Tag: Singapore

  • Goh Meng Seng: Singaporeans Are Self-Centred, Fairness And Social Justice Unimportant To Them

    Goh Meng Seng: Singaporeans Are Self-Centred, Fairness And Social Justice Unimportant To Them

    I have met quite a number of Singaporean friends in Hong Kong recently and we naturally talked about the results of last GE2015.

    Part of the observations made are as follows:

    Most Singaporeans don’t put much emphasis on fairness and justice. Most of the time they know with PAP as Government, there are gross injustice and unfair happenings but to them, these are non-issue to them as long as they are not affected by it.

    They would continue to vote PAP even though they know PAP is not exactly a party that uphold fair play and even justice in every sense, as long as they continue to enjoy their own good life. It would be even better if they are given handouts directly, care less about fair or not unfair.

    Most Singaporeans are more self centred and only concerned about their own self interests. Social issues, balance and justice are basically non of their business.

    Even when they chose to swing against PAP is Purely because they are unhappy that their pockets are hurt or interests have been overlooked.

    That is why not many people attend any protests that raise social issues or even important issues but have DISTANT IMPLICATIONS on their self interests.

    What do you think?

     

    Source: Goh Meng Seng

  • Religious Teacher Jailed 3 Weeks For Ill-Treating Children

    Religious Teacher Jailed 3 Weeks For Ill-Treating Children

    He had ill-treated eight children under his care at the Pertapis Children’s Home in Kovan Road.

    Religious teacher Muhammad Abdul Gani, 27, was sentenced yesterday to three weeks’ jail after previously pleading guilty to four of 10 charges of ill-treating the children, aged four to 11.

    The other charges were taken into consideration during sentencing.

    Last month, the prosecution asked for a global sentence of four weeks’ jail for his ill-treatment of the five boys and three girls between 2012 and January last year.

    But District Judge Christopher Goh said yesterday that he was “not convinced” by all of the aggravating factors cited by the prosecution.

    One of them was that Muhammad had deliberately breached the home’s instructions regarding the meting out of corporal punishment.

    Mr Goh said: “In my view, this was neither here nor there. Any institution worth its salt would have such restrictions as to how corporal punishment should be inflicted.

    “The more pertinent issue was how closely the institution monitored whether its instructions were being adhered to.”

    The incidents came to light when an ex-employee of the home told the Child Protection Services (CPS) of the Ministry of Social and Family Development that certain employees had meted out inappropriate punishments to children during religious and sports activities.

    Muhammad was among the five employees named. A CPS manager then made a police report on Feb 10 last year.

    Investigations revealed Muhammad had ill-treated three children in the home’s prayer room.

    On two occasions, he lifted two boys – a seven-year-old and a four-year-old – by grabbing their heads.

    PUNISHED

    He punished one of them for not lining up properly and the other for no apparent reason.

    In another incident, Muhammad pushed a 10-year-old girl in the mouth when she ignored his instruction to stop whistling in the prayer room.

    This caused the back of her head to hit a cupboard.

    Muhammad’s lawyer, Mr Abdul Jalil Muhammad Tahir of AJ Tahir & Co, had recommended a fine, citing medical and psychiatric reports that showed the victims had not suffered adverse physical and psychological effects.

    He said his client was not “the kind to abuse children”.

    While Judge Goh did not believe there was malice on Muhammad’s part, he agreed with the prosecution that Muhammad’s actions were a gross breach of trust and authority.

    “What made these a more serious case… was that these were vulnerable children, sent to the home specifically because they were vulnerable and at risk,” he said.

    During the period of the offences, about 60 children – generally from dysfunctional families, abused or neglected, or beyond parental control – were living in the home.

    The judge acknowledged that caring for disadvantaged children is not easy as a huge burden and responsibility is placed on caregivers.

    “Nonetheless, the paramount interest must be the welfare of the children… Therefore, where incidents such as these do occur, the persons involved must be brought to task and, if found guilty, punished severely,” he said.

    Another employee, Joanne Joy Coloma Dadiz, a 29-year-old Filipina, was charged with one count of ill-treating an 11-year-old girl in December 2013. Her case is pending.

    What made these a more serious case… was that these were vulnerable children, sent to the home specifically because they were vulnerable and at risk.

    – District Judge Christopher Goh

    THE NEW PAPER, SEPT 11
     
     
    Source: www.tnp.sg
  • Cracks Appearing In New BTO Flat, HDB Officer Unwilling To Do Site Visit

    Cracks Appearing In New BTO Flat, HDB Officer Unwilling To Do Site Visit

    Dear Editors,

    I refer to the recent article published in Straits Time regarding crack lines appearing in Punggol BTOs.
    http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/housing/cracks-appearing-in-new-bt…

    We are staying in our new BTOs along Yishun Avenue 1 Blk 431D and several of us here have noticed crack lines appearing in every room in our flats, after renovation commenced above us.

    We are worried about safety and have reported this issue to HDB. However, as the DLP just hit 1 year, they mentioned that they could not do anything much. While we understand that it may not be a structural defect because the HDB officer mentioned that the crack lines need to be more than 3mm or something, we believed that their professional officer should at least come and check instead of brushing us off by calls.

    We hope that the authority will do something. Thank you.

    Adeline
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Ringgit Fall – Abuse, Exploitation Does Not Stop Blue-Collar Workers From Flocking To Singapore

    Ringgit Fall – Abuse, Exploitation Does Not Stop Blue-Collar Workers From Flocking To Singapore

    When 21-year-old Zuhalfizi Ismail from Negri Sembilan arrived to work in Singapore last month, he was confident his family’s mounting debts would be paid off within the year, and he would have saved enough to marry his childhood sweetheart.

    But barely a month into his job as a cleaner with a large Singaporean firm, he now finds himself out on the streets, pockets empty, in one of the richest nations in the world.

    “My boss cancelled my permit, and I have to go home. But when I asked for my salary, he said my contract says they can forfeit my salary because I worked less than three months,” Zulhafizi told The Malaysian Insider.

    He is one of thousands of migrant workers who come to Singaporean non-profit organisation Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics (HOME) every year with complaints of employer abuse or exploitation.

    He is also one of hundreds of thousands of Malaysians in Singapore working blue-collar jobs that locals shun and, ironically, which migrant labourers in Malaysia are doing.

    Zulhafizi, who was working as a general cleaner, said his job was terminated because he had repeatedly demanded to be paid for working overtime.

    “They made me work 12-hour days for six days a week, but said I would only get S$500 (RM1,500) a month.

    “They promised me S$1,200 before I came, but now they say I signed the contract agreeing to S$500.”

    HOME executive director Jolovan Wham said Zulhafizi’s situation was similar to most of the foreign workers who come to the centre.

    “Work contracts are signed in English which most of the foreigners have very little understanding of.

    “Because his employers didn’t technically breach the contract, unfortunately, he doesn’t really have a case,” said Wham of Zulhafizi’s case, adding that HOME was now trying to work out an amicable settlement with his employers.

    Seeking greener pastures 

    Singapore’s thriving economy is a boon for immigrants from poorer neighbours and is now especially enticing for Malaysians with the continued decline in value of the ringgit, Asia’s worst performing currency.

    Most of the semi-skilled or low-skilled workers are willing to accept lower wages than their Singaporean counterparts, and put up with less-than-satisfactory working conditions for the possibility of bringing home much higher wages than if they were to work in Malaysia.

    Wham says apart from contractual disagreements, he has received complaints of physical intimidation by employers seeking to “discipline” their workers.

    “One guy from Sarawak once complained that he was made to do push-ups.

    “Another one was shoved and threatened with a punch,” Wham told The Malaysian Insider.

    Every morning from Monday to Friday, Malaysian semi-skilled and skilled workers gather in Singapore’s Woodlands area with the hopes of being picked up for a day’s work, which will earn them up to S$80 (RM240). – The Malaysian Insider pic, October 14, 2015.

    .A total of 146 Malaysian blue-collar workers sought assistance from the Malaysian High Commission in Singapore from January to June this year, the high commission revealed. Total number of complaints for the whole of last year was 145.

    High commission officials believe the figures are a fraction of the actual number of complaints, as many blue-collar workers find approaching non-governmental organisations, like HOME, for help to be less intimidating.

    “Most of them have problems with their work permits, or their employers are not paying them or are keeping their passports,” a senior official at the high commission told The Malaysian Insider on condition of anonymity.

    “We try to help by contacting their families in Malaysia, or by informing Singapore’s Ministry of Manpower. But honestly, there’s usually very little we can do,” he said, citing “diplomatic sensitivities”.

    According to statistics provided by the Ministry of Manpower, the total number of work permits issued for semi- and low-skilled jobs in 2014 was 991,300. From January to June this year, 993,900 work permits for blue-collar jobs – including cleaners, constructions workers and factory workers – were issued.

    The island-state recorded more than 1.35 million foreign workers last year, a figure that has already been surpassed as of June this year.

    A 2012 World Bank report placed the number of Malaysians working in Singapore at more than 400,000, a figure that Malaysian officials believe has grown much higher in the past two years.

    This means almost half of the tiny republic’s foreign labour force is made up of Malaysians, and the majority of them are in blue-collar jobs.

    Risking arrest, fines and deportation

    The attractiveness of earning in Singapore dollar, which was trading at S$1 to RM3.01 by the end of yesterday, has even emboldened Malaysians to risk hefty fines and arrest.

    Every weekday morning at specific areas around Woodlands – Singapore’s northernmost suburb – hundreds of semi-skilled and skilled Malaysians with no legal permits will wait with the hopes of being picked up by employers looking for day-job workers.

    Jobs ranging from painting to electrical and plumbing works pay from $50 to $80 a day, almost double of what they would get back home for the same amount of work.

    The men wait at coffee shops, bus stations and other fixed spots around Woodlands from as early as 7am, waiting for owners of small cleaning or construction businesses to drive by and take their pick of workers.

    At the end of the day, the workers get dropped back at the pick-up point, where they will make their way home with their day’s wages.

    “Most days we don’t get any work, but sometimes if we’re lucky, an employer will ‘book’ us for a few weeks,” said Ah Lim, a Johor native who was one of the many Malaysians waiting on the steps of Woodlands Centre last Thursday morning hoping to be picked up.

    Under Singapore’s Employment of Foreign Manpower Act, foreigners working without legal permits face a S$24,000 fine and up to 24 months’ jail.

    Ah Lim, who works as a freelance electrician back in Johor Baru, said he was aware that he could be jailed and fined if caught, but says it was a risk he and his friends were willing to take.

    “There’s very little work (in Johor Baru), so it’s better to take the risk and come here every day. By noon, if nobody comes, then I will return home,” he said.

    “But I will come and try my luck again the next morning.”

    Malaysians doing jobs foreigners at home do

    Wham says while Malaysians make up a small percentage of the migrant workers coming to his organisation, he has already seen an increase in the numbers.

    “The Malaysians who come here are doing jobs that foreigners are doing back in Malaysia. They work in low-skilled jobs as cleaners, or work in the service sector,” Wham said, referring to Malaysia’s 2.1 million legal foreign workers, and almost as many illegal migrants, who are employed in industries, such as construction, manufacturing and the service sectors back home.

    “So Malaysia is both a receiving and sending country (of blue-collar workers). It’s quite a unique situation,” he said.

    For Zulhafizi, his short-lived and bitter experience with one employer has not been enough to deter him from trying to seek re-employment in Singapore.

    “If I manage to save S$1,000, and send it back every month, that’s RM3,000! I can’t even earn half that amount in Malaysia, much less save that amount,” he said.

    “Of course, this experience has left me with a bitter taste, but it’s worth risking it again. I can’t find the same opportunity in Malaysia. There, my family is ‘sesat’ (lost).”

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Propnex Investigating Agent For Racist And Anti-Islam Remarks

    Propnex Investigating Agent For Racist And Anti-Islam Remarks

    Amazing…a Propnex Property agent…

    Is an anti Muslim bigot in Singapore…

    Stan Sukhwant

    He first accused Muslims of supporting ISIS. When I told him that we do not support ISIS and we need to look at how the west created the environment for groups like ISIS…

    He responded with insult after insult on Muslims, Islam and Arabs.

    He first said my response about western colonisation is the “biggest b.s. muslims tell the world”. Then proceeded to how starving arabs begged the British to buy their oil…

    That the arabs have zero contribution since 16th century…that I should leave singapore and become a wannabe arab with a GOAT’s beard.

    This Propnex agent then followed up with…

    saying palestine existed is an “Islamic lie”

    and that the whole “god damned middle east can be bombed, since, they are useless”

    He ended with saying I should get an education but not from madrasah.

    I am amazed that such a racist and Islamophobe is in Singapore and representing a major company.

    Why does Propnex work with such anti Muslim bigots?

    Update: We have been informed that Propnex will investigate and take appropriate action.

    Ismail Gaafoor Propnex

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

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