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  • Police: 9 Cases Of Travellers Misusing Boarding Pass This Year

    Police: 9 Cases Of Travellers Misusing Boarding Pass This Year

    There have been nine cases of travellers misusing their boarding pass since January this year, the Singapore Police Force said on Sunday (Sep 27).

    In an advisory posted on Facebook, the police also said that 13 people have been arrested in connection with offences under the Protected Areas and Protected Places Act.

    The transit areas of Changi Airport are gazetted as Protected Places, the police said, adding that all passengers who enter the transit areas should only be there for the purpose of travelling to their next destinations.

    “Those who abuse their boarding pass to enter the transit areas to meet friends or celebrities, with no intention to proceed to their next destination, are liable for an offence under the Protected Areas and Protected Places Act.”

    Offenders face a fine of S$1,000, up to two years’ jail, or both, the police said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Indon Maid Stole Employers’ Valuables And Escaped From Singapore On Off Day

    Indon Maid Stole Employers’ Valuables And Escaped From Singapore On Off Day

    Dear Editor,

    The Indonesia maid has been working for me about 6 months. She is very good in acting. Like a normal person just do her job to look after our new born baby girl and housework.

    During the weekdays my wife need to sent my 2 years old son to the child care centre and do marketing for the daily need so we leave the maid and the baby at home. We trust her that she will do her job. One Saturday evening we wanted to past her the work permit for her off day the next day but we couldn’t find the work permit and the passport!

    When we ask her and she said that her work permit is with her and claim that the passport is with us. After that we decided to search for the passport in our room but we could not find it. The next day the maid go for her off day and we try to search for her passport again but cannot find it than we decide to check our locked drawer to check if our gold and money if is still inside but to our surprise our gold in a bag n cash is missing!!!!

    We hope that the maid would come back from off day but she didn’t return to our house by 6 pm that day. That’s when we made a police report. And the police officer did make a check from ICA and say the the maid already left Singapore on that Sunday. This maid is so cunning and deceiving. Beware!

    Charlie
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • FT From Britain Shamed By Local Girl For Being A Pervert On Dating Website

    FT From Britain Shamed By Local Girl For Being A Pervert On Dating Website

    Dear All Singapore Stuff,

    A perverted Caucasian foreigner working in Singapore, in NUS, was exposed by a girl whom he tried to date. Rather than waste time on indirect approaches like most Singaporean men, he directly told her that he needed to have sex with her because his penis was hard. Should he arrested for sexual harassment?

    For details and screenshots, please find them here:
    http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/eat-drink-man-woman-16/%5Bgpgt%5D-horny-amdk-living-sg-got-shamed-sinkie-girl-who-rejected-him-5186870.html

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

     

  • Working Mum To Get $1 In Maintenance

    Working Mum To Get $1 In Maintenance

    A working mother who divorced her pilot husband has been awarded $1 in annual nominal maintenance after the Court of Appeal clarified a previous ruling, a decision which means she can apply for further maintenance in future if her circumstances change.

    Last October, the High Court ruled that the couple’s $1.65 million matrimonial home should be divided 70:30 in favour of the wife, while a $1,500 monthly maintenance for their child should be borne equally by both parents.

    However, the judge made no order as to her maintenance but made it clear that she had a legal right to apply for it in the future.

    The woman, 42, a bank officer, appealed to the apex court against the whole judgment in July. It dismissed her case but explained that “no order” maintenance was not appropriate to reflect the judge’s ruling.

    Instead it granted her nominal maintenance, which preserves her right to apply for maintenance in the future should the need arise.

    “In order to preserve a wife’s right to apply for maintenance to the court in the future, an order for nominal maintenance is required,” wrote Judge of Appeal Andrew Phang, on behalf of the Court of Appeal in judgment grounds released this month. “What the judge was doing, in substance, was to equate the legal effect or result of an order for nominal maintenance with that for an order that there be no order on an application for maintenance. With respect, we disagree.”

    The 43-year-old former Republic of Singapore Air Force pilot and the working mum, whose salary soared after she got her master’s degree, will share custody of their 11-year-old child despite the wife’s bid for sole custody.

    The couple cannot be named for legal reasons. Their marriage broke down in 2010 after 12 years and she cited his unreasonable behaviour.

    She was represented by lawyer Koh Tien Hua, while he was defended by Ms Sim Bock Eng.

    In a commentary on the appeals court’s decision, two Singapore Management University law graduates have suggested that the award of $1 maintenance orders as the default position should be reviewed.

    This should be considered “in an age when women are increasingly financially independent and spouses share familial responsibilities more equally”, Ms Beatrice Yeo and Ms Fiona Chew wrote in a commentary published in Singapore Law Watch last week. “Arguably, the award of $1 maintenance simply to preserve the wife’s future right to maintenance without further justification might also be said to be out of touch with the realities of today’s more gender-equal era.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • How To Fight ISIS?

    How To Fight ISIS?

    The Islamic State, or ISIS, has captured the world’s attention with gruesome videos of beheadings, wanton destruction of antiquities and skilled use of social media.

