Tag: riot

  • 8 VS 3, All Myanmar Nationals, Fight Over Cigarettes At Peninsula Plaza, Seven Of Them Got Jailed 12 Months

    8 VS 3, All Myanmar Nationals, Fight Over Cigarettes At Peninsula Plaza, Seven Of Them Got Jailed 12 Months

    Seven Myanmar nationals were sentenced to 12 months’ jail for rioting after they got into a fight with three fellow countrymen over cigarettes at Peninsula Plaza.

    The court heard on Friday (13 October) that on 4 June this year, Cung San Eng, 26, Tluang Uk, 39, Ronal, 30, Lal Tha Siama, 25, Thaung Sun, 29, Van Liaw Aung, 30, Aung Maw, 23, and another unknown male had been consuming alcohol since 3pm near Peninsula Plaza. The seven accused, who pleaded guilty to one charge of rioting, are work permit holders working in marine dredging, shipyards and construction.

    At about 10:35pm, a dispute broke out between the group of eight and a group of three other Myanmar nationals over cigarettes and a fight ensued.

    One of the victims, Wunna, 32, fell as a result of the scuffle. Several of the accused rained punches on Wunna as he lay on the ground. Wunna’s friends Pyae Phyo Zaw, 31, and Min Zaw, 40, attempted to stop the fight but were also assaulted by the group.

    The entire incident lasted for about one and a half minutes. Police arrived at 10:45pm and arrested Cung San Eng, Tluang Uk and Ronal. The rest were arrested after follow-up investigations.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Claire Poh asked for a sentence of at least nine months for each of the accused, whom she said were part of an unlawful assembly. DPP Poh pointed out that the injuries to Wunna were not minor and that he had suffered a partially dislocated right foot and was given a week’s medical leave.

    In mitigation, the seven Myanmar nationals, who were unrepresented, said through an interpreter that they hoped for leniency. They told the court they were supporting their families in Myanmar and did not have income for four months since they were remanded.

    Referring to the December 2013 Little India riot, District Judge Imran Abdul Hamid said that Singapore takes a “very serious view of rioting offences”. As such, he said that the sentencing needed to be a deterrent so that Peninsula Plaza, commonly known as “Little Myanmar”, does not go the way of Little India.

    DJ Imran backdated each person’s sentences to the date when they were first remanded in June.

    Addressing the group, DJ Imran said, “My advice to you when you go back to Myanmar, tell your friends and family desiring to come to Singapore: Don’t mess around with our laws.”

    The group could have faced a maximum jail term of seven years and been liable to caning.

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Chinese Community Riot In Paris To Protest Alleged Police Brutality

    Chinese Community Riot In Paris To Protest Alleged Police Brutality

    Protesters spelling the word ‘violence’ in front of riot policemen in Paris on Monday.

    French police said on Tuesday they opened an inquiry after a Chinese man was shot dead by police at his Paris home, triggering riots in the French capital by members of the Chinese community and a diplomatic protest by Beijing.

    The shooting on Sunday, which led China’s foreign ministry to call in a French diplomat, brought about a 100 members of the French-Chinese community on to the streets in Paris’s main Chinatown district on Monday night.

    Some protesters threw projectiles outside the district’s police headquarters and a number of vehicles were torched in a confrontation with riot police.

    Media reports said a 56-year-old man of Chinese origin was shot dead at his home on Sunday night in front of his family after police were called to investigate an altercation with a neighbour.

    Police said the man attacked police with scissors, adding that an inquiry had been opened. The man’s family, according to media reports, denied this and some media said he was holding scissors because he had been cutting fish.

    Police said they questioned 35 people after Monday’s street protests and three members of the police had been treated for slight injuries, they said.

    In Beijing, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday it had summoned a French diplomat to explain events. It also sought a thorough investigation by French authorities and steps to be ensure the safety of Chinese citizens in France.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 3 Sentenced To Reformative Training For Boys’ Home Breakout Attempt

    3 Sentenced To Reformative Training For Boys’ Home Breakout Attempt

    Three accomplices of a youth under the age of 16, who hatched a plan to escape from the Singapore Boys’ Home, were dealt with on Thursday.

    Zain Sani, Salman An-Farisi Yusri and Nicholas Koh Hwee Kiat, all 16, were sentenced to reformative training after pleading guilty to being members of an unlawful assembly to commit vandalism, as well as abetment to escape from legal custody at the Singapore Boys’ Home.

    They now have to spend between 18 months and three years in a reformative training centre and follow a strict regimen that includes foot drills and counselling.

    The three are among the 26 boys who caused $18,362 worth of damage in the juvenile rehabilitation centre, which is in Jurong West Street 24, on Sept 19 last year.

