Tag: Singapore

  • Temasek Yang Dulu Bukan Seperti Singapura Sekarang

    Temasek Yang Dulu Bukan Seperti Singapura Sekarang

    Temasek yang dahulu bukan lah Singapurak yang sekarang…

    1. Populasi imigran Cina di Temasek berjumlah kurang 100k di Pulau Singapurak pada tahun 1700an. Kebanyakan menjadi peniaga dibawah koloni pemerintahan Syarikat Indian British dan buruh kasar kongsi ladang di Johor.

    2. Kemerosotan populasi Melayu semakin merosot akibat kemasukan besar besaran imigrasi etnik Cina semasa berlaku revolusi dan perang di Benua China pada tahun 1800-1900. Populasi etnik Cina di Singapurak meningkat naik kepada 900k.

    3. Peperangan dunia kedua membawa masuk lebih ramai etnik2 Cina dari seluruh benua Cina. Tempias juga kepada populasi di Tanah Melayu dengan kaum cina semakin menjadi jadi menguasai segala serba serbi sektor ekonomi.

    4. Salah satu sikap peniaga Cina yang mendatangkan ketidakpuasan hati rakyat asal Tanah Melayu dan Singapurak Melayu ini adalah kelicikan mereka menguasai dengan pantas jaringan perniagaan. Tiada ruang diberikan langsung kepada peniaga Melayu untuk berkembang. Ini kerana peniaga Melayu kekurangan modal dana untuk berkembang dimana jaringan peniaga Cina bekerjasama sesama sendiri memberi bantuan kewangan menyebabkan mereka pantas menguasai segenap ruang yang ada.

    5. Tahun 1900 banyak bank bank dikuasai etnik Cina ini membuka cawangan berkembang di Tanah Melayu dan Singapura. Dengan licik mereka mula berpakat dengan British untuk menguasai Tanah Lombong dan Perladangan. berjuta juta hektar tanah dimiliki oleh pelabur peniaga Cina tersebut.

    6. Itu bab sejarah asal usul perkembangan ekonomi kaum Cina. Sekarang kembali kepada topik asas Cina Kiasu di Singapurak.

    7. Kaum Cina ini golongan yang sangat licik sekali. Mereka yang akan timbulkan masalah dan mereka juga yang akan kedepan seolah olah sang penyelamat dengan memberikan penyelesaian kepada masalah. Sebab itulah orang Eropah menggelarkan bangsa Cina ini sebagai Virus Yahudi di Timur Dunia.

    8. Contoh paling kritikal adalah kemunculan Komunis Cina di Tanah Melayu dan Singapurak. Orang Cina yang mewujudkannya. Kemudian mereka juga menubuhkan parti radikal perkauman Cina seperti MCA, DAP dan PAP seolah melawan komunis tersebut. Walhal seumpama pepatung puppet sahaja. String atau talinya tetap dimainkan belakang tabir oleh elitis2 Cina tersebut.

    Orang Melayu buta berpolitik. Maka termakan dakyah tipu helah sebagaimana beratus ratus tahun sudah ditipu hidup hidup oleh sang penjajah2.

    9. Kesannya?… Singapurak secara halus dilepaskan (Expulsion) dari genggaman pemerintahan orang Melayu dari Tanah Melayu selama lamanya. Tertubuhlah Republik Singapurak purak.

    10. Pada awal penendangan Singapurak dari Persekutuan Tanah Melayu (Malaysia) pada 1965, populasi orang Melayu hanya 15%. Buddha Cina menguasai Singapurak dengan 75% populasi.

    11. Julat yang sama seperti Pulau Pinang dan bandar bandar ekonomi utama di Malaysia skang ni. Nampak tak plot trend disitu?…

    12. Sekarang ini, julat populasi masih kekal sama dengan Melayu penduduk asal Singapurak hanya kekal berjumlah 15%. Macam mana boleh terjadi perkara begini?… Sedangkan populasi jumlah kaum cina di Malaysia sudah pun meningkat naik mencecah 45%?…

    13. Bagaimana kerajaan cauvinis perkauman Cina yang menguasai Republik Singapurak menjalankan operasi mengawal populasi kaum Melayu dengan berjaya?…

    14. Mudah. Kerajaan Cina Buddha Cauvinis Singapurak selama ini menjalankan dasar licik :

    – Dasar Ketat Peneutralan Imigrasi untuk orang Melayu
    – Mengetatkan undang2 perkahwinan campur antara Muslim dan non Muslim di Singapurak

    15. Di Singapura orang bukan Islam dilarang keras oleh undang undang untuk berkahwin dengan orang Islam (MELAYU). Tetapi dibenarkan oleh liberal law untuk berkahwin tanpa bertukar agama. Sama seperti yang terjadi di Indonesia juga sekarang ini. Anak2 golongan kawen tanpa asas agama ini sekarang semakin ramai di sana. Secara harafiah institusi ke Melayuan sudah pun dirosakkan dengan sistematik.

