Tag: PRC

  • PRC Waitress At Tang Tea House Takes Effort To Speak Malay To Malay-Majority Clientele

    PRC Waitress At Tang Tea House Takes Effort To Speak Malay To Malay-Majority Clientele

    It is sad that there are still people who don’t recognize that Malay is our National Language. And worse still, they insist the minorities should learn Mandarin instead of the majority picking up the National Language.

    It is also sad that there are some foreigners who don’t want to learn English.

    I went to Tang Tea House for lunch just now. These days even Halal food outlets employ PRC. There was this waitress. She spoke with a Mainland accent. But what struck me was that she made the effort to learn Malay and took my order in Malay. I am a very happy customer. I patronize Tang Tea House because they trained their staff very well especially the foreigners.

     

    Source: Hazrul A. Jamari

  • Malay Man Told To Learn Mandarin When Involved In Misunderstanding With PRC Waitress WHo Doesn’t Speak English

    Malay Man Told To Learn Mandarin When Involved In Misunderstanding With PRC Waitress WHo Doesn’t Speak English

    Went to a coffeeshop in Tuas, bought a can of coke zero an a bread ask the lady at the counter how much? And she replied in Chinese, so i told her in English pleased, but she keep repeating in Chinese… in a helpless situation i give her a $2 note and she look at me with such big eyes of hers and say out loud in Chinese which i still don’t understand and ask her how much?

    At that point a customer come forward and say it is $2.20 so i give her another $2 note. The Chinese lady accepted it but she still scolded me in Chinese so i told her in English, i don’t understand a single word you say and you don’t understand a single word i say why don’t you learn English so that you can easily communicate with your customers, and a man came forward and say why don’t you learn chinese too?

    And i ask him why should i? He goes on to say that Singapore is 80% Chinese and the goverment should made the chinese language as the national language not English.

    With that i told him that the national language of Singapore is MALAY and that he and that lady should learn MALAY since it is the national language of Singapore.

    He was looking rather angry at that point and i was readying myself for a fight when the owner of the coffeeshop came over and say sorry for the trouble that his staff has cause. I just walk away but what worrying me is what the man had said…….

     

    Source: Pak Dolmat

  • Beware Of PRC Scammers Approaching You With Pitiful Story To Borrow Your Money!

    Beware Of PRC Scammers Approaching You With Pitiful Story To Borrow Your Money!

    To all my dear friends. I experienced this myself. I was in Tampines today and this woman approached me to ask to lend her some money.

    Kelvin Lua On Scammers

    She say she is from Shanghai and that she ran into some problems here and need money to tide over.So she is seeking a loan assistance and that she will return the money.

    She will ask you for your phone number to pay you back.

    I encounter the same situation/ same story line with a guy in Bedok last week and I say this can’t be a coincidence.

    A syndicate or team is probably operating to scam sympathy money from the public so please share this and warn your frens that we have sympathy for you but we are not suckers either.

     

    Source: Kelvin Lua

  • High Court Unmoved By PRC Worker’s Drama, Awards Damages Less Than Amount Offered By Company That Worker Rejected

    High Court Unmoved By PRC Worker’s Drama, Awards Damages Less Than Amount Offered By Company That Worker Rejected

    An injured worker who declined a company’s offer to settle at $50,000 and took the case to court for a bigger sum may end up the “loser” – even though he won the case.

    The High Court awarded Mr Wang Jianbin some $37,000 in damages and loss of earnings but as this sum is less than that offered for the settlement, the Chinese national will have to pay the full costs of the defence lawyers.

    Mr Wang, 41, a construction worker and sole breadwinner from China’s Hebei province, was injured in the right forearm, neck and forehead by a metal pipe in the course of work in July 2011.

    His employer, Hong De Development, and the main contractor accepted 80 per cent of blame for his injury before an Assistant Registrar (AR) in the High Court, who awarded Mr Wang $28,000 for pain and suffering and $2,000 for future medical expenses.

    But since this award was less than what he would have got had he not taken the case to court, she also ordered him to pay the full, indemnity costs for the legal fees of the other side. However, she also ordered the defence to pay him $5,500 in legal costs from the time the suit was filed to the time the offer to settle was made in October 2014.