    The group also sparked a six-hour stand-off with Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) staff and police.

    The 26 youths include the plot’s alleged mastermind, whose particulars were redacted in court documents, along with those of six other accomplices who were under 16.

    The youth was said to have drawn up plans to escape from the home. His accomplices included three 18-year-olds.

    A piece of paper with the plan written on it was passed among the rooms in the centre.

    The boys believed that the room gates would open if the fire alarm were triggered,so one boy deliberately activated it at 11.12pm on the day of the incident.

    But the gates remained shut.

    Koh, Zain, Salman and three others then rattled their room’s gate and demanded that it be opened.

    Two MSF officers on night duty went to investigate, and a dispute broke out.

    Muhammad Amiruddin Sabtu, 18, is said to have then incited other residents to create a ruckus by damaging furniture and barricading themselves inside their rooms.

    He lifted a bed frame and slammed it onto the floor.

    Koh, Zain, Salman and three others followed suit and tried to dismantle their beds.

    Some residents also used their bed frames to barricade their rooms.

    In the chaos that ensued, the boys smashed fluorescent light tubes and broke a toilet bowl.

    Some even urinated into the corridor and threw items into the courtyard below.

    The MSF officers retreated to the centre’s operations room and tried to persuade the boys to stop.

    Police had to be called in when they failed.

    Amiruddin and Salman were accused of having led the negotiations with the officers, asking for cigarettes and demanding that all 26 of them be allowed to walk out of their rooms together.

    They finally surrendered when their demands were rejected.

    Police took them away after the barricades were removed.

    For being a member of an unlawful assembly to commit vandalism, Koh, Zain and Salman could have been jailed for up to three years, with between three and eight strokes of the cane.

    For abetment to escape from legal custody, they could have been jailed for up to two years and fined.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Low Yat Was About Racism, Deal With It

    Low Yat Was About Racism, Deal With It

    The Low Yat Plaza riot which injured five people was scary with its disturbing racial overtones, and we don’t do Malaysia any favours by pretending that the whole incident had nothing to do with racism.

    The original incident seemed simple enough. A Malay man allegedly stole a smartphone from a Chinese trader at a shop in Low Yat Saturday.

    He was caught and handed over to the police. Then the upset man brought a group of friends over who allegedly assaulted the workers from the mobile phone outlet and damaged the store, causing about RM70,000 in losses.

    The story then took a strange racist twist, with rumours suddenly popping up on social media about how the “cheating” Chinese had tried to sell a counterfeit phone to the Malay man. The police, by the way, have reportedly dismissed claims about the counterfeit phone.

    A riot broke out at Low Yat the following day, with disturbing videos of the violent Malay mob attacking a car with passengers cowering inside, as well as three journalists from the Chinese press.

    The shoplifting was not unusual and had nothing to do with race, certainly. But the subsequent fallout was motivated by racism, with all the belligerent calls on social media to #BoikotCinaPenipu and to boycott Low Yat.

    There were hostile calls for Malay unity and vague threats of assault, with a photo of a gunman and the words “Call of Duty Low Yat” on Facebook.

    There were even calls for arson. Malays were painted as victims, oppressed by the Chinese.

    At the mob gathering on Sunday night, a Malay man is seen in a video making a racist speech about how Malaysia is “bumi Melayu” and how the Chinese humiliated the Malays.

    Police, politicians and the public have been quick to say that the Low Yat incident was not about racism, but just a simple case of theft.

    Wake up and smell the coffee — the Low Yat riot was racially motivated and it shows how ugly things can get when the economy is bad.

    For all our campaigns about “moderation”, the truth is, racism exists in this country and we can’t ignore it.

    People look for scapegoats when the economy is in the doldrums. The Jews were made a scapegoat for Germany’s economic problems after World War I.

    It’s far easier to blame a person from another ethnic group living near you, who’s sitting in the same LRT and eating at the same fast food restaurant in which most of the counter staff appear to be Malays, for robbing you of opportunities in life.

    It’s easier to get angry at news of someone from another race ripping off your fellow brethren over something tangible like a phone, than at the purportedly missing billions in the 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal.

    After all, you don’t know exactly how many of those billions come from your taxes. And you don’t see physical cash from your taxes being diverted into someone’s personal bank account.

    It’s easier to hit a fellow Malaysian of a different skin colour over perceived injustices, compared to trying to slap the prime minister who’s protected by bodyguards and whom you only see in the news, not on the streets.

    The government too should be blamed for allowing, and even encouraging, circumstances for a riot to happen.

