Tag: Rehabilitation

  • 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

  • Drug Abusers Dumped Friend’s Body At Staircase Landing

    Drug Abusers Dumped Friend’s Body At Staircase Landing

    He died suddenly while in the company of two friends.

    But the friends did not alert the authorities about his death as they were both wanted by the Central Narcotics Bureau.

    Instead, Karim Arshad, 42, and Juwita Mohd Yusof, 36, unceremoniously dumped Mr Ramdan Ishak’s body at a staircase landing between the sixth and seventh storeys of Block 4, Dover Road.

    That was June 3.

    Yesterday, Karim was jailed for eight years and four months and ordered to receive six strokes of the cane yesterday after pleading guilty to one count each of drug consumption and dishonestly misappropriating Mr Ramdan’s property.

    Juwita pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to report for a urine test and one count of misappropriating Mr Ramdan’s property. She will be sentenced on Oct 30.

    On June 2, Mr Ramdan, 37, Juwita and Karim went to Block 4, Dover Road, to console their friend, Madam Ratnawati Samad, 38, whose husband had been arrested for drug activities.

    They decided to stay overnight in her flat. In the wee hours of the next morning, Mr Ramdan went to the bathroom and remained inside for a long time.

    When Karim went to check on him, he was sitting on a toilet bowl, seemingly asleep. He appeared weak when Karim tried to wake him up.

    As Karim was helping Mr Ramdan out of the bathroom, he spotted a syringe in the back pocket of his friend’s trousers.

    He asked Mr Ramdan about it but the latter did not reply. Karim threw the syringe away.

    In the morning, they woke to find Mr Ramdan was not breathing.

    Before carrying the body to the staircase landing, they helped themselves to Mr Ramdan’s personal belongings.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Launch of the Subhas Anandan Star Bursary Award for Ex-Inmates

    Launch of the Subhas Anandan Star Bursary Award for Ex-Inmates

    Editor’s Note: This is a FB post on 31 Oct 2014 by K Shanmugam (Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister for Law) lauding the achievements of noted criminal lawyer, Subhas Anandan
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    Subhas Anandan has handled over 1,500 cases in his career. He is one of our best known criminal lawyers. In recognition of Subhas’ work, the Association of Muslim Lawyers held a tribute event on Tuesday where they launched the Yellow Ribbon Fund .The award is called the Subhas Anandan Star Bursary Award.

    It will provide financial support to ex-inmates who wish to further their studies, and help give them a second chance in their lives.

    I attended the event. It was quite a moving experience to hear people speak about Subhas. Subhas also delivered a touching speech where he thanked judges, colleagues and his family for standing by him during his recent bouts of severe illness.

    I am glad that Subhas is practicing once again. All of us wish him the very best.

    K Shanmugam

    Source: www.facebook.com/k.shanmugam.page