Tag: Singaporeans

  • Primary 5 Boy Falls To Death After Failing Exams For The First Time

    Primary 5 Boy Falls To Death After Failing Exams For The First Time

    In his first four years in primary school, he had never fared poorly in any examination subject, usually averaging about 70 marks.

    But in this year’s mid-year exams, the Primary 5 pupil found out that he had failed two papers – mathematics and Higher Chinese.

    On May 18, the boy was found dead at the foot of his Sengkang block, just nine days after his 11th birthday.

    He was due to collect his exam results that day for his parents to acknowledge.

    A coroner’s inquiry into the boy’s death yesterday was told that his 45-year-old mother thought he had killed himself over his exam results by jumping from his bedroom window in the 17th-storey flat.

    But his father, a 47-year-old customer service engineer, felt his son had accidentally fallen to his death.

    The identities of the boy, his family members and his school cannot be disclosed because of a gag order.

    Yesterday, investigation officer Inspector Lynn Ong told State Coroner Marvin Bay that the boy’s mother, a housewife, had expected him to score at least 70 marks per subject for his exams.

    He had scored about 70 marks for every subject from Primary 1 to Primary 4.

    If he did not meet her expectations, she would cane his palm lightly, Insp Ong said, adding: “She would hit him once for every mark short of 70 marks.”

    However, she would cane him only if his average score across all subjects was below 70 marks.

    “Sometimes, she would look through his examination papers first, and if they were difficult, she would not hit him.”

    His mother also rewarded him when he did well, such as buying him a gift.

    For the mid-year exam, he had asked for a kite, and she bought one for him on May 14, even before the results were out. He went out to fly the kite with his father the next day.

    The school principal described the boy as an average performer who was generally able to cope with school.

    The principal also said that pupils tend to see a dip in their exam results in Primary 5 because of changes in the exam format to prepare them for PSLE.

    The boy found out his results before May 18, when the exam papers were returned to the pupils for checking.

    Out of 100 marks, he scored 50 for English, 53.8 for Chinese and 57.5 for science. He fared poorly in two subjects, scoring 12 marks for Higher Chinese and 20.5 for mathematics.

    UPSET

    The boy’s Chinese and Higher Chinese teacher noticed that he was visibly upset after receiving the results for both subjects.

    However, his science teacher saw him on May 17, a day before he was supposed to take his results home to show his parents, and he was cheerful and bubbly as usual, the court heard.

    On May 18, his father noticed that he was taking a longer time than usual to get ready for school.

    His mother tried to open the bedroom door, but it was locked.

    She used a spare key to unlock it, and when they entered the room, he was nowhere to be seen.

    The couple, who also have a 16-year-old daughter, looked out of the window and saw their son lying on a grass patch at the foot of their block.

    His mother called the police at around 6.50am.

    She called his school about 15 minutes later and told the principal what happened and said she needed help as her husband was distraught.

    Insp Ong said that when the principal arrived at the scene, the mother was “very emotionally unstable”.

    “She heard her lamenting in Mandarin, saying ‘I only asked for 70 marks, I don’t expect you to get 80 marks,’” Insp Ong added.

    A paramedic pronounced the boy dead at the scene at around 7am.

    The police do not suspect any foul play.

    The cause of death was found to be multiple injuries, consistent with those sustained after a person had fallen from height.

    Coroner Bay will deliver his findings today.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Ustaz Abd Al-Halim: Is ARS Just A Mechanism For Asatizahs To Be Controlled By The State?

    Ustaz Abd Al-Halim: Is ARS Just A Mechanism For Asatizahs To Be Controlled By The State?

    AsSalaam’alaikum!

    I recently attended a seminar on making the Asatizah Recognition Scheme mandatory. It is clear that asatizahs are worried that if they resist the ARS scheme i.e. teach even if they are without ARS, they could be arrested and put to jail. One person actually asked that question during the Q & A. Of course, there is as yet no passing of any laws. There is no police force to watch over the asatizahs for now. But the indications that the speakers gave is that there will be law enforcement. One speaker spoke of levying fines upon asatizahs who do not comply. It is one thing to come up with a questionable policy but entirely another to implement it. I wonder if such enforcement is to be done by the government which is, by the way, secular. If so, will we have a secular non-Muslim government sending police officers out to arrest asatizahs who do not have ARS but are nonetheless qualified to teach given that they have been teaching for years and years and that they have been appointed to teach by ulama before ARS came along?

    I spoke to a senior person who is knowledgeable in Islam afterwards. He is not convinced that making ARS mandatory is about stemming “ajaran sesat” (deviant teachings). Instead he, like many others know that this is becoming a draconian mechanism to control the asatizahs. He further quipped that if they are concerned with ajaran sesat, there are many ideas that the religious authorities themselves seem to propagate that can be classified as “ajaran sesat” such as the idea that all religions are the same and that it is ok to praise Lee Kuan Yew who is a non-Muslim (Kafir) in the mosque during Jumaat sermon even though the Jumaat sermon is part and parcel of our ibadah and that the Masjid should not be politicised.

