Tag: China

  • PRC Girl Urinates On Grounds Of Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall In Bangkok

    PRC Girl Urinates On Grounds Of Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall In Bangkok

    An image of a young girl from China urinating in front of the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall in Bangkok was posted online to the collective finger-wagging of Thai netizens, who are once again calling out Chinese tourists for their “lack of etiquette”.

    “This is what happens when there are so many unlicensed Chinese guides here,” wrote Facebook user Tiger Foung, who posted the photo on June 7. “They are so negligent. A Chinese tourist let one’s daughter pee in front of the lawn of the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall.”

    Foung went on to say that Thai people were ‘disgusted with the Chinese people who are rowdy, have no manners, spit and defecate anywhere they want,’ according to a translation by the Bangkok Post.

    Urging this photo to be shared worldwide, he further added that “In the end, we’ll end up having just low-quality Chinese tourists. We have to share this to world, so they know how bad the Chinese tourists are.”

    Some users from social media say Foung’s post is biased, while a Chinese user chimed in that “If you have to pee then go someplace no one can see.”

    This is only one of many complaints from Thai people about the behavior of Chinese tourists, who previously came under fire for washing their feet in public sinks, drying their unmentionables at the airport, stealing pedicabs and knocking down barricades.

    [Image via Bangkok Post]

     

    Source: http://shanghaiist.com

  • HSBC To Cut Jobs Globally To Focus On Asia

    HSBC To Cut Jobs Globally To Focus On Asia

    HSBC will slash as many as 50,000 jobs worldwide in an effort to streamline its businesses and improve its sluggish performance as it shifts its focus back to fast-growing Asian economies, Europe’s biggest bank said yesterday.

    About half of the staff cuts will come from the sale of HSBC’s businesses in Brazil and Turkey, while the other half will come from cutting about 10 per cent of the remaining 233,000 staff by consolidating IT and back-office operations, and closing branches. About 7,000 to 8,000 of the workforce reduction are expected to be in Britain, where it is based.

    When asked by TODAY, Mr Daniel Fitzpatrick, head of HSBC Singapore’s corporate communications, declined to comment on whether there would be any job cuts or gains in Singapore. The bank, which has been in Singapore since 1877, employs about 3,000 people here, its website shows.

    The global workforce reduction exercise is part of a second attempt by HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver to boost profits since he took the helm at the start of 2011. The previous effort was foiled by high compliance costs, fines, low interest rates and weak growth.

    The cuts will leave HSBC with about 208,000 staff by 2017, down from 258,000 at the end of last year, though the bank said it would be hiring in growth businesses and its compliance division.

    HSBC also said it will cut its assets on a risk-adjusted basis by US$290 billion (S$392 billion) by 2017. That will include a reduction of US$140 billion in the Global Banking and Markets division, its investment bank, where returns have suffered in tough market conditions.

    HSBC also lowered its target for return on equity to “greater than 10 per cent” by 2017, down from a previous target of 12 to 15 per cent by next year. Overall, HSBC aims to cut costs by between US$4.5 billion and US$5 billion by the end of 2017.

    A key tenet of HSBC’s strategy unveiled yesterday is to expand its presence in China and across the Asia-Pacific region. HSBC has a sizeable presence across Asia deriving from its deep historic ties to the region.

    It was founded in Hong Kong in 1865 when the city was a British colony in order to finance growing trade between China and Europe.

    “Asia is expected to show high growth and become the centre of global trade over the next decade,’’ said Mr Gulliver.

    HSBC’s plans to accelerate its investments in Asia will involve the expansion of its asset management and insurance businesses in a bid to earn more profits from the region’s rapidly expanding class of newly wealthy.

    In particular, the bank is planning to expand in southern China’s Pearl River Delta manufacturing hub in southern Guangdong province, which is next door to Hong Kong and one of the wealthiest regions in the world’s No 2 economy.

    It is also planning a similar expansion exercise in South-east Asia, where booming economic growth in countries such as Indonesia is swelling the ranks of the middle classes.

    The Asian pivot raises the likelihood that HSBC will shift its headquarters to Hong Kong.

    HSBC has set out criteria it will use to evaluate whether to move its headquarters from London, where a bank levy cost the lender £700 million (S$1.45 billion) last year. These include factors such as economic growth, the tax system, government support for the growth of the banking system, long-term stability, and the possibility of attracting good staff.

