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  • Pinoy Maid’s Throat Sliced By Foreign Boyfriend In Horror Attack

    Pinoy Maid’s Throat Sliced By Foreign Boyfriend In Horror Attack

    A maid was slashed on the throat on Sunday by a man her alleged to be her ex-boyfriend in what is believed to be a crime of passion.

    Ms Allen Remedios, 38, was returning home to Block 311, Tampines Street 33, when the man stopped her, took out a 15cm paper cutter and slashed her throat, wrist and palm.

    After he fled, she stumbled up the stairs to the second-storey flat, leaving a trail of blood.

    Another maid working for the same employer said she heard the door bell ring at about 6.30pm and was horrified to see Ms Remedios drenched in blood when she opened the door.

    “She was standing there with blood all over her.

    “The cut on her left hand was very deep, and blood was gushing out of her throat,” the maid, who wanted to be known only as Ms Rose, 25, told The New Paper yesterday.

    “She said, ‘Sister, call boss’, and I shouted for our employer, who came running out.”

    By the time their employer, Mr Jose Mari Camacho, 40, rushed out of a room, Ms Remedios had slumped to the floor.

    The planning manager said: “I was shocked. I immediately grabbed a towel and told Rose to apply pressure on the injuries and called the police.

    “I then ran out of the flat to find out who had done this to her.”

    When he could not find the attacker, he went back to attend to Ms Remedios.

    “She was still conscious and bleeding heavily. It was a very deep cut and I could see her trachea (windpipe) coming out from her throat, where blood was spurting out of,” Mr Camacho said.

    Her wrist and thumb had deep cuts and her finger and wrist were also almost severed.

    She was taken to hospital and is in stable condition, though she is still unable to speak.

    The police have classified it as a case of voluntarily causing hurt with dangerous means and the attacker is still at large.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 68 Year Old Uncle Shows Singaporeans The Right Way To Treat Foreign Workers

    68 Year Old Uncle Shows Singaporeans The Right Way To Treat Foreign Workers

    Witnessed a heartwarming incident on the train at Raffles Place before peak hour this evening involving an uncle and a construction worker who had scooted down some seats to make way for Singaporeans.

    Uncle to worker: “Hey you can sit down… You don’t always have to give up your seat, especially not to men on the train. You come here to build our homes so you can sit also you know?”

    The worker at first puzzled by the interaction digests what he means and breaks into a sweet and winning smile. I can’t really hear the next exchange but then I see the worker whipping out his mobile phone to take a selfie with the uncle.

    Uncle And Foreign Workers 1

    The uncle continues chatting with him… he points to the train map overhead and dishes out advice and instructions on how to navigate Singapore’s transport network, honing in on Little India in particular. He asks: “Do you know which bus you can take if you get off at that station?”

    Uncle And Foreign Workers 2

    Later I learn from the “uncle”, Mr Rimy Lau, 68, who used to work in the hotel line, that the worker, Saravanan Samidurai, 28, has been in Singapore for just three days and he just wanted to him to feel welcome.

    “They come here to work. This is how we can take care of them,” said Mr Lau.

    (shared with permission)

     

    Source: Melody Zaccheus

  • $20,000 Grant To Help Extended Families Live Closer Together

    $20,000 Grant To Help Extended Families Live Closer Together

    Families intending to buy resale flats to live with or near their parents, or seniors who plan to do the same with their married children, are set to receive S$20,000 under the new Proximity Housing Grant (PHG).

    First announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his National Day Rally yesterday (Aug 23), the scheme, which kicked in today, will replace the Higher-Tier CPF Housing Grant that previously gave first-timer families S$10,000 and singles S$5,000 on top of the basic S$30,000 or S$15,000 CPF Housing Grant they receive respectively.

    Under the scheme, singles will receive grant of S$10,000, half of what a family gets. Recipients of the grant will need to live in their flats for at least five years after receiving the grant, as well the families they live near or with. The grant is available to Singaporean families once, regardless of their household income, any previous subsidies enjoyed or private property ownership.

    Details for this scheme, as well as for a slew of other measures announced by Mr Lee, were released by the Ministry of National Development (MND) and Housing and Development Board (HDB) at a media briefing today. The other measures include raised income ceilings when buying new HDB flats and Executive Condominium units, and bigger Special CPF Housing Grants.

    While more are now eligible to buy flats from the HDB, National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan yesterday sought to assuaged fears that a crush of buyers could outstrip supply and drive up queue times for Build-to-Order (BTO) flats, or prices for ECs.

    Emphasising that MND and HDB will monitor the market to ramp up supply if necessary, Mr Khaw said that the market would adjust itself, with buyers flowing both ways between HDB flats and EC units.

