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  • MHA: Foreign Companies Need Permit To Sponsor, Promote Or Participate In Speakers’ Corner Events

    MHA: Foreign Companies Need Permit To Sponsor, Promote Or Participate In Speakers’ Corner Events

    Foreign companies will need a permit to sponsor, publicly promote or get its employees to participate in events at the Speakers’ Corner, stated the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on Friday afternoon (Oct 21).

    For the first time, the ministry made clear what a Singapore entity was: those incorporated or registered in Singapore and controlled by a majority of Singapore citizens.

    The entity’s directors must be mostly Singaporean, and the majority of its ownership must be held by Singaporeans or one or more Singapore companies.

    Meanwhile, the ministry is loosening rules for local entities organising events at the Speakers’ Corner. From next month, Singapore companies or non-government organisations no longer need permits to hold events at the Speakers’ Corner. Now, only Singapore citizens are exempted.

    In its news release on the amendments to the rules, the ministry reiterated that the Speakers’ Corner was set up in 2000 for Singaporeans to express their views on issues that concern them.

    “The Government’s position has always been that foreign entities should not interfere in our domestic issues, especially those of a political or controversial nature,” said the MHA. “The amendments reinforce the key principle that the Speakers’ Corner was set up primarily for Singaporeans.”

    MHA is also extending the rules to those who participate at Speakers’ Corner events through remote means. So foreign entities will also need a permit if they speak through teleconferecing or pre-recorded messages at the Speakers’ Corner.

    These changes come on the back of reviews to Speakers’ Corner rules which the MHA started in June. The ministry had wanted to “make it clear that foreign entities should not fund, support or influence” events held at Speakers’ Corner, such as June 4’s Pink Dot – the annual lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rally.

    This year’s Pink Dot – the eighth such – attracted 18 sponsors including multinational companies such as Google, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, Visa and General Electric.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Man Dies After Being Attacked In Malaysia As Heated Facebook Argument Turns Violent

    Man Dies After Being Attacked In Malaysia As Heated Facebook Argument Turns Violent

    A heated Facebook chat between a 15-year-old schoolgirl and some friends turned deadly when one of them came looking for her together with other family members.

    The scuffle that followed led to the death of a man at the Jalan Kurau flats in Jelutong.

    Mr Panjavarnam Perumal, 56, died after he was attacked by about six girls, aged between 15 and 20, armed with helmets, at about 11pm on Monday (Aug 22). The Form Two student’s mother, Madam A. Rajeswari, 34, was also injured in the attack.

    Madam Rajeswari, a factory worker, said she received a call at 10pm while she was at work from a girl who insisted on meeting her.

    “I told her I was at work and would only be home at 11pm. When I got home, I saw a group of girls hanging around on the ground floor.

    “I then went back to my flat on the first floor and my daughter told me that the girls were shouting profanities at her and she was afraid,” she said on Tuesday (Aug 23).

    Madam Rajeswari said she asked her uncle, Mr Panjavarnam, who lived with her, to talk to the girls and see what was going on.

    “They told me that my daughter wrote disparaging remarks about them on Facebook and she should apologise.

    “I told them what they were doing was very unbecoming as what they were shouting could be heard by the other residents.

    “Two men also turned up to threaten us but they were not involved in the attack.

    “We then walked away and they started to beat us with their helmets. I lost consciousness and woke up in an ambulance,” she said.

    Madam Rajeswari was discharged from the Penang Hospital after receiving treatment for bruises on her head and body.

    George Town OCPD Asst Comm Mior Faridalathrash Wahid said Mr Panjavarnam died on the way to the hospital. A post-mortem showed that he died of a heart attack.

    “We arrested three girls and a man, aged between 15 and 23, at the scene and they have been remanded for six days pending investigations.

    “The case has been classified as murder under Section 302 of the Penal Code.”

    He confirmed that the disparaging Facebook post led to the argument and the deceased, who worked as a cleaner, had tried to stop the argument but was beaten up, kicked and stepped on instead.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • ISIS Terrorist Murdered French Police Commander & Wife In Front Of 3 Year Old Son, Act Streamed Live On FB

    ISIS Terrorist Murdered French Police Commander & Wife In Front Of 3 Year Old Son, Act Streamed Live On FB

    A man who was previously convicted of terrorism and pledged allegiance to ISIS killed a French police commander and his partner at their home in Magnanville in an horrific attack France’s president says was “incontestably” a “terrorist act.”

