Tag: Singapore

  • Deaf And Mute Foodcourt Cleaner Berated By Woman Intends To Quit His Job This Month

    Deaf And Mute Foodcourt Cleaner Berated By Woman Intends To Quit His Job This Month

    The deaf and mute cleaner who was berated by a woman at the Jem foodcourt is planning to quit his job this month.

    The cleaner, Mr Png Lye Heng, 64, indicated to The Straits Times on Monday (June 6) that he wanted to leave because of the incident.

    To communicate with reporters who interviewed him, he gestured “yes” or “no” to questions written in Chinese on a piece of paper.

    When reporters asked him in writing if he intended to leave his job, he pointed to the response “yes”.

    The incident at the Jurong shopping mall caught the public eye over the weekend. A video, posted by Facebook user Euphemia Lee showed a woman lashing out at a manager of the company providing cleaning services to the Jurong shopping mall foodcourt.

    She can be heard berating the manager, who wanted to be known only as Steven: “If he’s (the cleaner) deaf, ask him don’t work, go home and sleep.

    “Just ask the Government to feed him, go and be a beggar! I don’t care, he took my food!”

    Mr Png said he has been “slightly hurt” by the scolding but had forgiven the woman, who was identified as by The New Paper as Ms Fong. He also said he had enjoyed working at the food court and did not find it difficult to work there.

    Steven, the 51-year-old manager, told The Straits Times that Mr Png had not informed him of his intention to leave later this month, but that he had heard about it from the man’s colleagues. He added that Mr Png had been working at the foodcourt for about a year, and that in the past few days, customers had recognised Mr Png and gestured at him.

    The manager said Mr Png was patient with foodcourt customers. He added that he had asked him if he wanted to wear a badge indicating his disability but he turned down the suggestion.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Faisal Manap: Ramadan Is Opportunity To Become Better Individuals

    Faisal Manap: Ramadan Is Opportunity To Become Better Individuals

    Assalamualaikum Wr. Wb.
    May Peace Be Upon You

    Ramadan Kareem to my fellow Muslims.

    Please allow me to do a brief sharing regarding the month of Ramadan.

    Ramadan is the ninth month in the Muslim calendar (a total of 12 months). During this month, fasting is made obligatory to all Muslims who have reached the age of puberty.

    Now you may ask why do Muslims fast during the month of Ramadan?

    The feeling of hunger and thirst that one experience during fasting will help one to develop compassion for those who are less fortunate and underprivileged. It also allow one to build up a sense of self-control and willpower.

    The holy month of Ramadan is also a period for Muslims to enhance or ‘recharge’ our spirituality through inner reflection and devotion to God which leads to a greater sense of humility.

    With better self-control, willpower, compassion and humility, one will then be able to become an individual who will benefit his community and nation.

     

    Source: Muhammad Faisal Abdul Manap

  • Indonesia Activists Apologise For Planning Demonstration At Singapore Embassy

    Indonesia Activists Apologise For Planning Demonstration At Singapore Embassy

    The group supporting Jakarta governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama on Sunday (Jun 5) apologised for planning to stage a demonstration in front of the Singapore embassy in Jakarta.

    Singgih Widiyastono, one of the founders of Teman Ahok, or “Friends of Ahok”, said he regretted that the group reacted in a provocative manner when two of its members, Amalia Ayuningtyas and Richard Saerang, were questioned by Singapore officials on Saturday.

    “We issued a statement saying that we will deploy a mass movement. We were just being emotional because (Amalia and Richard) were supposed to return home at 10pm, but they didn’t,” said Mr Singgih during a news conference held at the Friends of Ahok secretariat in Jakarta on Sunday (Jun 5).

    Teman Ahok is a volunteer-run group campaigning for Mr Basuki’s attempt to contest as an independent candidate in Jakarta’s gubernatorial election next year.

    On Saturday, the group said that if Amalia and Richard were not released immediately, it would go to the Singapore embassy in Jakarta with its “entire strength that the Friends of Ahok possesses.”

    Their threat went viral on social media. Numerous social media posts in Indonesia had alleged that the two Indonesian activists were detained at Changi Airport.

