Tag: Singapore

  • Indian Construction Worker Jailed For Molesting 12 Year Old Boy

    Indian Construction Worker Jailed For Molesting 12 Year Old Boy

    A construction worker who molested a 12-year-old boy in a public toilet was jailed for six months on Wednesday.

    Indian national Ravikumar Sathish, 20, admitted using criminal force to outrage the youngster’s modesty at a male toilet in Tampines Mall on March 2.

    A court heard that the boy had been having dinner with his mother when he went to use the loo.

    As he walked out, Sathish bumped into him and grabbed his private parts.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Housing Agent Arrested For Suspected Involvement In Unlicensed Moneylending Activities

    Housing Agent Arrested For Suspected Involvement In Unlicensed Moneylending Activities

    A 40-year-old housing agent has been arrested for his suspected involvement in unlicensed moneylending targeting Housing and Development Board flat sellers.

    Police said today (April 1) that the suspect had loaned S$30,000 each to three persons in the process of selling their flats. The sellers later had to repay their loans after completing the sale of their flats at interest rates of between 233 per cent and 260 per cent.

    The suspect will be charged in court tomorrow for offences under the Moneylenders Act 2010 (Revised Edition). First time offenders found guilty of carrying on the business of moneylending in Singapore without a licence may be punished with a fine of between S$30,000 and $300,000 and with imprisonment up to four years.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • MediaCorp To Release Lee Kuan Yew Documentaries On DVD

    MediaCorp To Release Lee Kuan Yew Documentaries On DVD

    Programmes about the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s founding Prime Minister, will be made available on DVD, said MediaCorp on Wednesday (Apr 1), after the media company said it received overwhelming requests to make them available on DVD for purchase.

    The programmes were broadcast during the period of National Mourning, following his passing on Mar 23, 2015.

    The three-part documentary, Time Nor Tide, was part of a series of special programmes to commemorate Mr Lee’s life and legacy. The series traces Mr Lee’s life and work from the time he entered politics, and includes exclusive archive footage and interviews with local and international personalities.

    Special box set editions of Time Nor Tide in English and Mandarin will be available at S$24.90 from Monday, Apr 6, 2015. They will be sold at all Poh Kim Video outlets and POPULAR/CD-RAMA stores. For bulk orders (above 100 copies), members of the public can email [email protected].

    A set of these programmes in Malay and Tamil will be available for purchasing two weeks later.

    In honour of Mr Lee’s lifetime contributions to the nation, MediaCorp is donating the net proceeds of the first public sale of DVDs to the Community Chest.

    The documentaries are also available for viewing online on Toggle, and on Channel NewsAsia’s website.

    MediaCorp is also planning to produce other programmes on Mr Lee Kuan Yew on DVD. These include In His Own Words, a six-part series of his key speeches over the years; and Forging A Nation, a compilation of short stories capturing significant moments and issues in Singapore’s history.

    These DVDs will be released by end-April 2015. Further information about these titles will be available soon.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • SJI Wins First Schools’ Football Title In 30 Years

    SJI Wins First Schools’ Football Title In 30 Years

    Four years after re-instating football in the school’s curriculum, St Joseph’s Institution (SJI) claimed their first football title in 30 years when they beat Queensway Secondary School 1-0 in the final of the National Schools’ South Zone B Division Football Championship at SAFRA Tampines today (April 1).

    The goal separating the two sides came in dramatic fashion in the dying minutes of extra time when, freed by midfielder Elliot Ng on the right, Nasrul Matin delivered a cross for the unmarked Jared Ng to tap the ball past Queensway keeper Ismail Aung Htun Thu.

    But SJI were left on edge when Mari Martinez was sent off for two senseless infringements, including a handball that gave Queensway the opportunity to take the match into extra time.

    However, Queensway, the better side for most of the match, failed to convert the free kick as referee Victor Teo blew the final whistle.

    SJI’s victory capped four years of hard work by former LionsXII assistant coach and national defender Kadir Yahaya, who was hired in 2012 to help SJI build a decent footballing side after they dropped the sport in 2000.

    They were quick to announce their return, reaching the South Zone C Division Final the following year, but lost 2-1 to Serangoon Garden Secondary School. That defeat only strengthened the team’s resolve to work harder.

    “My team is not as skilful as Queensway, but this is the same team that played in the C Division final two years ago and what got them the winners’ trophy in the end boiled down to sheer hard work,” said Kadir.

    “What has been equally important is that the school did not interfere in my work and this gave me a lot of room to implement my training programme.”

    Better known for its rugby teams, SJI took football off its list of co-curricular activities in 2000, citing declining interest and resource constraints.

    It returned after the SJI Old Boys alumni called for its reinstatement, said Bernard Teo, the teacher-in-charge of football at SJI.

    “There is renewed interest in football at the school with a different crop of students we are getting at SJI,” he said.

    “They have shown more discipline to work hard for the sport and are achieving things and this is good for the school.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 97% Of Singaporeans Would Consider Leaving Singapore To Work Overseas

    97% Of Singaporeans Would Consider Leaving Singapore To Work Overseas

    Ninety-seven per cent of Singaporeans would consider leaving Singapore to work overseas — the biggest proportion in Asia, a poll by recruiting firm Hays showed.

    The poll, released on Monday (March 30), found that 85 per cent of respondents would leave for better job opportunities, career development or exposure.

    Twelve per cent would leave for a change in lifestyle.

    The poll was conducted among 2,553 job seekers in Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, China and Japan.

    China had the second most globally-mobile workforce, with 96 per cent of job seekers willing to work overseas, with better job opportunities, career development or exposure being the key reasons.

    The figure for Hong Kong was 94 per cent and 93 per cent for Malaysia, with most job seekers citing better opportunities, career development or exposure as the factors that would nudge them to leave.

    Japan had a lower proportion of job seekers who indicated they were willing to work overseas — 88 per cent.

    However, it had the biggest proportion of job seekers citing lifestyle factors as a reason for leaving, at 23 per cent.

    Ms Christine Wright, managing director of Hays in Asia, said the opportunity to gain international experience is the top factor driving local talent overseas.

    Employers increasingly value local talent with “international experience and an international mindset”.

    “These candidates are even more highly valued than expatriates since they combine their Westernised way of thinking and experience of how business is done overseas with local cultural understanding,” she said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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