    The AR had, among other things, found poor evidence of any permanent disability. The injuries had all healed with no residual handicap except for headaches, giddiness and some numbness in the arm.

    She found Mr Wang was “making up evidence in the witness box” and the medical evidence did not rule him out of work. However, he had made no attempt to get a comparable job in China despite having returned there for two years.

    Mr Wang, represented by lawyer Eric Liew, appealed to the High Court following the AR’s assessment in July of damages payable.

    In examining the items, Justice Choo Han Teck said the AR had been “generous” to have awarded Mr Wang $2,000 for future medical expenses even though she was not satisfied he had shown enough evidence he would incur those costs.

    Mr Wang had sought compensation for future medical expenses, claiming they were required for more orthopaedic treatment, physiotherapy and pain medication.

    Justice Choo was also not convinced by his claims for loss of future earnings, and agreed with defence lawyer Ramesh Appoo that Mr Wang , “having realised the inadequacies of his evidence and his case, is hoping to overcome them not with evidence but a plea that the court should find it reasonable to accept that many of the missing evidence could and should be assumed”.

    The judge rejected Mr Wang’s claims but allowed the appeal for pre-trial loss of earnings for the period he remained in Singapore on medical leave until his repatriation to China.

    The additional sum awarded of $7,830 would supplement the $12,313 paid by his employer during the medical leave period .

    This raised the overall sum for Mr Wang to $37,830 which at 80 per cent meant he got $30,264.

    From this, Mr Wang would have to pay $23,000 in costs for defence lawyer Ramesh Appoo, which leaves him with about $7,000 to sort out the bill for his own lawyer, together with the $5,500 in legal costs awarded earlier by the AR.

    Justice Choo noted Mr Wang had spurned a “generous” offer to settle and the AR was right to order indemnity costs.

    “The award of costs on that scale is an important aspect of the idea behind the offer to settle. If a litigant believes that he is entitled to more, then he must accept the consequences if he fails,” he wrote.

    ” If (Mr Wang)’s lawyers will consider waiving their own fees, (he) would have returned to China with a bit of compensation, instead of a substantial debt,” he added.

    Justice Choo declined to make any order as to costs for the appeal, acknowledging “this may be unfair to the defendants but they at least had the comfort of obtaining substantial costs before the AR”.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Primary School Teaching Assistant Dies In Accident With PRC Embassy Car

    Primary School Teaching Assistant Dies In Accident With PRC Embassy Car

    A 32-YEAR-OLD primary school teaching assistant died on the spot after his motorcycle collided with a car from the Chinese Embassy on Sunday morning.

    Tan Kiat Siang was believed to have been on his way to pay respects to his father, who had died recently, when he got into an accident at about 10.30am at the junction of Mandai Lake Road and Mandai Road, reported Chinese newspaper Shin Min Daily News yesterday.

    Mr Tan was an allied educator – someone who supports teachers in their work – in mathematics at Naval Base Primary School, where he was also in charge of the Info Comm Club.

    An eyewitness told Shin Min Daily that a red Volvo was preparing to turn right from Mandai Road into Mandai Lake Road, when Mr Tan approached from the opposite direction on his motorcycle and collided with the car, landing a metre away on the road.

    There were a few passengers in the embassy car, which Shin Min Daily reported as possibly being on its way to the zoo.

    Noah Ong, vice-principal of Naval Base Primary School, told My Paper via e-mail: “The school is deeply saddened by the passing of our allied educator.”

    Mr Tan was supposed to return to teach at the school yesterday.

    “He was responsible and well-liked by his colleagues and students. We will provide counselling support to affected students and staff, and are rendering the necessary assistance to his family,” added Mr Ong.

    Friends and relatives of Mr Tan have shared their condolences on Facebook, with pupils saying that he was the best educator.

    Police confirmed that they were informed of the accident on Sunday morning and that paramedics on the scene established that a 32-year-old man had died.

    The Chinese Embassy told The Straits Times: “A staff member of the Chinese Embassy in Singapore involved in a traffic accident in Mandai Road on the morning of Sept 13 is under investigation by the Singapore Police.”

     

    Source: http://mypaper.sg