasion but he did not know him by name.

    “Because he was very quiet nobody noticed him,” Mr El-Kadomi said.

    “He’s not known in the mosque. He came to the mosque to heal himself before he did the crime, which is wrong.”

    Mr El-Kadomi said the mosque had nothing to do with the shooting and did not condone it.

    “The boy, he did it alone. He died and his motive died with him,” he said.

    “You have to be an active person in society, you have to join others in building Australia.

    “So, we don’t agree with what happened in Parramatta.

    “We’ve got nothing to do with it and I hate the linking of the mosque with the crime.”

    Shooter’s relative tipped off police

    The ABC was told by a senior police source that it was the older brother of the Parramatta shooter who tipped off them off about the identity of Farhad.

    It is also understood Farhad’s sister Shadi went missing on Thursday and flew out of Australia on a Singapore Airlines flight bound for Istanbul, and may be attempting to reach Iraq or Syria.

    Her family told police she had taken all her belongings.

    Police searched Farhad’s North Parramatta home and confiscated computer equipment.

    ABC’s police source said the youth had been “carrying on” outside police headquarters for a few minutes before the shooting.

    “He drew attention to himself to the extent some people caught it on their iPhones,” they said.

    The gunman walked past a plain clothes female detective.

    “She was wearing a business suit and she wasn’t carrying a gun,” a source said.

    “This poor bloke [the victim] was apparently the first one to walk out of the building — he had a connection to the police force — that was it.”

    Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and NSW Premier Mike Baird have been holding talks with Muslim community leaders following the shooting.

    Ms Bishop said the issue of radicalisation must be addressed.

    “So we’re certainly reaching out to the leaders of the Muslim community … but working with the families at a grassroots local level … it’s the families that will be a frontline of defence against radicalised young people … so we will be working very closely with them,” she said.

    The ABC’s Fran Kelly told the Insiders program that a phone hook-up between “the Premier, the Police Commissioner and the Prime Minister with seven or eight members of the Muslim community” took place last night.

    She said Mr Turnbull used the phone call to convey the message that “we have a remarkably cohesive society, respect is key to that and [urged] everyone to work together to expose preachers of hate”.

    The ABC understands the community leaders were impressed by the move and communicated their willingness to work with governments. One leader said the conversation reset the relationship.

    Muslim community leaders said they were shocked by the tragic shooting of Mr Cheng.

    They called for more to be done to stop extremist leaders from recruiting vulnerable youths.

    Sydney Muslim community leader Ahmad El-Hage said the Government only acted when extremist thoughts turn into acts of violence.

    “And we tell them this is not correct we need to act way before that,” he said.

    Mr El-Hage said the Government needed to focus on the extremist leaders rather than the young people they target.

    Youth worker Sheikh Wesam Charkawi, who works with high school boys to counter radical ideas, said the acts of one person should not reflect upon the broader Muslim community.

    He also said some of the youth he worked with feel marginalised.

    “Some of them in their families feel that there’s a disconnect, some of them come from broken families and so there is an array of issues that can lead to criminality,” Mr Charkawi said.

    He said despite youth being impressionable and often naive, nothing could justify what the shooter did.

    Relative known to police and counter-terrorism authorities

    As part of their investigation, police are now trying to trace the ownership and history of the revolver used by Farhad in the attack.

    The ABC has been told the youth had never come to the attention of police.

    “We don’t know anything about him,” the source said.

    But it is understood a relative was known to law enforcement or intelligence agencies.

    “[The relative] was a bit of a problem, he did come to the attention of police and counter-terrorism [authorities],” a source said.

    One source confirmed the teenager was a Sunni Muslim who was born in Iran.

    He said he was of Iraqi-Kurdish background and may have been a refugee.

    “It is interesting he is a Kurd, the Kurds are among those bearing the brunt of ISIS, it doesn’t make any sense,” the source said.

     

    Source:www.abc.net.au

     

  • One-Year Old Baby With Advanced Heart Failure Hopes For Transplant

    One-Year Old Baby With Advanced Heart Failure Hopes For Transplant

    Aiden Chew will turn one on Thursday, and his dad’s greatest wish is for him to have a heart transplant.

    Baby Aiden has advanced heart failure due to a complication from Kawasaki Disease. A massive heart attack in June had robbed the muscle of its function.

    He is now on a temporary heart pump device, and will go for a Berlin Heart operation — the first in Singapore — scheduled in 1½ months’ time.

    His mother Mrs Marie Chew, who is in her 30s, conceded that she struggled to come to terms with her first and only child’s condition initially.

    “I wish it happened to someone else, not me,” the full-time caregiver caught herself thinking from time to time.

    Four months on, Mrs Chew and her husband Jeremy are just glad that their little fighter is still alive despite all the obstacles.

    They have agreed to share their story with The New Paper in hopes of raising awareness for organ donation for children.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Ridjal Noor – The Singaporean Behind GCSE Text Studied In UK

    Ridjal Noor – The Singaporean Behind GCSE Text Studied In UK

    When Mr Ridjal Noor, 36, first wrote “Anil”, a short story about a boy living in India, he never expected that it would one day be studied by students in the United Kingdom.

    “Anil”, published in 2004, is about a seven-year-old boy who witnesses a murder in his village and faces a moral dilemma: Should he tell the truth?

    He said: “I didn’t even spend that much time writing “Anil”. It’s just surreal that there are students out there spending hours studying what I wrote.”

    Mr Ridjal, who was an engineering student and now runs his own display stand and publishing company, credits his polytechnic communications lecturer, Ms Shirley Joseph, for discovering his talent and encouraging him to pursue writing.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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