Tag: drugs

  • Pelakon Tony Eusoff Dihukum Penjara 8 Bulan Di Singapura

    Pelakon Tony Eusoff Dihukum Penjara 8 Bulan Di Singapura

    Mahkamah Singapura hari ini (21 Apr) menjatuhkan hukuman lapan bulan penjara ke atas pelakon Malaysia Tony Eusoff kerana memiliki dadah.

    Tony, 38 tahun, atau nama sebenarnya Anthony Joseph Anak Hermas Rajiman dihada kan ke mahkamah pada 31 Mac lepas dan didakwa memiliki dadah terkawal Kelas A di bawah Akta Penyalahgunaan Dadah.

    Laporan sebelum ini menyebut pelakon itu dipercayai memiliki satu peket mengandungi tidak kurang daripada 4.56g bahan sayuran yang dianalisis dan didapati mengandungi kesan ganja.

    Dia didakwa memiliki dadah itu di balai ketibaan bas Pihak Berkuasa Imigresen dan Pusat Pemeriksaan di Pusat Pemeriksaan Tuas pada 12 Mac lepas.

    Turut hadir di mahkamah memberi sokongan ke atas anak kelahiran Sarawak itu adalah penerbit filem Datuk Vinod Shekar dan rakan-rakan artis termasuk Jehan Miskin.
    Atas kesalahan memiliki ganja, Tony boleh dipenjara sehingga 10 tahun, didenda sehingga S$20,000 atau kedua-duanya sekali.

    Source: Berita Mediacorp

  • Let’s give help to those struggling with drug issues

    Let’s give help to those struggling with drug issues

    “Mereka yang berusia di bawah 20 tahun naik 51 peratus.
    Penagih dadah muda kekal membentuk majoriti pesalah kali pertama sejak 2011.”

    It’s disheartening to see this. I cried in silence.
    My son saw the sudden change in my facial expression. I tried to hold them back but I just couldn’t.

    Friends and families, I urge each and every one of you reach out to those whom you know struggling with this challenge in life. Don’t be too ashamed to seek professional help. Your denial now could lead to more greater issues in the future and greater issues means more sacrifices needed.

    And to those who are struggling with this, know that there are many genuinely concerned people out there who are ready to render support to you. But please know, that no matter how good the interventions (programme, counselling, therapy) are, the real change is within YOU!
    Don’t go on complaining that your life issues are too great and the only coping mechanism is to depend on that particular substance.
    Millions out there are facing greater trials but chose to face them instead of escaping.
    Let’s be the change, be an inspiration to others, you never know who you might inspire. It could be that enemy of yours, your next door neighbour, that kid on the street or even the buddy of yours whom you are sharing that instrument with.

    Please help me to share this message around, screenshot the message if you have to. We need to raise more awareness. More caring people like you and me.

    Link –> http://berita.mediacorp.sg/mobilem/singapore/cnb-jumlah-pesalah-guna/2516260.html

    Source: Shafiee Razali

  • Single Mum Of Seven Children Turns Over A New Leaf For Sake Of Children’s Futures

    Single Mum Of Seven Children Turns Over A New Leaf For Sake Of Children’s Futures

    She had seven children in seven years.

    What made things worse for the unwed mother was that she had to raise them mostly on her own because the children’s father was in and out of jail.

    Uneducated and poor, she turned to prostitution and was also jailed for drug offences.

    Her eldest child was last week convicted of having sex with underage girls.

    Miss Milah has an 18-year-old son, Samsudin Abdullah, and six daughters aged between 11 and 17.

    Samsudin was sentenced to reformative training last Tuesday for having sex with three underage girls, theft and receiving stolen property.

    Speaking to The New Paper at her one-room rental flat in Ang Mo Kio last Wednesday, Miss Milah, 36, said she was furious when she found out what her son did.

    “I worked like a dog to provide for him and his sisters. I wanted to give them a better childhood, one that I never had,” she said.

    “But maybe it’s good that he learns from this experience and comes out a better person.”

    Raising seven children was a hellish struggle that often left her crying at night, but she said there is nothing she would not do for her children.

    Miss Milah was raised by her grandparents, whom she thought were her parents, till she was 10. It was only after her grandmother died that her relatives told her the truth.

    Her grandfather remarried, but Miss Milah could not get along with his new wife, so she moved in with her aunt.

    At 15, she met her first boyfriend, who was five years older.

    She said: “I fell in love with him because I never had any love from family. My mother didn’t want me and I never knew my father.”

    She became pregnant soon after.

    “I was shocked and at a loss when I first found out about the pregnancy. I was young and didn’t know what to do,” she said.

    “But I did not want to be like my mother, who didn’t want me. I didn’t want to give up my child.”

    In 1996, she gave birth to her son.

    She claimed her boyfriend drank heavily and was abusive.

    “I don’t know why I stuck with him. He was the first person who was very kind to me and I thought I would just bear with it and stay by him,” said Miss Milah.

    UNSURE

    She said she did not marry him because she was unsure if he would change his ways.

