Tag: sabah

  • Sabah Earthquake: Singapore Students, Teachers Missing

    Sabah Earthquake: Singapore Students, Teachers Missing

    Eight students and two teachers from Tanjong Katong Primary School (TKPS) who were on a school trip to Mount Kinabalu were uncontactable after a 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck Sabah yesterday (June 5).

    They were among a total of 29 students and eight teachers from TKPS on the excursion. In a statement issued at about 9pm, a Ministry of Education (MOE) spokesperson said others had been accounted for.

    “We are continuing efforts to contact the remaining (students and teachers). Parents have been informed and kept updated on the situation,” the spokesperson said.

    Fifty-eight students and eight teachers from two other schools — Fuchun Secondary and Greenridge Secondary — were also on Mount Kinabalu when the quake occurred. They were safe, and arrangements had been made for them to return to Singapore, said the spokesperson.  They arrived at Changi Airport after midnight yesterday. MOE officials were at the airport to receive the students and teachers. In a statement issued at about 12.30am, MOE said arrangements were being made to fly the families of students and teachers who were unaccounted for to Kota Kinabalu this morning.

    Education Minister Heng Swee Keat told TODAY: “A team of MOE officials and our teachers and counsellors will be together with the team , and will be together with the parents to give our utmost support. We are also working with the Malaysian authorities to give every assistance possible to continue with this operation.”

    “It is a very difficult time for the parents and …  a very difficult time for everyone.”

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) has despatched a Crisis Response Team (CRT) to Sabah to help Singaporeans there. Singapore’s High Commissioner in Kuala Lumpur has also contacted Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to offer support.

    The quake struck near the mountain around 7.15 am yesterday, jolting a wide area of Sabah. Tremors were felt as far as the northern Kudat and Kota Marudu districts, and Beaufort in the south.

    Since news of the quake broke yesterday morning, parents and relatives continued to stream in to TKPS throughout the day. The Malaysian media reported that two bodies, believed to be of a local guide and a 12-year-old female Singaporean student, had been recovered from Mount Kinabalu. When TODAY visited TKPS, parents and relatives were seen going in and out of the school premises deep into the night. Some had been there since morning, waiting for updates.

    A parent, Mr James Ho, said: “For 12 hours, all we saw were teachers, the principal comforting us (and) giving us food. But beyond the school, we are not seeing any help.”

    Another parent, Mr Sadri Farick, said he had been informed that his son Emyr Uzayr, who is in Primary 6, had been found with leg injuries, but there were no details. “We got news from one of the boys that there were boulders dropping in front (of them) and (their path) was cut off. I’m very upset by the information and resources we’re getting.”

    Primary 6 student Emyr Uzayr was rescued with leg injuries, according to his father Sadri Farick. The extent of his injuries is not known. Photo: Sadri Farick

    Posting on Facebook at about 10.40pm, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said: “We are doing all we can to reach them and I really hope they are alright.” Mr Lee said that the authorities had contacted their Malaysian counterparts yesterday afternoon to offer support and help. “My thoughts are with those affected by the earthquake, and their families,” he added.

    About half an hour later, Education Minister Heng Swee Keat also posted on Facebook: “Our hearts and thoughts are with the families of the students and staff of Tanjong Katong Primary School… We will do all we can to find the missing students and teachers in Mount Kinabalu.”

    Mr Heng, who visited TKPS at close to 1am, added that MOE staff are in touch with the families of these students and teachers.

    Foreign Minister K Shanmugam also took to the social networking site, saying that he had been monitoring the incident. He also outlined the efforts by his ministry to provide assistance to Singaporeans in Sabah. “My thoughts and prayers are with all those affected in the disaster,” he said.

    MFA said that there are more than 100 registered Singaporeans in Sabah during the earthquake. As of 7.30pm yesterday, the ministry has contacted the majority of them and they were safe.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 6.0 Trembler Rattles Sabah West Coast

    6.0 Trembler Rattles Sabah West Coast

    US Geological Survey reports that the source of the earthquake occurred 19km North West of Ranau.

    The earthquake with magnitude 6.0 occurred near Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia at 7.15am today.

    Road from KK to Ranau. -Viral photo from Facebook.

    The tremor lasted for 30 seconds.

