Tag: Singapore

  • More Parents Opting For Beyond Parenting Control Order

    More Parents Opting For Beyond Parenting Control Order

    More parents are taking up a Beyond Parental Control (BPC) order, the Singapore Children’s Society Youth Services said. This order applies to children aged 16 and below and have behavioural problems in school or at home, leading to their parents applying to the Court for assistance in managing them.

    Every Friday at Youth Court, a team of social workers and counsellors from the Singapore Children’s Society Youth Service Centre screen complaints from parents wanting to pursue a BPC order. In the first three months of 2015, the team has screened 113 complaints. It screened a total of 373 complaints for the whole of 2014.

    Among the common complaints by parents – that their children were involved in truancy, were runaways or stayed out late at night.

    “A lot of parents who come to court every Friday to lodge the BPC complaint, a lot of them are desperate,” said Dr Carol Balhetchet, Senior Director at the Youth Service Centre. “Some of them are desperate but are open to listening to other possible alternative care or alternative help. But the majority of them come to court with the intention of forcing through the BPC order, of obtaining the BPC order.”

    Before an order is obtained, counsellors organise a pre-mediation session with parents and their children to see if their issues can be resolved. But if such measures fail, the BPC complaint will proceed. Once accepted by a judge, the child is put into a closed institution – either the Singapore Boys’ Home or Singapore Girls’ Home – for four to five weeks. During that time, an investigation is carried on the child’s background, which will be presented to the judge.

    The judge then has three options: To keep the child in a closed institution, or admit the child in an open institution like Boys’ Town, where they can come out during weekends. The child can also be put under a Statutory Supervision Order, where a counsellor will supervise youth and parents. All options can last between one and three years

    GIRLS MAKE UP MAJORITY OF BPC CASES

    In 2013, there were 83 Beyond Parental Control cases, compared to 66 cases in 2014. But a consistent trend has remained since 2008 – girls form the majority of BPC cases. In 2014, 40 cases involved girls, while 26 cases involved boys. The Youth Service Centre of Singapore Children’s Society says it is also seeing girls become tougher and more aggressive.

    “During adolescence, generally youth could face challenges in regulating their emotions and girls tend to have higher emphasis on maintaining good relationships with significant others and friends,” said counseling psychologist at PsyFit Gerald Boh. “If they could not have quality relationships, they might face difficulty fulfilling their underlying need for love and belonging and, as a result, might exhibit inappropriate behaviours.” These could actually be a cry for help, he said.

    There were three Beyond Parental Control cases involving 11- to 12-year-olds, and 24 cases involving 15-year-olds. The age group of 13 to 14 years old, which comprised 39 cases, made up the majority in 2014.

    The Singapore Children’s Society Youth Services said this is a newer trend. In previous years, the majority of BPC cases were between the ages of 14 and 15 years old.

    The Society said this could be due to the fact that parents are now receiving less family caregiver support. In response, they are encouraging parents to spend more quality time with their children to get to know them better. The Society adds that ultimately, community support is a better solution for a delinquent child than intervention from the authorities.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Teenage YouTuber Amos Yee was back at the State Courts on Tuesday (Apr 21) for a bail review. He had been remanded at Changi Prison since last Friday, after no bail was posted for him following a pre-trial conference that day.

    The 16-year-old appeared in court handcuffed and dressed in a purple jumpsuit just after 4pm, and looked calm. Three lawyers, Alfred Dodwell, Chong Jia Hao from Dodwell & Co LLC, and Ervin Tan from Michael Hwang Chambers LLC told the court they would be acting for Yee pro bono. Mr Dodwell said a bailor was on the way, but offered no further details.

    Yee’s parents were at the State Courts on Tuesday, as well as a few other members of the public who said they were there to show moral support for the teen. Activist Jolovan Wham and was spotted at the Court as well.

    Yee’s pre-trial conference has been moved forward to Apr 30, 3pm.

    He was charged with multiple offences on Mar 31, after posting a video which contained disparaging remarks against Christians. On Apr 14, Yee posted on his blog and made two Facebook posts asking for public donations. Doing this meant he flouted his initial bail conditions – which disallowed him to post materials online.

    The Court on Friday changed the police bail to a court bail, and set new conditions for bail such as making the YouTube video private and having to report to an Investigation Officer at Bedok Police Station every day at 9am.

