Tag: BBC

  • BBC News Biased – Female Circumcision In Singapore Not Genital Mutilation Described By AWARE

    BBC News Biased – Female Circumcision In Singapore Not Genital Mutilation Described By AWARE

    Myself and my 3 girls have undergone female circumcision. My son was circumcised too.

    For my girls, basically the SKIN tip of the clitoris, a tiny 1mm worth was clipped by the female Muslim paediatrician in a clinic. In fact I was the one holding my babies’ legs open cos whatever medical procedures concerning my children, I insist to be present and ensure it is carried out right. All 3 girls, same doctor.

    Female circumcision in Spore is NOT genital mutilation as described by AWARE. The clitoris is NOT deformed or reduced. The labia is NOT cut NOT sewn shut. Everything looks normal and pretty down there huhu. And as a paramedic, midwife trained and also doula in Spore, I have SEEN many Sporean/foreigner private parts, circumcised and not. The difference, if any, is negligible.

    I also assure you, my libido and sexual abilities are healthy and not deficient in any manner due to circumcision. If any other person has suffered, perhaps it WAS wrongly done or that person has mental/emotional issues concerning sex/has suffered a form of sexual abuse. Which I don’t hv. Neither have my girls.

    In Islam, female circumcision is NOT mandatory. I chose to do it for the benefit of my children. So do your research and make your own decision concerning your children. AWARE is an org I neither endorse nor respect after their recent fiasco of accusing a person of promoting family violence without proper investigation.

    I urge BBC to interview midwives and doctors in KKWCH, NUH, SGH and other hospitals with gynae/obstetric facilities. Do a proper investigation of ‘female genital mutilation’ among the Malays before naming it as such. Before you produce a baseless crappy article submitted from AWARE.

    Be AWARE of these ‘Muslims’ and the ‘liberal’ ideology spread and accepted due to the lack of religious knowledge in our community. Go back to your basics and learn your religion from MUIS and PERGAS teachers. And Allah knows best.

     

    Source: Dil MY

  • Watching My Country Mourn From Afar

    Watching My Country Mourn From Afar

    Watching the reaction to Lee Kuan Yew’s death from overseas has been a surreal and difficult experience.

    As a Singaporean journalist with the BBC, it’s been a privilege to cover many stories about my country over the years. But here was probably its biggest story, garnering the most global attention, that I was missing entirely as I spend two weeks working in London. I’ve had to watch the events of his death unfold, and my fellow Singaporeans grieving from afar.

    But my anguish isn’t just professional, it is also personal. As a Singaporean growing up in the 1970s and 80s under Lee Kuan Yew, the influence he had on my life and the lives of many millions of Singaporeans has been immense. The story has been told a million times, how with a tight grip on power, he and his team took a small third world country with limited natural resources and turned it one of the world’s wealthiest countries per capita in a generation.

    But what was it like growing up as that transformation took place?

    Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew thanks constituency after the election in Sept 1988

    Even as children, we were aware of the constant change, not just externally, with the nation’s skyline, its factories and rivers, but also internally. Campaigns spearheaded by Mr Lee’s government sought to micromanage our behaviour. From courtesy to anti-spitting campaigns, Singaporeans were taught from a young age how to be compliant.

    When we were older, we were told how many children we should have and even whom to marry. As graduates, you were encouraged to marry someone with the same level of education, to make real Mr Lee’s vision of social engineering and becoming a nation producing smarter babies.

    Watching the thousands throng the streets – first to show their respects to his coffin at Parliament House and then to watch his funeral motorcade go by in a tropical downpour – made me think at first that here at work was the same thing: compliance, from a nation so accustomed to doing as he said. The alternative often meant being sued, or thrown into detention without trial. Most Singaporeans traded up personal freedoms for economic success.

    Queues outside parliament in Singapore (25 March 2015)

    But here at work was something more. Tears and emotions were high, not just in Singapore but for the many Singaporeans living overseas. My extended family, many of whom have emigrated to the US and Canada, spent days debating his legacy on our family group on WhatsApp. If he was having that impact on them, years after they left their country, imagine what sort of influence his death still wielded on many millions more.

    It’s hard to put in words the effect he had. For many, including myself, it was a love-hate relationship. Love for the immense transformation his governance brought to Singapore. How it’s now admired as a nation to be emulated by giants such as India, which has Singapore building a new city for it, and China, which had President Xi Jinping dispatching generals to live there to study its model of governance. Being Singaporean makes me hold my orange-red passport proud at immigration lines worldwide.

    But hate for the way his executed the transformation, depriving many of free speech, a two-party state, their native Chinese dialects and, if you were a man, the freedom to wear your hair long, get out of military conscription and love a member of the same sex. And then there’s the ban on chewing gum that many foreigners seem to delight in pointing out.

    Mr Lee’s influence spanned well over the 31 years that he actually governed. As a senior minister and then “minister mentor” – titles he took after standing down as prime minister in 1990 – his counsel was regularly sought by Singapore’s next generation of leaders, including the current leader, his son, Lee Hsien Loong.

    Such a cult of personality has been built around Lee Kuan Yew’s intelligence and vision that continuing on as a successful nation almost seems impossible without him.

    It’s made me nervous about the Singapore I shall find when I return, stepping through the comfortable gates of Changi Airport in a little over a week’s time. A Singapore without Lee Kuan Yew.

     

    Source: www.bbc.com

  • Finally, One PAP MP Show Support For Gazans

    Finally, One PAP MP Show Support For Gazans

     

    Credit: Zainal Sapari
    Credit: Zainal Sapari

    This Israel response to the Hamas attack had been described by a reporter as akin to Mike Tyson punching a baby that spat on him. Israel has claimed the right to defend themselves but, their response has been described as disproportionate by an Israel human right activist

    “We are targeted by mostly shitty rockets. Gazans are being shelled with heavy bombs. We have shelters, sirens, Iron Dome. They have 0.”

    It is indeed heart wrenching to see images of innocent children being killed and the agony of their parents. Unless both sides agree to a truce and work towards PEACE, the violence will continue and more innocent people will lose their lives and families.

    ‘Israel under renewed Hamas attack’, says the BBC. More balance is needed

    READ RELATED ARTICLES ON GAZA/PALESTINE CONFLICT

     

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