Tag: Singaporeans

  • Khan Osman Sulaiman: Mengapa AP Melayu Islam Dan MUIS Membisu Dalam Isu Online Gambling?

    Khan Osman Sulaiman: Mengapa AP Melayu Islam Dan MUIS Membisu Dalam Isu Online Gambling?

    Apabila polisi membina 2 casino dibahaskan dalam parliament dan diletakkan pada undian, tidak seorang pun AP Melayu/Islam menentang hasrat pemerintah. Malahan mereka setuju dgn hala tujuan pemerintah untuk membangunkan negara dgn hasil perjudian.

    Sebaliknya, yg menentang ialah AP2 bukan Islam.

    Baru2 ini, pemerintah meluluskan permohonan dari Singapore Pools dan Singapore Turf Club untuk menyediakan perkhidmatan ‘Online Gambling.’

    Langkah itu menimbulkan kebimbangan daripada pihak Majlis Kebangsaan Gereja-Gereja yang menekankan bahawa perjudian akan meninggalkan kesan buruk terhadap masyarakat.

    Yg peliknya, bantahan dari MUIS dan AP2 Melayu kita tidak langsung kedengaran. Walaupun Singapura adalah negara sekular, ini tidak bermakna nilai2 murni yg diajarkan kepada kita melalui agama Islam tidak boleh diluahkan.

    Kita dapat melihat bagaimana Majlis Kebangsaan Gereja-Gereja memainkan peranannya terhadap masyarakat umum dengan mengambil pendirian tegas terhadap polisi2 pemerintah yg tidak sehaluan dgn ajaran agama mereka.

    MUIS selaku kuasa tertinggi yg menyeliakan hal ehwal umat Islam di Singapura, seringkali didapati membisu apabila pemerintah menggubal rang undang2 yg bercanggah dgn ajaran Islam.

    Pucuk kepimpinan MUIS yg lemah setelah beberapa dekat ini menjadikan organisasinya mandul. Tidak dapat memainkan peranan nya seperti yg diharapkan oleh masyarakat.

    Pada masa jangkau yg panjang, kelemahan MUIS untuk membuat pendiriannya terhadap isu2 genting yg berkaitan dgn polisi2 negara, akan menghilangkan pengaruh masyarakat Islam Singapura.

     

    Source: Khan Osman Sulaiman

  • You Don’t Need Much Space To Have Sex: Josephine Teo On ‘No Flat, No Child’ Belief

    You Don’t Need Much Space To Have Sex: Josephine Teo On ‘No Flat, No Child’ Belief

    You do not need much space to have sex.

    That was the feisty rejoinder from Senior Minister of State Josephine Teo, who oversees the National Population and Talent Division, to a question on whether young people are not getting their flats early enough to have children.

    The suggestion was that this could be a chicken-and-egg problem. To qualify for the Parenthood Priority Scheme, which gives first- time married couples first dibs on getting a flat, they must be expecting or have a citizen child below 16.

    But to have a child, some say they need to have a flat first.

    With a straight face, Mrs Teo declared: “You need a very small space to have sex.”

    Known for her candid blog posts on dating and marriage, Mrs Teo does not mince her words – think “menstruation” and “cysts” – when it comes to urging young people to look for love and settle down early.

    In an interview on marriage and parenthood issues last week, the mother of three teenage children tackled issues ranging from infertility to why the Government should not be “too kaypoh” (Hokkien for busybody).

    She noted that the Singaporean love story has a different arc from that of countries in the West. “In our case, man meets woman, man falls in love with woman, man proposes to woman, they then plan the wedding and do the house,” she said.

    “In France, in the UK, in the Nordic countries, man meets woman, tonight they can make a baby already. They love each other. Both of them partly have their own family, so it is a matter of living in yours or living in mine, and they also don’t have to worry about marriage – that comes later,” she added.

    So how about having a couple declare that they wish to have a child in two years and get the flat first?

    “What if they can’t conceive? Take back the flat from them? How do you know they really tried to conceive? Can we check whether they use contraceptives? Cannot, right?” she replied, amused.

    Instead of having the Government poke its nose into the bedroom, Mrs Teo relied instead on persuasion. She urged women to have babies early as they would not know if they are fertile or not.

