Tag: PRC

  • PRC Mom Lets Son Pee In Pastic Bag At MBS Foodcourt, Leaves Bag On Floor

    PRC Mom Lets Son Pee In Pastic Bag At MBS Foodcourt, Leaves Bag On Floor

    I spotted this at Marina Bay Sands food court 29/7/15.

    Me and my friend will have lunch together, and this PRC women sitting on the next table, just let her son pee in the pastic bag in front of us without giving a f*** of the surrounding people.

    Best part is, after she is done, she simple throw the bag of pee on the floor!!

     

     

    Alvin

    A.S.S. Contributor

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

  • Another Escalator Incident In PRC Leaves Parents On Edge

    Another Escalator Incident In PRC Leaves Parents On Edge

    Shortly after the fatal accident which saw a young mother being “swallowed” up by a revolving escalator in a PRC mall, another report of a chilling incident involving escalators in Guangxi Province has emerged.

    According to local media reports, a 1 year-old toddler had gotten his left arm trapped in the grooves of an escalator at a mall. He was riding the escalator with his mother when the incident took place on Monday at about 10AM.

    A distress call was sent out and local rescue workers were dispatched to the scene. They found the boy crying in excruciating pain and his mother in shock and a state of panic.

    Rescue workers used hydraulic equipment to pry open the escalator steps and freed the boy within 5 minutes. However, according to eye witnesses, the boy’s left arm was “basically destroyed”.

    Local PRC authorities are investigating the case.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

  • PRC Tourist Hit By SBS Bus Along Serangoon Road

    PRC Tourist Hit By SBS Bus Along Serangoon Road

    A 56-year-old tourist was hit by an SBS bus outside the Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple along Serangoon Road on Monday (June 22) afternoon.

    Eyewitnesses told The Straits Times that the man, who is believed to be from China, had been trying to take a better picture of the temple and stepped out onto the road unknowingly.

    He was part of a larger tour group of about 40 who were visiting the temple as part of their sightseeing trip.

    Urban planner Choo Meng Foo, 50, said he was talking to a temple staff by the entrance when he heard a bang, followed by several loud screams.

    “I saw a woman chasing after the bus and shouting for it to stop. A man was lying on the ground and he was bleeding from his head,” said Mr Choo.

    Large cracks were seen on the left side of the double-decker bus’ windscreen.

    A police spokesman said a call informing them of an accident that had occurred along Serangoon Road after Belilios Road was received at 4.34pm on Monday.

    The man, who was conscious, was taken to Tan Tock Seng Hospital for treatment.

    Police investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Primary School Chinese Teacher From PRC In Court To Face Charges Of Sexual Expolitation Of A 12 year Old Girl

    Primary School Chinese Teacher From PRC In Court To Face Charges Of Sexual Expolitation Of A 12 year Old Girl

    A primary school Chinese teacher accused of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl appeared in court on Monday to face four charges.

    Du Tao, 35, allegedly penetrated the girl with his fingers at a flat in Punggol last March.

    He also faces three charges of sexual exploitation of a child, after he allegedly tried to kiss and hug her, touch her breasts and perform a sex act on her. He is also accused of trying to make her perform a sex act on him.

    His case was adjourned to July 13 as Du said he intended to hire a lawyer. He is currently out on $15,000 bail.

    For sexual penetration of a minor, he faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine. For sexual exploitation of a child, he faces up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Scam Victims From China Allegedly Lost $1.6B, Look For Clues In Singapore

    Ripples from a scam that has allegedly cost Chinese investors US$1.2 billion (S$1.6 billion) touched Singapore’s shores yesterday.

    A group of angry investors from China showed up at a flat in Sengkang yesterday afternoon to demand their money back from a Singaporean employee of the company that allegedly caused thousands of investors to get their fingers burnt.

    The seven, who had flown in from Beijing on Sunday, knocked repeatedly on the door of a Singaporean’s flat for two hours to no avail.

    He purportedly worked for API Premiere Swiss Trust AG – a finance firm that has reportedly cost almost 30,000 investors from China US$1.2 billion of their savings.

    In the five days here, the investors have engaged lawyer Chung Ting Fai and lodged a police report with the Commercial Affairs Department.

    They left a note written in Chinese on the man’s door. It read: “Return our hard-earned money.”

    Street protests were held in Beijing and Hong Kong earlier this year when investors realised they might have been duped.

    In January, API sent out a message informing investors that its servers had been hacked.

    Investors could not access their accounts and were told that their money was gone.

    Mr Zhao Guangcai, the group’s leader, said in Mandarin: “We went to Switzerland and found out that the company was a shell.”

    The police had sealed doors to its so-called headquarters.

    The group in Singapore said they had invested through another Singaporean, who visited China and held seminars in Beijing.

    Some investors were also invited to all-expenses-paid trips to Switzerland – where they met with traders – and Dubai.

    They saw forex trading rooms, where traders worked and made deals online.

    Most investors had started by investing about US$10,000 and could withdraw their money any time they wanted. They got back their principle sum – with 8 per cent interest – within a week.

    Over time, they began to pump in more money. Mr Zhao and Ms Miao Lihua, 33, who owns a fashion company, put in more than US$1 million each.

    Now, they want their money back.

    The group, due to return to China yesterday, extended their stay after realising that one of the company’s employees was in Singapore.

    So far, they have spent about $10,000 each, flying around the world to look for leads.

    They plan to stick around the Singaporean’s registered address to demand an explanation from the employee.

    Mr Zhao, 58, said: “He is the closest clue we have to getting our money back. We are not giving up so easily.”

    According to Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, the Singaporean said he was also a victim and that the company owed him $30,000 in wages.

    He blamed the other Singaporean, whose registered flat in Mei Ling Street is empty, for roping him into the business.

    “I have been looking for him since the start of the year, but I can’t find him. I don’t want to talk about this incident any more. I just want the situation to be over,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com