    YEE BAILED OUT BY YOUTH COUNSELLOR

    Youth Councillor Posts Bail For Amos Yee

    At about 6.10pm, Yee was brought to the bail centre, still handcuffed and with ankle restraints, accompanied by more than five officers. Youth and family counsellor Vincent Law posted bail for him.

    Mr Law said that he came forward to post the S$20,000 bail as he is a Christian, and wanted to show he was not offended by Yee’s posts. “It seems the charges say he made disparaging remarks about Christianity. I’m a Christian and I’m stepping up to say I’m not offended,” he said, adding that he, too, is a parent.

    The 51-year-old, who is not related to the Yee family, hopes that Yee will also be willing to be counselled by him, and that he may respond better to a third party.

    Yee was released at about 7pm.

    YEE AGREED TO PULL DOWN OFFENSIVE POSTS: LAWYER

    Lawyer Alfred Dodwell Acting For Amos Yee

    Mr Dodwell is on the board of directors for socio-political website The Independent.Sg. Asked about his pro-bono contribution to the case, he told Channel NewsAsia: “Because he’s a 16-year-old boy and everybody requires and needs legal representation. Needless to say, I have been following these news and I learnt that he’s not had any lawyer come forward to represent him and it is not easy for anybody to manoeuvre through the criminal justice system let alone a 16-year-old.

    “We may not agree with him on what he has posted… (but) if it is a crime it has to be proven in the court of law and it needs some level of representation, that’s what we’re doing in this case.”

    Mr Dodwell said he had yet to meet with Yee to “have a discussion with him on where he wants to go with this”, but that his client has been cooperative so far, having “immediately agreed” to pull down the offensive posts.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

     

  • Five Bosses Whose Companies Made A Million Dollars Before Their Bosses Turned 30

    Five Bosses Whose Companies Made A Million Dollars Before Their Bosses Turned 30

    When it comes to making big life decisions, Mr Jonathan Yang is a strong believer in trusting his instinct.

    Case in point? When the global financial crisis hit in 2010, the same year he graduated from The State University of New York at Buffalo, it derailed his lifelong dream to go to law school.

    Given the hiring uncertainties in the legal sector at the time, he packed his bags and headed home – no matter that he had already received acceptance offers from Ivy-league law schools.

    That same instinct kicked in in 2013, when after 31/2 years as a public relations consultant, the bachelor decided to plunge into the food and beverage business.

    The 180-degree career change stemmed primarily from the lack of good burritos in Singapore at the time, something he desperately missed after having spent his childhood shuttling between Singapore and California. His parents run a costume business in Singapore and he has a younger brother, 19.

    Convinced that he could shake up the Mexican food scene, he pooled together $120,000 from savings and loans from banks and his parents to start a restaurant.

    Within three months, he had roped in an old childhood friend and trained chef, Mr Elson Lee, 29, to help with the menu and operations, signed a lease for a 1,400 sq ft shophouse in Keong Saik Road and, faster than you can say “quesadilla”, opened the doors to Muchachos.

    It was not an instant hit.

    “I remember on our first day, our total takings were a pathetic $129,” he says with a laugh. “There’s nothing as humbling as the feeling that you are skirting dangerously close to bankruptcy.”

    But news about the cheap and cheerful burrito joint spread and, within a week, Muchachos had lines out the door.

    The business started turning a profit in eight months and hit $1 million in annual revenue seven months later.

    Not one to rest on his laurels, he started his second venture, The Daily Cut – a protein-focused salad bar for gym buffs such as himself, which he saw as filling a gap in the market.

    There was another reason.

    “Truth be told, I wanted to open a new concept just to convince myself that I wasn’t just a one-hit-wonder,” he says with a grin.

    He looked long and hard for the perfect location in the Central Business District before investing a much heftier $300,000 into The Daily Cut, which opened its doors in the basement of One Raffles Place last July.

    The menu, which includes complex carbs and options such as sirloin steak and sous vide eggs at an under $15 price point, has received rave reviews.

    It also helps that there are 13 gyms in the vicinity of his 624 sq ft, 42-seater restaurant.

    The eatery has done so well that he recouped his initial costs in four months and generated more than $1 million in revenue just two months later.