    “Some EC buyers may move into BTOs, some BTO applicants may go up to ECs. At the border (between) EC and (private) condos, there will also be movement. Key point is because we have leverage over supply and we can always adjust the supply, expand and reduce as necessary,” said Mr Khaw.

    On whether developers of EC would capitalise on the higher income ceilings of buyers and raise prices of units, Mr Khaw said developers should be looking at lowering prices, to balance the increased supply of EC units in a market where demand has largely been satisfied.

    And dispelling notions that the measures were introduced to sweeten the ground before the upcoming General Election, Mr Khaw said it was the right time to introduce these adjustments after having cleared the queue of first-timers. Such measures could not have been introduced three or four years ago, he noted.

    “When I took over four and a half years ago, we focused on specific groups where the need was greatest. And that’s how we incrementally adjusted the policies… So now that the first-timers, newly-weds problems are largely resolved, it allows me now to begin to look at other groups – middle income groups and higher income groups … and going forward… including those who are renting HDB flats,” he said.

    Adding he “could not care less when GE is”, Mr Khaw said problems must be solved and schemes will be launched “once I’m confident that those are practical scheme(s)”.

    He also clarified that shifting the focus towards the higher income groups does not be at the expense of the lower income groups. “Even if we expand upwards to a higher income group, we are also improving or enhancing the subsidy for the low income group. But what it means is in totality, more Singaporeans get to benefit from housing subsidy,” he said.

    To that end, the September BTO and Sale of Balance Flats exercise will be slightly delayed — but still held in the same month — to ensure that the next round of buyers will be able to benefit from the changes, said Mr Khaw.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 2 PRC National Who Knelt In Protest On Road In Front Of MOM Were Arrested

    2 PRC National Who Knelt In Protest On Road In Front Of MOM Were Arrested

    Two people were arrested yesterday for kneeling in the middle of Bendemeer Road and refusing to move when told to do so.

    Videos and pictures taken by drivers and passers-by, and later uploaded onto social media, show a man in a yellow T-shirt and green shorts, carrying a yellow backpack, kneeling on the middle lane next to a woman dressed in a black T-shirt and pants.

    Both were holding sheets of paper covered in Chinese writing, and making a commotion as vehicles whizzed past, apparently protesting an agency fee dispute.The drama took place in front of the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) Services Centre at noon yesterday.

    An MOM spokesman said the woman, a work permit holder, had gone to the centre with her husband to get help in obtaining a refund of agency fees she had allegedly paid her overseas agent. She wanted the local employment agency which had hired her to return the money.

    “Based on her representation, our officers explained our laws and regulations to her, which she refused to accept,” said the spokesman. “Despite our efforts, she was not satisfied.”

    A construction worker, who wanted to be known only as Mr Amin, said he was waiting at the bus stop outside the centre when the incident took place.

    “I saw them run out onto the road. They were shouting and crying in Chinese,” said Mr Amin, 32, of the pair. “Some security (guards) from MOM tried to talk to them, make them cool (down), but they did not listen.”

    Vehicles in the middle lane were forced to slow down and change lanes to avoid hitting the couple. MOM officers helped to divert traffic while several drivers wound their windows down and urged the duo to move out of the way, but their words fell on deaf ears.

    The police, who arrived in 15 minutes, said the pair were arrested on the spot for committing a rash act.

    Investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • NSP CEC Member Mohamed Fazli Talip Resigns

    NSP CEC Member Mohamed Fazli Talip Resigns

    Ahead of the looming General Election, the National Solidarity Party (NSP) has been rocked by yet another resignation, this time of central executive committee (CEC) member Mohamed Fazli Talip.

    In a Facebook post on Monday (Aug 24), he said: “With a heavy heart, I have submitted my resignation from NSP with immediate effect. I wish the party all the best of luck in the coming (general election).”

    He told The Straits Times on Monday that he had tendered his resignation via e-mail on Sunday, and that the CEC had tried to convince him to stay on.

    “I wanted to spend more time concentrating on my career, and I was disappointed by some of the decisions that were made by the party,” he said, adding that he was saddened by the events of the past week that have impugned on the party’s credibility.

    Mr Fazli, 34, a branding consultant, was one of NSP’s 11 potential candidates at the upcoming polls,  widely expected to be held early next month.

    He contested the East Coast GRC in the 2011 polls on the Workers’ Party ticket.

    The NSP did two rounds of U-turns over the past week, first by announcing last Wednesday that it would enter into a three-cornered fight in MacPherson Single-Member Constituency (SMC) with the Worker’s Party and the ruling People’s Action Party.

    It prompted acting secretary-general Hazel Poa to quit the partylast Wednesday and pull out of the next polls.

    On Sunday morning, NSP council member Steve Chia, in another U-turn, said he would not be contesting MacPherson single-seat ward after all. He cited online criticism he had received over his role in the earlier decision.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

     

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