    According to Ranau police, damages caused by the tremors to building nearby appear minimal, with several business premises in Ranau town reporting shattered windows.

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    Viral photo on Facebook.

     

    Cracks narrowly miss hitting house. -Viral photo from Facebook

    Damage caused by 6.0 Earthquake. -Viral photo from Facebook

    Road from KK to Ranau. -Viral photo on Facebook.

    Viral photo on Facebook

    Viral photo on Facebook.

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    Source: www.theborneopost.com

  • Sabah Christian Angry That Daughter Was Converted To Islam Without His Knowledge

    Sabah Christian Angry That Daughter Was Converted To Islam Without His Knowledge

    PAPAR, Feb 8 — Sitting on the porch of his wooden stilt house, Sabahan rubber tapper Jilius Yapoo’s eyes welled up with tears when he recalled his shock earlier this week when he saw his 16-year-old daughter in a tudung (Muslim headscarf) for the first time.

    The staunch Christian dusun said he had gone to his daughter’s hostel to take her home for the weekend when the teenager emerged garbed in the tudung, looking upset.

    “She was wearing the tudung and showed it to me. I teared up and she looked at me and cried.

    “She told me she had converted into Islam and could not back out now. I was absolutely speechless,” said Jilius, choking back tears.

    The father of eight from the Kaiduan village in Kawang lodged a police report on Wednesday after being told by his relative that his daughter was seen in the Muslim headscarf at her school SMK Kinarut.

    He said he had earlier tried to take the matter to the school’s Parents Teachers Association meeting but was allegedly rebuffed and told to calm down.

    Jilius said he had also tried to see his daughter the day of the meeting, but was not able to.

    “It was only two days later that I went to pick her up from school to take her home for the weekend when I got to see her, but she said she would not be coming home this week,” the distraught father lamented to Malay Mail Online when met at his home yesterday.

    “She is only 16, underaged, and should not need to make a decision like this. Even if she had willingly declared the words (shahadah, the Islamic declaration of belief Allah and Muhammad), and wanted to convert, she and the school should have informed me,” said Jilius.

    Malay Mail Online had on Thursday reported that authorities are investigating the alleged “Islamisation” of a Christian student in SMK Kinarut near here by the school hostel’s warden.

    It is believed that the school’s former hostel warden had incited the conversion of the student with the recital of the shahadah, forcing her into embracing Islam despite being “underaged”.

    According to the student’s mother, Jaina Yassin, her daughter had a lot of Muslim friends in school but never mentioned anything about changing her faith.

    “We used to pray as a family with our pastor, who came to the house sometimes. When we heard she was wearing a headscarf and had converted, our hearts just sank.

    “How can this happen?

    “We have three other children studying in the same school and I fear this might happen to them as well,” she said, adding that the church pastor had suggested they consider transferring her out of the school.

    The family, with Jilius as the sole breadwinner, earns a small income of up to RM350 a month.

    The money is used to support the ten people living in their home, which is in the rural West coast of Sabah.

    The village consists mostly of subsistence farmers and there is no telephone reception or television available, although there is electricity and running water.

    “I sent her to school for her to learn and get an education. Not to be converted into another religion.

    “As long as she is underaged and under my care, she cannot make this decision. When she reaches the age of consent, then it is up to her,” said Jilius.

    Village safety and security committee chairman Michael Frederick said it was unusual for the school to allow a religious conversion without asking for the student’s parent’s permission.

    “Usually they notify parents just to take their students out from school and a letter needs to be produced and signed by parents and acknowledged by the committee.

    “We are not against freedom to choose religion but I hope the authorities will look into this and ensure it was carried out properly in the future, without ill motives from the school, and with parents consent.

    “We cannot have students going to school one religion and coming out another,” said Michael.

    Sabah police have said that the case has been referred to the state religious authorities for further action.

    State Education Department director Datuk Jame Alip when contacted said that the matter is now in the hands of the police. He declined further comment.

    Christian groups in Sabah have recently cried foul to alleged furtive attempts to convert Bumiputera followers of the faith to Islam.

    In January 2014, a group of indigenous Sabahan villagers from the remote Pitas district were reportedly deceived into embracing Islam for RM100 by a Muslim welfare group.