    It is glaring that the President of Pergas had to assure the audience that those behind making ARS mandatory are not agents of the government – pointing to the panelists and making the audience repeat after him several times that they are not agents of the government but instead they are Warathatul Anbiyaa’ (Inheritors of the legacy of the Prophets).

    I was there and those who were there and reading this can verify or debunk what I say here.

    May Allah swt save this ummah from internal and external enemies. Amiin!

     

    Source: Ustaz Abd Al-Halim

  • Syukrina Iwana Sofhian Dilapor Hilang, Polis Rayu Orang Ramai Beri Maklumat

    Syukrina Iwana Sofhian Dilapor Hilang, Polis Rayu Orang Ramai Beri Maklumat

    Polis merayu orang ramai tampil memberikan maklumat tentang keberadaan seorang budak perempuan.

    Kali terakhir Syukrina Iwana Binte Sofhian, 12 tahun dilihat adalah di Blok 817 Jurong West Street 81 pada 17 Oktober sekitar pukul 1.00 tengah hari.

    Menurut kenyataan Pasukan Polis Singapura (SPF) yang dikeluarkan hari ini (19 Okt), Syukrina Iwana, yang setinggi kira-kira 1.5 meter dan berkulit cerah, kali terakhir dilihat memakai t-shirt berwarna hitam, berseluar panjang dan memakai selipar.

    Beliau juga memakai beg silang berwarna kelabu, tambah SPF.

    Sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat, diminta menghubungi hotline polis di 1800 255 0000 atau menyerahkannya di laman www.police.gov.sg/iwitness.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • CAN Singapore: Amos Yee Beaten Up In Changi Prison, Free Him Now

    CAN Singapore: Amos Yee Beaten Up In Changi Prison, Free Him Now

    <Credits: Community Action Network – CAN Singapore>

    #freeamosyee, interestingly, we have been informed that Amos has been transferred from Changi’s Men’s Prison to Tanah Merah Prison… Amos has said that Tanah Merah Prison has mostly Malay youths.

    We have also been informed that he has been threatened, slapped on the back and kicked while he was climbing up the stairs. A complaint has been lodged with the Prison Authorities, who had efficiently replied to say they will look into the matter.

    Amos’ mother has put in an urgent request for Amos to be moved to Home Detention.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Global Survey: Most Will Trade Freedom For Security

    Global Survey: Most Will Trade Freedom For Security

    Most people think that violent terrorism is a major challenge facing their societies and they support tough measures to counter the problem at the expense of some civil liberties, according to a global survey on public perceptions towards violent terrorism commissioned by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), based in Washington.

    According to the findings released earlier this week — derived from 8,000 respondents in eight countries — one in two people feel that their governments have not taken adequate steps to address violent extremism.

    The survey was conducted in August this year and involved participants from China, Egypt, France, India, Indonesia, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

    Around 25 per cent of the respondents from Turkey and France felt that violent terrorism is the most important issue facing their countries. Overall, around two-thirds of those polled see violent extremism as a major problem in their country.

    “In everywhere except China, at least 75 per cent of those surveyed expect a terrorist attack in the next year,” said CSIS in a report of the survey findings.

    “On a more alarming note, a majority in every country believes that it is likely that violent extremist groups will acquire and use weapons of mass destruction in their lifetime.”

    The majority of respondents in Turkey, France and the US feel their own governments have not taken adequate steps to contain and prevent violent extremism.

    In late June, a gun and bomb attack on Istanbul’s Ataturk airport killed more than 40 people and injured more than 230. Yesterday, a Turkish official said police in the capital had fatally shot a suspected Islamic State (IS) group militant who was planning a suicide bombing.

    France has also been hit hard by violent terrorism, with 230 deaths and about 700 injuries as a result of attacks said to be carried out by IS.

    Both France and Turkey are both sources of a relatively high number of foreign militants fighting in Iraq and Syria, with an estimated 700 French citizens and 500 Turks fighting under the IS flag.

    Just last month, an Afghan-born American sowed terror across Manhattan and New Jersey, wounding 29 people before he was arrested — the latest in a spate of lone-wolf attacks to rock the US.

    Despite widespread anxiety about the terrorist threat, 73 per cent of respondents in the CSIS survey believe that violent extremism can be eradicated.

    When asked about potential measures to counter violent extremism, 90 per cent were in favour of requiring all citizens and visitors to have identification cards.

    A similar percentage also supported asking Internet companies to do an even better job of shutting down all content from violent extremist groups, while 71 per cent favoured allowing government agencies to monitor all phone records, email and social media for contacts with terrorists.

    Close to 90 per cent of the sample was also supportive of asking Muslim leaders to declare definitively that Islam does not in any way condone violent extremism or the creation of a caliphate. More than 80 per cent of those surveyed also said that immigrants who have not passed rigorous screenings and background checks for connections to extremism should be barred from entering their countries.

    On Monday, Iraqi forces, supported by a US-led international coalition, launched a major offensive on the city of Mosul, the IS’ last major stronghold in Iraq.

    The US expects IS to use crude chemical weapons as it tries to repel the offensive, although experts say the group’s technical ability to develop such weapons is highly limited.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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