    Larossi Abballa, 25, posted video of the killing online during the rampage, referencing the so-called Islamic State, The Guardian reports.

    The officer was named as Jean-Baptiste Salvaing. His partner has not yet been identified, but she was also a police employee.

    Abballa, who was born in France and called himself Mohamed Ali on Facebook, was killed in a SWAT raid that saved the slain couple’s 3-year-old son, who was being held hostage inside the home, authorities said.

    The attack came as France hosts the 2016 UEFA European Championship soccer tournament and is in a heightened state of security as a result. The country has been under a state of emergency since the November 2015 attacks in Paris by ISIS terrorists.

    Magnaville is west of Paris.

    Here’s what you need to know:


    1. Abballa Livestreamed the Killings on Facebook & Told His Followers ‘I Don’t Know What I’m Going to Do With the Boy’

    French special forces RAID vehicle leaves after an assault on June 14, 2016 in Magnanville, 45 kms west of Paris. (Getty)

    French special forces RAID vehicle leaves after an assault on June 14, 2016 in Magnanville, 45 kms west of Paris. (Getty)

    Abballa live streamed the attack on Facebook Live. The video and his Facebook page were deleted, but it has been distributed online by ISIS propagandists.

    In the 12-minute video he expressed his allegiance to ISIS and its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. At one point in the video, Abballa referenced the police officer’s 3-year-old son, who he was holding hostage.

    “I don’t know what I’m going to do with the boy,” Abballa said. Police later raided the home, killing Abballa and saving the boy.

    You can watch the video at the link below:

    WATCH: Magnanville Attacker Larossi Abballa ISIS Video

    Larossi Abballa, the ISIS sympathizer who murdered two French police officers in the Paris suburb of Magnanville yesterday, filmed a 12-minute video while he was barricaded inside their home. Watch it here.

    Click here to read more


    2. A List of Targets, Including Other Police Officers, Politicians & Journalists, Was Found at Abballa’s Home

    (Getty)

    (Getty)

    Police found a list of targets, including other police officers, politicians and journalists, at Larossi Abballa’s home in Mantes-la-Jolie, a suburb of Paris, Prosecutor Francois Molins said at a press conference.

    Three knives used in the attack were found at the police officer’s home.

    In his video, he urged more attacks by French Muslism, according to SITE. He said, “”kill them even if their name is Mohammad or Aisha,” SITE says.

    3. He Was Sentenced to 3 Years in Prison for the Prior Terrorism Conviction & Was on a Watch List

    larossi abballa, larossi abballa france, larossi abballa facebook, larossi abballa video, larossi abballa isis

    Larossi Abballa.

    Abballa was sentenced to three years in prison for “criminal association in view to preparing terrorist attacks,” for recruiting jihadis to Pakistan and Afghanistan, The Guardian reports.

    He was 20 at the time of that 2011 conviction and was released from prison in September 2013.

    Abballa was more recently investigated by French authorities and was on a watch list, according to officials. He was being monitored for being part of the entourage of a French man who had recently traveled to Syria.

    4. An Official ISIS News Agency Called Abballa an ‘Islamic State Fighter’

    In a statement, the ISIS Amaq news agency said “Islamic State fighter kills deputy chief of the police station in the city of Les Mureaux and his wife.”

    The phrasing of the statement is similar to one posted after the terrorist attack in Orlando, Florida. In both messages the killer was referred to as an “Islamic State fighter.”

    In Orlando, the FBI is investigating whether gunman Omar Mateen had any official ties to ISIS. Like Abballa, Mateen pledged allegiance to ISIS during his attack at Pulse, a gay nightclub. Mateen killed 49 people and wounded 53 others before he was shot dead during a police raid.

    5. Salvaing Was a Commander & His Partner Worked as a Secretary at a Police Headquarters

    French policemen stand guard on June 14, 2016 near the house in Magnanville where a man claiming allegiance to the Islamic State group killed a French policeman and his partner on the night of June 13. (Getty)

    French policemen stand guard on June 14, 2016 near the house in Magnanville where a man claiming allegiance to the Islamic State group killed a French policeman and his partner on the night of June 13. (Getty)

    Jean-Baptiste Salvaing, 42, was a police commander in the city of Les Mureaux, according to officials. His 36-year-old partner, who has not been named, worked as a secretary at a police headquarters.

