Tag: Malaysia

  • Lelaki Singapura Antara 3 Maut Dalam Kemalangan Motosikal Di Johor

    Lelaki Singapura Antara 3 Maut Dalam Kemalangan Motosikal Di Johor

    Seorang lelaki warga Singapura antara tiga yang terkorban dalam kemalangan melibatkan tiga buah motosikal di Kilometer 45, Jalan Batu Pahat Mersing di Kluang, tengah malam tadi (12 Sep).

    Ketiga-tiga mangsa dikenali sebagai Mohamed Hassan Ali, 65 tahun, yang merupakan seorang pekebun dan menantunya warga Singapura, Noraripen Surni, 48 tahun dan seorang penunggang motosikal lain iaitu Muhamad Hafiz Ghazali, 21 tahun.

    Seorang lagi penunggang motosikal pula iaitu Muhammad Ekmal Yussry Md Yassin,19 tahun, cedera parah dan kini menerima rawatan di Hospital Kluang.

    Ketua Polis Daerah Kluang, ACP Mohamad Laham berkata kejadian berlaku pada pukul 12.40 tengah malam apabila motosikal ditunggangi Muhamad Hafiz bertembung dengan motosikal Mohamed Hassan.

    Pertembungan itu berpunca daripada tindakan Mohamed Hassan yang ingin masuk ke laluan motosikal Muhamad Hafiz selepas warga emas itu keluar dari sebuah simpang di Taman Ria.

    Menurutnya pertembungan mengejut itu, menyebabkan sebuah lagi motosikal yang ditunggangi seorang lelaki dari arah Kluang ke Ayer Hitam juga gagal mengelak daripada melanggar motosikal Mohamed Hassan.

    Kemalangan tersebut menyebabkan Mohamed Hassan, Noraripen dan Muhamad Hafiz mati di tempat kejadian dan mayat mereka dibawa ke Hospital Kluang untuk dibedah siasat.

    Kes disiasat di bawah Seksyen 41( 1 )(A) Akta Pengangkutan Jalan 1987.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Dalang ISIS Warga Malaysia Terima RM100,000 Meski Hanya Tukang Beri Arahan

    Dalang ISIS Warga Malaysia Terima RM100,000 Meski Hanya Tukang Beri Arahan

    Sebagai dalang yang mengawal anggota-anggota ISIS di Malaysia sejak tahun lalu, Mohamad Wanndy Mohamad Jedi berhasil mengumpulkan RM100,000 (S$33,090) dalam tempoh yang singkat.

    Menurut sumber-sumber risikan, anggota militan yang dilahirkan di Melaka itu menerima sekurang-kurangnya RM8,000 (S$2,650) sebulan daripada para penyokong ISIS di Malaysia.

    Bagaimanapun, Mohamad Wanndy yang berusia 26 tahun dipercayai menggunakan dana tersebut untuk melangsaikan hutang-piutangnya, antara lain.

    “Sebahagian besar wang tunai tersebut digunakan bagi perbelanjaannya di Syria.

    “Pihak berkuasa mendapat tahu bahawa Mohamad Wanndy yang juga dikenali sebagai Abu Hamzah Al-Fateh, menggunakan dana tersebut untuk melangsaikan hutang piutangnya dan juga isterinya,” seorang sumber memberitahu The Star.

    HANYA BERI ARAHAN, TIDAK PERLU SUSAH PAYAH

    Dipercayai bahawa dia yang berasal dari Durian Tunggal, selesa memberi arahan kepada para pengikutnya untuk melancarkan serangan demi serangan, termasuk serangan bom nekad, tanpa perlu bersusah payah.

    “Dia menggesa para anggota militan di Malaysia supaya melakukan serangan secara sendirian malah menjadi pengebom nekad namun tiada bukti dia sendiri terlibat dalam sebarang pertempuran di Syria,” menurut seorang lagi sumber.