    16. Peneutralan kerakyatan Melayu juga diperketatkan. Dasar berbeza digunapakai terhadap golongan Cina yang mahukan kerakyatan Singapurak dengan dilepaskan secara mudah didalam sistem imigresen. Kesannya populasi kerakyatan baru Singapurak dikalangan etnik Cina semakin meningkat berpuluh2 ribu setahun.

    17. Dasar perundangan antara Melayu dan Cina juga berbeza. Registry of Muslim Marriages (ROMM) dan Registry of Marriage (ROM) untuk non-Muslims. Poligami juga diharamkan terus di Singapurak.

    18. Dari sejumlah 6 juta warga Singapurak sekarang, hanya 15% saja Melayu Muslim. Itu berjumlah 900k semenjak 50+ tahun yang lepas. Selagi menjadi MINORITI, maka nasib orang Melayu kerap lah tertindas dan tidak terbela.

    19. Apakah mungkin nasib orang Melayu di Singapurak boleh berulang di Malaysia kelak?…

    20. Dan orang2 Cina di Malaysia tidak habis habis mencari pasal dengan hak keistimewaan orang orang Melayu yang termaktub didalam Kontrak Sosial dan Perlembagaan Malaysia.

    21. Apa yang menjadi polemik bukan hubungan antara kaum Melayu dan Cina yang menjadi masalah. Tetapi sikap tamak dan keinginan kaum Cina yang mahu menapau semua saki baki kek yang ada seolah tidak mencukupi amatlah menakutkan orang2 Melayu skang ni.

    22. Jika tidak dirawat masalah ini, tidak mustahil akan terjadi protest besar besaran anti Cina berulang lagi pada masa depan. Amuk itu ayat khusus alter terahsia orang Melayu.

    23. Jika Melayu mengamuk dah berubah fikiran dengan menyatakan tegas bahawa cukup lah sudah perkongsian selama ini dengan kaum Cina dan mahu kod perkongsian selama ini dihapuskan… Soalan lain yang tak mustahil akan timbul masa depan :

    DIMANA KAUM CINA MALAYSIA MAHU BERPINDAH?…

    24. Terlalu lama memberi ruang dan berkongsi lama kelamaan orang Melayu juga yang kena pijak. Hanya masa saja menentukan tahap kesabaran orang Melayu boleh bertahan berapa lama lagi.

    Kami sayangkan senyuman manismu,
    Tetapi Kami juga bencikan kelicikan kamu memijak menindas kepala kami…

    Fikirkanlah…

     

    Source: Amzarul Yuzrin Bin Mohd Yusof

  • Lawyer M Ravi To Contest As An Independent In Ang Mo Kio

    Lawyer M Ravi To Contest As An Independent In Ang Mo Kio

    Lawyer M Ravi today (Feb 2) declared in a hastily-called press conference his intention to contest the next General Election as an independent candidate in Ang Mo Kio constituency.

    Sending the media the invitation roughly three hours before the press conference started yesterday afternoon at The Fullerton Bay Hotel, he spent nearly an hour unleashing a tirade against the Government for not treating Singaporeans with due respect and not putting their interests above those of foreigners.

    His electoral campaign, he said, will focus on seeing Singaporeans “being put first”. He also brought up a range of issues he wants to tackle should he be elected. For example, he called for the four official languages here — Malay, English, Mandarin and Tamil — to be made compulsory in school curriculum to “promote equality in the languages”.

    The lawyer, who has taken on a number of cases involving government leaders, including the recent defamation suit by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong against blogger Roy Ngerng, said he chose to run in Mr Lee’s constituency because he (Mr Ravi) has a quarter of his relatives living there. He said he has not firmed up plans on who will run with him in the six-member Group Representation Constituency. Mr Ravi also said he aspires to become the Prime Minister one day. He claimed that he had set aside S$1 million for his campaign and said more details of his manifesto will be announced on Friday.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Online Betting Sites Blocked As Remote Gambling Act Comes Into Force

    Online Betting Sites Blocked As Remote Gambling Act Comes Into Force

    Visitors to online gambling sites would have found themselves shut out yesterday after the authorities blocked access to several hundred of them, as laws to curb remote gambling kicked in.

    The list of websites to be blocked will be regularly reviewed, but details will not be made public, a Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) spokesperson told TODAY.

    “The MHA and the Media Development Authority are working with Internet service providers (ISPs) to ensure that the blocking of websites is implemented smoothly,” the spokesperson said.

    As the law came into force yesterday, some regular visitors to remote gambling websites found that they were unable to withdraw money that they had deposited for games on those sites.

    A check by TODAY showed that as of 10pm yesterday, some popular betting sites such as ibcbet.com and sbobet.com had been blocked. Some other popular sites were still 
accessible.

    The Remote Gambling Act, which was passed in Parliament on Oct 7 last year, outlaws remote gambling services. “It is also an offence under the Act to publish remote gambling service advertisements and promote remote gambling in Singapore. Offending websites will be served notices to remove these materials,” said the MHA spokesperson.

    Under the new legislation, it is an offence to gamble in Singapore using remote communication such as via websites or to use a remote gambling service such as mobile apps that are not provided by an exempt operator. Those who break the law may be fined up to S$5,000, or jailed for up to six months or both.

    The Association of Banks in Singapore confirmed that banks here had been informed that the Act would come into force yesterday and said it had “ensured compliance with its provisions” after it received orders from the Monetary Association of Singapore (MAS) to do so.

    The MAS yesterday ordered all licensed banks, card issuers, holders of stored value facilities and operators of any payment system designated under the Payment Systems (Oversight) Act to block payment orders involving mobile or Internet gambling application or websites.

    Financial institutions are not to accept credit or proceeds of credit, any cheques, bank drafts or similar instruments, or make or accept electronic fund transfers or any fund transmissions to or from remote gambling services.

    They are also to block payment and prohibit transactions to merchant category codes 7995 MasterCard, 7995 Visa, 7995 UnionPay, 7995 JCB and 7995 Diners.

    Meanwhile, StarHub, an ISP here, yesterday told TODAY that it was putting measures in place, in compliance with the new law. However, it was not able to share information on the blocked websites due to confidentiality obligations, said a spokesperson.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Lee Hsien Loong Instructs The Revise Of Electoral Registers

    Lee Hsien Loong Instructs The Revise Of Electoral Registers

    Singapore’s voter rolls are being revised to ensure they are current.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has directed that the revision of the registers of electors be made and completed by April 30, according to Monday’s Government Gazette.

    This is the second time the voter rolls will be revised since the 2011 General Election.

    The Parliamentary Elections Act requires that the voter rolls be updated not more than three years after a general election. It also provides for the Prime Minister to call for revisions from time to time.

    But the last revision, which was done last year, had already fulfilled that requirement as the election was held on May 7 in 2011.

    When completed, it showed that there were 2,411,188 eligible voters as of March 31 last year.

    To qualify as an elector, a person has to be a Singapore citizen. He must also be 21 years old or older as of Feb 1 this year and also cannot be disqualified as an elector under any written law.

    In addition, the person must have a Singapore residential address registered with the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority as of Feb 1 this year.

    This is so that his name can be entered or retained in the register for a constituency.

    The Elections Department will give details later about public inspection of the revised electoral rolls.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Former Presidential Election Candidate Tan Kin Lian Posts Racist Remarks On Foreigners

    Former Presidential Election Candidate Tan Kin Lian Posts Racist Remarks On Foreigners

    Former presidential candidate Tan Kin Lian has come under fire from netizen for posting a status seen by some as racist.

    Mr Tan had taken a photo on board a bus where all the commuters in the photo appeared to be foreign workers from India.

    He accompanied the photo with the caption “I boarded SMRT 857 and found that I was in Mumbai. Hahaha.”Preview

    He had likely intended it as a light hearted observation of the number of foreigners in Singapore and passed comment on a common frustration Singaporeans feel but doing so on a public platform like Facebook wasn’t taken well by netizens.

    Many commented that his comments were racist and unfit for someone who was once running for presidency.

    Some netizens commented that they were glad that he wasn’t voted in or he could have steered Singapore wrongly or made such social media gaffes which could result in international outrage.

    However, some others also defended Mr Tan saying that the comment itself was not particularly racist as he was just observing that the commuters were probably from India and did not make any derogatory or otherwise negative comments about them.

    It is also clear that many people agreed with Mr Tan or at least found his comment accurate and funny as there were at least 101 people to like his status.

    Mr Tan has since removed the Facebook post after the heavy criticism received but he failed to remove the linked post on Twitter which still shows his post and some users comments in response.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

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