    The bank said it would complete the review of the possible move by the end of this year.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Elderly Uighur Uproots Family To Syria To Join ISIS

    Elderly Uighur Uproots Family To Syria To Join ISIS

    Islamic State fighters in Syria have revealed their latest weapon – an 80-year-old from China believed to be one of the the terror group’s oldest jihadis.

    In a propaganda video released by ISIS, Muhammed Amin says he left his home country with his family after seeing a video of his jihadi son being killed in Syria.

    Chilling footage was also shot inside a school run by ISIS and features a child singing about ‘martyrdom’ and another issuing a warning to the Chinese.

    Oldest jihadi? Muhammed Amin, 80, left China with his wife, daughter and grandsons to join the terror group

    Oldest jihadi? Muhammed Amin, 80, left China with his wife, daughter and grandsons to join the terror group

    Despite 'ending training camp very well', Amin was not given permission to fight although posed behind the controls of heavy artillery for the propaganda video

    Despite ‘ending training camp very well’, Amin was not given permission to fight although posed behind the controls of heavy artillery for the propaganda video

    Amin and his family are believed to members of the Muslim Uighur in an autonomous territory in China

    Amin and his family are believed to members of the Muslim Uighur in an autonomous territory in China

    It is believed Amin was a member of the minority Muslim Uighur in Xinjiang, an autonomous territory in northwest China once known as Turkestan.

    ‘I was subjected to oppression in Turkestan at the hands of the Chinese… for 60 years,’ the grandfather told his interviewer – a fellow ISIS fighter.

    ‘I made hijrah (religious journey) accompanied by my four grandsons, my daughter and my wife.’

    Filmed holding an AK-47 in some scenes and at the controls of heavy artillery in others, the elderly jihadi, who is dressed in fatigues, says he trained but is not currently fighting.

    ‘I came to Islamic State and went to training camp despite my old age,’ he added. ‘I went to training camp and I crawled, I ran and I rolled.

    ‘I did almost everything and ended training camp well. After receiving a weapon I asked permission to participate in battle, but he didn’t give me permission so I am presently in ribat (base).’

    Oldest jihadi: 80-year-old grandfather fights for ISIS

    Elderly: Amin boasts in the video that he can walk for two kilometres by foot and 'did almost everything' at training camp

    Elderly: Amin boasts in the video that he can walk for two kilometres by foot and ‘did almost everything’ at training camp

    The elderly jihadi from China, dressed in fatigues, says he went to a training camp but is not currently fighting

    The elderly jihadi from China, dressed in fatigues, says he went to a training camp but is not currently fighting

    The jihadi, who says he was a imam in China, says Muslims face oppression in his home country.

    The video, believed to have been filmed in Syria, cuts to scenes inside one of the terror group’s schools, where children sit inside a classroom wearing hats bearing the recognisable ISIS logo.

    It will certainly unsettle the Chinese security authorities; they have they own very real jihadist threat and anything that inflames the Uighurs will cause the greatest concern

    One child, who looks about 10 years old, tells the camera: ‘O Chinese kaffar (non-believers), know that we are preparing in the land of the khilafah (caliphate) and we will come to you and raise this flag in Turkestan with the permission of Allah.’

    Anthony Glees, the director of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, says the footage seems to be propaganda aimed at Uighurs.

    ‘It’s clearly a rallying cry to all Muslims everywhere,’ he told MailOnline. ‘Yet the images of foot soldiers and this wizened man, looking a bit like a hobbit, trekking his way across vast swathes of wasteland to get to ISIS, is curiously old fashioned. No high-tech warfare here.

    ‘The tenor of the entire video is that ISIS is now fighting a ‘crusade’ in reverse: Muslims from all over everywhere are flocking to fight for the caliphate.’

    ISIS footage: The propaganda video - like many of the terror group's others - has high production values

    ISIS footage: The propaganda video – like many of the terror group’s others – has high production values

    Classroom: Children wearing hats bearing the ISIS logo are filmed learning in one of the terror group's schools

    Classroom: Children wearing hats bearing the ISIS logo are filmed learning in one of the terror group’s schools

    Earlier this year, Chinese officials claimed Muslims from Xinjiang were travelling to Syria and Iraq to join ISIS – before returning home to take part in plots against the communist rule.

    Authorities in the western region said they were planning to strengthen a crackdown on terrorism and extremism in the area, home to the minority Muslim Uighur, some of whom want their own independent state.

    China has previously expressed concerns about the rise of ISIS, fearing it will fuel unrest and violence in Xinjiang, where some seek to set up an independent state called East Turkestan.