    Dari mengatur dan memberi arahan dari jauh sehinggalah membiayai serangan-serangan di Malaysia secara langsung, Mohamad Wanndy juga menyalurkan sekitar RM6,000 (S$1,990) kepada tiga anggota militan yang merancang untuk melancarkan serangan sehari sebelum sambutan Hari Kemerdekaan.

    “Pihak berkuasa mendapat tahu bahawa ketiga-tiga anggota militan itu dijanjikan wang sehingga RM10,000 (S$3,310). Sasaran mereka adalah ibu pejabat polis daerah Kajang, sebuah kuil di Batu Caves dan pusat-pusat hiburan di Klang Valley,” menurut sumber.

    Turut dimaklumkan bahawa jumlah yang diberikan kepada ketiga-tiga anggota tersebut adalah untuk memperolehi senjata api dan membiayai perbelanjaan perjalanan ke Syria setelah melancarkan serangan tersebut, menurut The Star.

    SEORANG PENDENDAM

    Mohamad Wanndy disifatkan sebagai seorang yang suka bersendirian dan cepat naik berang, oleh anggota keluarganya.

    “Dia juga pendendam. Dia menyimpan dendam. Dia akan pastikan dia dapat membalas dendam terhadap sesiapa yang melakukan kesalahan terhadap dirinya,” menurut seorang sumber.

    Mohamad Wanndy mempunyai dua orang saudara perempuan yang sudah lama berpisah dengannya namun dia masih berhubungan dengan seorang makcik saudara sejak bulan November tahun lalu.

    “Dia juga memberitahu makciknya bahawa dia berada di Syria setelah memasuki Iraq,” menurut sumber itu.

    Dia dipercayai tidak merancang untuk kembali ke Malaysia meskipun isterinya sedang hamil lima bulan.

    “Matlamat utamanya ialah untuk melancarkan serangan besar-besaran di Malaysia sebagai membalas dendam terhadap penangkapan para anggota militan ISIS di negara itu,” menurut seorang lagi sumber.

    Ketua Penolong Pengarah Bahagian Anti-Pengganasan Cawangan Khas Bukit Aman

    Ayob Khan berkata polis berjaya mematahkan 13 pakatan serangan pengganas, dengan kebanyakannya didalangi oleh Mohamad Wanndy.

    Encik Ayob juga berkata 239 anggota militan diberkas sejak bulan Februari 2013, lapor laman The Star.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Genting Bus Crash Victims: Our Valuables Went Missing

    Genting Bus Crash Victims: Our Valuables Went Missing

    Blood flowed from his head as passers-by pulled him from the tour bus after it crashed and flipped on its side near Genting Highlands in Malaysia.

    Mr William Wee, 52, was drifting in and out of consciousness, but all he thought about was his wife.

    He was soon reunited with his wife, who was also pulled out of the bus. She, too, was badly injured.

    As they lay on the ground near the wreck, Mr Wee realised that his wife was no longer wearing her jewellery.

    Then he remembered that his Galaxy Note 5 and Sony Xperia smartphones, and his wife’s Samsung, were still on the bus. But when he went back into the bus to look for them, they were missing.

    The security manager told The New Paper yesterday: “I don’t know where everything had gone, but when my wife was dragged out, her gold necklace and bracelet were missing.”

    He also tried looking for his luggage, where he had kept his wallet containing $350 and RM1,500 (S$500), but it was nowhere in sight.

    “We never found our luggage or phones,” said Mr Wee, who later reported the loss to Malaysian police.

    He had kept his and his wife’s passports in his sling pack.

    Mr Wee said he was confused after the crash, but noticed about a dozen people entering the bus to help pull injured passengers out of the wreck.

    He also saw them standing around in the accident area, but they had vanished by the time the authorities arrived. He suspected that one or more of the bystanders could have stolen his valuables.

    Mr Wee received 18 stitches to his head at Bentong Hospital. His wife had multiple fractures to her shoulder, ribs and right wrist.