    He is currently working on a second outlet, set to open at Buona Vista business park One-North next month.

    Asked about his success, Mr Yang seems genuinely surprised himself, sheepishly letting on that he had only imagined lasting in the competitive F&B industry for a year, tops.

    “I think it’s helped that I’ve pursued my businesses like a passion. Sure, making money is great, but I’ve tried to focus on the bigger picture,” he says.

    This includes paying his staff above market rate and grooming them for bigger roles in the company.

    “There were tough months where we had to roll up our sleeves and pull 20-hour days to make things work,” he adds.

    “But looking back now, I can confidently say I love my job. At the end of the day, that’s all I can ask for.”


    EUNYCE YAP, 31, AND JOANNA LAM, 29, CO-OWNERS OF FAST-FASHION BRAND, LOVE AND BRAVERY

    Ms Eunyce Yap (left) and Ms Joanna Lam are childhood friends who decided to go into the womenswear business together and started Love and Bravery in 2008. — ST PHOTO: MATTHIAS HO

    In 2005, Love and Bravery was one of Singapore’s first fashion blogshops. It did not even have its own domain and was hosted on the popular microblogging portal Livejournal.com.

    Ten years later, co-owners Eunyce Yap, 31, and Joanna Lam, 29, have built it into a popular womenswear brand with its own online shop at loveandbravery.com and three shops across the island. Prices range between $30 and $40 for a dress.

    The label has also gone from selling mass-manufactured dresses and tops to producing its own prints and designs catered to the young and fashionable working woman.

    The brand now boasts 15,000 people on its mailing list and more than 31,000 fans on its Facebook page. Its bi-annual warehouse sales also attract thousands of women eager for 40 to 50 per cent discounts on its clothing.

    Still, the scale of the business today – it brings out more than 50 new designs every month – is not something Ms Yap says she could have ever imagined.

    The oldest of three daughters in her family, Ms Yap was the one who started the business to sell accessories in 2005, with an initial investment of about $3,000. At that time, she was a mass communications student at Nanyang Technological University.

    Later, when business started to get better, she roped in Ms Lam to help and the duo began travelling to China together to source for more clothes to sell.

    “Back then, it was just for some extra pocket money,” recalls Ms Lam, who is married with no children. “I would help Eunyce out as the sunglasses-wearing model and she paid me with free clothes. It was a win-win for both of us.”

    Gradually, the friends became close working partners. Three years on, their online store became so popular that the clothes were selling out fast, sometimes within the day.

    This prompted Ms Yap, who is married with no children, to quit her $3,000-a-month job at a trading company within just three months of joining to focus on Love and Bravery full-time.

    For two years, she went at it alone, while Ms Lam decided to focus on her full-time job in business operations at a local hospital.

    But by 2011, Ms Lam too had tired of the nine-to-five grind and joined the business full-time as a co-owner.

    The duo moved out of Ms Yap’s home, which had been serving as their office and warehouse space, into a 200 sq ft office.

    Over the next few years, they moved office a number of times to accommodate the company’s rapid growth and finally ended up at its current space, a 4,000 sq ft workspace in Geylang Lorong 23, comprising a reception area, conference rooms, a warehouse space for inventory and its own studio for photoshoots.

    The founders have also been opening brick-and-mortar stores, starting with the brand’s first outlet in Tampines One in 2011, a city store at Hitachi Towers in Raffles Place in 2012 and, most recently, a new branch at Bugis Junction last October.

    Ms Lam, who has a younger sister, says that the physical stores allow the brand to reach more customers and makes it easier for online buyers to collect their orders there.

    The brand’s growth has also given them the opportunity to work with better manufacturers in China and to produce their own designs and prints that they come up with together.

    The business hit $1 million in revenue in 2013 – the same year it became a GST-registered company. Revenue since then has grown by 50 per cent.

    The duo plan to spend this year growing the brand’s online presence before continuing to expand in Singapore.

    Says Ms Lam of the journey: “We really got our hands dirty and did everything ourselves to slowly build this business from the ground up.

    “Watching our clothes and our brand evolve as we grow older has been the best part for us – it’s like we can see our own journey through our clothes.”


