Tag: Singapore

  • Jurong West Coffeeshop Toilet Too Dirty For NEA, Ordered To Shut Down, Operator Fined

    Jurong West Coffeeshop Toilet Too Dirty For NEA, Ordered To Shut Down, Operator Fined

    A coffeeshop at Jurong West will be shut on Friday (March 17), after it was found to have violated several health violations related to its restrooms.

    According to National Environment Agency (NEA), the eating house, at Block 503 Jurong West Avenue 1 #01-855, had failed to maintain sanitary fittings in good working condition and repair. It also did not provide hand soap in the toilet.

    The whole eating house, will be required to cease operations for a day while the operator has been fined S$1,000.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

     

  • JB Car Wash Chaos: Driver Of SKR9083B, My Car Keys Are In Your Car

    JB Car Wash Chaos: Driver Of SKR9083B, My Car Keys Are In Your Car

    Looking for : SKR 9083 B (Mitsubishi model)

    Please help to share this post so that the rightful owner of his Mitsubishi Delica gets his key back. On Tuesday 14 March between 1500-1700 hours at a car wash at Giant Southern City, Johor Bahru, my friend Shaik Mohamed Muzhaffar had his car key misplaced into another vehicle bearing registration number SKR 9083 B, another Mitsubishi model. Keys were accidentally misplaced by the car wash staff.

    Kindly help to share and viral this post so that we can trace the other vehicle SKR 9083 B and if found, please contact me at 93296689 or Shaik at 87148197 if the other car is traced.

    Thank you all for taking time to read and share and may the power of social media be of great help to others in need.

     

    Source: Syafiq Aziz

  • As Long As She Is Comfortable And Feeding Well, I Don’t Really Care What Others Think

    As Long As She Is Comfortable And Feeding Well, I Don’t Really Care What Others Think

    I know that a picture of me breastfeeding is being shared right now. I am ok with it. Thanks for the concern to all those who have pmed me.

    Personally, I am not too bothered about it since I don’t think it is wrong to breastfeed in public. I have a nursing cover, but my girl will cry and struggle when I use it. Those who suggest using a cover should try eating or drinking under a cover and see if you like it or not. I put my baby first so as long as she is comfortable and feeding well, I don’t really care what others think. It isn’t that hard to just look away if you don’t like to see a baby drinking milk.

    I just want to dress up and be a normal woman while still being able to take care of my kids and their needs. If people are ok with women who show cleavage, I don’t know why they would not be ok with me breastfeeding. Unless these group of people think my breast is for sex and not for feeding my baby.

    Anyway, it’s just a breast. We all have it. Be it female or male. It’s meant to be used to feed a baby, I don’t see anything wrong with using it to feed a baby and ensuring my baby is comfortable. What’s so sexual/wrong about it? Hahas! Maybe girls should stop eating bananas/popsicle in public as some might find it sexual too.

    #proudbreastfeedingmama#useplasticbagtocoveryourselfwhenyoueat
    #nowrong#mybabywillalwayscomefirst#breastservingdifferentpurposes#notjustsex

     

    Source: Cheryl Lee

  • Preference Or Just Racist: Prefer A Non-Malay Baby Sitter

    Preference Or Just Racist: Prefer A Non-Malay Baby Sitter

    Too many Malay men sex abusing infants in Singapore? Like pedophiles?! I haven’t heard of one such incident in Singapore. As much as we’d like to think we are very multi-racial, everyday I still come across racism in Singapore. Be it finding a job or doing anything else, most Chinese people/employers always seem to play the race card. Pretty sick of this.

     

     

    Source: Nana Bruns

  • NS Recruits’ Photos And NRIC Numbers Posted Online In BMTC Slip-up

    NS Recruits’ Photos And NRIC Numbers Posted Online In BMTC Slip-up

    The latest cohort of National Service (NS) recruits who completed their basic military training over the weekend had their NRIC numbers and pictures published online for a day, before authorities realised the mistake and took down the materials.

    The incident happened about a month after a cyber attack on an Internet access system used at military premises caused an unprecedented theft of the personal data of 850 national servicemen and Ministry of Defence (Mindef) employees.

    In the latest case, the recruits’ NRIC numbers were emblazoned under their personal portraits that were uploaded onto Facebook last Saturday by the Basic Military Training Centre (BMTC) — a practice to allow servicemen to share the photographs with their family and friends.

    Apologising for the “mistake”, BMTC commander Colonel Desmond Yeo said these portraits were taken down by noon the following day “when the oversight was realised”.

    He was responding to a reader who wrote in to TODAY’s Voices section to highlight the incident.

    Col Yeo did not specify the number of recruits affected, but there are a few thousand recruits in each graduating cohort.

    The soft copy portraits of recruits are uploaded online to make the BMT graduation parade a “memorable and meaningful event”, said Col Yeo.

    Recruits have also “warmly received” the practice, he added.

    In the past, the portraits were manually labelled with a recruit’s platoon, section and bed number, for example.

    To speed up the process, the BMTC used a new system for the most recent graduating cohort of recruits.

    The labels were automatically generated by scanning the recruits’ Singapore Armed Forces identity cards.

    “This resulted in the portraits being labelled by NRIC numbers. No other personal data was released,” said Col Yeo.

    “BMTC recognises that making available our recruits’ portraits, labelled together with their NRIC numbers on a platform accessible to the general public, was an oversight. We apologise for the mistake.”

    Col Yeo also said the BMTC is reviewing its procedures to prevent a similar recurrence.

    A recruit from the affected cohort, who wanted to be known only as Mr Lim, 18, was not aware of the BMTC’s slip-up.

    Asked if the leak of personal information was a concern, he said: “Even if it was a mistake, I would assume they’d be able to deal with whatever happens, and if I’ve any concerns, I should be able to approach them and they’d have a proper solution.”

    Early last month, a cyber attack on I-net, the system used at military premises to access the Internet, resulted in the theft of the personal data of about 850 national servicemen and Mindef employees, including their NRIC numbers, telephone numbers, and dates of birth.

    Classified military information was not compromised in that unprecedented breach — described by Mindef as appearing to be “targeted and carefully planned” — as that is stored on a separate and more secure system which is not connected to the World Wide Web.

    Mindef said it disconnected the affected server after the breach was discovered and carried out immediate and detailed forensic investigations.

     

    Source: Today

deneme bonusu