    Sabah Council of Churches as well as the Roman Catholic Church of Sabah had also complained officially to the Education Ministry last year of a covert ploy to convert under-aged Christian students at the residential Labuan Matriculation College to Islam.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • Malaysians With ISIS Links Raised Funds to Attack Putrajaya

    Malaysians With ISIS Links Raised Funds to Attack Putrajaya

    ISIS T shirt

    Malaysian militants linked to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) were planning to overthrow the government in Putrajaya and attack several pubs, discos and even the Carlsberg brewery in Shah Alam, Selangor, according to the police.

    Federal Special Branch principal assistant director Ayob Khan Pitchay Mydin told The Sunday Times yesterday that out of 19 suspects arrested in a clampdown earlier this year, seven are set to face trial in October for security offences.

    “They have the same ideology as groups like Al-Qaeda, where the main objective is to topple the government and install an Islamic state,” said Datuk Ayob, who heads the force’s counter-terrorism efforts.

    The suspects had raised several thousand ringgit for their efforts which were nipped in the bud when the police dismantled the group between April and June.

    “Their plans were not that advanced. They were only discussing (how) to attack but had not obtained material to make bombs,” he said, adding that the police had seized homemade rifles, shotguns and ammunition.

    Mr Ayob said the group had dispersed after their leader and second-in-command were arrested between April and May. The police are searching for the remaining members.

    “Their plan is to go to Syria for training. More than 20 are already there but we have identified them and will nab them if they return,” he said.

    ISIS is a splinter group of Al-Qaeda that wants to set up an Islamic caliphate encompassing both Iraq and Syria.

    Malaysian factory worker Ahmad Tarmimi Maliki died as an ISIS suicide bomber in May, sparking alarm over renewed Islamic extremism in Malaysia.

    Muslim-majority Malaysia practises moderate Islam and has not been the target of any notable terror attacks in recent years.

    But it has been home to several key figures in militant Islamic groups, such as the Al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiah, blamed for the deadly 2002 Bali bombings.

    Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has said that a regional ring he dubbed the “Nusantara network” might be recruiting citizens of Malaysia, Indonesia, southern Thailand and the Philippines to join militant activities abroad.

    In June, the police arrested three alleged militants in Sandakan, Sabah. One of them had allegedly received training from Islamic militant group Abu Sayyaf in the southern Philippines, while another was a Royal Malaysian Navy personnel. The latter was released last month and has since returned to full service.

    In late June, the United Nations revealed that 15 Malaysians were allegedly killed in Syria after joining terrorist and jihadist activities with ISIS.

    ISIS fighters have engaged in a bloody war across Iraq, overrunning large areas of the country and conquering a substantial part of the north.

    Iraq’s Prime Minister-designate Haider al-Abadi said last week that Iraqis must unite to face terrorism, promising that his government will fight to “salvage the country from security, political and economic problems”.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/the-big-story/asia-report/malaysia/story/malaysian-govt-brewery-pubs-militants-target-list-20140817

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  • Roti Hotdog Giant Berkulat Dan Berulat!

    rotiulatgiant1

    Menggelikan… itulah perasaan apabila pertama kali melihat gambar-gambar roti sosej yang diupload oleh seorang pengguna facebook di dalam akaun peribadinya.

    Puan Bie Jackson mendakwa roti sosej yang dibeli suaminya telah berkulat dan berulat. 6 keping gambar yang dimuatnaik beliau turut menunjukkan tanda harga pasaraya Giant. Lokasi Pasaraya Giant tersebut terletak di Kelombong, Sabah.

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    “Suami membeli roti ini di kedai yg tertera d kolombong. Dgn harga rm5. Malangnya sesampai ja d rumah kita ingin menjamunya kelihatan hot dog yg d gunaan suda berkulat yg lebi malang berulat. Nasib la aku ni jenis keluarkan sosej dr roti br mkan. Dgn itu boikot giant utk roti jenis ini.” Menurut Caption dalam gambar tersebut

    Melalui tinjauan kami, gambar-gambar tersebut telah mencecah lebih 2000 share. Pihak pengurusan Giant perlu memberikan respon segera mengenai kejadian ini kerana ia pasti memberikan reputasi buruk kepada pasaraya terkenal itu

    rotikulatgiant2rotikulatgiant3

    Sumber: Nescafeais & Tengok TV Online