    He was not in uniform when he was ambushed at about 8:30 p.m. Monday, Fox News reports.

    “The toll is a heavy one,” ” Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet told reporters.

     

    Source: www.heavy.com

  • Rehashing the Hijab Movement in Singapore

     

    NUS Nursing undergraduate Afiqah Binte Kamel, who started the Singapore Nursing Hijab Movement aimed at representing nurses and the specific issues surrounding wearing the hijab in nursing. Credit: Google Images
    NUS Nursing undergraduate Afiqah Binte Kamel, who started the Singapore Nursing Hijab Movement aimed at representing nurses and the specific issues surrounding wearing the hijab in nursing.
    Credit: Google Images

    SINGAPORE, Mar 14 (Campus Eye) – Debates concerning the ban on the hijab for Muslim women wearing uniforms in the civil service continue between the Singapore government and lobbyists, after having been reignited in late 2013.

    This issue resurfaced following the creation of the Singapore Hijab Movement, a Facebook group that amassed more than 20,000 likes within weeks of being set up. The group ceased operations on Nov. 14, 2013.

    Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs, Yaacob Ibrahim, said in a statement released on his Facebook page following closed-door discussions in November 2013 with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that Malay ministers from the People’s Action Party and civil society leaders in the Malay-Muslim community must “manage and balance the diverse needs of our multi-racial and multi-religious society,” and that “accommodation and compromise by all parties” is necessary.

    Lobbyists for the cause are dissatisfied with this seemingly ambivalent government response.

    One such reaction came from Walid J. Abdullah, a tutor in National University of Singapore (NUS) Political Science department and active participant in the ongoing debate.

    “One of the things we are afraid of is dialogue and debate about religion in Singapore. On all sides, there needs to be more openness, more engagement,” he said.

    “Have discussions, for example, with the nurses who want to wear the hijab,” Walid added. “Get to know them, get to know what their intentions are.”

    This sentiment was echoed by NUS Nursing undergraduate Afiqah Binte Kamel, who started the Singapore Nursing Hijab Movement aimed at representing nurses and the specific issues surrounding wearing the hijab in nursing.

    Read more here

    Written by Sharifah Nursyafiqah

    Source: Sharifah Nursyafiqah, Campus Eye NUS, Afiqah Kamel

     

    MORE HIJAB RELATED ARTICLES HERE

  • Syed Khairudin Aljunied Clarifies Personal View on LGBTQ

    Syed Khairudin Aljunied
    Syed Khairudin Aljunied

    Some Clarifications

    Dear Friends,

    There has been coverage in the press about my postings about the LGBT movement in Singapore.

    While the media has provided coverage for the LGBT supporters, so far, little coverage has been provided to those that are not for LGBT.

    Hence, I would like to take this opportunity to make clear my views on the matter:

    1. My initial posting entitled “Liberal Islam, Lesbianism and the likes of it” is still on my Facebook page. It has not been removed because it reflects my personal conviction on the issue.

    2. I edited the post and removed certain words such as “cancer” and “social diseases” prior to the issue being made public. This change was done in view of the sensitivities on the ground which I am fully aware of.

    3. My position as a Muslim about LGBT remains clear and is in line with the view of Muslims scholars such as the one made by PERGAS that “According to the higher objectives of Islamic Law, the family unit serves to bring in new generation and preserve the existence of humankind. For that reason, Islam gives attention in establishing a family only through the legal marriage of a man and woman. Any form of extra-marital or same-sex relations are hence prohibited in Islam (MEDIA STATEMENT, 11 February 2014,https://www.facebook.com/Pergas.Singapore)

    4. There is no disagreement in Islam on the prohibition of homosexuality. As a Muslim, I fully subscribe to Islam’s guidance and stand firm that homosexuality is a challenge that needs to be addressed through reasoned dialogue and education.

    This view is my personal view and I stand by it as a member of a religious community in Singapore.

    Thank you,

    Khairudin Aljunied

    Source: Syed Khairudin Aljunied

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