    They were later transferred to the National University Hospital (NUH) in Singapore. He is expected to be discharged today.

    The couple were on the Grassland Express And Tours bus that crashed into a road divider at the Karak Highway last Wednesday at about 3.45pm while heading to Kuala Lumpur from Genting Highland.

    Nine Singaporeans on board were injured. One of them, Mr Lim Sia Thian, 62, died from his injuries on Sunday.

    Another couple on the bus have also reported the loss of their valuables to Malaysian police.

    LOST

    Mr Phillip Wee, 65, who is semi-retired, said in the report that his wife, who was injured in the accident, had lost her $6,500 Rolex watch as she was being pulled out.

    His iPhone 6S, worth $1,200, and his wife’s Samsung 6S Edge smartphone, worth about $1,000, which were on them, had also gone missing.

    They also couldn’t find their luggage, which included their shopping of handbags, shoes, clothing and mooncakes worth a total of $1,400, and a carry-on bag containing a $1,000 iPad Air 3 and RM1,000 in cash.

    “All we got back from the police were our passports,” he told TNP yesterday.

    “When I asked them where the rest of our belongings were, they said they did not know.”

    He said in the report that many people had entered the bus after the accident and while they seemed to be there to help, he believed they had stolen from the victims.

    He said a representative of Grassland has contacted him and his wife to discuss compensation for their missing belongings.

    Recalling the accident, Mr William Wee said the road was clear at the time of the accident, and he was not sure what caused the bus to crash.

    “There was no car in front of the bus when it swerved suddenly,” he said.

    “When I saw that it was going to hit the divider, I shouted. Then my head hit something and I blacked out.”

    When he came to a few minutes later, he was being dragged out of the bus by strangers.

    “I heard people shouting ‘tarik, tarik’ (Malay for pull), and someone pulled me out of the bus and left me on the road,” he said.

    “I sat up, and my head was bleeding like a tap, but I knew I had to find my wife.”

    His wife was later taken out of the bus by the passers-by.

    Mr Wee said he was seated at the front of the top deck next to the late Mr Lim. He did not know Mr Lim, but was sad to learn of his death.

    “It’s really sad that this has happened,” he said.

    “Like most of the passengers, Mr Lim was sleeping when the accident happened.”

    Malaysian police said a blood sample had been taken from the bus driver and sent to be tested for drugs and alcohol.

    Inspector Mohd Shaifuddin, the investigating officer, told TNP yesterday that the results have not been released. He added that no one has been arrested and that investigations are still ongoing.

    Despite the loss of their belongings, the couples were grateful to be alive.

    Mr William Wee said: “Money can be earned. We may have lost all our belongings, but we are lucky that we at least get to keep our lives.”

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • What Happened To Entry Fee For Singapore Vehicles? Johor Residents Ask

    What Happened To Entry Fee For Singapore Vehicles? Johor Residents Ask

    Malaysia’s government must explain repeated delays to the introduction of the Vehicle Entry Permit (VEP) and if it still intends to implement the charge, said Johor residents. The New Straits Times quoted several of them as saying that there have been no updates on the system, leading them to suspect the move has been secretly scrapped.

    “I wonder what seems to be taking the government years to decide on this entry fee charge.

    “I hope this is not just talk and no action as I recall this VEP plan was mooted a couple of years ago,” 44 year-old Tiew Hui Ping told the newspaper.

    Ms Tiew said the collection from the VEP could be used to fund projects and fix the roads in Johor.

    Another Johor resident, Saravanan Batumalai, said he hoped the government will resolve the issue quickly.

    “The VEP charge should also be imposed on Singaporean motorcyclists entering as right now, Malaysian motorcyclists have to pay up to S$4 (RM12.05) everytime they cross over to Singapore,” the 24 year-old said.

    Ms Salimah Muhari from Kangkar Pulai said the government should have started implementing the VEP charge when the Singaporean government revised their toll rates at the checkpoints and increased its VEP fees to S$35 per day.