    It has also captured a large part of eastern Syria and western Iraq, proclaimed a caliphate based in Raqqa, Syria, and attracted foreign jihadists from around the world.

    United States President Barack Obama said that the Islamic State must be degraded and ultimately defeated. He has appointed General John Allen to lead a coalition of about 60 countries in the task, relying on air strikes, special forces and training missions.

    Some critics want him to send more American troops; others say that the US should settle for a doctrine of containment.

    In the current US presidential campaign, some candidates are calling for “boots on the ground”. They are right: Boots are needed.

    But the soldiers who wear them should be Sunni Arabs and Turks, not Americans. And that says a lot about the nature of the triple threat that the US and its allies now face.

    The Islamic State is three things: A transnational terrorist group, a proto-state and a political ideology with religious roots.

    It grew out of Al Qaeda after the misguided US-led invasion of Iraq; like Al Qaeda, it appeals to extremist Sunni Islamists.

    But it has gone further, by trying to establish a caliphate, and is now a rival to Al Qaeda.

    Its possession of territory creates the legitimacy and capacity for offensive jihad, which it wages not only against infidels, but also Shia and Sufi Muslims, whom it considers “takfir”, or not true Islamic monotheists.

    The Islamic State extols the purity of seventh-century Islam, but it is extremely adept at using 21st-century media.

    Its videos and social-media channels are effective tools for attracting a minority of Muslims — primarily young people from Europe, America, Africa and Asia — who are struggling with their identity. Disgruntled, many are drawn to “Sheikh Google”, where Islamic State recruiters wait to prey upon them.

    By some estimates, there are more than 25,000 foreign fighters serving in the Islamic State today. Those who are killed are quickly replaced.

    SUNNI MUSLIM SOLDIERS TO COMBAT ISIS

    The tripartite nature of the Islamic State creates a policy dilemma. On the one hand, it is important to use hard military power to deprive the caliphate of the territory that provides it both sanctuary and legitimacy. But if the American military footprint is too heavy, the Islamic State’s soft power will be strengthened, thus aiding its global recruiting efforts.

    That is why the boots on the ground must be Sunni. The presence of foreign or Shia troops reinforces the Islamic State’s claim of being surrounded and challenged by infidels.

    So far, thanks largely to effective Kurdish forces, who are overwhelmingly Sunni, the Islamic State has lost about 30 per cent of the territory it held a year ago.

    But deploying additional Sunni infantry requires training, support and time, as well as pressure on Iraq’s Shia-dominated central government to temper its sectarian approach.

    After the debacle in Libya (where the Islamic State supports jihadist militias and has announced the creation of three “distant provinces”), Mr Obama is understandably reluctant to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, only to see the Islamic State take control of more territory, accompanied by genocidal atrocities against Syria’s many non-Sunnis.

    But Mr Assad is one of the Islamic State’s most effective recruiting tools. Many foreign jihadists respond to the prospect of helping to overthrow a tyrannical Alawite ruler who is killing Sunnis.

    The US diplomatic task is to persuade Mr Assad’s supporters, Russia and Iran, to remove him without dismantling the remains of the Syrian state structure. A no-fly zone and a safe zone in northern Syria for the millions of displaced people could reinforce American diplomacy. And providing massive humanitarian assistance to the refugees (at which the American military is very effective) would increase US soft power enormously.

    As it stands, the funding and coordination of America’s soft-power strategy is inadequate. But we know that hard power is not enough, particularly to contest the cyber territory that the Islamic State occupies — for example, by developing a capacity to take down botnets and counter hostile social-media accounts.

    Even if the US and its allies defeat the Islamic State over the coming decade, we should be prepared for a similar Sunni extremist group to rise from the ashes.

    Revolutions of the type the Middle East is experiencing take a long time to resolve. The sources of revolutionary instability include tenuous post-colonial boundaries; arrested modernisation; the failed Arab Spring; and religious sectarianism, exacerbated by the interstate rivalry between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shia-ruled Iran.

    In Europe, wars of religion between Catholics and Protestants lasted for nearly a century and a half. The fighting ended (with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648) only after Germany lost a quarter of its population in the Thirty Years’ War.

    But it is also worth remembering that the coalitions of that time were complex, with Catholic France aiding Dutch Protestants against Catholic Habsburgs for dynastic rather than religious reasons. We should expect similar complexity in today’s Middle East.

    Looking ahead in a region where the US has interests as varied as energy, Israel’s security, nuclear non-proliferation and human rights, American policymakers will need to follow a flexible strategy of “containment plus nudging”, which implies siding with different states and groups in different circumstances.

    For example, whether or not Iranian policy becomes more moderate, sometimes Iran will share US interests, and sometimes it will oppose them. In fact, the recent nuclear agreement may open opportunities for greater flexibility.

    To seize them, however, US foreign policy towards the Middle East will have to develop a higher level of sophistication than the current debate reveals.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Joseph Nye is a professor at Harvard University and the author of Is the American Century Over?, recently co-chaired an Aspen Strategy Group discussion on the Islamic State and radicalism in the Middle East.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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