    “You never really know that you’re not fertile until you try. Unfortunately, it is one of those things. There is no fertility indicator. As a woman you will know, if you have regular menstruation, okay, (there is a) likelihood. But maybe you have a major cyst and how would you know until you attempt to conceive, only to realise that you can’t?”

    The search for love is also not something to be left to chance, she said. “When I meet young people and ask if they go and look for upgrading opportunities, they said ‘yes’. I said, ‘What about love? Do you go and look for love?’ They said ‘no’. I said, ‘Why not?’ They said, ‘If it happens, it happens’.

    “I said, ‘You don’t think that upgrading and a good job, if it happens it happens, right? So why is it that you would apply that thinking to your career and your own education, but you don’t apply it to your personal life?’”

    However, the minister was quick to point out that there is a need to respect personal choice when it comes to marriage and children.

    She said: “In this day and age, it is not possible for us to say that you are somehow bad, you are not doing your part for society.

    “No, there are many reasons why people remain single. Sometimes, (for) very good reasons. Why should we pass judgment on them?”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Grace Fu: ‘No Discrimination In Helping Para-Athletes Excel’

    Grace Fu: ‘No Discrimination In Helping Para-Athletes Excel’

    Instead of focusing on post-podium rewards for national athletes, the Government’s focus remains on helping all athletes get to the podium, said Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Grace Fu.

    To this end, there will be no discrimination on the support extended to para-athletes, Ms Fu stressed.

    Ms Fu was responding to questions on whether the Government will consider offering equal rewards to Olympic and Paralympic gold medallists.

    Para-swimmer Yip Pin Xiu will receive $400,000 for the two gold medals she won at the recent Rio Paralympics, while swimmer Joseph Schooling received $1 million for winning a gold medal at the Rio Olympics.

    The rewards medal-winning athletes receive are decided by the Singapore National Paralympic Council (SNPC), Singapore National Olympic Council (SNOC) and their sponsors.

    “This is in line with the general convention that monetary rewards for competitions in sport are largely funded by private means through sponsorships, donations and product endorsements,” said Ms Fu.

    “I encourage the SNOC and SNPC to review the schemes with their sponsors, and for more corporations to step forward to support SNOC and SNPC on the awards.”

    What can make a difference to the national athletes is the combined assistance they receive from family, the community, corporations, the public and the Government, Ms Fu said.

    She said: “Instead of a one-off cash prize, athletes would also welcome career opportunities that can accommodate their sporting commitments and provide greater security and dignity when they retire from their sporting career.

    “To enable this, SportSG has the spexBusiness Network.”

    There is also no discrimination. For instance, the monthly payments under the spexScholarship scheme for all athletes are the same.

    And sports medicine and sports science specialists, psychologists and trainers under SportSG offer the same support to both able-bodied and para-athletes.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • 11-Year-Old Boy Dies From Dengue In Singapore

    11-Year-Old Boy Dies From Dengue In Singapore

    An 11-year-old Singaporean boy died from dengue on Aug 30, the Ministry of Health (MOH) and National Environment Agency (NEA) announced on Tuesday (Oct 11).

    He died the same day he was admitted to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, they said in a joint news release. MOH said it was informed of the cause of death in a coroner’s report on Tuesday.

    The patient lived at Woodleigh Close, an active two-case dengue cluster, which was reported on Sep 6, but no mosquito breeding was detected there, NEA said. The cluster was closed on Sep 14.

    This is the eighth fatality from dengue in Singapore this year.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

  • Anda Kenal Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal? Sila Bantu Pihak Polis

    Anda Kenal Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal? Sila Bantu Pihak Polis

    Pihak polis meminta orang ramai supaya tampil ke hadapan untuk memberi maklumat tentang lokasi remaja berusia 13 tahun, Nur Sarah Syafiqah Binte Shahrizal.

    Kali terakhir Nur Sarah Syafiqah dilihat adalah di Blok 12A Marsiling Lane sekitar 6.45 pagi pada 7 Oktober 2016.

    Pada ketika itu, Nur Sarah Syafiqah memakai jersi berwarna merah dan seluar pendek berwarna biru.

    Sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat diminta menghubungi talian Hotline Polis 1800-255-0000 atau secara online di www.police.gov.sg/iwitness.

    Semua maklumat yang diterima akan dirahsiakan.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

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