    “The RM20 fee proposed for the VEP charge is reasonable and I don’t think it will burden the Singaporeans,” the 24 year-old said.

    Back in July, Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said that the government has no plan to scrap the implementation of the VEP and said it will be resumed once the system is ready to go.

    The VEP, which was first proposed back in 2006, was supposed to start with a charge of RM20 for foreign vehicles entering Johor on July 16, but was postponed for the fourth time.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Dr Mahathir Meets Anwar For First Time In Over 18 Years

    Dr Mahathir Meets Anwar For First Time In Over 18 Years

    Once bitter foes, former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad and the one-time protege he jailed, Anwar Ibrahim, exchanged a previously unthinkable handshake on Monday (Sept 5) that illustrated the country’s topsy-turvy politics.

    Dr Mahathir sparked a social media frenzy with a show of support at a court appearance by Anwar, who was jailed again last year by Malaysia’s current government following a sodomy conviction, the same charge Dr Mahathir used against him in 1998.

    “Pertemuan pertama selepas 18 tahun 2 hari..sejak 3 September 1998..,” (The first meeting after 18 years 2 days..since 3 September 1998) opposition leader Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, who is also Anwar’s wife, wrote on her Facebook page in Malay as she posted a picture of Anwar and Dr Mahathir shaking hands in a crowded courtroom.

    The brief and smiling encounter — images were shared widely online — underlined the political flux in Malaysia, where opposition to current Prime Minister Najib Razak has upended alliances. Mr Najib is facing calls to quit following irregularities in state investment firm 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) as well as over US$681 million (S$924 million) deposited into his personal accounts. Mr Najib maintained he had not used the funds for personal gain, and has been cleared of any criminal offence.

    Dr Mahathir, who was Malaysia’s prime minister for 22 years before retiring in 2003, has led calls for Mr Najib to be ousted and to face justice.

    Monday’s meeting capped months in which Anwar and Dr Mahathir have flirted from a distance, reviving memories of their stormy past.

    Anwar was deputy premier and heir apparent to Dr Mahathir until he was sacked in 1998 by his boss over political differences, an episode that continues to reverbrate. Charged with sodomy and corruption, Anwar spent six years in jail. But he emerged to lead the previously ineffectual political opposition to strong electoral showings until he was jailed again in 2015 by Mr Najib’s government.

    Dr Mahathir played down Monday’s meeting, saying he was merely showing support for a legal challenge launched by Anwar against a new security law. The law, passed by Mr Najib’s government last year, grants Mr Najib sweeping security powers.

    “I don’t know about friends but I know I talked to him,” Dr Mahathir said with a chuckle when reporters asked after the encounter whether the two were friendly again.

    “I met him and had a long chat with him about what he was doing.”

    Anwar said Dr Mahathir’s appearance in court showed the latter “presumably” supported the reform agenda. Anwar said he will continue to “engage” with Dr Mahathir.

    “He has showed preparedness to come and pledge his support and wish me well and I presume therefore he supports the reform agenda,” Anwar told the Malaysian media when asked if Dr Mahathir had earned his trust.

    “My position is this: No 1 the welfare of the people is paramount, the welfare of the country is paramount, which means whoever wants to engage must accept a reform agenda,” he said, without elaborating on what he meant by “reform agenda’’.

    “Now I think I have seen everything,” Mr Eric Paulsen of activist group Lawyers for Liberty said in tweeting an image of the handshake.

    It remains to be seen whether any real detente between the political heavyweights can be achieved — or dent Mr Najib. The next general election must be held by mid-2018.

    Leading independent pollster Ibrahim Suffian called the handshake “a big deal” and a sign that “Mahathir has come full circle”. “The fundamental problem for the opposition was that Mahathir and Anwar couldn’t get along,” he said. “Their shaking hands means their interests have converged.

     

    Source: TODAY Online