    The Singapore Embassy in Jakarta on Sunday denied claims that they were detained, saying the pair were denied entry into Singapore as they were intending to carry out political activities in the city-state.

    “Two members of ‘Teman Ahok’ were not detained while they were in Singapore,” said the statement issued by the embassy. “They arrived in Singapore on Jun 4, 2016, and were interviewed by Singapore officials.

    “They informed immigration authorities that they were in Singapore to conduct political activities including raising campaign funds. They were therefore denied entry into Singapore and arrangements were made for them to return to Indonesia,” it said.

    The Indonesian Embassy in Singapore also issued a statement saying that the pair were “not detained” in Singapore, and reiterated that “Singapore law forbids political activities from being conducted in Singapore, and this law should be respected”.

    The statement added: “The embassy had been in communication with Singapore authorities to facilitate their return to Jakarta on Jun 4, 2016. However, because of technical difficulties in the field, the two activists could not return on the last Garuda flight departing Singapore and would depart on the first Garuda flight out of Singapore on Jun 5, 2016, instead.

    “Singapore immigration authorities had provided accommodation and sufficient services to the two activists,” the statement said.

    The two Indonesians arrived back in Jakarta at 11am on Sunday.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Be Honest – Why Are We Selectively Indignant To Racism?

    Walid J. Abdullah: Be Honest – Why Are We Selectively Indignant To Racism?

    -When people who disagree with the government are harassed-

    *silence*

    -When politicians one likes spout racist comments-

    *silence*

    -When fences for foreign workers are mooted-

    *silence*

    -When Donald Trump suggests a wall to be built on the border, Muslims to be monitored, and that Mexicans are rapists-

    ‘This is absolutely outrageous. No human being who believes in the values of liberty and democracy, and basic human rights, should tolerate this. This is an attack on all of us. I really hope Americans do not vote for this demagogue. He is a threat to the entire world.’

    ——

    Selective outrage sure is not limited to Fox News.

    If we are inconsistent in our indignation toward similar events/actions, it is then perhaps timely to touch our hearts and ask ourselves what we are actually disgusted with or angry about. Our selective outrage could reveal more about ourselves than about people like Trump.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • WearWhite: Stand Up Against The LGBT Ideology

    WearWhite: Stand Up Against The LGBT Ideology

    I’m wearing white today.

    Not because I’m a bigot. This is a secular country. What one does behind closed doors is between him and his Maker.

    I’m wearing white today.

    Because I’m standing up against an ideology. An insidious ideology that wishes to radically change society at its very core. Do not be deceived. Pinkdot is not there to promote ‘free love’.

    It is there to change the structure of society itself. It has stated as its goal the repeal of 377A.

    BUt that is not its endgame.

    They will push on and on…..

    Imagine this scenario:

    At City Hall gay couples queue to get married. In attendance are ‘Liberal’ religious priests and imams. At a nearby mosque an openly gay imam is conducting a marriage ceremony of another gay couple.

    Down Orchard Road is a gay pride parade. As they moved down Bras Basah road the backdrop of the gay pride parade is the Sultan mosque. Images are beamed worldwide, with the Sultan mosque standing as a very visual symbol of our docility to stand up for our beliefs. Our toilets must now be completely gender free, with full grown men sharing it with six year old girls.

    If we do not share this vision of Singapore, then we have to make our stand. Now.

    And not stand by the wayside mired in our own docility. And I speak to the young. If you have a young family or thinking of getting married etc, ask yourself what kind of Singapore do you envision for your children when you look into their eyes?

    I’m wearing white today. And I urge my Christian friends to wear white to church this weekend.

    I too will be wearing white on Sundsy evening to welcome the blessed month of Ramadhan.

    I invite all of us to wear white this weekend.

    More importantly we should make a stand. Learn about he LGBT ideology. Speak about it to our family friends n neighbors. Start a conversation going.

    May God bless our efforts. And may He Protect our country from forces – foreign and local – who wish to fundamentally change the structure of the family itself.

    ‪#‎wearwhite‬

     

    Source: Syed Danial

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