    Xinjiang has seen repeated violence, as members of the Muslim Uighur have bristled under what they say is repressive Chinese government rule.

    Beijing has previously blamed the violence on Islamic militants with foreign connections who are seeking an independent state in Xinjiang, but has offered little evidence and ignored calls for independent investigations.

    Uighur groups say police have used indiscriminate deadly force against people protesting the government’s policies in the region.

    One child (right), who looks about 10, issues a chilling warning to Chinese non-believers from the classroom

    One child (right), who looks about 10, issues a chilling warning to Chinese non-believers from the classroom

    This child is filmed singing a song about 'martyrdom' in one of the most chilling pieces of footage in the video

    This child is filmed singing a song about ‘martyrdom’ in one of the most chilling pieces of footage in the video

    Attacks blamed on Uighurs have also occurred in other parts of the country, including a car which plowed into Beijing’s Tiananmen Gate in 2013, killing five people.

    Many of the group, who have traditionally followed a moderate form of Islam, have also begun adopting practices more commonly seen in Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan, such as full-face veils for women in the face of the crackdown.

    Some Xinjiang cities have placed restrictions on Islamic dress, including the capital Urumqi, which banned the wearing of veils in public late last year.

    Professor Glees added: ‘It (the video) will certainly unsettle the Chinese security authorities; they have their own very real jihadist threat and anything that inflames the Uighurs will cause the greatest concern.

    ‘They will fear further Uighur attacks in China.’

    Xinjiang is the largest province in China, and despite only about 4.3 per cent of the land area being fit for human habitation, it is home to more than 22million people, nearly half of whom are Muslim Uighur.

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Goh Meng Seng: What Is Government Doing About PRC Vice Menace?

    Goh Meng Seng: What Is Government Doing About PRC Vice Menace?

    Caution: The following links are websites that sex peddlers put up to promote commercial prostitution. A FB friend wanted me to post this because he wanted MDA and the relevant authorities like anti-vice unit to take actions against the people behind these websites. The following the message written to me:

    The following websites are the PRC prostitutes solicting themselves in Singapore, some operatte from HDB flats, some condos and some landed properties, some work full time using their tourist visa, some are students working part time, some are 陪读妈妈.

    http://sgperfectlovers.com/
    http://sgbeautycity.com/
    https://dangelsz.wordpress.com/
    http://www.sexydreamgal.com/
    https://dangelsz.wordpress.com/
    http://www.shenhua69.com/
    http://www.mygongzhuwang.com/
    http://www.bluemoon8891.com/
    http://www.sgcityangel.com/index.html
    http://www.sweetprcbabes.org/
    http://www.fl8090.com/
    http://shuijing6868.com/
    http://bonkersroom.com/
    http://www.newfateinsg.com/

    i want to ask the relevant authorities including MDA, if solicitng sex service via internet is an offence? Ask the immigration dept if these bitches holding tourist or 陪读妈妈 are allowed to work as prostitutes, worse are those PRC students and employment pass holders who may not be so easily detected working here as prosittues
    if these are people who violated our laws, is our “police” going to take action or “close both eyes” and allow them to continue to operate their sex service here?

    i want to ask HDB if these kinds of “activities” are allowed? we have sons and daughters studying, some of these bitches are operating in areas where renowned schools are situated.

     

    Source: Goh Meng Seng

  • Woman Angry At Daughter, Throws $10,00 At Her

    Woman Angry At Daughter, Throws $10,00 At Her

    A woman’s frustration with her six-year-old daughter cost her more than $10,000, when she mistakenly threw out a bag containing the money.

    Ms Li Xin Hua, 35, a Chinese national, was angry with her daughter for watching television past bedtime. She started to hit her daughter after the girl ignored her repeated pleas to stop, evening daily Lianhe Wanbao reported on Thursday.

    Her daughter then ran out of house with Ms Li in pursuit. Ms Li threw a bag of items at her daughter, without realising that the bag contained money amounting to 47,000 yuan (S$10,200).

    The bag sailed over the 13th floor parapet at Block 28, New Upper Changi Road. When she realised what she had accidentally thrown away, she went to look for it. The money, meant for her daughter’s education and their living expenses, was already missing.

    A neighbour on the second floor of the block told Wanbao that she saw a man in his 20s, and about 1.7m tall, picking the bag up.

    The incident happened on April 19, and Ms Li had made a police report. The police confirmed that they had received a call for assistance, and that a case of dishonest appropriation of property had been reported. Investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: www.sraitstimes.com