    The race-baiting in Utusan Malaysia, the refrain for Malay unity, and Friday sermons that repeatedly label minority groups as “the enemy” have all contributed to this powder keg of racial tension.

    A minister who brazenly called for Chinese traders to be boycotted should have been sacked.

    But instead, he remains in government.

    The ethnic conflict between the Malays and Chinese is driven by the perception that the Chinese are significantly wealthier. It’s unclear how much of that is really true.

    A Khazanah Research Institute study shows that 26 per cent of Bumiputera households earn less than RM2,000 per month, compared to 20 per cent and 14 per cent of Indian and Chinese households respectively. So it’s arguable if the Chinese really do dominate the economy.

    Racism is not just caused by politicians who use the race card to get support.

    There are things that don’t make it in the news – the wariness of the Malays at eating or drinking at Chinese coffee shops, the unnatural fear of pork to the extent of shunning Chinese ice-cream sellers, the undercurrent of complaints against the Chinese for stealing the country’s wealth and for trampling on the rights of the Malays.

    There’s breeding resentment on both sides.

    The Chinese complain about not getting equal treatment and having to work twice as hard to get the same opportunities as the Malays, who receive coveted positions at public universities, housing discounts etc. They look down on the Malays and perceive them as “lazy”.

    When a Malay is hardworking and does make it to the top, they say she’s an exception, not the rule.

    This makes for uncomfortable reading. But we need to confront racism head on.

    We need to acknowledge that we hold racial stereotypes and that such stereotypes comfort us. They make us feel good about ourselves. They make us feel superior.

    We can laugh at racist jokes but we secretly place our colleagues, acquaintances, civil servants, and traders into racial stereotypes that they happen to fit in.

    I myself am guilty of doing it. I compare the Chinese and Malay nasi lemak sellers at the wet market that I regularly go to.

    The Chinese nasi lemak seller is fast and efficient, but she’s very careful with her portions, always measuring them so she doesn’t give too much.

    The Malay trader’s nasi lemak is tastier and he lets customers dole out their own portions, charging a far cheaper price too. But he arrives at a later time than the Chinese, which means fewer customers, and he’s slow.

    So I secretly think that the Chinese is a better businesswoman, even though I prefer buying from the Malay nasi lemak seller (when he arrives early enough).

    And I allow myself to take comfort in the (dangerous) belief that yes, the Malays may get everything handed to them on a silver platter, but we Chinese can still beat them because we’re better, smarter and faster than them.

    I feel uncomfortable admitting this in writing. But I must, just like all of us must similarly admit the racial stereotypes we hold if we want Malaysia to move forward. We will never eradicate racism by burying our heads in the sand and pretending that it doesn’t exist.

    We need to perhaps befriend more people of other races. Maybe even get into interracial relationships and have babies of mixed ethnicity.

    Then maybe, just maybe, Malaysia will be a little less racist.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • Malaysian Police Say Low Yat Riot Sparked By Clear-Cut Theft Case

    Malaysian Police Say Low Yat Riot Sparked By Clear-Cut Theft Case

    KUALA LUMPUR (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) – The events that escalated into a brawl at Kuala Lumpur’s Low Yat Plaza on Sunday started from a clear cut case of theft, said Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar.

    He said two men were arrested at 7.50pm on Saturday – one suspected of stealing a phone at a kiosk inside the mall and the other his accomplice.

    He said the two were caught by staff of the phone shop, Oppo Malaysia, and handed to the security guards who later called the police.

    Khalid said the suspected thief was detained in the lock-up while the accomplice was released at the discretion of the investigating officer who did not refer the matter to his superior.

    “This suspect (accomplice) then made up stories to his friends and said that Oppo (staff) cheated them but, in truth, they stole the phone from another kiosk and not Oppo,” Khalid told reporters at Low Yat Plaza in the Bukit Bintang shopping belt after visiting the mall on Monday.

    “According to the accomplice, he has a receipt of the purchase but when we checked, it was not true.

    “He also claimed that he filed a report with us but when we checked our system, there is none. He is a cheat. So please stop spreading false news,” Khalid said.

    Khalid said police had also called the Oppo staff to assist in the investigations.

    Police have arrested 19 people, ages 19 to 26. All were remanded for four days starting Monday.

    Khalid said police would monitoring social media postings that could spark racial disharmony.

    On Saturday, a fight erupted between the thugs and sales assistants after a group of youths came to the shop on the ground floor at Low Yat Plaza.

    This led to another group of about 100 people who started a brawl at the plaza at 6.30pm on Sunday.

    The group had gathered to protest what they claimed was “biased investigations” by the police.

    Khalid said police have already arrested 19 people between the ages of 19 and 26. They will be remanded for four days starting Monday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com