    PAULINE NG, 29, FOUNDER AND MANAGING DIRECTOR OF PORCELAIN, THE FACE SPA AND PORCELAIN AESTHETICS

    Ms Pauline Ng, 29, is already scouting locations for a new branch which will provide a retail arm for its skincare line and hopes to expand across Asia. — ST PHOTO: ONG WEE JIN

    There is no doubt that Ms Pauline Ng was born to be anything but an entrepreneur.

    At seven, she photocopied pages of her colouring books for five cents and sold them to her classmates for 10 cents.

    At 17, she started her own event company that organised concerts, private events and themed birthday parties.

    And at 20, while a business student at Singapore Management University (SMU), she was behind the SMU Arts Festival, which helped showcase student talents in music, dance, theatre, film and the visual arts.

    It all came in good stead in 2009 when her beautician mum, Madam Jenny Teng, 50, approached her to help relaunch her facial business, which had tanked in 2004 after the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome in Singapore.

    Having just graduated from SMU at the time, Ms Ng thought helping out her mum meant driving her around in her free time.

    But a few days in, she realised she could help in a more substantial way.

    “My mum wanted to run a skincare business, but her strength was in her treatments and skills,” recalls Ms Ng, who is married to a private banker and has no children. “When it came to technical aspects such as hiring people or planning logistics, she was often lost.” Her retiree father teaches classical guitar and she has a younger brother, 27, who is not involved in the business.

    Ms Ng knew she had it in her to run the business, but was slightly apprehensive given that her relationship with her mother had not always been smooth sailing.

    “We both have strong personalities, which meant we didn’t really see eye to eye when I was growing up,” she says. “It made going into business together a tricky proposition.”

    Still, the two sat down and had a frank discussion, deciding to clearly demarcate roles from the get-go.

    Ms Ng took on the position of founder and managing director, overseeing everything from marketing to procurement, while Madam Teng focused on doing treatments and training staff.

    And though the business started small when they opened in July 2009 (Ms Ng would not disclose their initial investment), appointments at the two-room shophouse outfit in Cantonment Road quickly began picking up – at first thanks to Madam Teng’s loyal clients and later, by word of mouth.

    Within months, Porcelain had become the skincare spa of choice among beauty insiders and appointments with Madam Teng were booked out five weeks in advance.

    Now, its signature Quintessential facial costs $374.50 a pop, but if you want Madam Teng’s personal services, you must pay upwards of $430.

    Ms Ng did not let the success get to her head though.

    She quickly began reinvesting the profits into the business – starting by launching Porcelain’s own skincare line in 2010, hiring more skilled therapists for the business and, later, setting up an aesthetics arm, Porcelain Aesthetics, in July last year.

    After consulting with skincare houses in the United States, Japan and Taiwan, the brand now has 18 exclusive products in their in-house skincare range, with three more slated for release by the end of the year.

    The business became GST-registered and hit $1 million in revenue in 2013 – the same year in which it was named Best Luxury Beauty Spa in Asia at the World Luxury Spa Awards. It won the accolade again last year.

    And though success came quickly for Ms Ng, it has been a rollercoaster ride for the young boss, who now manages a team of 30.

    “I had to adapt quickly with each challenge – such as learning not to scrimp on legal advice after dealing with employment contract issues or realising that, at some point, creating basic spreadsheets on Microsoft Excel just won’t cut it anymore,” she says with a laugh.

    “But in all honesty, I wouldn’t trade the experience for the world. I learnt from each mistake I made and it ultimately shaped the way the business turned out.”

    And despite the business being in a comfortable place, she is already pondering her next steps.

    She lets on that she is already scouting locations for a new branch which will provide a retail arm for its skincare line and hopes to expand across Asia.

    “When I started on this journey, I never imagined this would be a ‘forever’ sort of career,” she says.

    “But having grown along with the business for the past six years, I’ve definitely changed my mind. I couldn’t be prouder of how far we’ve come.”


    LIM QING RU, 30, DIRECTOR OF CUSTOMER ADVOCACY AT AMERICAN SOFTWARE FIRM, ZENDESK

    Ms Lim Qing Ru, 30, found herself a multimillionaire overnight when her technology company Zopim was acquired by an American software company. — ST PHOTO: AZIZ HUSSIN

    Raised frugally by a housewife mother and technical supervisor father, Ms Lim Qing Ru found herself a multimillionaire overnight when her technology company Zopim was acquired by an American software company.