    They had two more children before they moved into the Ang Mo Kio flat in 2001. That year, she was jailed for 10 months for consuming drugs.

    When she got out, she returned to her boyfriend.

    Miss Milah said her boyfriend was also arrested and jailed for various offences, including drugs.

    “Each time he came out, we would get back together and have a child. It was as if he was treating me like KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital,” she said.

    She went on to give birth to four more girls, including a pair of twins, despite her boyfriend’s continued abusive behaviour.

    But by 2004, she had had enough and she chased him out of her home.

    She said she struggled to make ends meet and decided to become a prostitute after a friend suggested it.

    “It was the worst period of my life. I hated it, but I did it because I needed the money quick for my children.”

    And she went back to drugs.

    It was also in that year that the authorities placed her seven children in different foster homes.

    “I was sad. Imagine your kids taken away from you for years. I really wanted to get them back, but I was on drugs and alcohol and involved in illegal activities,” she said.

    The turning point came in 2008, when she was jailed 18 months for heroin abuse.

    Her sentence was increased to 19 months after she fought with an inmate. She spent 11 months in an isolation cell.

    She said: “Those 11 months set me straight. I had so much time to think over what I wanted to do with my life. I resolved to change.”

    After her release in 2010, she picked up odd jobs and worked hard to regain custody of her children.

    Today, they live together in the one-room flat, which is stocked with four electric fans, soft toys and a stack of blankets the family lays out on the floor when they sleep at night.

    Money, Miss Milah said, is her greatest challenge in bringing up and providing for her children.

    She earns $1,900 a month from her cleaning job, where she is a team leader.

    “It’s hardly enough to feed my children. That’s why now I have to budget carefully. I cook every day,” she said.

    “It hurts every time I turn down my kid’s request to buy them a fast-food meal. I usually tell them I’d buy it for them another time.”

    While she had her own brushes with the law, it pained her to watch her son packed off behind bars.

    “As a mother, you can only tell and warn them not to do something and provide an environment for them to grow up in,” she said.

    This is why she is planning to leave her one-room Ang Mo Kio flat and move to a two-room unit in Yishun.

    “We’ve had so many bad memories here. Once I’m done clearing the backlog of utility bills, it’s time for a fresh start.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Islam Is The Answer To Social Ills That Beset The Muslim Community Here

    Zulfikar Shariff: Islam Is The Answer To Social Ills That Beset The Muslim Community Here

    It is so predictable.

    Whenever Muslims discuss discrimination in Singapore, whether hijab, SAF, leadership, madrasah etc, the government and its tools will tell us…

    Focus on drugs, on high rate of divorce and other social problems that Muslims are involved in.

    We will always be told not to spend our energy and efforts discussing and overcoming discrimination. Instead, we are told, either by the PAP (whether the Prime Minister of the Malay MPs) or its supporters that there are more important issues to work on.

    Sure, drugs, divorce etc are important social issues. But working on one does not mean we should exclude working on another.

    But what PAP supporters tend to ignore (whether intentional or unintentionally) is that these issues are interrelated.

    First, as I have discussed before, drug, divorce and economic disempowerment are systemic problems. Part of the problems can be traced to the PAP’s policies from the 1960s onwards.

    Second, and more importantly is that the solution to these social problems are found in the same place that drives us to work on the hijab, the madrasah and Muslim community leadership.

    The ban on hijab, the attempt to shut down madrasah and the denial of an independent Muslim community leadership are based on political and religious imperatives.

    The attempt to remove Islam from the Muslim community as can be seen in these discriminatory policies are also at the root of these social problems.

    What the Muslim community need is not less Islam. We need more.

    A community that is dedicated and committed to their Islam will not be involved in drugs.

    They will not create social problems.

    They will not misuse or abuse the amanah and talent that have been granted to them.

    A community that is dedicated to Allah will excel. Not because they want to be rich or have power.

    But so that they can better serve Allah azzawajal.

    A community that lives in Islam will be strong not for strength sake…

    But so they can help the ummah.

    The solution to our social problems does not lie in programs that negate Islam from our lives.

    The solution lies with Islam.

    And that is also why we defend our sisters who wear the hijab.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Teenage Girl Who Fell To Death Was On Drugs

    Teenage Girl Who Fell To Death Was On Drugs

    About two weeks before she fell from her seventh-storey flat in Block 431, Bukit Panjang Ring Road, on Aug 19 last year, she told her father that she could see a monster and hear children crying in her room.

    Administrative worker Denyse Tan, 18, also appeared groggy, so her father asked her if she was on drugs. When she replied no, he believed her.

    A coroner’s inquiry into her death yesterday confirmed that she was on drugs, with State Coroner Marvin Bay saying  that methamphetamine, better known as Ice, was detected in her blood.

    Recording a verdict of misadventure, he found that her fall had occurred “in the wake of a likely drug-induced psychotic or delusional episode”.

    Mr Tan, a businessman, later told The New Paper: “I didn’t know Denyse had been abusing drugs. I would have called the CNB (Central Narcotics Bureau) immediately if I had known that she had taken drugs.

    “I would have done it out of love.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg