Tag: Singaporean

  • Security Executive To Be Jailed And Caned For Unlawful Possession Of Air Pistol And An Unexecuted Robbery Attempt

    Security Executive To Be Jailed And Caned For Unlawful Possession Of Air Pistol And An Unexecuted Robbery Attempt

    A security executive who was facing financial difficulties came up with an elaborate plan to rob a bank with an illegal air pistol – but got cold feet at the last minute and went to work instead.

    Ng Shi Qiang, 31, did extensive online research on bank heists and carried out reconnaissance missions at several banks here.

    He decided to target the POSB outlet in Block 926 Yishun Central 1 and turned up there on the morning of Oct 14, 2013, carrying a bag with the pistol and other equipment.

    Ng could not bring himself to carry out his plan to rush in the front door when two women arrived to unlock it, as he did not want to hurt them.

    He left and stashed the items in a dry riser unit at a nearby HDB block.

    But by the time he returned to retrieve them two days later, a resident had already discovered them and called the police.

    On Wednesday, Ng was jailed for five years and nine months and ordered to be given six strokes of the cane, after pleading guilty to having unlawful possession of the Beretta pistol. One other charge under the Arms Offences Act, for having various component parts of firearms, was taken into consideration.

    The court heard that Ng had received the air pistol from his 27-year-old brother, a regular serviceman in the Singapore Navy. His brother had brought it back from Taiwan in May 2013.

    He later decided to rob a bank to pay off his debts, which included $50,000 chalked up on credit cards and a $100,000 loan from his mother-in-law.

    Ng has two young children and previously worked as a security guard and army regular.

    He could have been jailed for between five and 10 years, and ordered to be given at least six strokes of the cane.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Becoming A Millionaire At 28 Came At A Price For This Lady

    Becoming A Millionaire At 28 Came At A Price For This Lady

    On the middle finger of her left hand, Lim Qing Ru sports a ring with “April 10 2014” engraved on it.

    That was the day news broke that Zopim, the tech company she joined as a co-founder in 2008, had been acquired by an American software company for a reported US$29.8 million (roughly S$37 million).

    The payout was split between herself and four other co-founders, making her a multimillionaire overnight. She was then two weeks shy of her 29th birthday.

    “We went from being nameless entrepreneurs to instant role models for the tech industry,” says Qing Ru, who turns 30 this April. “All of a sudden, everyone was paying attention to us.”

    Journalists spun a blithe tale about how a group of scrappy entrepreneurs finally made good after years of surviving on meagre salaries: They created a winning product – a chat widget that allows business owners to send instant messages to customers and provide real-time customer service – after which the company was wooed by US-based customer support firm Zendesk. The co-founders then signed an acquisition deal that gave each of them multimillion-dollar payouts. It was the perfect rags-to-riches tale. Or so it seemed.

    Like giving up a child
    The truth was, it wasn’t quite the happily-ever-after that most people imagined it to be.

    “[The acquisition] wasn’t an easy decision,” admits Qing Ru. “I spent seven years building the company with my blood, sweat and tears. Then, I had to let it go.” After signing the agreement, she sobbed uncontrollably. Till this day, she hasn’t spent a cent of her millions – she can’t bear to. All of it is sitting in a bank.

    If going into a business is like getting married (“you stick with your partners through thick and thin”), then building a company is like giving birth to a child, she explains. “It’s heartbreaking to give up your baby.”

    Even after the deal was closed, there were nail-biting moments. At the time of acquisition, Zendesk was a relatively young company and had not yet launched its initial public offering (IPO) – its IPO was launched only in May, the month following the acquisition. A portion of Qing Ru’s payout was in the form of Zendesk shares, which could very well have ended up worthless if the IPO had failed. “If things had turned out badly, I would never have forgiven myself,” says Qing Ru. “I would have signed away my baby for nothing.”

    Fortunately, things went well. Zendesk shares started trading at $11.40 apiece – above the company’s off ering price of $9 – and their value doubled to around $23 apiece in December. Every day, she thanks her lucky stars that her instincts turned out right.

    How it started
    Money was never Qing Ru’s motivation in life. Her supervisor father and housewife mother were frugal folk who often took her to playgrounds as a child as they didn’t want to splurge on toys. She says cheekily: “I became quite a bully. If I saw a boy on my favourite toy car at the playground, I’d tell him to get off! When you have to share, you learn to fight for what you want.”

    She majored in philosophy at the National University of Singapore. While there, she was disappointed to learn that most of her seniors had ended up as public servants. Being a bureaucrat and following procedures wasn’t her idea of an exciting career.

    After poking around, she stumbled upon the university’s underground start-up scene: Student entrepreneurs were working in converted bungalowoffi ces on the fringes of the campus. Engineers, programmers and designers ate, slept and worked side by side in these spaces, feverishly talking about their passion projects. “Just being in the same room as them, and soaking up their energy, excited me,” she says. “They were a very different breed.”

    Through these circles, Qing Ru met Royston Tay, Wu Wenxiang, Kwok Yang Bin and Julian Low. The four friends had just started a new tech company: Zopim.

    She and the boys were all straight talkers and shared the same sense of fun. When the guys travelled to Silicon Valley to pitch their company to investors, they asked Qing Ru to represent them in a Singapore start-up competition. Soon after, they invited her to join Zopim as a co-founder.

    Surviving on $500 salaries
    Most entrepreneurs have the same woe: slogging for hours on pitiful pay, fuelled only by passion and coffee refills.

    But Qing Ru is reluctant to dwell on those details. “If we had focused only on the sacrifices, we never would have accomplished anything,” she says. “Was it really important to have a big pay cheque? You don’t need a lot to survive. Was it really important to work only eight hours a day? But we enjoyed our work! These ‘sacrifices’ were conscious choices we made.”

    They weren’t easy choices though. In her first year of work, Qing Ru and her co-founders paid themselves just $500 a month. After that, they went without salaries for half a year.

    She recalls having food poisoning and not being able to afford the $15 doctor’s consultation fee. “I went home, cried and slept it off ,” she says baldly.

    Stress and long working hours turned her skin sallow. She talks self-deprecatingly about how she stopped bothering with makeup and haircuts, and wore cheap, baggy pants (“the sort from the pasar malam!”) to work as she had no money to shop.

    “I would think, ‘How can I care about clothes when I have sh*t to do!?’” she says with a laugh. Even her boyfriend started hinting about her sloppy dressing. “He met sharply dressed women in his investment banking job… and then he’d meet me,” she deadpans.

    The two broke up several times, partly due to the strain of their jobs, but they always got back together; they’re still dating now. “Being apart made me appreciate him more,” she reflects. “He saw me through my struggles and we survived so many problems together. That’s more important than finding some fantasy guy with a checklist of impeccable qualities.”

    A tough fighter
    One of Qing Ru’s most enduring memories of Zopim is that of the founders’ twice-yearly performancereview sessions. Th e five of them would coop themselves up in a room for 14 hours without breaks and give one another feedback – and they didn’t mince their words.

    “If something had been handled badly, we would say ‘that sucked’ or ‘that project was f*cked up’,” she says. “I was in charge of marketing and my co-founders once said to my face that none of my work mattered if I couldn’t deliver a viral campaign.”

    Such sessions were part of the company’s culture of absolute honesty. “When your team sets high standards for you, it means they trust you to deliver,” she says, adding that her colleagues’ candidness was vital in pushing her to improve. She adds with a grin: “It helps that I’m very thick-skinned.”

    Where to go from here?
    Today, Qing Ru is the director of customer advocacy at Zendesk. While she’s happy in her role, one senses a certain restlessness when talking to her.

    Now that Zopim is a success, she dreams of creating another start-up one day. “Starting a business is not about making money – I mean, how much do you need to survive?” she says. “It’s about the legacy you want to leave behind… the impact you want to have on the world.” — HW

    Photography: Frenchescar Lim; Art Direction: Alice Chua; Styling: Violet Foo; Hair: Kazu Leong/Kenaris Salon, using Redken; Makeup: Ernest Lim, using Yves Saint Laurent Beaute; Jumpsuit: Zara

     

    Source: www.herworldplus.com

  • Girl Poses Nude At Carpark Entrance And Posts Photo On Tumblr

    Girl Poses Nude At Carpark Entrance And Posts Photo On Tumblr

    Stomper Xox was shocked to see a girl’s naked photo online, where she had posed naked in public — in front of a carpark entrance.

    According to the Stomper, she and her friend had spotted this posting on Tumblr.

    In the photo, the girl is standing in front of a carpark’s entrance, completely nude and holding up the “peace” sign.

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

  • Parang-wielding Man Tasered At Toa Payoh

    Parang-wielding Man Tasered At Toa Payoh

    Police officers had to use a Taser gun on a man who brandished a 30-cm-long parang in Toa Payoh Central on Monday night, said reports.

    The incident, which occurred at a coffeeshop at Block 78C, involved a 54-year-old man wearing a red shirt and another man.

    An eye-witness by the name of Mr Wang told Shin Min Daily News that the man in the red shirt had whipped out the weapon following what appeared to be a heated argument between the duo.

    Mr Wang, a 47-year-old property agent, said there were about 10 people in the coffeeshop and that the situation was tense, with some people holding up chairs in self-defence.

    Up to five police officers arrived quickly at the scene and shouted at the man to put down his weapon, but he refused, said the report. Shortly after, a woman’s scream was heard and there was a loud noise as the man slumped to the floor.

    According to the report, he is believed to have been tasered. Police officers then surrounded him and he was handcuffed.

    Another witness, who sent a video to citizen journalism website Stomp, claimed that the man had started to threaten passers-by with the parang.

    A police spokesman told The Straits Times: “Police received a call on Feb 23 at 11.33pm requesting for assistance at Block 78C, Toa Payoh Central.

    “Upon police arrival, a 54-year-old man was arrested for possession of offensive weapon.”

    The man was conscious and was taken to Tan Tock Seng Hospital, added the spokesman. Police investigations are ongoing.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

     

  • Come Aboard The Gay Love Boat In Singapore

    Come Aboard The Gay Love Boat In Singapore

    Dear TRS,

    I don’t want to be homophobic or anything but I wish highlight a major hypocrisy in our system.

    I read that there is a Gay Cruise which will berth at Marina Bay Cruise Centre in April:

    Gay Cruise from Singapore to HK​, coming Singapore April 2015​

    http://atlantisevents.com/Singapore-to-Hong-Kong-Cruise/40#overview

    March 29 – April 9, 2015
    Singapore to Hong Kong Cruise
    Celebrity Millennium

    This is outrageous, Singapore welcomes World largest Gay Cruise to Marina Bay Centre Cruises.

    The Penal Code 377A is against man to man sex, anal etc, yet we allow such a gay cruiseship to be berth in Singapore, and welcome 2000+ gays to visit and transit in Singapore.

    The government has repeatedly explained that they are not ready to repeal s377A despite a lot of support and a growing Pink Dot community.

    However, when commercial benefits are involved, such as in this cruise, they openly welcome thousands of people into Singapore even though they are likely to be breaking the law that the government refuses to repeal.

    If the government is saying that there are cultural issues and Singapore is conservative, that’s why we need 377A, how can we welcome such a huge group of people to come here who may conflict with that culture?

    Is it just for monetary gains, the govt allows such cruise chip to come via Marina Bay Cruise Centre.

    This isn’t really a debate about s377A but the hypocrisy is outstanding.

    TH

    TRS Contributor

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com