    San Francisco-based, New York Stock exchange-listed Zendesk reportedly paid US$29.8 million (S$40 million) last April to buy over Zopim, which was built by Ms Lim and four other co-founders. Zopim is a chat software that allows brands to have live conversations with visitors on websites in the form of a widget.

    Her entrepreneurial journey started nine years ago, when as a philosophy undergraduate at the National University of Singapore (NUS), Ms Lim attended a cross-college conference at Harvard University, the birthplace of social media start-up-turned-behemoth, Facebook.

    Inspired by the possibility of starting her own tech business, she returned to NUS and took on a minor in technopreneurship and also began looking for like-minded people on campus.

    Her search lead her to Mr Royston Tay, Mr Wenxiang Wu, Mr Yang Bin Kwok and Mr Julian Low, all 32 – four engineer friends who had recently started Zopim.

    The five of them clicked instantly over their shared work ethic and sense of adventure.

    When the men left to pitch their idea to investors in America, they proposed that Ms Lim, who is single, represent them at a start-up competition in Singapore.

    She gamely took on the challenge and reached the semi-finals, despite going at it alone. Impressed by her gung-ho attitude, the four asked Ms Lim to come on board as a co-founder in 2006.

    Before the product was officially launched in 2008, they each drew about $500 a month for about two years.

    This was because they did not accept funding from venture capital companies or angel investors – opting instead to rely on basic seed money from NUS Enterprise, a small investment from the Media Development Authority and $250,000 from Spring Singapore.

    This allowed them to grow the business at their own pace.

    Working tirelessly, the team launched Zopim in 2008, offering it for free to businesses for two years during their period of beta testing.

    When the price plan was officially announced at the end of 2009, businesses that had been using the product free were happy to become paying customers.

    Zopim began turning a profit a few months after.

    By 2012, the group had hit an annual revenue of more than $1 million and was servicing more than 400,000 international clients out of Singapore.

    The runaway success of their widget meant acquisition offers were coming at them from all sides, but the decision to sell the business was not an easy one for Ms Lim.

    “Even though we were open to the idea, it’s hard to put a price on the blood, sweat and tears that go into building a business from scratch,” she says.

    Ultimately, they decided to sell the business to Zendesk last year after realising that “Zendesk was the company we aspired to be in five years”, she says. “Everything from its branding to its management style synced with ours – it was the perfect fit.”

    On April 10 last year, Zendesk officially acquired the business and, a month later, filed its US$150 million initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Shares rose from their initial offering of $9 apiece to $11.40 and are currently trading for $23.80 apiece – making Ms Lim’s partial payout in stocks a goldmine. She declines to say how much she pocketed from the sale to Zendesk.

    But instead of resting on her laurels and enjoying her windfall, Ms Lim took on a salaried position at Zendesk as its director of customer advocacy, overlooking the integration of Zopim with Zendesk. All 30 original Zopim staff now work for Zendesk after the acquisition.

    Last Thursday, the company launched Zopim Premium – an advanced version of the software that enables larger businesses to communicate with their customers in real time.

    More impressively though, Facebook has recently come on board as a partner and is beta-testing the Zopim widget with two American businesses for its Facebook for Business clients.

    Ms Lim proudly mentions that their widget even got a shoutout during Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg’s recent F8 keynote address in San Francisco.

    The down-to-earth boss lets on that the change in her bank account has done little to change her outlook on life.

    She has chosen to skip all indulgent luxuries and, instead, is using her money to help grow other local start-ups.

    “I worked hard to get where I am today and now I’m doing my part by investing in other Zopims of the future,” she says.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Di Manakah Peminat-Peminat Silat Dan Sepak Takraw?

    Di Manakah Peminat-Peminat Silat Dan Sepak Takraw?

    Sementara penjualan tiket bagi beberapa acara di Sukan SEA Ke-28 hangat, sambutan bagi enam sukan yang bakal diadakan di Singapore Expo, termasuk silat dan sepak takraw, kelihatan dingin.

    Ini berbanding tiket bagi pertandingan lawan pedang dan renang telah pun laris sebanyak 80 peratus.

    Namun, kurang 50 hari sebelum Sukan SEA bermula, penjualan tiket bagi pencak silat, sepak takraw, tinju, judo, taekwondo dan wushu masih muram, menurut jawatankuasa penganjur Sukan SEA (Singsoc).

    Dihubungi Berita Harian, Setiausaha Agung Persekutuan Sepak Takraw Singapura (Perses) Abdul Halim Kader berkata pihaknya mengambil berat akan keadaan ini.

    “Kami prihatin dan akan mencari jalan terbaik bagi menggesa warga turun dan memberi sokongan kepada anak muda yang mewakili negara,” katanya.

    Ketua Pegawai Eksekutif (CEO) Persekutuan Silat Singapura (Persisi) Sheik Alau’ddin Yacoob Marican turut menggesa masyarakat setempat daripada pelbagai peringkat usia supaya menyokong pasukan Sukan SEA.

    “Kami tidak bimbang kerana yakin penggemar silat akan tampil memberi sokongan,” ujar beliau.

    Kededua sukan tradisional Melayu itu antara enam sukan yang bakal mengisi dua dewan di Singapore Expo.

    Ruang itu mampu menampung 4,800 penonton secara serentak. Tiket bagi kesemua acara berharga $5 sebelum diskaun.

    “Saya ingin melihat respons yang lebih baik. Persatuan sukan nasional (NSA) memberitahu saya tiada masalah, tetapi saya rasa mereka perlu mempertingkat usaha,” ujar pengerusi Singsoc Encik Lim Teck Yin kepada The Straits Times kelmarin, walau beliau akur warga setempat mempunyai kebiasaan membeli tiket di saat akhir.

    Bersependapat ialah presiden Persatuan Tinju Amatur Singapura Syed Abdul Kadir. Menurutnya, beliau yakin sambutan bagi tinju akan meningkat lebih dekat kepada tarikh pertandingan, berdasarkan pengalamannya apabila Singapura menganjur Sukan SEA 1993.

    “Tinju ada ramai pengikut, terutama dalam kalangan pekerja asing dari Filipina dan Thailand,” katanya.

    Persekutuan Judo Singapura (SJF) sedang mempergiat usaha mendekati masyarakat.

    Pengerusi jawatankuasa penganjur acara judo, Encik Stephen Loh, berkata pihaknya berusaha mendekati pihak berkepentingan seperti kelab judo dan sekolah menerusi lawatan dan e-mel.

    “Jika boleh, saya ingin dewan penuh apabila kami beraksi nanti,” kata Encik Loh.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Maid Punched, Slapped For Eating Fish Not Meant For Her

    Maid Punched, Slapped For Eating Fish Not Meant For Her

    In 2012, a Filipino maid jumped from the bedroom window of a sixth-floor condominium unit to escape the alleged abuse by her employer and her employer’s mother.

    A district court heard that she landed on the fifth-floor rooftop of another building at Maplewoods condominium and broke her legs as a result.

    Her employer, Chua Siew Peng, 43, went on trial yesterday for wrongfully confining Ms Jonna Memeje Muegue at the Bukit Timah Road condominium on Oct 30, 2012, and slapping her the night before.

    Her 74-year-old mother, retired radiograph and medicine technician Lum Wai Lui, will know her fate next month for allegedly pulling the maid’s hair, knocking her head on the wall and pouring bleach on her hands and arms on Oct 29 that year.

    Chua’s 41-year-old sister, Kathleen Chua Siew Wei, is also accused of slapping the maid sometime in May that year.

    Yesterday, Ms Muegue, 26, who is now working for another employer, testified that she was initially treated well when she started work in December 2011.

    She said she was never given the key to the unit’s door and gate from the time she began working for the family.

    She said Lui, whom she called “por por” (grandmother), punished her for eating fish that was not meant for her on Oct 29 that year. After Lum found out, she punched, slapped and slammed Ms Muegue’s head against the wall of the kitchen toilet.

    Ms Muegue said: “She used bleach on me and she poured bleach on my hands and my body.”

    A few minutes later, she said, Chua Siew Peng came in and pulled her hair and slapped her many times.

    Chua then told her to stand in one corner of the toilet and to take a shower at around midnight.

    In the morning, she was alone in the flat when she climbed out of a bedroom window and escaped.

    She was later referred to the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics and a police report was lodged. She was warded in hospital and then admitted to a nursing home.

    The hearing continues.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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